The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-04-18, Page 16e 2 -Crossroad* -April 18, 1974 -
CHESS TIME
Game
causes
tension
By JOSEPH MILL BROWN
Shortly after Boris Spassky
won his first game against
Robert Byrne at the Candi-
dates Chess Quarter-fmal in
San Juan, Puerto Rico, a very
usual thing happened: Byrne
became ill. In Moscow, Ana-
toly Karpov won his game
against Lev Polugaievsky
and, lo and behold, the latter
too needed a doctor.
Both incidents confirmed a
chess verity: there is no such
thing as a healthy loser. (Af-
ter a loss to Tigran Petrosian,
Bobby Fischer also came
down with a cold and a fever.)
In other sports it's possible
to incure a cauliflower ear or
a fractured rib; nothing seri-
ous. But in chess the emo-
tional stress is so tremendous
a loser may often require se-
questration in a psychiatric
clinic.
The psychological aspects
of chess are the pride and joy
of themedical world. Dr. Karl
Menninger described chess -
players as plotting murderouS
campaigns of patricide, mat-
ricide, fratricide, regicide,
and mayhem.
Consequently, it's con-
ceivable that the last German
air raid of World War I was
engineered by a chessplayer.
It destroyed the home of En-
gland's legendary J.H. Black-
burne, who insisted that the
nslight deafness and loss of
--nerve he suffered were re-
sponsible for the diminution of
his chess sltills. (After all, he
was only. 76!)
Chess inspires many
interesting medical theories.
The colorful' Dutch grand-
master .Jan Hein Donner
claims that, of some 4,000
chessplayers he knows, only
one - Russia's Victor Korch-
noi -- has ulcers. And, despite
the fact that the game is
played maitily by Men. against
• other men, there is not a
single Imam homosexual in
.chess- a statistic that should
relieve and enlighten most
• ,American parents.
thne&ses contracted over
the chessboard defy medical
history. When Siegbert Tar-
rasch lost a world champion-
ship match to Emanuel
Lasker at Dusseldorf, Ger-
many. in 1908, he blamed it on
his sensitivity to the sea - a
very rare disease when you
consider that Dusseldorf is 170
miles from the nearest beach.
Denmark's Bent Larsen
once declared that "simul-
taneous displays only become
a physical strain after 100
boards," but that may have
been because he began to lose
a few games thereafter. For
some grandmasters the loss
of only one can be tratunatic
enough, as happened in the
famous (or infamous) game
played by Tigan Petrosian at
the 1956 Candidates Tourna-
ment, in Amsterdam.
In a winning position
against the brilliant David
Bronstein, Petrosian left his
queen en prise (and then re-
signed) after a classic demon-
stration of chess blindness.
(See below.)
Many theories have since
been promulgated for
Petrosian's oversight, all of
them out of a handbook for
witch doctors. No one sug-
gested it may have been due
to an extra -rich diet - a pos-
sibility, considering that his
second, Andte Lilienthal,
came to Amsterdam fortieed
with 18 cans of caviar.
Jewish folklOre tells us that,
in the Middle Ages, pregnant
women were allowed to in-
dulge in a game of chess when
it was forbidden to everyone
else. Which proves what
every player " knows in-
stinctively: that a good hot
game of chess often heals the
soul and tleanses the stomach
more effectively than a sour
pickle, a pint of icetcream, or
an eneina.
Amsterdam -
1956
Tigran Petrosian
(USSR)
David Bronstein
(USSR)
KING'S INDIAN
DEFENSE
1. P-QB4
2. NQB3
3. P-KN3
4. B -N2
5. N -B3
6.0-0
• 7.P -Q4
8. Px.P
9.B -K3
10. Q -B1
11. R-Ql
12. B -R6
N-ICB3
P-03
B -N2
0-0
P -B4
N -B3
P -Q3
PxP
N -Q2
N -Q5
P -K4
Q -R4
ROSSWORD
• • B A. C. Gordon
' ACROSS
1 - Musical instru-
ment
11 - Conforms
12 - Everyone indi-
vidually (abb.)
14 - To schedule
16 - Emergency
, Service (abb.)
17 - Paired
18 - Tease (slang)
19 - A brace (abb.)
20 - Yearn
21 - A visionary
23 - British award
24 - Circle segment
26 - Tree
27 - Bulgarian city
28- Greek letter
29 - Petty cash (abb.)
30- Transport Ship
(.bb.)
31 - PrepOsition
32 - A fabric
33 - Man's name
34- Baba
35- Preposition
36 - Vibrating
38 - Short. blunt
ObJecr
39 - College degree
40 - Manpower
42 -Evict
43 - Metric unit
of area
44 - Brazilian state
45 - Abraham's
birthplace
46- To turf previously
48 - A token ci regard
DOWN
2 - Of a type of
poetry
3 - Literary
composftion
4 - Musical note
MUUMMBEEIEllg
• alAUWElti CM CI
MUM Clia NULEAU
MMM 1E10 0MHO M
• OOMMOMMO WH
UMUI MUU MAIM
• IDU EU MU
0111119570 WEJU WEW
•KI-EIPMCGEED-M
M OMOU UE1 MEM
monoa CO mum
u JLECWWU
WWWLEWEWUMU
5 - Musical
dramas
6- Little letters
7 -Capital Stock
- Rough sheds
- Recent
- Modernized
- Promoting
intelligence
15 - Roman deuce
17 - To relate
wrongly
19 - Tranquil
20 -Greek letter
22. - Literary
Hour (abb.)
23 - Small vessel
for liquids
25 -Destroy
29 - Inferior
racehorses
33 - Cold (chem.)
34 - Militaryfleet
37 - Weight unit
38 - Pour forth
(var.) •
41 - Suffix of
Comparison
43 - Fortify
44 - Hawaiian dish
46- Greek letter
41- Tin (chem.)
.8
9
10
13
!Crossroads
Published every Wednesday as the big, action cross-country section in
The Listowel Banner, The Wingham Advance -Times and The Mount
Forest Confederate'. Wenger Bros. Limited, publishers, Box 390,
Wingham.
Barry Wenger, Pres. Robert 0. Wenger, Sec .-Treas,
Display and Classified ad deadline -
Tuesday, week prior to publication date.
.REPRESENTATIVES
Canadian Community
Newspapers Association,
Suite 51,
2 Bloor St., West,
Toronto 962-4000
Ontario Weekly
Newspaper Assoc.,
127 George St.,
Oakville 684-0184
13. BxB
14. Mal
16. N -Q2
16. P -K3
17. P-QR4
18, P -R4
19. N -Q5
20. P -N3
21. N-KB3
22. Q -B3
23. P -K4
24.N -Q2
25. NxP
26. R -Q2
27.P -R5
28. P-QN4
29. QxP
30. QR -Q1
31. R -K1
32.Q -R3
33. R -N2
34. R( K1 )-QN1
35.0;61-446
36. N -N5
37. Resigns
KxB
RAM
POO
N -K3
P414
P -B4
K -R2
R -B2
QAD
Q -R1
PreP
Q-112
K -R1
R -B1
N -Q5
RAP
N-KB4
N -Q5
N -Q133
N445
N-QB3
N -Q5
N-KB4
NxQ
NO. 8 HWY. BETWEEN HWY. 401
AND KITCHENER 653-5784
Shelf Supports
One quick and easy way to
build some rough shelving is to
support the ends,of each shelf on
corrugated fasteners, procure
at any hardware store and
driven part way into the vertical
framework. After your shelves
have rested on these fastene.rs
for some time, the 'fasteners will
become embedded inithe shelve -
and prevent their slipping off
CHARMING MUZAK
Muzak, which began sup-
plying music via telephone
wire in the 1930s, operates-
throughout the United States
and in 25 countries around
world.
ONE OF THE GREAT SIGHTS of the eastern Caribbean, and a landmark for centuries
for mariners sailing the region, is shown in top one of these two photos. The inverted twin
volcanic cones of St. Lucia -the Pitons, GroS and Petit -rise a half -mile above the
• Caribbean Sea near the little town of Soufriere, the capital of the island when it was, held
by the French. St. Lucia changed hands between English and French more than a dozen
times in its history before it became- British more than a century and a half ago. The
Gallic touch remains, however -in the French place names, island patois and the influ-
ence of the Catholic Church. Below is Marina Bay, one of the faliorite havens with today's
yachtsmen sailing the Caribbean. It is located in the harbor at Castries, now the capital of
St. Lucia.
YOUR HANDVVR1TING TELLS
•Long loops show
•need for change
By DOROTHY
ST. JOHN JACKSON
-CiAiftedMatiter
iphoaiialyst
Dear Dorothy:
Two years ago, my husband
Went into a business which
calls for a woman's touch. I
work six days a week. I love
the work, but I hate myself for
getting so involved. I must be
there all the time for the de-
tailed party plannhig end of it.
I come twine so exhausted.
Somethnes I wonder if 1. can
face another day. I am so
tired all the dine.
D.D.
Dear D.D.:
All day you're revving your
motor in neutral. Your whole
system resists being "tied
down". Change and variety is
a must in your life, seen in the
very long lower loops. ,
In fact, you have so many
things you want to do that
nothing definite is really de-
fined, seen in the tangling \of
the upper strokes with . the
lower ones. So, you just keep
spinning.
oulike the feeling of In -
e, seen in the large
loop on the capital I, but you
1 1 :
H. GORDON
GREEN
. . . .
According to a recent issue of
Viva magazine, when evangelist
Billy Graham flies to Europe, he
buys two adjacent first class
seats -one of which stays empty.
Which, says Viva, symbolizes
that Graham is flying high on at
least two continents as the
richest, most publicized and most
politically influential Bible
thumper in all the long history of
religious salesmanship.
A former Fuller Brush sales-
man, Graham now heads a multi-
million dollar empire which takes
at least a score of accountants to
keep track of the money, plus a
crew of public relations consult-
ants, legal advisors, road -show
managers, lighting and sound
technicians, make-up specialists,
"crowd motivators" (whatever
they are). And, oh yes, let's not
forget the bodyguards. While the
Bible which Graham delights to
take to the nations repeatedly
promises that the Lord will
deliver the true man of God. from
all enemies as well as from "the
pestilence that Walkethin dark-
ness and the destruction that
wasteth at noonday", Billy
Graham not only has a group of
bodyguards off his team but a dog
trainer who supervises a trio of
Doberman Pinchers which are
trained to kill, whenever they get
the right command. That com-
mand, incidentally, will be given
to them in German.
All of which seems to add up to
a man who is either a hypocrite,
or someone who is as confused
and as inconsistent as the rest of
us. Yet over the years Billy has
been a public habit with the White
House and with Messrs. Nixon
and Agnew especially. It was no
secret that Graham regarded
Nixon and Agnew as God's
choices in the last election, and
just a few days before Spiro fell
from grace and respectability,
Graham felt impelled to declare
that this stalwart exponent of law
and order was "a great American
and a very great Vice -Presi-
dent." _
Which reminds us that not too
many years ago God laid it on
Billy's heart to say something
equally blessed about another
great politician. Declared that
this man was "a truly dedicated
American to whom we owe a
great debt of thanks for his pat-
riotism." That truly dedicated
American was Senator Joe
McCart ,-' m
the most faous
ii
witch -b rner since the days of
Cotton Mather. .
It is ironic that the Man who
gave us that sweet and simple
little thing called Christianity
2000 years ago was the poorest
and humblest of men who never
passed the hat in all His ministry
and whose most luxurious ride
was on a borrowed donkey. But
those who make the loudest
claims of being his modern dis-
ciplesare all too often famous
men who are proud of their humi-
lity, who rake in millions and ride
jet planes and Cadillacs.
only purport to "love your
work". Your confmement to
the job is pulling against your
inner desire to "get up. and
go." Confusion is torturing
• you. Have a tallt with your
husband the boss. Tell him
that if he hopes, to preserve
you, as his favorite employe,
he'd better arrange to release
you for a few hairs a day.so
you can go It at your own
steam.
• All of us haveour huier con-
flicts, frustrations, and „con-
fusions, and, somethnes, we
do strange thhigs with them."
We turn them into a nervons
stomach, a headache, or. a
palpitating heart.
You have hulled your'S into
• a case of tiredness. •
D.J.
A free ' handwriting
brochure of some common
basic personality traits may
be obtained by writing to
Dorothy St. John Jackson,
Copley News Service, in care
of this newspaper. Enclose
long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope.
POWER-FUL. EXAMPLE
The use of solar energy W-
heat and cool a new engineer-
ing building at NASA's Lang-
• ley Research Center in
Hampton, Va., is planned as a
practical demonstration of
how alternate sources of pow-
er may help alleviate Amer-
ica's energy problems.
Nothing Runs
Like a DeereTM
•A John Deere Lawn and
Garden Tractor is engi-
neered and built with as
much concern and pride
as big John Deere Farm
Tractors. So you get a
machine designed to pro-
vide you with the built-in
quality that's a John
Deere tradition. Choose
from 7- to 14 -hp models.
Ask us about John Deere
Financing.
With us service
is a profession
....not a sideline
Reppers Garage
Phone 291-1749
Kurtzville,
goaraiwitworwitr
• For Farm, Town and Cotiptry
Home Owners!
Can You Use $1,600 to $20,000?
If you can afford monthly payments of
317.83 you may borrow 31,600
333.43 you may borrow 83.080
355.71 you may borrow 33,000
$77.99 you may borrow
etc.
The above Loans based on 13 per cent per annum
s Vr. Tom 4-- 20 Yr. Amortization
Borrow for any worthwhile purpose: To consolidate your debts,
fix the car, buy cattle, or a cottage!
Fast -Courteous Service.-- Please Call
Gerald H. Wolfe
PALMERSTON 3434632
Representing.
Arnold Highman Realty Ltd.
Kitchener, 1-519-744-6251
Member of Ontario Mortgage Brokers Association
anney ani 'Pearson eCti.
HOME FURNISHINGS
HANOVER
You'll enloy our,
o stores so much -
because. inie sell
quality goods Oa
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Buy a Chain Saw el an oh= a)
Super XL -Mini Automatic at ‘P I VV. UJ
Suggested Retail Price $184 95 (2)
Simplex starting for quick easy starts. Thick moulded cushion handie bar and pistol
grip make handling more comfortable. Quiet tone im muffler effectively reduces noise.
Large capacity fuel and chain oil tanks require fewer stops.
(2) With 12" guide bar.
, .
)",* 0.04:005f.,/,Y /.05'4,1•y0:f/./xf4.././
Or an XL -1 at $1 _
49 95'
Suggested Retail Price $164 95'
Simplex starting system means eaty two -finger starting; fast dependable starts.
With a lightweight easy handling Homelite XL -1, you can take care of many outdoor
woodcutting jobs. Ideal for farmers, cottage owners, fishermen, hunters and campers.
(2) With 12" guide bar.
(1) At participating dealers. Your HOME LITE dealer is listed in your Yellow Pages under Saws.
Special Spring otter ends June 30th.
jtRity INDUSTRIES
AIWIS1011011
111 Woes.' /owe, P. thile* 64/0.
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43
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' '
In
' ACROSS
1 - Musical instru-
ment
11 - Conforms
12 - Everyone indi-
vidually (abb.)
14 - To schedule
16 - Emergency
, Service (abb.)
17 - Paired
18 - Tease (slang)
19 - A brace (abb.)
20 - Yearn
21 - A visionary
23 - British award
24 - Circle segment
26 - Tree
27 - Bulgarian city
28- Greek letter
29 - Petty cash (abb.)
30- Transport Ship
(.bb.)
31 - PrepOsition
32 - A fabric
33 - Man's name
34- Baba
35- Preposition
36 - Vibrating
38 - Short. blunt
ObJecr
39 - College degree
40 - Manpower
42 -Evict
43 - Metric unit
of area
44 - Brazilian state
45 - Abraham's
birthplace
46- To turf previously
48 - A token ci regard
DOWN
2 - Of a type of
poetry
3 - Literary
composftion
4 - Musical note
MUUMMBEEIEllg
• alAUWElti CM CI
MUM Clia NULEAU
MMM 1E10 0MHO M
• OOMMOMMO WH
UMUI MUU MAIM
• IDU EU MU
0111119570 WEJU WEW
•KI-EIPMCGEED-M
M OMOU UE1 MEM
monoa CO mum
u JLECWWU
WWWLEWEWUMU
5 - Musical
dramas
6- Little letters
7 -Capital Stock
- Rough sheds
- Recent
- Modernized
- Promoting
intelligence
15 - Roman deuce
17 - To relate
wrongly
19 - Tranquil
20 -Greek letter
22. - Literary
Hour (abb.)
23 - Small vessel
for liquids
25 -Destroy
29 - Inferior
racehorses
33 - Cold (chem.)
34 - Militaryfleet
37 - Weight unit
38 - Pour forth
(var.) •
41 - Suffix of
Comparison
43 - Fortify
44 - Hawaiian dish
46- Greek letter
41- Tin (chem.)
.8
9
10
13
!Crossroads
Published every Wednesday as the big, action cross-country section in
The Listowel Banner, The Wingham Advance -Times and The Mount
Forest Confederate'. Wenger Bros. Limited, publishers, Box 390,
Wingham.
Barry Wenger, Pres. Robert 0. Wenger, Sec .-Treas,
Display and Classified ad deadline -
Tuesday, week prior to publication date.
.REPRESENTATIVES
Canadian Community
Newspapers Association,
Suite 51,
2 Bloor St., West,
Toronto 962-4000
Ontario Weekly
Newspaper Assoc.,
127 George St.,
Oakville 684-0184
13. BxB
14. Mal
16. N -Q2
16. P -K3
17. P-QR4
18, P -R4
19. N -Q5
20. P -N3
21. N-KB3
22. Q -B3
23. P -K4
24.N -Q2
25. NxP
26. R -Q2
27.P -R5
28. P-QN4
29. QxP
30. QR -Q1
31. R -K1
32.Q -R3
33. R -N2
34. R( K1 )-QN1
35.0;61-446
36. N -N5
37. Resigns
KxB
RAM
POO
N -K3
P414
P -B4
K -R2
R -B2
QAD
Q -R1
PreP
Q-112
K -R1
R -B1
N -Q5
RAP
N-KB4
N -Q5
N -Q133
N445
N-QB3
N -Q5
N-KB4
NxQ
NO. 8 HWY. BETWEEN HWY. 401
AND KITCHENER 653-5784
Shelf Supports
One quick and easy way to
build some rough shelving is to
support the ends,of each shelf on
corrugated fasteners, procure
at any hardware store and
driven part way into the vertical
framework. After your shelves
have rested on these fastene.rs
for some time, the 'fasteners will
become embedded inithe shelve -
and prevent their slipping off
CHARMING MUZAK
Muzak, which began sup-
plying music via telephone
wire in the 1930s, operates-
throughout the United States
and in 25 countries around
world.
ONE OF THE GREAT SIGHTS of the eastern Caribbean, and a landmark for centuries
for mariners sailing the region, is shown in top one of these two photos. The inverted twin
volcanic cones of St. Lucia -the Pitons, GroS and Petit -rise a half -mile above the
• Caribbean Sea near the little town of Soufriere, the capital of the island when it was, held
by the French. St. Lucia changed hands between English and French more than a dozen
times in its history before it became- British more than a century and a half ago. The
Gallic touch remains, however -in the French place names, island patois and the influ-
ence of the Catholic Church. Below is Marina Bay, one of the faliorite havens with today's
yachtsmen sailing the Caribbean. It is located in the harbor at Castries, now the capital of
St. Lucia.
YOUR HANDVVR1TING TELLS
•Long loops show
•need for change
By DOROTHY
ST. JOHN JACKSON
-CiAiftedMatiter
iphoaiialyst
Dear Dorothy:
Two years ago, my husband
Went into a business which
calls for a woman's touch. I
work six days a week. I love
the work, but I hate myself for
getting so involved. I must be
there all the time for the de-
tailed party plannhig end of it.
I come twine so exhausted.
Somethnes I wonder if 1. can
face another day. I am so
tired all the dine.
D.D.
Dear D.D.:
All day you're revving your
motor in neutral. Your whole
system resists being "tied
down". Change and variety is
a must in your life, seen in the
very long lower loops. ,
In fact, you have so many
things you want to do that
nothing definite is really de-
fined, seen in the tangling \of
the upper strokes with . the
lower ones. So, you just keep
spinning.
oulike the feeling of In -
e, seen in the large
loop on the capital I, but you
1 1 :
H. GORDON
GREEN
. . . .
According to a recent issue of
Viva magazine, when evangelist
Billy Graham flies to Europe, he
buys two adjacent first class
seats -one of which stays empty.
Which, says Viva, symbolizes
that Graham is flying high on at
least two continents as the
richest, most publicized and most
politically influential Bible
thumper in all the long history of
religious salesmanship.
A former Fuller Brush sales-
man, Graham now heads a multi-
million dollar empire which takes
at least a score of accountants to
keep track of the money, plus a
crew of public relations consult-
ants, legal advisors, road -show
managers, lighting and sound
technicians, make-up specialists,
"crowd motivators" (whatever
they are). And, oh yes, let's not
forget the bodyguards. While the
Bible which Graham delights to
take to the nations repeatedly
promises that the Lord will
deliver the true man of God. from
all enemies as well as from "the
pestilence that Walkethin dark-
ness and the destruction that
wasteth at noonday", Billy
Graham not only has a group of
bodyguards off his team but a dog
trainer who supervises a trio of
Doberman Pinchers which are
trained to kill, whenever they get
the right command. That com-
mand, incidentally, will be given
to them in German.
All of which seems to add up to
a man who is either a hypocrite,
or someone who is as confused
and as inconsistent as the rest of
us. Yet over the years Billy has
been a public habit with the White
House and with Messrs. Nixon
and Agnew especially. It was no
secret that Graham regarded
Nixon and Agnew as God's
choices in the last election, and
just a few days before Spiro fell
from grace and respectability,
Graham felt impelled to declare
that this stalwart exponent of law
and order was "a great American
and a very great Vice -Presi-
dent." _
Which reminds us that not too
many years ago God laid it on
Billy's heart to say something
equally blessed about another
great politician. Declared that
this man was "a truly dedicated
American to whom we owe a
great debt of thanks for his pat-
riotism." That truly dedicated
American was Senator Joe
McCart ,-' m
the most faous
ii
witch -b rner since the days of
Cotton Mather. .
It is ironic that the Man who
gave us that sweet and simple
little thing called Christianity
2000 years ago was the poorest
and humblest of men who never
passed the hat in all His ministry
and whose most luxurious ride
was on a borrowed donkey. But
those who make the loudest
claims of being his modern dis-
ciplesare all too often famous
men who are proud of their humi-
lity, who rake in millions and ride
jet planes and Cadillacs.
only purport to "love your
work". Your confmement to
the job is pulling against your
inner desire to "get up. and
go." Confusion is torturing
• you. Have a tallt with your
husband the boss. Tell him
that if he hopes, to preserve
you, as his favorite employe,
he'd better arrange to release
you for a few hairs a day.so
you can go It at your own
steam.
• All of us haveour huier con-
flicts, frustrations, and „con-
fusions, and, somethnes, we
do strange thhigs with them."
We turn them into a nervons
stomach, a headache, or. a
palpitating heart.
You have hulled your'S into
• a case of tiredness. •
D.J.
A free ' handwriting
brochure of some common
basic personality traits may
be obtained by writing to
Dorothy St. John Jackson,
Copley News Service, in care
of this newspaper. Enclose
long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope.
POWER-FUL. EXAMPLE
The use of solar energy W-
heat and cool a new engineer-
ing building at NASA's Lang-
• ley Research Center in
Hampton, Va., is planned as a
practical demonstration of
how alternate sources of pow-
er may help alleviate Amer-
ica's energy problems.
Nothing Runs
Like a DeereTM
•A John Deere Lawn and
Garden Tractor is engi-
neered and built with as
much concern and pride
as big John Deere Farm
Tractors. So you get a
machine designed to pro-
vide you with the built-in
quality that's a John
Deere tradition. Choose
from 7- to 14 -hp models.
Ask us about John Deere
Financing.
With us service
is a profession
....not a sideline
Reppers Garage
Phone 291-1749
Kurtzville,
goaraiwitworwitr
• For Farm, Town and Cotiptry
Home Owners!
Can You Use $1,600 to $20,000?
If you can afford monthly payments of
317.83 you may borrow 31,600
333.43 you may borrow 83.080
355.71 you may borrow 33,000
$77.99 you may borrow
etc.
The above Loans based on 13 per cent per annum
s Vr. Tom 4-- 20 Yr. Amortization
Borrow for any worthwhile purpose: To consolidate your debts,
fix the car, buy cattle, or a cottage!
Fast -Courteous Service.-- Please Call
Gerald H. Wolfe
PALMERSTON 3434632
Representing.
Arnold Highman Realty Ltd.
Kitchener, 1-519-744-6251
Member of Ontario Mortgage Brokers Association
anney ani 'Pearson eCti.
HOME FURNISHINGS
HANOVER
You'll enloy our,
o stores so much -
because. inie sell
quality goods Oa
. •
• vorygoom-
1 WALKERTON
,o0704wergil4r404;0-."oiriz,40a054&
• ..,
"Pm#:74$.3§mr.., ,4,44vr;pop4rorAre'ho'A?'"'
Buy a Chain Saw el an oh= a)
Super XL -Mini Automatic at ‘P I VV. UJ
Suggested Retail Price $184 95 (2)
Simplex starting for quick easy starts. Thick moulded cushion handie bar and pistol
grip make handling more comfortable. Quiet tone im muffler effectively reduces noise.
Large capacity fuel and chain oil tanks require fewer stops.
(2) With 12" guide bar.
, .
)",* 0.04:005f.,/,Y /.05'4,1•y0:f/./xf4.././
Or an XL -1 at $1 _
49 95'
Suggested Retail Price $164 95'
Simplex starting system means eaty two -finger starting; fast dependable starts.
With a lightweight easy handling Homelite XL -1, you can take care of many outdoor
woodcutting jobs. Ideal for farmers, cottage owners, fishermen, hunters and campers.
(2) With 12" guide bar.
(1) At participating dealers. Your HOME LITE dealer is listed in your Yellow Pages under Saws.
Special Spring otter ends June 30th.
jtRity INDUSTRIES
AIWIS1011011
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