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The Brussels Post, 1962-10-18, Page 6USING- HIS HEAD — Giovanni Bortot, 36, not only eats fire and swallows swords, but he also hits his head against rocks. Here he's shown entertaining children of Rome, NURSE* WANIVEPt tairr•ies 8 certifietil mu*. assistants required for 52' bed hos- pital - treed salary Acconnuodattoth •Nurses" residence, ,Apply- Superintendent gINCARDINE GENERAL HOSPITAL'. Kincardine, Out '" opp.oarunuties FOR^ KEN AND, WOMEN BE A (HAIRDRESSER .10IN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Grout thvortanitiv Loam trairdres5ins Pleasant dignlfictl profession good, wages TheusaildS of successfut marvel Graduates America's Oreatest System rintstrated Catalogue Proe‘ Write 01 eau Marvel Hairdressing School) 356 8 1410 r St W, torPnto ifranche$ 44 King St. W. Hamilton, 72 Rideau Street Ottawa akt$I-N_E$$ OPPORTIMMES FOR SALE ).cicala; storage & auteaer ,aqatanualt,' 230 Keeprite Sleet 'Ldefters, waxing tank, 2 Defiance 00111Prding scales, frozen food counter, Rebbart meat grisicter (Iv; Berkel meat sheer, Berke/ power slIwt shelving, meat bloelc; • kettle stove, Oriffith smoke- home, Nit., tiottal Cash regtSter, Bestir pressure system, Esse oil burner, Gilson furnace. Write Box 347 Tavistock, oat. • NEW INVENTIONS NEW PRODUCTS - MONEY NEW IDEAS WE develop, finance and sell. ANY PROFITABLE IDEA HU 9.4443, BOX 154, POSTAL, STA, "K" TORONTO 12 Write SCQPF. • DOGS SALE . FOR . FOR sale Maltese puppies registered, From Canadian Chem/ADD Stra and Thuile 1100.00 and UP, E, Bellisle, 990 Roper Ave., • Lorne Park, Ord, Phone oil 8.2759, ALL my ONVI1 breeding Meek Sr Tans- 2 females - 1 nude, Hi yrs.,. heautleS., -females $30.00. males $40,09, Reg HMO:fel; pups 2 males, 2 females, 4 months. Sire Vatighans and Pilot breeding. Dams side strong in Old Drum breed, Bred for coon, will make .„ good deer or fox dogs $30,00 each, Clifford Symington- Watford, Ont., RR No, 3 DAIRY EQUIPMENT 23 CAN woods bulk milk cooler, Hen- man vacuum pump and pipeline. all in near new corWition. Russ .t1 Miller, Route 1, Markham, Ont. FARM HELP WANTED WANTED. man for large dairy farm. Idust be fully experienced. Modern house, or good home, Niagara district. State wages, John Ronyn' RR. 1 Stevensville, Ont. FARMS FOR SALE 400 ACRE dairy farm. 70 registered Rol. steins, machinery, Near Ottawa. Two houses, Hydro, water heese$ and barn, One hOuse Wily modernized. ideal for - partners. Box 255, 123.18th Street, New Toronto, Ont. DAIRY FARM Must he sold to settle estate, 230 acres, 185 plowable, two tractors and truck. All power machinery. Modern home and barn. Two silos, Forty milking claws, twelve yearlings, three cables, has nine can contract, This can easily be increased. Farm IS twenty miles' north of Cornwall and forty miles south of Ottawa. $10,000 down, the balance at 5% interest Contact Mrs. Anna Van Egmond. RR No, 2, Moose Creek, Ont., ' phone 20-R.6. AFTER DEATH WHAT? Reality of the Spiritual life revealed in, HEAVEN and- HELL, by SWEDEN. RORG; PPM $1. HELEN KELLER tells the story of he; Christian faith, to RELIGION; library copy .03e paper 55t. Send to Leonard' Cole; Goderich, Ont. PHOI °STAMPS FAvoitiox picture? TOO copies on photostamps. For letters, aards,, cations. Ftotti, any size photo, nugativet. Original returned unharmed, $2.004 Crestas, 'Box. 3143, San Mateo, Cali:, fornia. 4-,-• PHEASANTS AND, W'ATE'RFOWL PHEASANT' breeders, 7.95 trio. Other brirds,, waterfowl, Eggs-adults. Northern; Pheasant Farms,, Hilton, Beach, °Marto VACATION IN FLORIDA RENT modern 40 ft, trailer, quiet park, available October-FebruarY. R. Cotton, 11 Battram, St., Thomas, English Urged as World Tort- gue.--Headline, We wonder if even that would induce some • Canadians to 'take' the trouble to learn it. PATENTS CANADIAN patent for sale, or royalty. Nationally advertised and sold in- U.S, Wanted by every tvoinan, Retails at $1. Write Royal Scot, Waterbury, Conn,. —._-.-- PERSONAL ... ----- JESUS is coming again (this time) to , rule the world! 'Be prepared and re, Joice confident hope, For free liter- ature write -Box nil Brantford, Ont. UNWANTED HAIR VANISHED away with SAGA-FELO. SAGA-PEL0 is different it does not dissolve or remove' hair - from the SW., face, but penetrates-and retards growth. of UNWANTED- IIA113, Lor.Beer- Lab.. Ltd , Ste, S, 079 Granville St., Vaneett.. veg 2, B.C.' STAMPS. U.S. Used, FAMOUS Americans at $2.601. ARMY and Navy at .30. WASHINGTON Bicentennial at 44k R. Shortei, R.D.No.4; Middletown, Cl Y. ROY S. WILSON la Richmond Street West. Coronto NEW ISSUES CANADA B.C. & PCIREIGN RAPHIN GIBBONS SCOTT - MINIWS .HAHRIS & GROSSMAN " ALBUMS IN STOCK COLLECTIONS ALSO PURCHASED SWINE - `CONSIGNMENT SALE "THE Ontario Landrace Swine Associa- tion will hold their 11th Consignment Sale at Brubacher's Sales Arena, Bridgeport, on Saturday, October-20th. at 1,30 sharp. Bred gilts, open gilts, premium 'boars will be offered. All guaranteed breeders, and government Inspected. Catalogues from Mrs, Dorothy Simmons, R.R. No, 1, London, Ont. .Telephone 652.3567 TRUCKS FOR SALE "BRAND NEW" 1962 Mobil-Lift Fork. Lift trucks-3,000 and 4,000 pound cap- acity. List prices range from a5,270.00 to 56,045.00. This special offering at 20% discount, United Bearing Co. of Call- Sarnia, Inc., 756 E, Washington Blvd., Los Angeles 21, California, U.S,A, VACATION RESORTS sAtty'S SALLIES Registered • Physiotherapist FOR sparkling new department in 330-bed general hospital' in raawartna Lakes district. Pleasant working conditions. SALARY in accOrdance with education- and experience. APPLY ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT PETERBOROUGH CIVIC HOSPITAL PETERBOROUGH, ONT. HELP WANTED - MALE COMPOStTORS. LINOTYPE OPERATORS MONOTYPE KEYBOARD OPERATORS NEW England's fastest growing trade typographic plant needs men with job shop experience to handle greatly Sn. creased work load, Good pay, good working Conditions. These are perman- ent all-year-round jobs with a real fit. tore for competent, dependable men who can hold their own in a fast troy. ing operation. WRITE: GENERAL MANAGER Eastern Typesetting CO. 433 CHURCH ST., HARTFORD, CONN. OR CALL COLLECT: HARTFORD 525.8276 LIVESTOCK FOR SALE CHOICE 200 Hereford yearling steers, around 750 lbs, Kenzie Swelger, Dobbin 'ton, Ontario, phone 338-3-1 Chesley, FOR sale 300 choice Hereford steers varying in weight. from 700 to 850 Ms, Included are 50 from the Church Ranch. Apply Willard Calhoun Dobbinton, Ont, Phone 338W3 Chesley MEDICAL PEOPLE -ARE TALKING ABOUT THE GOOD RESULTS FROM TAKING DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS AND NEURITIS MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 EXPRESS COLLECT. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin ,troubles, Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint You Etching, scalding and burning acre- ma• ache ringworm, pimples and foot eczema, will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST `S REMEDIES 2865 St, Clair Avenue East Toronto NURSES WANTED AititAidNMEN't fitituftuffed, Nelson C, beUirtt :fnond tries to shield face from: photographers as FBI dgeht$ 16tid hire froth Federal courthouse ih New York after toigrunent on charges, of toti§pliiiij tt7 064:Cciit 0,S, tlefitia tetrets t0 Auttiti. NEW MANAGER — Ed Lopat, Kansas City pitching coach, agreed to a two-year contract as manager of the Athletics, succeeding Hank Bauer, who resigned. Westerns," Unfortunately, when the U.S. began talking seriously of arti- ficial satellites seven years ago, a spate of puerile space novels was turned out by opportunist hack writers. When the sput- niks went up to prove reality more exciting than this fiction, sci-fi sales slumped badly. Sci- ence fiction, many A,merica.ns decided, was a less than respect- able literary form. "Now inter- est is widening again,", Clarke reports. "People realize that the best science-fiction writers know what they're talking about." Baldis h, 55-year-old Robert Heinlein, who in 1940 wrote a story describing t h e A-bomb's radioactive fall-out, is a case in point.. Not a trained scientist himself, he subscribes to 60 sci- entific journals and often checks the plausibility of his stories with practicing scientists. Sci-fi subject matter is also widening to encompass the non- physical sciences. "The distance between man and the other planets," says Bradbury, "is not as groat as the distance between a man's left and' right ear." At one extrein6, there are rather Gothic tales of extrasensory per- ception; at the other, biting sa- tires on the ostrich-like manner in which men are facing Space Age culture. In the tradition of George. Orwell's "1984," and Al- dam Huxley's "Brave New World," the new crop of science writers a ' tackling — some- times dully, often iinaginatively alWays boldly — every, seeks- Scientific problem from sublim- inal advertising to how a per- feet 0 r a 1 , contraceptive might ohange sexual mores. Perhapli as Frederik Pehl, one of the Masters Of 'the new sci-fi, observers, "it's a pity that tax- payers don't read science fic- tion, They might know more about the age they're buying." INT THE HORSE'S MOUTH Pioneer, art Italian horse which competed in the recent Dublin international horse show, was fit- ted With four gold upper teeth before participating in the event. Why? Because a short time be- fore that event he had fallen at a Watet jump in. Oeneva, knocking out four of his ovan teeth. Pioneer's gold teeth remind One of the $160 gold tooth fitted for a valuable pedigree 8iarnese cat. The loath he had lost in, an accident was One of the impor- tant teeth he used. for Jeering food, and Withotit it he had ex- perienced difficulty hi eating. normally. Palte teeth ',for animals Were a rarity' lip to a ./eW year's ago, but ,,abler 'YOrkshlre bulldog, was , the firohd owner 61 ti top Set, i§stt 42 1064 Kids If' You're W1.60; Sttly in Uhoet Who lakaa _aanamot.,a twin, te;.eg4i. _dio: not well hold. thow c4stumary ad- vance gathering • in Memarial Stadium., but With the aid of -television, met separately m -Khoo] buildings -7 the pubiie schools' oeW academie yoar be- gins, The weather was right; the ream'anged bus schedules were perhaps as nealr right as they ever are, considering the ln- evitable collision with dawn- -t a w tl office worker demands; even the - figures • an overcrowd" Mg and part-time schedules are no more alarming than on other .opining dilys in the postwar past. For t•he beginning ten and the younger' anti of the scale generally, the day is one of emotion, of fears, joys or other experiences to be extract- ed at nightfall as 'far as is par- entally possible, For older stu- dents a principal significance of the day is to be -found in no school book or lesson plan, ex-• cept perhaps in a course on cur-, rent events. The first day Of classes happens to coincide with the latest einployment report from the Bureau of LaboOr Sta- tistics, Assuming that this 'year's youngsters are as career-minded as last year's and those of any year in the present atingspnere, the import of the .job or no job pioture is worth a • moment or two removed from homework time. The prospect is that well be- taro the present school year ends, this will be a nation of 70,000,000 jobs. But unless the economy experiences drastic gains, the labour force will also go on containing close to 4,000,- 000 unemployed, .Some part of these, having never' had jobs, is. hard to classify,. but Statistical analysis lists a large percentage as unskilled or ,semi-skilled. A fundamental change in the •ria- ture of this country's work farce is the decline. in demand for men and women without train- ing,. 'The youngster who,. once past the excitement of opening day, finds schcal 'tedious' or a teacher uncongenial,- Or .•lessons, in; the stepped-up curricula • of the mis- sile age, strenuous, must none- theless' take a hard-eyed view of -his personal future. To 'drop out of school -in the. Hope of going to work is an increasingly wrong- headed action. To entertain, fur- ther, any realistic hope of "stand- ang, out among .the 70,000,000, nowadays, -.means that -staying in. school' and merely drifting along IS hot enough, For many of the next, generation's job-holders, opening 'day is also on the order of a starting gun. — The Eve-• ning Sun (Baltimore). How Can I? By Roberta Lee • Q. How can I remove some mildew stains from cloth? A. Wash, and while still' damp, immerse the article in hydrogen peroxide, or in a solution of chlorinated lime. While the spot is damp, expose to the sun's rays. If the material is colored, test a scrap piece to determine whether or not the dye will be affected, Q. How can I remedy a faulty shower head that sprays water over the shower curtain and onto my bathroom floor and walls? A. Cut out the center of a plas- tic kitchen bowl cover, slip this over the shower head, and it will direct the spurting water into a mainstream, Q. Vlease suggest a good way to pfesS a pair of men's unvvash- able trousers. A. One good, -safe way is to cover the trousers with news .% paper and, use your` iron on ,bop of this. In this way, there's . no TieBd to Wait for the ,trousers to dry because they haven't really been steamed. FARMS FOR ter,s.Thrignicti i)aoeirle4 n20.0 06 moata a2,11S"Imiles101,n1114.vote i t.l'll'eNevitnnnkr...ea.11;4gbet°acres, solld brick mod, loam with Alaletbt4ensICtulea rrtin4r1°;:tiviniCill Dtc1).elou:gi $714.rt-Ysl000 house, 11 rotans,, pioneer vintage, hydro, avowal, con- dition. Large modern ,cattle asras, 150' fertile aereS., geed hash, two spring Write John cio James O. Gilbert Realtor, 1995 Kipllnq AYenue,,N. ROO*, Ont• or paii. 5205. FOR MISCELLANEOUS FOR 'sale diesel and Portable Sawmill, diesel suitable for feed mill, both in excellent coadition will sell separately, Reasonable, For details eontactt Roy Toltley, Tweed, Ontario HELP WANTED Medical Laboratory Technician; Required by 55 Bed General Hospital. Attractive working conditions and per,- sonnel policies Reply stating gualifiea• tions, salary expected and date avail• able to: stce Aursldbkmarinrilinsget,rraotiotr, asrpliot ,a1 Science Fiction And Its Followers John Nr1/00(1)t Wcis Fort Worker . . Weaiey'a industry was almost withnut parallel. The mere out- lines of his work are Sufficient to Make one gasp with astonish, anent. During his itinerant min- istry, he travelled (mostly On )hOraebaCkl Over a quarter of a million miles (a distance equal to nine times round the world), preached no less than 52.400 tunes between 1738, when he re- turned from Georgia, and 1791, when he preached his last sermon eight daYS before he died, In addition he organized and superintended hundreds of socie- ties in every part of the kingdom, wrote 233 books and pamphlets and, helped in the writing and editing of two hundred more, kept a journal and private short- hand diary, carried on a huge correspondence, organized vari- ous forms of relief for the poor and unemployed and had always time to talk or pray with any- one who needed him. "Looking at-his traveling the marvel is how he found time to write, and look- ing at his books, the marvel is how he found time of preach." He was always moving and yet in the midst of ceaseless toils, he betrayed no more bustle than a planet in its course, His mission was too great to allow time for trifles. Rising with the lark, trav- eling with the sun, he always acted -In harmony with his, awn - known utterances. "The world is my parish!" He reap- pears in nearly half a hundred towns for thirty times and more, while he records forty visits each to Santerbury, Bolton, Chester, Manchester, Birmingham, New- castle-on-the-Tyne, over a hun- dred to Ringswood, one hundred and seventy-five to Bristol, and two hundred recorded visits to London. He sent forth preachers to proclaim the love of religion to every inhabitant throughout the land while he himself regu- larly ranged the three kingdoms and Wales "stirring the stagnant current of human. life." His labors in Ireland were al- ' most incredible, All .over the isle he went preaching every day and often twice or thrice a day, not only in Methodist meeting houses, but in factories, in bowling greens, in assembly rooms, in court houses, in barns, in sloping meadows, in shady orchards, in groves and avenues, in linen halls, in churchyards and streets — everywhere he had a chance. We know with certainty that min- ute as are the details of his jour- nals he by no means mentions every sermon that he delivered and every society that he visited. — From "John Wesley, Friend of the. People," by Oscar Sherwin. IT PAYS TO USE OUR CLASSIFIED COLUMNS DRIVE WITH CARE! "I'm taking the Fifth (er) Commandment or something like that." For many readers, the love of science fiction is also a kind of madness. Held in its grip are philosopher Bertrand Russell, the poet W. H. Auden, and Cor- nell as-tron:Tiler Thomas Gold, Science fiction, or can be define d broadly as short stories and novels concerned, in the classical tradition of H. G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds," with how scientific discoveriea might ageot people in the fu- ture. It is also popular among university students an d young engine,era. "When I go out to Cal Tech, I'm a celebrity," sal- t author Ray Brad-bury says. "They all know my work," What is the appeal that draws an estimated U.S. audience of 500,000 to the nation's six sci- ence - fiction magazines and to the 250 or so hard-cover and paperback titles in print? For some addicted scientists, sci-fi is a form of occupational therapy. The hard core of sci- ence is founded. on rigidly con- trolled experiments which often fail. But sci-fi is "a topical fairy tale where all scientists' 'experi- ments succeed," comments Isaac. Asimov, the biochemist whose own novel "I, Robot" is a classic of the genre. Science fiction can also serve -as a sounding board for ideas that don't fit 'into the hidebound formula of the scientific paper. The physicist Leo Szilard, for example blueprinted a program for nuclear disarmament by let- ting a tankful of talking dol- phins -advance the plan, and Wernher von Braun, the moon- rocket man, detailed "The Mars Project" fictionally almost a de- cade ago, ("The Expert Dream- ers," an anthology of stories by scientists edited by sci-fi author Frederik Pohl, will be published by Doubleday this month.) "A critical reading of science fiction is essential training for anyone wishing to look more than ten years ahead," insists author Arthur Clarke, who last month was awarded the an- nual IC,alingo prize for pdpularri- ration of science, "Not enough administrators a n el 'politicians know enough about science, I wish they'd take 'an armful of science fiction on their holidays instead of detective stories and HITCH IN TIME — The band directos had to -take a few fast stitches in- hem of coat and trousers worn• by sixth-grader Cary HartzMan so he could play with marching band at half-time of a fabtbali game, REGISTERED NURSES REQUIRED immediately for small mod-ern hospital in northern Ontario. cellent 'personnel policies and wbrking conditions, Residence accommedation and usual facilities available in Ptogres. sive community, Salary a346.00 to $422.00 Monthly, UP to $50 00 allowance to- wards travelling' expenses to Smooth Rockfalls after satisfactory employment has been established. Please give tele- phone, number if possible. . ApdIy ARITIBI PTOoviteRrszonpeAlPECIReticarothinieptiAtNY, LIMITED SMOOTH ROCK FALLS, ONTARIO When Skin Itch Drives You MAD Nero is it clean stainless mane- ,trating antiseptic—knew' all over Canada as 11100NE'S FLIER iL7,5 OIL—th at dries right in and brings Swift sure relief front the almost Unbearable itching and distress. Its action is so powerfully pene- trating that the itching is prompt- ly eased, and with continued use your troubles may soon be over. Use RSInTLALD OIL night and Morning as directietts advise fut. and full week, It is safe to use and failure is rare Indeed, MOONI0`S Elli,l.F.IRALD OIL earl be obtained in the original bottle at any modern; drug store. VACATION VOYAGES VISIT EUROPE .AT 25% LESS NOW yOu can teavol.fo Europe at titweid.teip, exeuralon rates, or brinb your deOr ones 10 tailada' for a Chriettna9 Which they --add you Will rtotret forget. Or treat youraeli to btitslAllij "IiME-OtYcJiMlife't trulao • .tho.scenief telakitt; Carefree way bieeein4 the won der Spots of the Wend, Of .pian to visit Europe next spring in the New Look" 0AftMANIA and Fl ANCONIA . • :With air conditioning' throughout, Lido recrealleit decks, Outdoor0361§ --even al-M.41st hidlit ctutif Every atlantic OrtiSSilib Will Offer efts tdititerte and beriveilienee, PAV- LATtit. See your Agent Corner' toy ttsei Taranto' Out Last 6aili.lidt from Montreal` and chiebea, to Greenock, Utibt000l Nov, -to Cobh, l e Havre,: Scitfthampton Greenock, Livetpool Also fatt, trotieht oiiihg.§ from' New NARO CUNARD EAGLE!' FASTEST THROW* SERVICE *CP -362-291i LONDON vie NASSAU, find MORNIUDA from atauLAR SERVICE MAW-NASSAU. ckzk:KX:) Cmmivo