The Brussels Post, 1961-11-09, Page 3gullet/De CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
DOGS FOR SALE stole Ctilelee
AVAii..APLE quick shipment from
Bray, started Ames pullets and other good varieties, Also some dayolds,
Broiler chicks, Octo.ber,NOYarnber„ der now Your requiremente hatched
to order. See local agent, or write
Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hein,
Nton, Ont.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE < -- —
PHOTOGRAPHIC Studio and Camera Shop; fully equipped; established 15 years; P 0 Box toa, Forest, Ontario
COINS
SPIUNGEII Spaniel puppies, she cocker Spaniel. Shelties, and German Short
Haired. Pointers, Registered well:bred stock. healthy reasonableo ten str ern
Head Kennels. 0.11. Tecuoiseb. Oat: .....___ . . ---
DISTRIBUTQR.5. WANTED
UNUSUAL • •
OPPORTUNITY for men end Women to build their Oven oestnese products have national promotion. Commissions,
Bonus, Lifetime over-rides, Write R, Dahmer, 30 William St, West, Water-we, Ontario.
chap in Ancii,land.
.0110 gillary,".
"That's us," said the young
man, "My name's E'd Hillary.
Small world, isn't it?" • e •
During the' next two, seasons
I was meeting lad >Iillary quite
often, though • not until . 1.051
was our plan for .4 .P14144 real-
ized—and .then, it was the, result
of a dreamy speculation while
we were incarcerated in moun-
tain llut, a year earlier., cut off
from the ..world by a violent
4torm... We had. gone, Geoffrey
(Milne), and: I, to the hut' called.
liaa,s1, which lies on the lower
slopes from which the attempt
on "Mount cook is made, We
reached .H.aase about the same
time as Hillary and his com-
panion, a donnieh young man
named Bruce Morton,
Then 'the storm broke and
there was nothing for it but to
sit tight and hope 'for the best.
Lounging around the hut, the
four of us decided to team up
for the climb if and when the
weather Cleereet But the snow
streamed down and blew inces-
santly, and we were besieged
for nearly five days. For a time
we amused ourselves playing
draughts with a board drawn on
a large cardboard calendar, our
draughtsmen fashioned f r o in
chunks of parsnip and carrot.
Between desultory games and
Primitive cooking we daydream-
ed about the potential joys of
climbing in the Himalayas,
which in those days was still a
distant if not unattainable Mec-
ca for comparatively inexperi-
enced climbers, By the end of
the second day our talk was
soaring to a more daring level
as Hillary and I asked each
other, "Why II01;•tlw Himalayas?"
—From "From Everest to the
South Pole," by George Lowe,
MACHINERY FOR SALE
DOI.JUU power wagon .1-wheel drive
cOmPlete with winch portable derrick and leg, Jack arms and conneellen for
etectrie trailer brakes, Good eendit,
Lion I,.oula Lejeune , RM. 1, Port Erie,
Photw Fort Erle 871.2332 evenings.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN
R
AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing
Pleasan: dignified profession, good
wages Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America a Greatest System illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Cali MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
3S8 Bloor St W., Toronto
Branches;
44 King SiW Hamilton
72, Rideau Street Ottawa
GUARANTEED TO PAY $10.10 for 1925 .050 Kw for 1923 .010. 10 Page illustrated buying list ,250 refundable on first purchase Toronto Coin Box
317 Terminal "A" roronto. Ontario,
CHINCHILLAS
LiqUIPATING Chinchilla herd and all equipment Best offer DuBo Chin,
)875_ Chandler Windsor Ont_
DEER HUNTING
BURKS Falls, Algonquin Park area, for deer, everything supplied, C sher• rat t, Emsd,ale Phone Burks Falls.
152W5
DOGS FOR SALE
IRISH SETTER PUPPIES, Registered.
Mahogany Red Beauties, •three months
old, champion bloodlines and good
bird.dog stock. Males $45, Females $40. Further particulars from Mrs. O.
Grulke, R.R. 1, Fort William, Ont.
Registered males
----
and females, R8Smths to 18 mths. old.
Contact Clarence Holmes. "Ghost Inn
Kennels" Reg, ILR No. I. Blenheim
Ont Call OP 0-5757.
PERSONAL
UNWANTED HAIR
Vanished away with. Saca-Pelo. Seca-
Pelo is different. It does not dissolve or remove hair from the surface, but penetrates and retards growth of un-wanted hair. Lor-Beer Lab. Ltd., Ste 5,
179 Granville St., Vancouver 2, I3.C.
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS rES rED guaranteed, mailed in main
parcel, including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment 18 for $1 00 'Finest quality) Western Distribu-tors, Box 24-TPF Regina Sask.
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX SI GALT ONT.
Films developed and 8 magna prints 405
12 magna prints 800
Reprints Sc each
KODACOLOR
DeveLoping roll 90(.' mot Including
prints) Color prints 305 each extra.
Ansco and Elttachrome 35 m in 20 ex-
Posures mounted in slides SI 21' Color
prints from slides 32e each M.one re-funded In fell tot unprinted negatives.
—PONY AND SADDLE HORSE SALE ..„ _
15th semi-annual Pony & Saddle .Horse
consignment sale (Shetland, Welsh and saddle horses.) Saturday. October 14, at 12 o'clock. at Fiervie, Highway 9. Visit
Canada's oldest pony sale. Full course
dinner available, For information and consignments, write: Donne McLelland, Route 4, Kincardine, Ontario. Borne
and Doris McLelland, Auctioneers.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
HALIBURTON, solid house, chicken coop, 300' x 300 r lot on Hwy. 28 near Bancroft, Ideal business site $3,800. tan Gillies, SI R, No. 3, Bancroft.
KAWARTHA LAKES, 21/2 miles south
of Bobcaygeon on Pigeon Lake, twenty
miles north Lindsay. 11/2 acres, seven
room house, oil furnace, all conveni-ences, two car garage, boathouse, boat, Ideal for retirement, deluxe summer home or motel. $29,500. Particulars
wearyitgee,onphone, owner J. S. Wilkin, Bob-
REPAIRS
FARM CATALOGUE
FRET fall farm catalogue, write Stir eatn c Campbell , Realtor, lestowel, Ontario
FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS
HOME-MADE Doll Clothes, variety of
10 pieces 1,00. Send size and 255 for mailing, Mrs, SerimehaW, 41 Birming-
ham St., Halifax, N.S. —
WE OFFER the best value in men's wOrk and fancy socks. Money returned if not satisfied. Work socks as low as 75e pair; fancy socks 600 per pair Pre- paid. Catalogue listing hundreds of other lines of merchandise.
TWEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO. FERGUS 11, ONTARIO
ALADDIN KEROSENE HEATER
For barns, sheds, cellars, summer cot-tages, camping or emergency heating.
Operates on non-expioslve kerosene, burning up to 25 hours on a single gal; Ion Produces Sip to 9,320 BTU's per hour, enough to heat 3,000 cu, ft.
It burns with a blue flame, hence no smoke or Odour. Perfectly safe, quick to heat, easy to Operate. Completely portable No flue pipe needed.
Ruggedly constructed of heavy gauge steel with green enamel finish,
Satisfaction guaranteed, Only $19.95, we pay freight if cash sent with order.
Aber & Sons, 50 Van Horne, Montreal.
MISS FOOTBALL — Jane Cheney of Tulane University was
crowned "Miss Football 1961" in Berkeley, Calif.
JUNIOR PHONE $8.95
COMMUNICATE from main building to barn, garage, boathouse or basement. C.O.D., F.CI B.. Montreal Gemsee. P.O. Box 345 Snowdon Montreal 29, Quebec,
HOBBIES
"Everything for the Hobbyist". Whole-
sale; Retail. Complete Catalogue 405, Model Hobbles, 3155 Lakeshore Road,
Toronto 14,
HELP WANTED MALE
HOSPITAL ORDERLY
PERMANENT position open for man qualified by training and experience,
Medical, Hospital and Sickness Benefit Insuranee, Pension Plan, 40 hour week, $200.00 per month to start. Apply: Di. rector of Nursing, District Memorial Hospital, Leamington, Ontario,
STATIONARY ENGINEER
(4th Class)
PERMANENT position to satisfactory applicant with papers. Mainly on shift work, but 'interesting opportunity to learn maintenance of hospital equip-ment. Medical, Hospital, Sickness Bene-fits. Pension Plan, 40 hour week, start-ing salary $225 monthly Apply; Ad. ministrator. District Memorial Hoepital, Leamington. Ontario
MUSIC
Learn to play file plane in 6 weeks
with symprovised music. Free details, P.O. Box 873, Montreal,
MEDICAL
RAZOR AND PEN REPAIRS
FACTORY authorized repair depots. Overhauls and parts for all makes of electric razors. Ronson, Philishave, Schick, Remington, Sunbeam, etc. Par-ker, Sheaffer, Waterman. Pens. Mail to
SHAVER SHOPS
86 King St. West, Hamilton or 418
Talbot St., London.
STAMPS.
Channel Swimming
Won't Be The Same
Britons are saying that Eng-
lish Channel swimming will
never again be the same now
that 42-year-old Argentinian
Antonio Abertondo has made
history by crawl-stroking the
Channel two ways nonstop.
He achieved the ultimate
round-trip swim in 43h. 5m,, and
now his jovial manager, Sam
Rockett, the English Channel
expert who planned Abertondo's
feat, asks:
"What can anyone do now—
except try to beat Abertondo's
time for the two-way swim?"
British newspapers, naturally,
gave the chunky (5ft. 4in., 210
pounds) South American the
salute he deserved, likening his
accomplishment to the impossi-
ble—as impossible as once the
four-minute mile was thought
to be.
Accepting humbly his new
stature, Abertondo, through in-
terpreters, modestly suggested:
"If I get a reward for this
back in Argentina, I hope it will
be a swimming pool where i can
teach boys and girls to swim."
That has long been a dream
of the short man who has taken
his place among the great men
of world sport.
PROVEN REMEDY — EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect.
SPECIAL offer - 100 different select-ed Sr.Colonies used stamps - $0.59, 200 different $1,00. T. Ii, Graham, P.O.
Box 378, Beaverton, Ontario.
But what we can do is give
Houk the full credit he deserves
for being the manager in the un-
folding of this fine Yankee story.
He handled himself like a pro
all the way, working efficiently
in the background while his
ballplayers took most of the
bows, plodding with rare detpr-
mination up the victory ladaer
to another pennant, writes Ed
Rumill in the Christian Science
Monitor.
The Yankees were loaded with
catchers in the spring and a
trade involving one of them
seemed imminent, but Houk re-
sisted the temptation, one of the
master moves of the season.
Howard, given more work be-
hind the plate, developed into
the best catcher in the league.
Yogi Berra helped solve the left
field problem. Blanchard, eased
in and out of the lineup, pro-
duced a number of game-win-
ning hits,
Houk put Ford on a regular
schedule and kept him there,
,Ralph made Luis Arroyo the key
man in his bull pen. Veterans
Bob Turley and Art Ditmar had
to be bypassed, and youngsters
Roland Sheldon and Bill Staf-
ford were promoted to the front
line, as was Ralph Terry.
Bud Daley was acquired from
Kansas City and, with Jim
Coates, was spotted on the rub-
ber to fill out the hurling pic-
ture,
Houk, anchored Tony Kubek at
shortstop.
The manager's handling of the
Maris home run situation was
noteworthy. When critics tried
to pressure him into changing
his batting order so as possibly
to help Maris and Mickey Mantle
in their pursuit of Babe Ruth,
Houk stuck to his guns, em-
phasizing the importance of
team interests and the champion-
ship race,
"Our prime object is to win
a pennant," he kept saying,
ISSUE 41 — 1961
AIR LIFT — Salvador Dali, the
surrealist painter, suggested
this way of removing dead
bulls from the arena. All that
the fans could do was watch
amazed as the helicopter lifted
the beast, just after it was slain
by a matador in Barrancaber-
meja, Colombia.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. itching, scalding and burning ecze-ma acne ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubboen or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt or Price
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR.
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St Clair Avenue East TORONTO
LEARN WELDING
NO TIME LIMIT
Also
Certificate Courses in
SUPERVISION - INSPECTION
QUALITY CONTROL
A.R.C. SCHOOL OF WELDING
92 John St. N., Hamilton
JA 9-7427 JA. 7-9681
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When purchasing nutria consider the
following points which this organize. Hon offers:
t. rise best available stock, no cross-bred or standard types recommended.
2. The reputation of a plan which is proving itself substantiated by files of Satisfied ranchers,
.1 Full insurance against replacement, should they not live or in the event of sterility (all fully explained in our certificate of merit)
4. We give you only mutations which are in demand for fur garments.
You receive from this organization a guaranteed pelt market in Writing,
1. Membership In our exclusive breed( ers' association whereby only pur-chasers of this stock may participate In the benefits so offered.
7 Prices for Breeding Stock start at 5200 a pair
Special offer to those who qualify, earn your Nutria on MIT cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.,
R.R. No, 2, StoutNrille, Ontario.
Ralph Houk Filled
Old Casey's Shoes'
In appaulding New York's
26th American League pennant
and 11th in the last 13 years, it
would be a gross injustice to
brush over' the key role played
by Ralph Houk, the freshman
manager.
At the beginning of the season,
the one - time Army major,
though obviously supported by
the best organization in profes-
sional baseball, sat in an un-
comfortable managerial seat.
He was following the popular
Casey. Stengel, the recognized
managing genius of this genera-
tion, with the most successful
won-and-lost record in the his-
tory of the game,
Winner of 10 league cham-
pionships in 12 years, includ-
ing unbroken strings of four and
five, Stengel left the Yankee
club in the fall of '60 amid the
protests of millions, Though
commended in some quarters
for his courage in the face of
criticism that was sure to come,
owner Dan Topping aroused the
ire of the entire nation when he
handed Casey his walking pa-
pers.
And into the middle of this
widely publicized controversy
stepped the cool, equally cour-
ageous figure of Houk who knew
better than most the spot he was
on.
But the man who had been an
Army Ranger, decorated and
promoted in the heat of battle,
not only was equal to the chal-
lenge, he proceeded to win with
even more ease and finality
than bad the wily Stengel.
Houk managed his 104th Yan-
kee flag clinching victory at the
old 154-game mark. Stengel fin-
ished second in his lone 100-win
year at Yankee Stadium.
This is not written to belittle
Stengel in any way, for his
greatness at the Stadium will
linger forever—his greatness and
the stories he used to tell. But
the innocent have to wonder if
this tremendous Yankee year
could have been possible under
anyone except Houk,
Could Roger' Maris have writ-
ten the individual story of the
year? Could Whitey Ford have
had his first 20-victory year on
the Mound? Could Elston How-
ard have had his best year, and
could young John Blanchard
'have blossomed so impressively?
The answers to these questions
will never be known, -`of course.
.How Can I? •
By Roberta Lee
Q. Bow can I repair a small
leak in a water pipe?
A. Wind some adhesive tape
around it, then give it a coat of
shellac. This repair will last
quite a long time.
Q. What can I do for pictures
that have been stored away for
some, time and have become
somewhat dingy-looking?
A. Remove the glass and
frame, and then rub the picture
gently with a slice of bread.
The bread crumbs will often rub
the dint right off, and leave a
protective film on the pictures.
too.
Q. How can I treat some light
burn marks on my futeiture?
A, These will sometimes disap-
pear by use of your regular fur-
niture polish. If not, use some
rottenstone or finely-powdered
pumice mixed to a thin paste
with raw or boiled linseed oil,
Rub in the direction'of the grain,
Wipe with another cloth mreeten-
ed with plain linseed oil, Repeat
as often as necessary. If the
burn is too deep, you'll more
than likely need professional
care.
Passing Of A
Great SPyccitcher
The 44eefupe were a gray
suit, carried a light sultease and
Presented papers that were all
in Order, Peesuesive and charm-
ing, he explained that he had
escaped from occupied France
into Spain where his fie% over-
night stop was at the Hotel Con-
tinental in Barcelona,
"Splendid hotel," said the Bri-
tish intelligence officer wile was
questioning him, "Did you enjoy
the food?"
"I got there too late fee
ner," was the reply. "It was 10
o'clock,"
That was the end of the re-
fugee's persuasiveness, His in-
terrogator knew that he was
lying because the Continental's
restaurant stays open until mid-
night.
For CoL Oreste Pinto, the mas-
ter spycateher of World War II,
this was an easy case, but it did
emphasize one of his many tal-
ents: An encyclopedic knowledge
of the hotels, buildings, and
streets, of every major Euro-
pean city.
With this knowledge, Pinto
combined complete mastery of
six languages and a working
knowledge of seven others, in-
cluding Swahili. He also had a
memory so phenomenal that
after 50 years he could still re-
cite a long list of telephone
numbers that his father kept in
the Pintos' original home in the
Netherlands.
Pinto was a natural for the
shadowy world of espionage,
which he entered while a stu-
dent in Paris during World War
I. Hired by the. Deuxierne Bur-
eau, he went to Germany, posed
as a tobacco salesman and sent
out messages on tobacco wrap-
pers.
In World War II, the British
asked Pinto to set up a special
interrogation center to screen
out spies from among the thou-
eands of refugees pouring into
Britain. Seven of those he caught
were executed. One of them held
out for thirteen days but was
finally trapped after Pinto, go-
ing through a huge dictionary
page by page, came upon a clue.
Pinpricks had been made under
certain letters on different pages.
Put together the letter spelled
out the names of the spy's con-
tacts.
Pinto made his biggest single
haul shortly before the Germans
planned to invade England in
"Operation Sealion." Tipped off,
he and twelve men lay in wait
on the coast for a submarine
bringing four top German spies.
Three were nabbed promptly but
the fourth disappeared in the
dark and almost got away the
next morning by joining up with
those who were looking for him.
The spyoatcher's most specta-
cular catch occurred after the
Allied landings in Europe when
Pinto joined the Free Dutch
counterespionage s e r vi c ee He
named their famous resistance
leader, Christian (King Kong)
Lind.emans as "the traitor of
Arnhem." Lindennans — accord-
ing to Pinto — gave the Germans
advance notice of t h e British
army's ill-fated (7,000 casualties)
paratrooper drop at Arnhem in
1944. For this work, Pinto drew
praise from Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower as "the greatest Jiv-
ing expert on security" but be-
fore the charge could be fully
proven the "traitor" committed
suicide in a prison hospital.
After the war, Pinto moved to
England and wrote four books
about his adventures ("Spycatch-
er," "Spycatcher Two," Spy-
catcher Three," "Friend or Foe,")
Turned into a TV series, they
made their author a national fig-
tire. But Pinto continued to live
quietly until taken recently to
Westminster hospital, There last
month he died, at the age of 71,
Greatest Horse
Since .Man 0' War?
Ridan is a big, bay, two-year-
old colt who dislikes horses that
happen to be gray. He kicks at
them. Bill Hartacl is a short,
intelligent, 28-year-old jockey
who dislikes people that happen
to be reporters. He snaps at
them, Ridan and. Hartack get
along: Both love to win.
Muscular, with a white streak
down his long, narrow face,
Bedell may be the finest race
horse in a decade, ("He may be
the finest race horse since Man
o' War," said one enthusiastic
trainer recently,) He has run
seven races this year and won
all seven, Under Hartack, Ridan
won the 6-furlong Arlington
Park Futurity by five lengths,
easing up in 1:09, only a fifth of
a second off the course record.
"I was shocked," said Hartack
later. "He's got so much power."
Ridan's earning power matthes
hit running power. His purses
so far total $284,050. Originally
bought in June 1960, by Men-
tucky trainer Moody Jolley for
$11,000, Aldan is now owned by
a Syndicate: Mrs. Jolley; bakery
executive John Greer, and in-
surance executive Ernest Woods.
They have rejected offers of Up
to $250,000 for the colt, a grand-
eon Oe the Aga Khan's famous
Nasrullah.
As this was Written the owns
ens were undecided Whether to
enter Riders,• who in nursing a
sore righe foreleg, its the Garden
State stakes, the world's richest
race. Hartack, who could del,
let 10 '014 cent of the Winning
purse (10 per cent of toughly
$160,00b), naturally hopes the
horse will go. ROW good it ilia-
an? "He awes Me," Hartack
insists.
-- Jim Gentile, first baseniciti of Bahl-
in the dreteing room just after he set
record far the mast g rand
Afilititinteel bine in
BOA next week same itatillit,
Shine tutee, Sabin jokes.
GRAND SLAM RECORD
teleire'S Orioles; is shown
tedee Anieriedite Leci'Mio
rUYit lit one teeitOne
Great Mountain
Climbers Meet
The mountain bus was an un-
gainly affair, a big, brown, rub-
ber-tired creature with a high
wheelbase, transporting us along
rough tracks from the Mount
Cook hotel, across the floor of• a
valley, through a wilderness of
boulders, over dry stream beds
and right up to the side of the
glacier, there to disgorge its
loads of climbers and tourists,
It was not long before I was
regularly conducting parties of
sightseers on their first visits to
to the glacier, cutting steps,
guiding them to some interest-
ing point after alighting from
the bus, But always I enjoyed
the rattling bus ride, too, for
the view of the valley and
mountains was superb.
One day I noticed a long-
limbed, keen-faced young man
sitting alone on the rear seat.
Dressed in old tweed trousers
with puttees around the ankles,
a tartan shirt with a sweat rag
circling his neck, all topped by
a battered brown ski cap, he
carried On ice-'ice and a small
rucksack, and his green eyes
roved with a curious excitement
aver the scenery. T joined hirii
at the back of the bus, and We
talked easily about the stolen-
tains, The excited, ever-inter-
ested look never left his eyes.
He had been a War-time naviga-
tor on bomberS,. Was four years
my senior, and was now vecirk-
big for his father Who kept a
bee farm in •Auckland,
"My lather runs a fruit fatni,"
I told him, 'Iwith bee-keeping as
a Sideline. As a Matter of fed
we get OW' queen bees• fleet tit
THE ORES-FORM HOME Windows, doors, walks and chimneys all flow together in this
liOUSe design by St. tows architect John C, McEwen. It is a revotutieriaVY thought, almost
bringing abstract ciet into architecture. But he bates it on Frank Lloyd Wright le est ablished
idea that a house should fit the landscape, Though' in 'appearance "primitive" to the pOief
that it is reminiscent of the cave living of early man, it is entirely Metal lath land
cement plaster ore the basic rrititerials for the "continuous" constructiet.