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The Brussels Post, 1961-08-10, Page 3". . . FOR AMBER WAVES OF GRAIN" - Coleman Foley, once a penniless immigrant, stands in his wheat field. Foley has given 50 tons of wheat to three Greek towns as a port of the "Food for Peace" program. PHOTOGRAPHY . . FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB. BOX 11, GALT, ONT. Films oeveiatiect and 8 magna prints 404 12 magna prints 600 Reprints 50 each. KODACOLOR DOYelOPIng Nil 94 (not including prints), Color prints 300 each extra*. Ansco and Elttachrome 35 ni,M, 20 ex-posures mounted in slides $1.20 Color prints tram slides 300 each. Money re. funded In full for unprinted negatives, PROPERTIES FOR SALE 11/2-STORKY, l2-roam frame house, on large well shaded lot in Village of Caledon East. Ideal location for not's-lng home. Price $15,000, terms can be arranged. Thos R. Evans, Broker Cale-do» East. hone BOlton 00812. FRANKFORD, Ont; rooms, all town conveniences, large lot near Trent River; terms Contact I W Summers. Colborne Out. or rail Colborne 66, evgs RUBBER BELTING & HOSE ALL types of rubber belting and host for sale; belts repaired within 29 hours. Remnants at special prices, 50' farm belt 6" wide $45.00. Snowden indus- trial Rubber Is Plastics, 91 Bruce Street, Oshawa, Ontario, STAMPS STAMP mixtures - 200 worldwide 230. 100 Largo world pictorials 354. 100 Large U,S, commemoratives 504. Brook- side Stamps, R F,D., Box 242, [Hendon. Mass. SUMMER RESORTS WRITE Forest Lodge, Arundel. Que. On beautiful Lake 11,1acDonald in Laur-entian Mountains. Excellent cuisine Cocktail Lounge. Write, Chalet Bungalow Camp GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB FRENCH RIVER, ONT. AAA-ATRO & DUNCAN HINES RECOMMENDATION EXCELLENT fishing, golf, tennis, water sports, Delicious meals, accommodation. and service add up to a relaxing holi-day at this informal resort on the famous French River. Reasonable rates include meals and maid service Dick Brock, Manager. Write, wire or phone direct Noelvillc, 898.2244 or Toronto. 110. 1-2061, HOLIDAY IN Bonneehere Valley heart of Ren- frew County Good fishing, beaches, sight-seeing Write EGANVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE EGANVILLE, ONTARIO, CANADA TEACHERS WANTED AMAZING EncuosNINOEMSISCEASLI IPFItoTECTION FOR FAMILY, STORES, HOTELS, Powerful "FIRE ALARM" blasts warn-ing 1/5 mile. No installation costs, test any time, never falls even In event of short circuits by fire, storms etc Low cost two flashlight cell operation. Guar-anteed 20 years. Postpaid less batteries. Distributors needed your area, request free money making opportunity Don't delay needed protection. RUSH ONLY l795 T TRANS-WORLD TRADERS Eastern NOVA SCOTIA HAWK junction public school requires Protestant teacher, for grades K.P.. one, two and three. Approx. 24 pupils Sal-ary $3000.00 to $3600.00. Send particulars to W. E. Trainor, Secretary, Hawk Junction, Ont. REQUIRED for R,C.S,S. No. 1. Pisdale South Porcupine. TWO TEACHERS AND ONE PRINCIPAL For 6-classroom Separate SchooL J. V. .-T GERVAIS, SECREAS. BOX 367 SOUTH PORCUPINE, ONT, ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing Nutria consider the following points, which this organize. lion 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 replace-ment, should they not live or in the event of sterility tall fully 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 breeders' association, whereby only Purchasers of this stock 'may partici-pate 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, Stouffvllle, Ontario. BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates. America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 Ring St, W., HamiltOn 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa OFFICE EQUIPMENT TYPEWRITERS, Office Equipment. Large selection, lowest prices. Special - Underwood $150, our price $44, Write for Lists, Dominion Typewriter, Tress ton, N.S. OF INTEREST TO ALL BARGAINS from quaint old Mexico! Perfectly hand tooled leather purses and shoes. Most articles 1/2 retail prices. Beautifully Illustrated folder and prices. Rush only 104 or stamps to: TRANS-WORLD TRADERS, Eastern Passage, N.S. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN . . • ADVERTISING PREMIUMS •• ••••• • STOBES, Alusioosses., Selesitteni Effe.c. Wet lust Cost, attraetiVq. •Yenr .80 spat, 04.10 "Ponta Ad" Peas or imprloted on new ""Flower RUS)) Only 25c to clef fis, cost or samates and, postage, TIIANS-WORLI) TRADERS, .F.astern ['O- sage, M.S. s BABY CHICK S • DRAY has started chicks, many vex, idles, available prompt shipment. pay- olds. a few early shipment, or order. Broiler chicks available, Order now, See local agent, or write Bray .tistchery, 12Q John North, Hamilton, poi TIERRGOTT thresher 28 x 42 on rubber, shredder, grain thrower. New condition, greatly reduced George Martin. Mill- brook, Ont. for the entrance to this part of the caves is extremely narrow. To negotiate it, they wriggled on their stomachs, inch by inch, for seventy yards through a fif- teen-inch tunnel, through which an icy stream gushed. They carried their equipment — instruments, tents and food— in polythene bags, strapped to their ankles. Once they had disappeared through the tunnel, fellow pot- holers sealed up the entrance so that climatic readings taken inside would record real condi- tions. The youngsters set up their base inside the Giant Hall, and for seven days lived in the per- petual gloom. Though the damp affected their cameras, they brought back more than 200 coloured photo- graphs of the caverns, 'Part of this fourteen-mile long cave for- mation is open to tourists. One chamber, artificially lit, is used as a concert hall, In the river flowing beside it tiny blind crayfish swim and breed, This species has not seen daylight for millions of years. An 800-ft, stairway leads to other grottoes, most of which have romantic names, such as the Dragon Head, the Fairy Cas- tle, the Road of Lace. Baseball Midget Wanted To Swing Player, Club G All H BA. Gaedel, St, L 1 0 0 .000 These lines were stricken from the official record book of base- ball, but the memory lingers. On Aug. 19, 1951, Eddie Gaedel entered his first-and last-ma- jor-league game. A pinch-hitter for the St. Louis Browns, he walked on four pitches. Gaedel didn't work hard for his walk; thaelt was a midget, 3 feet 7 inches Two months before the tenth anniversary of his baseball de- but, Eddie Gaedel, 86, died in Chicago last month, "Eddie want- ed to swing at the ball," recalled Bob rigid, then publicity direc- tor of the 13rowns and now pub, licity director of the :New York Yankees. "When Bill (Veeck, owner of the Browns) was re- hearsing him with his toy bat, Eddie wanted to swing. Bill made him promise to take the pitches. Eddie didn't like it. but he followed instructions." How Can 1? by rtoberta tee , q. Witni is . T a. good substitu te cement for my 11011111 itioVieS film? A, Clear, 'colorless liquid firt- ornail polish makes h very good cement for this purpose. LSS11...; 28 - 1961 s. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES OPPORTUNITY for an active person With office or construction experience to participete In a ,year-round resort business, Minimum $3,000 required for art unlimited future. Box 2311. 12118th Street, New Torente, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE --,- — FEET) business, mill, bldgs., Office, ex. tea storage elicits, double garage, pri-vate railroad siding, $20,000 down. Hawkins Bros., 10 Wakefield Parry sound. RI. 0-5231. ;20,000.00 GROSS PROFIT GENERAL STORE and POsi, Ofiine in fast growing area, 55 miles from Tor. onto, no chain competition, 2 storey brick building, 6 room apartment, all equipment,owner ill, $20,000.00 cash will handle, ,W, II. Cool, Broker, 353 Cranbrooke , Ave., Termite 12, COINS WANTED, wanted coins, we're buying, no need to write, just send your coins insured, Enclose 250 stamps. Money order sent same day or your coins re-turned. Honest appraising. William Foyer, Coin Exchange, 161 Wyandotte Street East, Windsor. Ontario CL. 2,8427 FARMS FOR SALE 160 ACRE Farm, 6 room house large barn. Will sell with or without cattle or machinery. For further information write; Mr. T. Tynl, Dane, Ontario. 136 ACRES, 6 rooms frame house. good condition, hydro, phone, barn for 5,000 broilers, pressure system, bulk bin, propane brooders, autocratic warters, wired, 660 ft. water frontage on Smith's Bay, Prince Edward County, hard and soft wood lots, 80 acres workable, price $15,000 cash. Charles Young, P. 9 Picton, Ont. FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE FISHING ,TACKLE GOING FISHING ? 5-PIECE split bamboo all.purpose rod packaged with many extras. Packed in strong light-weight wooden box that Prevents breakage and keeps equip• meat dry. Complete $7.95 prepaid• Hud-son Sales Reg'd., Box 1826, Place d'Armes, Montreal. 111 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING When Automation Nits An. Industry FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS BARBECUES - $6.95. Chaise Lounge cots - $10.95. Campstools$1.96. Portable Water Softeners and Purifiers. -$29.00. Many other lines, Express Paid, Satisfaction guaranteed or money re-funded. Catalogue, TWEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO. FlOIPUS 18, ONTARIO GARDEN. VOA BUILDS Greenhouse of yourOwn. 12 x 16 ft, For ,complete plans and specifications, send $1.00 tee Garden Research, 7$6-C Darling Street, Ogden Utah, MEDICAL NATURE'S HELP-DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC 'PAINS, NEURITIS, THOUSANDS PRAISING IL MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 EIGIN, 0 (TAWA $1.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISU 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 stai nl ess, odorless ointment, regardless of how stubborn or hopeless thee seem, Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St, Clair Avenue East, TORONTO Horrors! Cricket Isn't On The Level ALL IS NOT LOST - Mother fell for a bargain and these Fa- ther's Day slacks were too big. But Carl, 9, and Neils Nahr, 7, had a use for them as a "cos- tume" for a gag photo. Wes Ferrell holds the record for most home runs by a pitcher In a single season, nine in 1931. What happens when atitema. Lion hits an industry? To find out, Arinour Co. and the two major meat-Packing Unions established the US, ha- Ugh's tirst laloor-roarlagOrnent- education automation study comi ittee in 1959, When the commit- tee last month released its first report, the problem was clearly defined, but not the solution, The committee had a ready. made test group for its study_ 5,000 Armour workers who had lost their jobs to hydraulic skin- aers, photoelectric knives, and electronic butchers. The major In East St. Louis, 56 per cent of the discharged workers were ;till unemployed a year after the shutdown; in Fargo, N.D., and Columbus, Ohio, between 25 and 10 per tent. Nearly half the unemployed were men over 45; the next two biggest groups of unemployed were women and Negroes-those workers with the lowest skills, the least education. The median wage of those who hart found other jobs had de- creased from $2.20 an hour, their pay at Armour, to $1.86 an hour. In looking for ways to solve these problems, the three-part committee could agree only that "a coordinated approach of pub- lic policy and private action" was needed to meet "the prob- lems of technological change." From this broad generalization, it was every man for himself, with the shorter work week the chief bone of contention. Representatives of the United Packinghouse Workers and the Amalgamated Meat Cutters held that the shorter work week is "not merely desirable but an economic imperative." Company representatives, for their part, were flatly opposed to a shorter work week, argued it would cut profits and thus "require ac- celerated efforts to automate just to stay in business" The impar- tial members-Dr. Clark Kerr, president of the University of California, and Robben W. Flem- ing, law professor at the Univer- sity of Illinois-conceded simply that "unless full employment can be achieved through a rapidly growing economy the demand for reduced work week will be- come increasingly insistent." Thus, the study dramatized emphatically the schism in labor- management thinking through- out American industry on the problems of automation. That schism will be nowhere more apparent than in meat packing, when Industry-wide negotiations en a new contract begin shortly. "It is no secret," summed up one union spokesman, "that we will insist on a shorter work week.- From NEWSWEEK. MERRY MENAGERIE REGISTERED NURSES For 20-bed, fully equipped, private hos-pital located in progressive town In Northwestern Ontario. Starting salary $275.00 per month minimum to $325.00 maximum for three years' experience. Board and room in modern nurses' resi-dence is supplied at no charge Excel-lent employee benefits, Year-round rec-reational facilities. Further particulars on request, Apply to Superintendent WILSON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL MARATHON, ONTARIO with details of experience, age, availability, and references off it while it is doing this we cannot, comments John Allan May in the Christian Science Monitor. In this match England scored an aggregate of 408 in three and a half days and Australia 411. wih five men still to bat in the second innings, An aggregate of 700 each would be considered respectable. Of course the trouble is that if the wicket, when relaid, is too flat and too level and too con- sistent it will be possible for a side to score 900 in only one inn- ings as England once did at the Oval and spoil the game by snak- ing a decision impossible even in six or seven days of play, This is the challenge, to pro- duce turf where the ball can bounce not erratically but un- certainly enough in a cultured way to make it fair on every- body. Not only both sides equal- ly but also the spectators. 8% Mortgage Investment FIXED return with interest, paid monthly. All funds handled through trustee. Security deposited with trustee. For further information write or call M,S. INVESTMENTS Exclusive Agents Day-GE. 84645.• -Ev'gs. 447 DUNDAS ST.. LONDON Member Q.M.B.A. OPEN Mortgage Loans on farms, homes commercial, eta. Fast service, Phone, write, or drop in. United County Investments Ltd„ 3645 Bathurst St. Toronto. RU 9.2125 MONEY TO LOAN NUTRIA "What's the most difficult in- strument of all to play?" asks a reader, Second 'It happens every tithe he s(oCa to sleept" Nothing quite like this has nappened for a century and a half. The "square" at Lords where the wickets arc pitched -- philol- gists will note this is a totally different form of the verb to pitch than that used in baseball which means to throw about - may have to be taken up this fall and relaid. After a test match witn Aus- tralia which ended too early, a day and a half early to be pre- c5se, the Marylebone Cricket Club called in the surveyors. And the surveyors bowled the MCC a googly - the wicket at Lords, Cradle, Nursery and An- cestral Mansion of Cricket, is, they report, not true. IL is neither level nor flat. There is a fall of two inches from the pavilion end to the nursery end - the nursery is a smaller satellite ground behind the bleachers where baby cricke- ters are educated - and among some variations in level and de- pression 23 feet from the stumps at the nursery end. During the match the players reported this depression a ridge. It seems, then, that there are waves in the turf. This is rather shocking Thomas Lord, whose ground it was, first pitched wickets in Dor- set Square in 1787. When he had to move, because of building, he took the turf with him to Re- gents Park, When he had to move from there, because they cut a canal through his cricket ground, he took the same turf up again and put it down where Lords Wicket now is.. The turf was all right when it was in DOrset Square, because Alexander, tenth Duke of Ham- ilton, once hit a ball 396 yards in the air from it, And although recently it has been a little live- ly with the dew on it, there have been no serious complaints since Mr. E, H. 13ucicl smashed a green- house the other side of the wall in 1808 when assisting England against. Surrey. Yet now Lords, in fact, has exactly the same problem as we have this season at the Oxshott Village Cricket Club: The ball bounces off in an un- predictable way. Now high, now low, now left, now right, now fast, now slow, and while our opponents can usually score runs String-on-Finger Things To Do Before Vacation Diaconneet eleetrfe applt4 onees, avoid short circuit danger. Lock all doors. and windows; ask police to check house. Now It's. A Book About Old Casey "Casey Stengers Secrets" by Clay Felkner is undoubtedly the smallest bundle of .literary (11- tertain(ncni :ever to hit the 1pyrts field. Though there . arc 124 number* • ed pages, it is so spiced with an ,excellent combination of and action pictures highlighting the colourful Stengel cowl', it can easily . be absorbed in 'Pat of .an evening. These who came in close con- tact with the most swecessful manager in the history of base- ball find themselves picking it up again and again, anxious to re-live the flotion-like experi- ences of this remarltablt man from 'Glendale, Calif. No one book, course, could completely cover the Stettgel lifetime on the diamonds of the majors and minors. There is too much to tell; too much per- haps, that could never be told, But Felkrter, with his typewriter and selection of photographs, has come up with an effort that seems to have touched all of the high spots without going into lengthy, extended detail. Aside from the recalling of 'some of these wonderful old Stengel stories, the feature of the • book is the fine picture col- lection, many of them lively closeups of some of the baseball greats whom Casey encountered. along his rocky road to stardom at Yankee Stadium. But many. of .the Stengel "shots," often taken at ungtfarded moments, are priceless particularly those that sneak back through the years, back to Casey's playing days with the Giants, Phillies, Pirates, Dodgers and Braves. Some of these pictures are familiar, but most will be fresh to' this generation of Stengel fans. Though pictured and writ- en as a clown in his early dia- mond days, Casey was also a fine ballplayer, holding his own in an era when some of the greatest stars swung bats and. !fired strikes. He had fun, but he also got the job done against the opposition. It was while otutfiekling under the likes of John McGraw and Wilbert Robinson that Stengel accumulated the background for the strategic "book" that • was later to bring him fame in the winning of 10 American League pennants in his 12 years at Yan- kee Stadium. ' The written pages are gener- ously coloured with Stengel words and phrases, an odd, con- fusing oolle.ction that became known as "Stengelese," and con- founded some of the best educat- ed men in the press rows of the major leagues, writes Ru- mill .in the ChristiM Science Monitor, If Stengel confused the critics who fllocked around him wher- ever he worked, he confused the opposition even more, Out-man- 'eu-vering Casey was a stunt, es- pecially during his Yankee days, when first rate ballplayers were always plentiful, and he. could jockey them in and out of the lineup as the innings rolled along, Those who knew the man's. intense love for baseball are not surprised when they read in "Casey Stengel's Secrets" of how, a few hours following his 1956 World Series victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers, he was caught iii his hotel room, fig- uring lthe-ups and moves that he could use the next spring. 8 t en gel ese unquestionably reached its height when the the manager of the New York club was asked to testify before a Senate Anti-Trust and Mono- poly Sub-committee of the Ju- diciary, chaired by Senator Estes Kefauver. For 45 minutes Stengelese overpowered some of the great-, est minds of official Washing- ton, but Must have accomplish- ed something, because the last time we looked, the game was Still being played from coast to coast, Ilia some of us will never get used. to seeing it played. without "Old Case." They .Needed Plenty Of Werve Cave explorers, or potholers, need strong nerves. They may lose their way underground or .. drop suddenly into deep chasms. Or be 'engulfed by roaring slib- terratieart torrents, In Ifungary recently, three youngsters volunteered to be shut up for a week in "Hell," an uncharted section of the Agg- telek stalactite eaves near the, Cteclioslovakiall border. Experienced potholers, they were a lathe operator,. a student and a physicist. The youngsters' adventure had a serious purpose, to map the section, take readings of clima- tic conditions and collect P.11111= pies of rock and •water. They had great diffienlly„ even in starting their trip• A Ionic left completely dark is an invitation to burglars. .alas e post office hold. mod Until your rotten. home, Areange to have someone cut.milk 441101'Y, by oxis plants a.htt watt g ar dt 414 flint dOitet Wile* liti ROO ., III VOLUNTEER , . FIREMEN - they're strictly professionals, these members Of Cleveland Fire D5r- pcirtfiriOheS Second Battalion. But When it cOhies fe tending babies, they're enthusiastic voluft, feers, The Mee' eat lunch reguldi'ly the COfetO'Ha Of the infant Home across the street from the fire 'station, where they play With the beiblet, they fake them for strolls', lift beds and do. 'other effores around the, honie. In return; when 640'14-I-tour duty at holiday time, the' met are invited over for a festive dinrieti