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The Brussels Post, 1961-01-19, Page 7truck pulls away, the, fishermen, can haul them out Again, the Governor said, There's a serious question in his mind whether such "put and take" fishing makes sense. Mr, Sprecher admitted the point is debatable, But when- ever the Conservation. Depart" merit tries to cut back on the planting of legal-sized trout, he said, the Legislature overrules the cutback. - And that, it would seem, is the fundamental reason for all the expensive fish, A million fisher- men,. plus thousands of resort Owners and others who need. good fishing to attract tourists, represent a lot of votes. And so few politicians in Wis- consin are willing to say a criti- cal word about his majesty, the muskie, no matter how much the pampered fellow nviy cost per pound. . Makes Clothes Far The New President TEE-TIME — Prince Yoshi, 25, youngest son of Emperor Hiro- hito and Empress Nagako of Japan, practices his golf swing on the litnperial Palace grounds in Tokyo. MO. NURSES WANTED openaaareo room. eepervieer tor 37be4 hospital, $000•00 monthly. Also ewe. Wed. generet, duty nurses requited for Medieal, :6,1111101, obstetrieal deport. ments, Average 40-hour week, usual benefits. Apply to Superintend, Kempt- vitt" District Hospital, Kemptville, On- tario, 111 REGISTERED NURSES 4Q.hour Wei* TOP SALARIES PAID, TRANSPORTATION ADVANCED. New Nurses' Residence beautifulla furnished, Director of Nursing, Pontiae Coromo-nity }hospital, .911AWVILI.,g, P.Q OAK. ADA= OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN , , • — OE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING acttoot. Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified, profession; good., wages Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates Arneritia's Greatest System illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 368 Bloor St W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St, W,. Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PHARMACIST WANTEP Graduate Pharmacist (Ontario Reg or Eligible) To assist In Hospital Pharmacy. Exrelent salary, range with good personnel policies, pension plan, vacations and sick Plan, In reply give references, experience and state marital status to DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL KINGSTON GENERAL HOSPITAL KINGSTON, ONTARIO PERFUMES PERFUME! Perfect Gifts for her. Fa- mous scents in attractive spray bottle. (CH • Chanel), (A - Arpege), (WS White Shoulders), (MS - My Sin) 5 for $7.99 postpaid. Sample $2.00. Galor Com- pany, 27 Dania Street, Boston 26 Mas- sachusetts, U.S A, PERSONAL HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS TESTED, guaranteed, Mailed in plain parcel, including catalogue and sex book free with trial assortment. 18 for. $1.00 (Finest quality). Western 131stribts- tors, Box 24-TPF Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT, Films developed and. 8 tnagna prints 40f 12 magna prints 600. Reprints 50 each. KODACOLOR Developing roll 900 (not including prints). Color prints 30f each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m.m, 20 ex-posure's mounted in slides $1.20. Coto, prints from slides 320 each. Money re. funded in full for unprinted negatives. PIPE SMOKERS REVOLUTIONARY PIPE SMOKINta INVENTION! Free information. Peti- nyfield's, P.O. Box 413, Dept. B, Clrll- cago 90, Illinois. RESORTS Le Montclair Inn FAMOUS FOR CUISINE STE. ADELE, QUEBEC French Canadian atmosphere. Exclusive ski resort - ski lift ski school - ski weeks. Luxurious cocktail lounge. Presenting daily in Copper Bar and nightly danc- ing "The Montclair Musicians," SEEDS QUAKER COMFREY OVER 100 TONS OF FEED PER ACRE Quaker. Comfrey (Symphytum PeregrIn- unt, Ledeb.) A high-protein, low-fibre fodder crop. Does not whiter-kilt With- stands drought, flooding. Mr. Deets of Oregon says, "I will have a return of $600 per acre per year." Orders now taken for Spring delivery. Special Prices on 14 or 1/2 acre. (Also relieves asthma), Write for free descriptive bulletin now. BODIE SEEDS, LIMITED, Winnipeg 2, Canada STAMPS Al!! breaking up accumulation of stamps of 30 years. British Colonies and USA only, 25 different 10e, 50 dif- ferent 25f, 100 different SOO, 200 dif- ferent $1. No ',kink, Add postage. net- ter grades and covers on approval. T. TI. Graham, 296A Gienforest Rd., Toronto 12, Ontario, 8 SOCI<ET-WRENCHES iN 1 NEIL!! .A 431., La tui cral. - all ssocetwrenh for industries - for the farm, garage s, repair sir o p s, factories, engi. nears or fitters, also ear owners. The. wrench. is designed to reach, bolt heads and nuts in hard. to - get • at places. The wrench heads are offset to clear obstructions and to protect the Operator's hands. Full Length of Wrench 101/z Inches it is made. of Chrome- V a nadium. Siert, (chrome- plated). which is strong a n tough It is approved by the Forlety of Auto- motive Erigiodet8 (SAL), In case of Tettity mateetai ot workmanship, a free replacement will he made cheerfully. N4 i ,5 Soeltet.sitis in inches, 7/16,`1 /2 , 9/1 , 116, 19/1 / 6 32 , , 5/0 • 3/4 & 1/8 Price - -- DELIVERED BODIE SEEDS Ltd, Winnipeg 2, Canade MEIkY 1 L4WAGal Lite Lecipe.: yoit to co tea thoueami red ante --, pitch of tramitee il oust- died black atite,—j' Pit DE TROIS - This modern dance step was• only accidefiteil. Ron Three basketball players — froth left, Ron derider, ierey Lied-a and Hank bunter — watch the ball out of bounds clurin 16, Ohio: State,Sefori full Ohne, Improving Fishing A Costly Business • Wisconsin is a state fishing is looked upon as bastion of individuality. A man may spend all week punching a button or pushing a pencil. But on the weekend he can return to the frontier way of life — fishing through the ice as the Indians did in the winter. In the summer, he can prove he is somewhat smarter than a smallmotith bass in any of sev- eral thousand Wisconsin lakes, No real fisherman will admit that it is slightly absurd to-spend hundreds of dollars on equip- ment — rods, reels, boats, and the rest — in order to take home a few fish. After all, he can poinCout, the fish themselves are free, no matter how much it may cost to make their acquain- tance. But now it develops that even this belief is illusory. A recent budget hearing in Madison dis- closed that some of the fish which Wisconsin anglers pull in- to their boats have cost the tax- payers as much as $180 a pound. Gov. Gaylord A. Nelson's com- .ment, though short, sums up the reaction of nonfishing Wiscon- sinites to this disclosure. When he was told by the state Con- servation Department that it costs Wisconsin 95 cents a pound for trout and from $20 to $180 a pound for muskellunge used in stocking the lakes, he declared: "Wow." In a state where more than 1,000,000 fishing licenses are sold annually, even though anyone under 18 or over 65 years of age can fish without them, politi- cians are hesitant to criticize either fish or their pursuers. Still, Governor Nelson allowed himself an observation. "That's a lot of money," he said, "to spend for a legal size trout for somebody to catch who doesn't know how to fish any- way." Wisconsin maintains 22 hatch- eries for the propagation of some of the 150 varieties of fish that, swim in the state's 8,500 lakes or 1,400 trout streams. Some of these state-produced fish are turned loose to take their chances when they're in the fingerling stage, but others are fed with the taxpayers' money until they (the fish, not the taxpayers) are of legal size, writes Robert W. Wells in the Christian Science Monitor. It is the latter variety that costs the most money. The mus- kie, which is the official state fish by act of the Legislature, is especially expensive, He has a voracious appetite. Over the Years, it has cost the Conserva- tion. Department an average of $29 a pound to raise its muskies, but in a bad year the figure has climbed to $180, When you consider that the 1r.i2.;cat muskie ever caught in 11w state weighed nearly '70 pounds, you can see that the fish is worth his weight in lax re- ceipts. Those used for stocking stay well below thiq record level,. of course. Still, the prices given in the budget report it wouldn't take ,many schools of muskies: to equal the cost of re- i placing some of the one-rooin scheela for humans that still dot the Wisconsin landscape, In defending the program, George Sprecher, deputy collect- valiant director, said that the percentage of fish caught is Muth higher when those of legal size ate planted than when finger- lings tire used' for stocking a lake. But Governor l\Telson said that is not the point. A conservation oartment ci46w eon tiviinp legal sized fish' into into a peel, soon as theoe where a final BACKACHE? ...net me! for relief from backache or that tired-out feelitig 1 depend INSTRUCTION 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 stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St. Clair Avenue East, TORONTO NUTRIA ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing Nutria, consider the following points, which this organiza- tion offers: 1 The 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. 3. Full insurance against replacement, should they not live or in the event of sterility (all Cully explained in our certificate of merit.) 4 We give you only mutations which are in demand for fur garments, 5. You receive from this organization a guaranteed pelt market, in writing. 6. Membership in our exclusive breed. ers' association, whereby only purchas- ers of this stock may participate in the benefits so offered, 7 Prices for Breeding Stock start at $200, a pair. Special offer to those who qualify: earn your Nutria on our cooperative basis write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.. R R. No 2, Stoutrville, Ontario EARN More! Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons 500. Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street, Toronto, MEDICAL HIGHLY RECOMMENDED - EVERY SUFFERER "OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN, OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect. CHEQUE Protectors; Reconditioned and guaranteed. Several models, Very rea- sonable. Information: T. H. Graham., 206A Olenforest Rd., Toronto 12, Ont. WARNER ELECTRIC LIVESTOCK FEED COOKERS COOKS two bushels grain or beans for 20f, Also cooks potatoes and roots. H.E.P.C, approved, safe Inside barn. Time-switch controlled. For literature write, H. E. Warner, Alvinston, Ontario. How Can By Roberta. Lee Q. How can f speed up the job of whipping some cream? A. ,To whip the cream in re- cord time, add six or eight drops of lemon juice per pint (two cups) of create. Use an eye drop- per and count the drops, since too much lemon sours the cream. Q. How can I remove the yel- low mark from a porcelain sink or bathtub, caused by the con- stant dripping of water? A, These spots can be removed with pumice stone, It is the iron from the water that causes these rust marks, Q. How can I remove ink Stains that were splattered on My wallpaper? A, Touch the spots lightly with Water and apply a biettei-, then treat with seine oxalic acid. If the color of the paper is affect- ed, you can louch the area up very nicely with some water colors or crayon. Q. How can f encoitrage the growth and health of my house- hold feiriis? A, Every three or four months, Add a teaspoonful of castor oil or two tablespoonfuls of olive 611 to the Theta of your ferns, Q. How can a stamp' tolietter reinOve used stamps front efive-, lobes in the easiest *617 A, You can do this easily With- out danger of tearing; if you'll apply Sonia lighter fluid to the inside of the envelopes behind the stamps.. rs'Act 1961; CLASSIFIED A ACCOMMODATION — WINTER. RESORTS: COLLINOW000, aeeted furnished cot, lase, accommodates ti skiers, inside tot. let, shower; by week or month. Apply Doneld, Mason, 47 Campbell .St., wood, AGENTS ..„ . AGENTS WANTED iSfAfF, or Female: Would you he Inter- ested to sell Bea Sweaters, eireet to wearer? full or part dine. High quality anti exclusive Styles, High corn., Missions and bonus pekt. For Free working lilt write to; JAY DISTRIBUTORS P.O. Box 145, Outremont, Montreal P+O. BABY CHICKS „BRA.Y hatching to order en Ames In- Cross 'pullets, dual purpose dayelda. Available immediately' some started pullets. Book April brellers now, Com tact Agent or write Aro' Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Got, COINS ho 'af vile& been et d C as Canadian are an d wLio,r1h comi 101 Sn money s' We will pay cash for wanted coins. Premium price list 250, shows the coins desired, International Coin Company. 227 Victoria Street, Toronto= FARMS FOR SALE FEMALE HELP WANTED SPEEDHAND ABC Shorthand trains for Stenographer In 10 weeks home- study. Anyone can, learn this approved course. Free lesson, Cassan Systems, .10 Eastbourne Gres., Toronto 14, FLORIDA RESORTS VACATION on a budget, Lovely room and bath, pool, kitchen, $20 weekly, WOO N.W. 14th St., West Hollywood, Florida. FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS a n d young people marched through the city with torches made of substances that gave off a very unpleasant odour. After a couple of days of be- ing smoked-out in their own homes, the leaders of the anti- smoking campaign agreed to drop the notion. Unhappily, the pro- test march caused 'a fire that cost thousands of pounds and the lives e of seventeen people. CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE — Three children of evicted share croppers play near a fire in a tent community in Somerville, Tenn. The U.S, Justice Department has moved to halt the evic- tions of several hundred Negro tenant farmers in two counties who claim they are being forced off the land because they registered 10 vote. MARKHAM; for sale, 50.acre farm, house, all conveniences, good barn, river running across property, . Johnson, R,R. 1, Stouffellle. Went To Jolt For Smoking In Street ! When a bus company recently allowed smoking on the lower deck, it was stated that on one occasion a riot ensued when the conductor ordered a lower deck smoker to put out his cigarette, But smoking has caused more exciting incidents than that — it once saved a, ruler from losing his throne. It occurred in Prussia in the year NA when smoking in the street was forbidden on pain of e fine and imprisonment for a sec- and offence. For a third offence the culprit might find himself in prison for five years. Prussian workmen decided to stage a revolt in defence of their right to smoke in public. A vast crowd gathered outside the royal palace and shouted "Liberty to smoke in the streets'," Officials wanted to call out the troops, but young Prince Lichnovsky realized that a mas- sacre might develop, He ordered a footman to drag a table on to the balcony overlooking the courtyard where the mob was shouting. Jumping on the table, the prince motioned for silence. Then he shouted: "Your liberty has been granted." And then lit a cigar. Smoking as hard as they could, the mob dispersed to their homes. Exactly the opposite sort of thing was happening in another European city, and at almost ex- actly the same moment. The pee-. Pie in Milan, who at that time were ruled by Austria, decided to annoy their rulers by refusing to smoke at all. This deprived the Austrians of a huge revenue from tobacco tax. Overnight the city was placarded and scrawled with the warning: "Only Ger- mans or spiei smoke tobacco." The Milanese didn't content themselves with sign-writing. They snatched the cigar or cigar- ette from anyone seen smoking— even from the Austrian occupa- tion forces! When news of the revolt reach- ed the Austrian commandet-in- chief, he showed a fine sense of humour.. HaVing ordeied a free. Issue of cigarettes to the troops and cigars to the officers, he then sent them all round the town smoking like the proverbial chimneys. The revolt spread to the town of Pavia where ugly incidents oc- curred a One student who had knocked the cigarette from a sol- dier's mouth was shot on the spot. What had seemed like • a childish gesture now spread like wildfire throughout' Italy. It reached Venice where Virginian cigars were stored. Then Lom- bardy revolted, 'and at Pied- mont the whole population arm- ed themselves and declared war on the smoking Austrian troops.' - The commander-in-chief was forced to evacuate all his troops from Milan and the matter only ended when crowds seized mil- lions of cigars in, warehouses and made them in ea bonfire. In some early American colon- ies the Puritans banned all smelt- ing, drinking and kissing in pub- lic. A few hardy spirits retaliated by building bonfires round the municipal headquarters. When guards were sent out they were attacked. In the end smoking was allowed a- though the ban on drinking and public kissing 're- mained: Just over a century ago there was a tobacco riot in Edinburgh. again touched-off by Puritans who wanted to forbid smoking in the streets on Sunday. By way of protest, more than fifty students These Greetings Were Untimely For a governor who person- ally opposes capital punishment, California's Edmund G. (Pat) Brown has had more than his share of agonizing involvement with the death house. First, there was the dragged-out, furor-stir- ring case of the late Caryl Chess- man. And now, by a cruel stroke of misplaced efficiency, Brown is on record as having sent his "best wishes for a joyous holiday season" to a 20-year-old youth awaiting execution. Last year, Brown got a Christmas card from one Alexander Robillard III of 450 Bradford. Street, Redwood City. In what the governor's press secretary later termed a "tragic error," the name automa- tically went onto Brown's 1960 card list. However, Robillard's card was apparently intercepted at his 1959 address — the San Mateo County Jail — before it could be forwarded to San Quen- tin Prison, where he faced the gas chamber for the murder of a policeman. Smart Tip For Winter Motorists Here's an idea for getting out of icy spots this winter: Carry a 50 pound bag of chick grits in your trunk. The grits are cheap — only about 800 a bag — and don't freeze like sand frequently does. Also grits are easy to clean up if some get spilled in the trunk and, because of their sharpness, allow better traction on ice, Have you noticed? The more articles written explaining the gold situation the-more confused the average reader gets. As the first U.S, businessman to really size up Sen John la. Kennedy, president Samuel Har- ris of New York's IL Harris & Co, can make two positive state- ments: The President-elect is "ultra-conservative" and his elec- tion is going to be good for Sam Harris's business. A custom tailor who has been fitting flannel to the Kennedy frame for twelve years, Harris last month was working on his biggest single or- der from the senator -- a cut- away, a black topcoat (both for inauguration), and a batch of size 42, "$225 business suits to pre- pare his client for the sartorial ordeal of the White House. It was Harris who advised Kennedy on the proper uniform for the in- augural — Oxford gray coat, light pearl gray waistcoat, and worsted gray striped trousers — although hat-hater Kennedy per- sonally made the ticklish de- , eision to wear a top hat (which may force Homburg-lover Eisen- .. bower to do the same). The role of Presidential tailor- elect fits snugly on Sam. Harris, who came close to landing the job in 1948 on the coattails of customer Thomas E. Dewey (still a regular client). A plain- spoken, 60-year-old craftsman, Harris has probably fitted as many celebrities as anyone out- side of Savile Row, but exhibits none of the publicity hunger of some of his zootier, more flannel- mouthed contemporaries. He gets all his business on personal rec- ommendations, has assembled an unzooty client list that includes the Duke of Windsor, Anothony Drexel Biddle. Jr. ("beet-dressed man in the 'coUntry," says Har- ris), and. Senator. Kennedy's brothers Bob and. Ted. Harris and his staff of 37 tail- ors operate at a posh address just off Fifth' Avenue but in strictly workaday surroundings, with piles of wool swatches on the table's and' the snipping of back- room scissors plainly audible in the front room. Harris executives make periodic trips to Washing- ton, Palm Beach, and Nassau to take new orders and check new measurements on old clients, keep an eye out for all fancy- dress occasions. Harris's latest social coup: Cutaways for groom and best man at last month's wedding of former Jones & Laughlin chairman Ben Moreell. His biggest order came from an Afghanistan potentate who or- dered 38 suits in one fell swoop during a visit to New York a few years back. But Harris's ail- time best customer was the late banker-philanthropist Otto Kahn, who had a Standing order for six ' dozen white dress vests every year. Like most of Harris's clients, and Harris himself, Senator Kee- 1 eedy will have no truck with t Continental or other extreme male fashions, prefers conserva- tive styling with only slightly narrowed trousers. In fact Har- ris would be happier if his top customer weren't quite so conser- vative, The senator, he says, nor- mally wears nothing but dark blue or dark gray, although "we've gotten him to brighten up a bit." , From NEWSWEEK Attach a small bell to your dog's collar. It 'keeps ringing while the dog is hunting, letting you know where he is, When the bell stops ringing, ydit know he's on point, end you can start to locate him. Willi Took One. • Drink To Many It was his liver that bothered Willi Knipp. It gave him a yel- lowish complextion, cost him more than he could afford, and —according to his story—forced him to take an hour's nap every day. Thus, whenever he locked his door after lunch,,Willi's fel- low janitors at Bonn's Ministry of Interior (security) building warned away all visitors. "Willi is resting," they said. "Ills liver, you know." What Willi actually was doing was copying the ministry's top- secret documents and war plans —on behalf of the Russians in Soviet-occupied. East Germany. The CoMmunists had provided him with a trick camera that fitted into a cleaning brush and hollow flashlights that he later loaded with exposed film and handed to eastbound couriers. In four years, Willi furnished. photographs of 3,000 confidential papers, 3,000 listed as "unclassi- fied," and 6,000 more for good measure. These gave the Rus- sians vital information on border defenses, NATO installations, and national-ernergency proce- dures. Some of the verboten material Willi puked' up while doing his janitor chores. Other docctrnents he obtained by -using a forged passkey that fitted confidential. dispatch cases. Once his camera- cleaning brush fell on the floor and a secretary asked: "What's that, Willi?" "Nothing for pretty' girls to know about," he replied. Another time he beguiled a fe- male clerk into leaving her desk unattended by tellhag her hp had 'left a basket of hard-boiled eggs downstairs. As lures go, this may have been unique in espion- age hiStory. But just as Willis liver—and the cost of caning for it on a $72- a-nmeth salary—had led him, into spying, so it led to his un- doing. One night he figured out that the Communists were 'only paying him 50 cents a document, I, didn't seem enough So Willi began to brood. And the more he brooded the more his liver started acting up. Finally he got drunk and complained to his bar companions. They turned hire in, Last month, looking more liver- ish than ever, Willi heard his story spilled out in a Kartsruke remit:bone When it was over he got the. Stiffest Sentence handed out for espionage West Ger- many 'aince the war — ten years. iMitg•• tititEtt the life :too l eve May he Otte IP tsztur tteters70