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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1962-06-14, Page 3EASY CHICKS tiOY NOW for best egg markets. Bray has available Ames, $yk es, and COMet egg specialists, daaol'd to ready.to•lay. Alao mixed chicke, and day old cock. tiros, Request prieellar, see local agent or write d ray Hatchery, 129 John North, Hamilton, Ont. MUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES OOWLING lanes, 8, completely mile- ped, excellent malt-ion, automatic foul lights, complete snack bar, Parehaser to removelanes from municipality. Owner moving to new lecatiOn Open for offers, David's BOwl-Q,DrOtrie, 33 punoes g., Trenton, Ont. EXCIJOSIV-E Frattellisea open in various Parts of Ontario for Factory & Summer Cottage display courts or Sales outlets. We will help you get Marted and provide Mal" financing We can finance all sales, no down payment necessary. ^ INTERPROVINCIAL HOMES 113 Ferguson N,, Hamilton BUSiNESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE • HIGHWAy village general store, at- tached dwelling, $6,500, about $6,000 stock at invoice, $3,000 henhouse OP, tional. Wm. Pearce, Realtor, Exeter, Ontario. RETIRING owner offers attractive, well. equipped restaurant and Gray Coach bus agency in thriving Muskoka town, before the busy summer season. Best restaurant in town, with little competition, doing 4100,000 annual sales, Sell business and buildings or lease to right party. Apply P.O. Box 382, Bracebridge, Ontario. CONSTRUcTION BUSINESS FOR $ALE Full line of Construction machinery - Bulldozers, Dragline shovels, Bridge building equipment, Dam building equipment and Pile driving equipment, with some contracts for spring. Phone Port flume)] 874-4301 Or write P,O. Box 30, Vienna. COINS WANTED COINS WANTED - Pay for Canadian cents Fine or better, 1922, $4.50; 1923, $6.75; 1924, $1.50; 1925, $5.00. More prices in the 1962 Coin- Catalogue 25c. Gary's (81 9010 Jasper, Edmonton, Alta. DOGS LAS. RETRIEVER PUPPIES CKC , Registered Excellent show and field stock. Pedigree furnished. Health guaranteed. Whelped 17 Dec., '61. Them werid's best Retriever and companion dog. Also some trained pups, 9 months old, from champion stock, STUD SERVICE " HAWKRIDGE KENNELS Reg'd 1110 Lakeshore Rd. Sarnia, Ont. — KI 2-5270 FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE FOR SALE —David Brown 850 Dem- onstrator, 1937 pore Tractor with Dear- born loader and blade excellent, Mas- sey 44, Massey 101, Dozer blade with pump and controls, Davis TOO Trench- er demonstrator,Howard 3PT Roto- vator demonstraor, Seaman 50" Tn. so ler, 90 inch Rotary Mowers, Holland. Transplanter demonstrators, Post Aug- ers, Sprayers, Full Line of used Spread- ers, Plows, Discs, Rototillers, Tractors. Pumps. Philbrick Farm Equipment, Vineland, LOgan 24511 FARMS FOR SALE FARM 100 acres, Lot 14, Con. 13, MeXillep Township, Huron County, seven room modern house with new double garage. 50 x 70 steel barn, never been used. Drilled well, has never been , dry. Good land and good fences. School on farm. Buyer gets first chance of 117 acres of grass farm across the road with 40 acres work- able land, spring water front and back, good fences, gravel pit. Price, $30,000. Apply Fred Glanville, RR 2, Walton, Ont. How Can 1? By Roberts Lee Q. flow can I make some of my old paint brushes soft and pliable again? A. Place these brushes in an old can, cover the bristles with vinegar, and then boil for about 15 minutes. Your brushes should then be ready for practical use again. Q. What can I do if I've run oust of logs for my wood-burning fireplace? A. With one or two nails, fas- ten together several pieces of wood otherwise useful only as kindling. They'll be almost as long-burning as the regular logs. Q. How can I make a good job of cleaning the type on my typewriter at home? A. Try using some of your fingernail polish remover. This will not harm the metal, dries instantly, does not spatter, and does a fine job. WHALE OF A ti•ibt ----Bimbo, 18 foot, ,400-pound pilot , -Owe, .eitips 'wedding portrait for Mr. idrid Mrs. Gory Wiritiie iy Settrikirtd boll Which triggers preset camera Honeymooners. 421, , .„, ., , .,4 later; saw ..,e print seconds The popular. whale IS a stair per- fOrriler in ritiliotie show tit Palos Verdes, His price is right tad ' ' One nidekerel, •; gasebail Oat; And their Making ThVY like to tell the „story around Louisville of hew 17-year- old John Andrew (Bud) Hill. crick, an apprentice in his lath- er's wood turning shop, lost his way coming back from lunch one day in 1875 and ended up at the local ball park. There young Hillerich saw the great Pete Browning break his pet bat and volunteered to make him a new one—and the bat turn- ing industry was horn, But knowing how boys feel about baseball, Bud Hillerich more;- )hall, likely knew exactly where he was going on that, sum- mer afternoon back in the 11380's and probably some time before had dreamed of the possibility of turtling bats on a wood lathe. At any rate, though his father; F. Hillerich, protested to some length, when producing baseball bludgeons became his prime in- terest, young Bud stuck to his guns—or his bats—and laid the foundation of a multi-million dol- lar business, Browning was so pleased with ,the young wood-turner's job, that other famous big league ballplay- ers were soon coming to the Hill- erich plant and standing at Bud's elbow as he shaped bats accord- ing to their instructions. Today Bud Hillerich, Jr., runs things at the Louisville Slugger bat company, carrying on the business of supplying the minors, as well as the majors, with a top- heavyns percentage of their bludg- eons, of course, it is a much more highly specialized industry than it was more than three-quar- ters of a century ago, but the basic lathe turning is the same, in some cases carried on by members of familieS that worked here in the early years of the, company. From time to time, Hillerich and. Bradsby (the latter became a partner in 1911) has tried to effect various improvements in their product, but always the process returned to the one that has now been used for many years, writes Ed Rumill in the Christian Science Monitor. A long time ago, hickory was sought extensively, but white ash is now the only wood used, Hickory was all right when the players wanted heavy clubs, but it would be impractical today, with lighter bats in demand, The company has experiment- ed briefly with laminated bets, which means a piece of lumber made up of two or more pieces. But the more pieces, the more problems; and, anyway, a lamin- ated bat would weigh too much In today's scheme of things, It is the light, easily swung bat that produces the present-day record home run pace, When Hillerich and Bradsby stopped after brief experimenta- tion with a laminated bat, they were criticized with interfering with progress. All they were try- ing to do was preserve their re- putation for quality. Every once in a while a play- er comes up with a new, some- times radical idea in a bat, For instance, there was Heinle Groh's bottle bat, probably the strang- est looking of all bludgeons. One player asked for collars in the handle, to keep his hands from slipping. Another asked for a ball knob at the end, as a sort of counter balance. The majors once saw a striped bat appear briefly, only to be outlawed immediately by. the umpire, but the stripes were added after the bat had left the factory. Hillerich and Bradsby has ex- perts constantly searching for the best white, ash available for their stock piles. But wood, like other products of nature, is Unpredict- able. The quality of wood in two bats cart be different even though they came from the same tree, and about 40 bolts can be cut from a single white ash. Ash is grown in many section's of the country, but the Louisville $lugger experts-have found that the best stilted to their purposes Is found in northern New York and Pennsylvania. A nine-acre timber yard con- stantly helds millions of feet of billets, which have been care- fully inspected and graded, then left for from 10 to 18 ,months to dry out-of-doors in te natural sir and sunshine, It is, indeed, a pampered piece Of lumber that a Roger Maris or Stan IVIusial takes to the plate in today's major leagues, MERRY MENAGERIE diAX8 jus-t lilted you cdn IL I' FARMS FOR SALE PARK 10e *ores, near Itrookedale, 14000 se. ft. bank Bassi, excellent land all workable. Denald. J loses, Embro, 1.0 4*701;$A7C0 farm, LOS acres, fully equip^ 470; 03; warcitree4.0„M0:11BRox, 0007.vdielnoncaa.tion near Vienna, phone Pert Burwell 874. FARM HELP WANTED WANTED, married matt to work on turkey and beef farm to commence on or before March let, Separate house with.hydro Apply with references„ Stuart MeWillians. RR 5, Dutton, tele- phone 600,1-e, noiton. FLORIDA VACATION RESORT SUNNY Florida vacation on beautiful Itedingtoe Gulf Bettell Fishing, sports, free TV. heated pool, tow rates, free folders, prices, Efficiency opts ' hotel rooms. El Morocco Motel, St Peters. burg 8, Florida. FOR SALE --MISCELLANEOUS CUT ' YOUR OWN HAIR With Penn's "Easytrire haircutting comb. No skill required Saves barber's fees, For men, ladies' and children's 3t1 Lri r330, s Only W., 16, August Avenue. Scarbora. On. $1.50 prepaid, Hughsons. • vTrveteenOrtrrnt cotton $1,98. Remnants, Assorted colours, Make kid. dies' clothing, quilts, hats, doll clothes, caps, overalls. Also 20 yds. quilted silk remnants $2.98, 4 lbs, yard pieces, no batting necessary. 3 lbs• leathercloth or settings $3 98. Embroidery yarns, 2 lbs. $1.90 Elastic 1/4"-2" width, 2 lbs. $2.50 Satin ribbon, 4" to 7" wide, 20 yds, $1,00; printed, 12 yds $1.00. Nar- row ribbon, 300 yds, $1.00. Cotton bias, navy brown, black, 300 yards $1.00. Re- mit $1.00, balance collect. Schaefer, Drummondville, Quebec. VIBRATIONS REALLY ARE GOOD FOR YOU Be in heaven SLEEP ON A CLOUD Help yourself RELIEVE YOUR TIRED BACK Look forward to bedtime RELAX AND SLEEP DEEP and Friends Wake up more refreshed than ever be. fore. No ridiculous prices, just a good product manufactured with a low over, head so as to make n available to one and all. Budget Plan if necessary; for further information, write EXCELSIOR AGENCIES 522 Hamilton Rd. (Rear) London, Ont. HELP WANTED FEMALE START AT ONCE We require several single young ladies 17 -23 for circulation department of MacLean-Hunter Publishing Company, Neatness essential. No experience ne- cessary. Complete training given, $200 monthly to start with rapid advance. merit. Write Mr. S. Birch, 5th Floor, 210 Dundas St. W., Toronto. Please enclose photograph and phone number. Jots OPPORTUNITIES SUNNY Southern California jobs in. teresting, plentiful, varied, By return mail big Help Wanted Ads. Send $2.00. Vern Ardiff, 323 No. Soto, Los Angeles 13. California. MEDICAL HIGHLY RECOMMENDED — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 315 ELGIN OTTAWA $1,25 Express Collect APPEARS SURPRISED—Gory Gubner, left, appears as sur- prised as anybody as he watches Louis Pagani, right, arid other officials mark the distance after Gubner broke his own world shot put record at the New York A.C, track meet. Young Pigs 'Visit .A Chor01 I found, personality yet again in of the creatures who sur- prNngly visit the little church Iwo uniquely situated. within the w "Id itself, i well remember the do light and surprise :T. c'dhe first time I entered its dour to find that a robin had ne,,t'Itecl, in the lectern: I have ,blown owls build in one or two- .church. belfays,and swallows in the beams of Bast Bergholt church in Suffolk, but I have DCVO,' Myself seen a bird build. sa lew down in a church, or in such close proximity to visitors who pass in and out, I was told the robin even continued to brood undeterred by the fortnightly service held here, The porch door is kept open during the spring and summer, and the bird actual- ly flew in and out, returning to feed her young as the service was in progress, and successfully rear- ing her , On several visits I have found friendly sheep in the churchyard; coming close up to me they al- lowed much rubbing of noses and stroking of their thick warm wool. Again I realized how easy, how pitifully easy, it is to make friends with animals and gain their trust, On one occasion when 1 attend- ed a service here, four baby pigs with obvious personality walked through the open door and up the aisle, voicing as young pigs - will, and certainly giving an un- usual variety to the service. There can be little doubt that personality in pigs, even as in bunions, sometimes makes them difficult, and much tact and pa- tience was necessary before these . voluble quadrupeds, not being welconied as members of the con- gregation, were induced to turn back down the aisle and through the porch to a more suitable en- vironment. So ended an unusual- ly long and intriguing morning service. Another clay when I entered the church to gain a slight respite from a. raging north-west wind, L experienced • an even more unique encounter, for as I opened the door a little bat dropped to they ground, i.ts wings outstretch- ed, then suddenly , closing them he rolled up into a small ball no larger than a walnut„I had never seen a bat quite so close before; its fury body was rather like a rnineture mole and it had a queer • little lace. As I stooped to pick it up ,c,,ently, it opened a tiny pink mouth very wide, whether in pro-. lest or pain I was not sure. 11. lay motionless, eyes closed, and. I carefully carried it into the church to place it out of the way of human feet and there it re- mained quite still, apparently lifeless; but before I left I found that the tiny creature had disap- peared... . • Whenever I come to this church in the wood, I am always cons- elan; of its personality, it imparts an atmosphere of serenity which may be due to a certain extent to its remarkable situation, it is so comfortably set, as it were, in. ae nest of trees. In the spring a nightingale is singing from. the nearby bush, a turtledove utter- Jag its soothing notes, the black- birds piping and • the robins hop- ping unafraid in and out of the ever open door, and I am for'the moment content. — From "Each in His Own Way," By Nancy. price. WALTER DIES — Bruno Wal- ter, regarded by many ,as one of the greatest musical con- ductors of this generation, died in Beverly Hills, of an ap- parent heart attack. He was 85. little of of Philip's zest for the strenuous life. At Gordonstoun (440 miles from London), Charles' life will be strenuous indeed. The 13-year- old Prince will live With 60 boys several of them scholarship stu- dents from poor families) in a tidy one-story wooden building next to a ruined windmill on the Gordonstoun grounds. He will sleep in a room with eleven other boys on a plain iron bedstead and be awakened at 7:05 every morning (except Sunday when he can sleep until 8). Then Charles will go for a brisk early morning run follow- ed by an even brisker cold shower. (the first of two each day). After breakfast (the Gor- donstoun diet is heavy on meat and boiled potatoes and strict about no eating between meals), he'll begin his studies. Following lunch, Charles will spend a Spar- tan rett period listening to mu- sic or to a master reading out loud, Some British educators con- sider Gordonstoun (whose . an- nual f — he of $1,453 makes it for non-scholarship students — the most expensive school, in Britain) a rugged cross between a Victor- ian orphanage and a Scottish commando camp, But Robert Chew, , the 54-year-old headmas, ter of Gordonstoun, insists that the purpose of his school is not so Much to build bodies "but to' build character." "Wu are different from other public schools in that the ethers , have 'no mountains, no sea or coastline. They have none of ottr outlets," explains 'Chevi. "Our mountain rescue training, our seamanship, our coast - guard work, our fire-fighting brigades are essential ingredients of our character building through ser- vice te others.' Ultimately, the good natured Prince. Charles Will probably ad- just. to this, rigorous regimen, Xurt Hahn, the German -refugee Who founded -Gordonstoun in 1934, thinks the school will bene- fit both the future King and the country, "Kingship," he says,. "is a healing force if it does riot grow up in the enervating itt,, illosphere o f privilege." ' A t Gordonatettn, the privileges are few. — From NtWSWBEIt.. Q: iVll you ,please settle big ar'g'iilnent some of us are having? Is a Irian supposed itt- VaYS to reilieVe his hat in an elevator'.'.)' A. Only in the elevator of hotel, apartinent house, or chili:. He may, of course, do so also in da epartment Store' or office building but convention does 'not require thito Tic-Tac-Toe With By Glenn On* of the finest pencil-and- paper recreation activities is the old standby tic-tac-toe. This game has one drawback, how- ever, and that is that games be- tween experienced, seasoned players are apt to result in ties. This fact has limited the game's usefulness, and, because of this, it is played more by younger children than by older persons. It is possible, however, to change tic-tae-toe into a more involved game without destroy- ing its essential characteristics. This tends to introduce strategi-, cal considerations, makes genies longer and forces players to do eome Wiens thinking before making their moves. An Added 'Twist a.,Dahlexn- In order Id adapt tic-tac-toe to adult play, an extra vertical and art extra horizontal bar are added to the traditional playing area, increasing the number of possible playing squares from nine to 16, A scoreboard for X's and O's 75 drawn next to the playing area, since points are scored in the Modified version, X begins the game, but, unlike regular tic-tac-toe, he takes two moves in one turn.. O follows, and he, too, is allowed two Moves, `K then takes his next two mites'. 0 his, and so on, un- til each has had fair turns; and the 16-square playing area is fill- ed, Points are scored, one for each tow of three, two for each MEDICAL POST'S ECZEMA SALVE SANISii the torment of dry cozen* rashes and weeping skin trotilS1911. poet's pezeine Salvo will not dtsappont you, itching :.raiding and burping pea ma, cone, ringworm, pimples and ff eczema will respond readily .to h stainless, odorless Ointment regarding of how stubborn or hopeless they seem, sent post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $4.50 PER .IAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St, Clair Avenue goo Toronto OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL, Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good wages Thousands of eueeesaful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated catalogue Free Write or Call Marvel Hairdressing School 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto eranches: 44 King St W , HamiltOn 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS Tested, guaranteed, mailed, in plain parcel in- cluding catalog, free with trial assort, mont, 36 for $2.00 (finest sitialitY), Western Distributers, Box 2.4-Tie Re- gina, Sask. OVERWEIGHT? A safe, effective reducing plan with "Way-Les" Tablets. Medically approved.. 1 month's supply $7 00 LYon's Drugs. Dept 32, 471 Danforth Ave- Toronto. PHOTOGRAPHY NEW ROLL OF FILM, with each film developed, printed or mounted. Black & White' Moil Film 8 exp. $1.00, 12 exp. $1.25 35mm 20 exp, $1.85, 36 exp., $2.05 Kenlacolor 8 ex. $3.75, 12 ex. $4.75, 20 ex. $5.75 Anscochrome Eictuchrome 20 exp. 52,85 Get 8mm Color Movie . Film Mel pro,. cessing $2.94 Money order or C.O.D. Photo Service, Box 10, Midland, Ont. PROPERTIES FOR SALE $8000 cash will buy 198 acres facing Hwy 69 fourteen miles south Parry Sound, Hunting with trout stream On. property. Call or write R. Harris, 11.0 Dundas Hwy East, Cooksvllle. Phone No. 277-3086. POULTRY CRATES FOR SALE HAULING poultry? Do it with Stad Poultry Shipping Crates, Write today for your free folder and price list, Stad Manufacturers, Box 53, St. Jacobs, On- feria. TREES SCOTCH and Austrian Pine, Colorado Blue Spruce, White Spruce, Ornatnens tals and seed. Seven varieties Nut Seedlings, Keith Somers, Ttllsonbtirg, Ontario. TRADE SCHOOLS ACETYLENE, electric welding and. Argon courses. Canada Welding Can-non and Balsam N., Hamilton, Shop LI. 4.1284. Res. LI, 5.8283. ISSUE 10 — 1062 row of four (a row 'of four is nothing more than two rows of three, sharing,two marks in com- mon). Vertical, horizontal, and diagonal 'rows are possible for scoring, as in regular tic-tac-toe, The player with the most points when the playing area Is filled is the winner. Strategical considerations in, the modified game are both ole Pensive and deferisiv41, as eao* player must plan his scoring' strategy carefully, but must alib, try to stop his opponent from scoring. The illustrationa show lIt move-by-move breakdown of it hypothetical game and are biAk tended to demonstrate a typlcs1 gable Situation, (Reprinted. front Retreat, the Magazine of the Ittereatio hloveineht:) tia In The Royci( Family Father Knows nest ! A scudding wind slashed across the Firth of Moray in northern Scotland one day recently as a blue-hulled sailboat tacked round the end of a cement jetty, At the helm, a bareheaded teen-ager gingerly guided the 24-foot open boat toward calmer waters. Then he and seven other young crew members lowered the sail, man- ned the oars, and neatly brought her alongside the jetty. From his vantage point amidships, red- bearded George Shaw, sailing master at nearby Gordonstoun (pronounced Gordons-tune) prep school, Erunted: "Well clone, chaps." Sometime this summer, a new boy will come aboard the Gor- donstoun sailboat to learn the skills of seamanship and hope- fully to earn an occasional "well done" from George Shaw. He is Charles. Windsor, the Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall, Lord of the isles, and a cleecend- ant of a long line of able sailors. As the future King of England, he will be expected to know the lore of the sea as well as the lay: of the land. Gordonstoun's maritime tradi- tions — more of its graduates enter the Royal Navy and the British merchant marine than enter universities — played a part in its choice as Prince Charles' school. Queen Elizabeth- reportedly favored aristocratic Eton, located near the Royal. Castle at Windsor. Charles him- self was supposed to have pre- ferred Charterhouse (in Surrey) primarily because his best friend, David Daukes, enrolled there last fall, But Prince Charles' energetic father had the final say. An old Gordonitoute boy himself (and a World War II destroyer of- ficer), Prince Philip wants Charles 'to share his own devo- tion to yachting and other- phy- sical pursuits. Although Charles plays a lively, if inexpert, game of soccer, he, has so far shown NOSE MUFF--Stan DeBruler, director of a Snoqualmie, ski school, doesn't believe in putting his nose into anything that doesn't concern him, such as the cold weather. He wears a knitted nose cover while giving instructionS. 'et CLASS14 JED ADVERTISING