The Brussels Post, 1961-08-17, Page 3•••••••• FARMS FOR SALE
POST'S REMEDIES
1065 St. Clair Avenue East.
TORONTO
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When purchasing Nutria consider the following points which this organize, Lion offers:
I. 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 (all 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 (his 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, Stouffville, Ontario.
Reett.iPmeell
KU/WI-SLAT -canvas for your -heiveethle egtrip nerd Write iw tnormation f95 Vier machine -4410-ad $1 Pb-sic Bear Lire -Onteitio. - • ONE 213-46 McCormick Deering grain threenee an rubber, 'Equipped with eberso, strew ehredder and grata thrower. Al condition. reasouable. Lorne Pven, Milton, Om Phone Tit
roe ;ALE )MISCELLANEOU S
NEW eatalueue 'tot Mt the press. Many lines H. eroose irtm, Portable Water Softeee.r.- - e20.00. Water Purifiers -
$29-00, reotteposition. Chaise Lounge Cots — an) as Comp Stools -- $1.90. BritishTraneLstor Rados. Many other lines. Ex:
limes. Prepaid. Satisfection guaranteed
or money refunded. TWEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO.
FERGUS 10, ye ONTARIO . „
SHOTSHFLLS $2.03 bOx Free delivery
on group orders, Free demonstration samples XI Explosives Ltd Ifawkes
bury Pot „ „.. .
HORSES FOR SALE
FIUNTER; bee gelding, 17 hands aged, bold jumper, goad manners and con,
formation, excellent wartime bunter J M McDougall Jr, Perth, Ont.
MEDICAL
A TRIAL — EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment at dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles Post's Emma 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 53.50 PER JAR
FARM for sale, Glengarry County. 80 acres good land, buildings and water
supply. Near Highway 34. Dunvegan Road. D R. ereGilliyray. Box 91 Due, vegan, Ontario,
FARM EQUIPMENT
BUCKEYE tiling machine, 301, with
WorleBrau conveyor, new last year. New segments, and new pins and bush. ings fortracks. Motor just overhauled. Priced to sell. Apply to Ronald Smith, RR 2, Camlachie, Ont. Phone Aberarder 2534.
WATER powered chopping and feed mill, Apply to Robert Duncan, Herring-ton West, Ont.
ALLIS Chalmers combine, model 66 with Scour Kleen and pickup. Three years old, in first class condition, priced
reasonab le. Also a George White cutting box on rubber tires, 15" throat with inside and outside pipes in good con-dition. Also a 12 foot boat. Apply to Blake Alton, R.R. 2, Lucknow, Ont.
box, The police fled to a wafer
distance and shouted an order to
Serafini to surrender. He replied
with a machine-gun burst. Then
they pleaded, with him not to
endanger his own child. Another
burst. "
The police tried more ingeni--
ous tactics. From the roof of the
building, they passed down cool
drinks, loaded with sedatives.
Serafini tested them on Gabri-
ella, who promptly dozed off.
Then, when Serafini stuck his
head out, the window, the police
on the roof tried, to knock him
out by dropping a sack of grain
on his head, but the sack only
hit his shoulder. Cursing wildly,
Serafini threatened to blow up
the house.
When night came, firemen
kept the house under floodlights
while reinforcements poured in.
By morning there were 500 po-
lice, carabinierie and a Guardia
Mobile detachment. They rushed
the house twice but were driven
back,
Next came tear gas. But while
this was being brought up, Sera-
fini appeared among the gera-
niums and showed he was ready
by waving a gas mask,
"This is all the fault of my
father-in-law," Serafini shouted
to watching reporters, "He did
not listen to me."
By now, the crowds of tourists
and curiosity-seekers had des-
cended on the village to see the
final assault. But it never cable.
After sixteen hours, Serafini
calmed down as suddenly as he
had exploded. "I could have held
out for a week," he said as he
surrendered.
Inside the house, the baby was
the only hostage still alive, Ma-
ma Fazi had been shot to death
shortly after her husband fled
to the police. Serafini had shot
and killed. Gabriella a few mo-
ments before he surrendered. It
was his final gesture to her on
what Was to have been their
wedding day.
Reports on the forthcoming
1962 models indicate the automo-
bile designers have accepted the
fact fins belong to fish — and
perhaps skindivers,
Love Affair Has
A Tragic End
"I'll marry the g d r I," Mauro
Serafino said, "but she must have
this house and the vineyard as
her dowry."
"Basta.!" s h o ut e d Serafini's
prospective father-in-law, Bruno
Fazi. "Already my daughter has
borne you one child, and another
is on the way. Marry her tomor-
row and be damned to you."
That's how the argument end-
ed.
For Serafini, a 21-year-old la-
bourer, pulled out a pistol and
began firing wildly, While Papa.
Fazi raced to the police station,
Serafini barricaded himself in the
house, in the village of Rocca di
Papa in the Sabine hills near
Rome. As hostages, he had Mama
Fast, 67, the daughter, Gabriella,
18, and Gabriella's 17-mont,h-old
daughter, Loredana. As weapons,
which he had been secretly stor-
ing in the house he hoped to ac-
quire, he had a machine gun,
four pistols, and a supply of
dynarnite and hand grenades,
When the local police first
showed their heads above a
stone wall facing the house, the
young gun eallector Opened. fire
On them from behind a window
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOuDS
rES'rEP, geaveliteee it
Parcel, including teiele,..le ,V0(1 sex
book free with Mel ',era 1! for
pe.00, (Finest qUelitv Western Oriteibie re, Box 24.TPF Regina. Srsk
PET STOCK
BUPGIES, annual seramet tvgh•
grade healthy stock, breeder/ rureels„
virgin. or nested. $4.4 , i sir 64 nnil SRL
Jiher varieties atedit,ble ANT ho`ies
forpets, Mrs T Brotee !tin 'erect
East. Oshawa, Ontario,
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31 GALT ONT
Films de%eiopect na nragna perms .114;
12 magna prints eT; Reprints tic caoh
KODACOLOR .
Developing rue l'', ,not ineleding
prints). Coto, prints 30.: eaeli rrOro. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 u rn Zi 010 Posures muunted in slides el 70 Cider prints from slides 32c each Monej re-funded in full foi imprinted eegarhes
PONIES
FOR Sale - Ponies, reline, mares,
studs, 34", 64", all colours, also Palo-mino. B. Unger, Ayton, Lint '3 miles
North of Clifford,
PROPERTIES FOR RENT
STORE for rent, in the town of Ayl-
mer. Approximately 135 be 25 plus warehouse space. Eecellent location on main street. Has modern front. R. S. Sheppard. 250 John St. South Aylmer
Ont.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
SUMMER RESORTS
abrasive surface of the sandpa-
per contacts the drawer front.
This will serve as a "lock wash-
er" to keep the knob tightly
screwed in place.
Q. What is an easy way to
paint screens?
A. Cover a small block of
wood with an old piece of car-
peting, tacking the carpeting se-
curely to the wood. Dip this into
your• paint and rub it over the
screen.
Q. • How can I produce a high-
er gloss on my shoes?
A. After polishing the shoes
as usual, put a drop or two of
plain water on the caps and fin-
ish-polish with your buffing
cloth.
Q. Have you any tips for
making easier the job of cutting
corn off the cob for canning?
A, This job will be easier if.
you'll use a shoehorn, instead oil
a knife. The wide end of the
horn, which is sharpened, con-
forms to the curvature at the
average ear of corn, and facili-
tates the shearing off of the ker-
nels.
Q. What can I do when. I
need only a few drops of lemon
juice, and don't wish to cut a
whole lemon into halves?
A. Pierce the lertion with a
fork or knife, and squeeze out
the required amount of jUice.
Then the lemon-can be returned
to the refrigerator for later use.
Q. How can. I make a good
dead-black paint?
A, By thinning some lamp-
black, of the type ground in lin-
seed oil, with some turpentine,
Q. How cell I improvise a
light starch for very delicate ma-
terials?
A. By using the water in,
which rice has been boiled. and
adding a little bitting to it.
rtairilyi I itheW :the artist;.
.tit
W
OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN
E A HAIRDRg..SS.E.R
JOIN -.CANADA'S LEADING ECHO,
prem. ;,I,Drt 1-?11 Learn Ileirrirt ,,'-eg •
Pleasant dignified eroheelerrii ledges Ileeteanie of soereetstill Marvel Grads:: I es. America's iireettsl 4-veteiry
(7r,tslogoe Prep
SI rite el CA.
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING
Bloor St W., Torente
firent:1;es.
eieg -St V.
22 -Ride-et Sittet
PERSONAL
MODERN 4-room winterized bungalow,
in Fenelon Falls. New automatic oil furnace, spacious lawn, small 'garden. near shopping, schools, churches, love taxes, $7,000. Mr. W. W. Jordan; Can-
nington, Ont. Phone 15. '
Motor Camp Far Sale
BLUE Top Motor Camp comprising a or more acres on No. 11 Highway, 31/2
miles north of Orillia, overlooking Lake Couchiching. Suitable for hotel. motel and market garden. This property has 8-room modern residence, 3 winterized cottages, all modern conveniences, and. .1 double and 5 single log cabins for summer tourists. For further Informa-tion apply to Chas. A Ann's. R.R. 3,
°Mille, Ont.
FOR complete information on summer vacation in Muskoka, write for free colour folder. Paighton House, RR 2, Port Carling, or phone RO. 5-3155,
Muskoka.
WHITE Forest Lodge, Arundel. Que. On beautiful Lake MacDonald In Laur-entian Mountains. 'Excellent cuisine,
Cocktail Lounge. Write,
saieeS sauitt
. CHAIN REACTION When -they toy Elauto 0'401' Hilt what they mean. the Chicago pileup Involved three autos
Iwo trucks dod wets a thairt reeittiari, of iiVeritt -set off by ih-li'kutIt (denten 'What* driver blacked 'out. tie( Were hurt
Charlie The Mote
Continues His Rest. CLASSIFIED AMIE TING
AGENTS, 4140E, ETC,.
can.,:ize.. want clirl,lmair eartie over lit mous,
eteon. day :nu, e 4T1d- n'raim 'cos tiht Noweilles Prompt 0 1.74:
Fti I olou red, eatelegue 51110 semi''''s on eep ee e Jew-wren. ereetina
elnitro Co
1253 Kinn ettir10.
BABY CHICKS,
eenn.' dayolds eel .,^ti4rted ayeilable,
pullets, mixed, cockerels. Send for list
120 John North Hamilton. Ont.
lteloiceialeragAals(tu.S(:‘,1 01.10eti,gnbsitilli%aby7111feartse.ileSve.!
001.141i SALL: (;•riusuel; Books ror the whole family. All New!!!
Led
Catalog,Aghtler‘alahtatinii"A‘ tslimuseIL 104 cio415112. of Nor.
Monterey, California.
"ETERNAI VALUES" - 52 501 •Pab. Usher William Frederick Press). Strive far eternal profits, World Factory Mall
13(1,i:taller r,Rakey,ar:iiiiilic7Igleatnite No. 2, I-lox 392.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
SELF•serve, grocery, restaurant, in village, Living quarters above. Com.
pletely remodelled, walk-in cooler, Sell or exchange for apartment build. lag, Kitchener preferred. T. J 'Schaefer, Forclwich, Ont.
TELEVISION & Radio Sales and Ser, vice Ideal business for a serviceman who would like to get into business for himself. This dept. connected with a furniture and appliance business. situated in a town of 1,000 population in the Niagara Peninsula. Records shown to interested party. Disposing of this end of business due to other inter. ests. Apply Box No. 239, 123 10th St New Toronto, Ont
COINS
WANTE D; Canadian Pennies, We pay high prices Write for our Free Buying List Ken Pierce. 070 Lafayette Ave„ Buffalo 9, New York.
EDUCATIONAL
EARN degrees, home study, Divinity. Science, Theology. Free information 4, Seminary, 423 Wilson, New Westmin, ster, British Columbia.
BONNIE LASS — Judy Derry was
named Missouri Lassie Queen
for 1961.
.?`..eele'eallaeraieteawee
HITLER'S WOMEN — German actresses Mario Emo, left, and
Cordula Trantow, Germany's "best new actress" of last year,
are in •Hollywood. Mario, 25, will play the part of Hitler's
mistress Eva Braun, and Cordula, 1 8, will play the dictator's
half-niece in the forthcoming picture "Hitler."
bum is a non-migratory non-
worker."
Charlie the Mole, of course,
considered himself a bum, al-
though he did confess to' cutting
grass in a nudist colony. When
columnist Howard Jacobs of
The New Orleans. Times-Picay-
une, who was by way of being
Charlie's Boswell, asked whether
he had to wear clothes on the
job, the Mole replied: "Dress is
optional."
Charles (Charlie the Mole)
Greer, 54 years of vagabondage
behind him, died last month at
Charity Hospital of Louisiana in.
New Orleans. To where he mi-
grated or whether he Would
work at anything when he got'
there, nobody knew. But one
thing was certain: Charlie was
wearing no man's wooden collar.
—From NEWSWEEK
their own rollicking and hilarious-
games- of hide-and-seek with us,
and a sort of aquatic blind-man's-
buff in which we in the boat were
all too literally blind. to them,
and a target for whatever sur-
prises they could devise.
The beginning followed an in-
variable routine; they would
lead, close-packed, their fins
thrusting from the water with a
long powerful forward surge
every five or ten seconds, and
we would follow to see how close
we could get to them. When we
were within fifty feet or so there
would be a sudden silence while,
unseen, they swooped back un-
der the boat to reappear dead
astern of us. Sometimes they
would remain submerged for
many minutes, and we would cut
the engine and wait. This was
the dolphins' moment. As long as
I live, and whatever splendid
sights I have yet to see I shall
remember the pure glory of the
dolphins' leap as they shot up a
clear ten feet out of the sea, one
after the other, in high parabolas
of flashing silver at the very
boat's side. At the time it gave
me a sensation that I could not
place; afterwards. I realized that
it recalled irresistibly the firing
in quick succession of pyrotech-
nic rockets, the tearing sound of
rockets' discharge duplicated by
the harsh exhalation of air as
each dolphin fired itself almost
vertically from the waves, —
From "Ring of Bright Water," by
Gavin Maxwell.
Dolphins Sport
In a Scottish Bay
The porpoises, six-foot lengths
of sturdy grace, are the common-
est of all the whale visitors to
the Camusfearna bay. Unlike the
rumbustious dolphins they are
shy, retiring creatures, and one
requires leisure and patience to
see more of them than that little
hooked fin that looks as if it
were set on the circumference
of a slowly-revolving wheel; lei-
sure to ship the oars and remain
motionless,- and patience to allow
curiosity to overcome timidity.
Then the porpoises will blow
right alongside the boat, with a
little gasp that seems of.shocked
surprise, and at these close quar-
ters the wondering inquisitive-
ness of their eyes shows as plain-
ly as it can in a human face, a
child's face as yet uninhibited
against the display of emotion.
The face, like the faces of all
whales but the killer, appears
good-humoured, even bonhom-
ous. But they will not stay to be
stared at, and after that quick
gasp they drive steeply down
into the twilight; they go on
about their own business, and
will not linger to play as do the
dolphins.
One summer a school of seven-
teen Bottle-nosed dolphins spent
a whole week in the Camusfearna
bay, and they would seem almost
to hang about waiting for the
boat to come out and play with
them, They never lept and sport-
ed unless the humeri audience
was close at hand, but when -We
were out among them with the
outboard motor they would play
ISSUE 32 — 1961
OW, .resu police
atation in the sire:centred Crim-
inal Building in New Orieans
a humilielleg 'fey of 191e crept
i0Veilbli• little old wintl»bber,
retired sign painter, rind authen-
tic wit who had bet it christened
Charlet, Greet' at birth in
Doerun. Ga.
Swiftly nicknamed Charlie the
Mole (by the press), he proudly
related how for six years, in a
snug that he called the Hotel
de Bastille, he and others of his
idle ilk had luxuriated right un-
der the very flat foot (and now
rod faces) of the New Orleans
police force.
"It started back in 1942," so
ran Charlie the Mole's account,
"when myself and a pal called
California Slim ducked behind
the bushes around the building
fora fast nip of muscat (in the
New Orleans patois; a wine call-
ed muscatel). We found a vent
leading under the Criminal
Courts building and decided to
investigate. We, saw at once that
we had struck paydirt. Having
no baggage to speak of we
checker,, in immediately.
"We mooched some coat han-
gers and later on a few bottles
of muscat. We smootched some
mattresses and smuggled them
in by night, Then we scrootched
a picture of Washington crossing
the Delaware and some scantily
clad calendars to give the place
a cozy, homelike atmosphere."
But Charlie, he was interrupt-
ed, don't mooch, smootch, and
scrootch mean the sarbe thing?
"Indeed not," he rebuked "To
mooch is to induce someone to
give you a handout. To smoatch
is to take something nobody
wants. To scrootch is to take
something that somebody might
want, but not enough to get stuf-
fy about it,"
And then, taking up the thread
of his narrative, Charlie said:
"Our next was to tap into the-
water supply, although the best
we could scrootch for- a wash
basin was a bed pan. Then we
commenced Work on Operation
Ouch, which was intended to cut
in on the electricity. California
and I, feeling that no sacrifice
was too great for the cause, ac-
cepted positions wheeling ice-
cream wagons. We resigned after
clearing 70 cents, just enough
for the tools we`` needed to cut
in on the power line,
"We got knocked clown four
times apiece, but finally connect-
ed and turned on the juice. (The
police subsequently 'recalled,
their mystification when' the
lights failed four times in a sin-
gle hour one night.)
"That night we threw an ex
cursive blowout to celebrate the
coming of light to Hotel de Bas-
tille. There was No Nose Ferdie,
Sloppy Robbie, a guy called
Janoots, a citizen from Balti-
more'named the Chesapeake Bay
Retriever due to his skill at stab-
bing cigar' butts, Twitchy-toes
Murgatroyd, The Sharecropper,
Gondola George, Knapsack Jack,
a chap called Horrible Example,
and. of course Atomic Bun, so
called because . he was usually
charged up. A handful of the
canned-heat mob tried to crash
but we doled out a few wooden
collars."
And what is a wooden collar,
Charlie?
"You take a whole board no
thicker than 1/4 inch, and you
bring it down' forcibly on the
skull Of the party to be fitted,
A hole will usually form in the
board where it comes in contact
wih the skull and the board will
settle on the shoulders, giving a
very neat collar 'effect,"
Next to the comfort of the
Hotel de Bastille, the food in the
House of Detention, and the beds
in the veterans' hospitals (Char-
lie had been in the Navy), the
Mole savored most the delicate
differences of word meanings.
"A tranip," he once said, "is a
Migratory worker, a hobo is a
migratory non-worker, and a
How Can I?
By Roberta Lee
Q. Will you please suggest a
good. meth od of laundering
quilts?
A. Make a generous lather
with pure soap and a little wash-
ing soda and ammonia in enough
moderately hot water to- cover
the quilt, and soak it for a half-
hour. Press the dirt out -with a
wooden potato masher or a era-
quet mallet. Do not. ub or wring.
Rinse in the same manner. Hang
on the line to drip, and shake
often. When partly dry, beat
lightly with a rattan carpet beat-
er to lighten the filling. Repeat
several times.
Q. How can. I assure myself
of a tender steak befOre grilling
it?
A. Rub it well With olive oil
about an hour before grilling,
Melted butter may be used if you
do not care for olive oil, but the
former is More effective.
4. -whit tan I de about
drawer knob that keeps itriscreW,
ing and 'working lieeSel
A, Try cutting a disk from
Sandpaper and gluing this to the
knob in such a way that tit
Day And Night
Beauty Treatment
At 1 a.m. one night recently,
while millions of other women
slept in their pin curlers, a
dozen New York girls chattered
happily under hair driers at Lar-
ry Mathews' 57th Street beauty
salon. Two were chorines just
finished work; three were mo-
dels with early morning jobs.
There was a lady executive and
a housewife," and before dawn
there was likely to be a cele-
brity or two. Purveyin.g beauty
around the clock, Mathews' sa-
lon never closes and is never
short of sleepless beauties to fill
its chairs.
This emporium is only one in
the Mathews chain of 22 beauty
shops in ten cities around the
country which have proved. that
the wee hours can mean: big
business. All the shops stay
open at least until midnight, and
last year grossed some $4.5 mil-
lion. Last month Mathews' late-
burning lights attracted chair-
man Jerry Finkelstein of All-
State Properties, Inc. (a holding
company with interests in apart-
ment houses, real estate, and
bowling alleys), who bought
control of the Mathews chain
for $500,000 in cash and stock.
Finkelstein, a New York pub-
lic relations man turned promo-
ter, immediately announced
plans to invest $1 million more
in the enterprise, beef it up
into a nationwide chain of 400
beauty shops and 100 barber-
shops (Mathews merged .with
Terminal Barbershops in 1959).
The first step would be an all-
night barbershop in New York's
Grand Central Terminal which
he hope's to open within six
weeks. He plans to offer a $12
"package" including a haircut,
shave, and hair tint "to train the
man to stay in the barbershop a
while longer and give him the
idea that it's a place to relax,"
Finkelstein says, And as a bonus
for daytime customers, he also
hopes to install a Dow Jones
ticker.
MathewS, who didn't have the
necessary financial backing to
spread his midnight gospel, says
he's "delighted" with Finkel-
stein's plans. A former fashion
photographer, he opened his
first all-night shop eight years
ago, sparked by his wife's com-
plaint that she couldn't " always
get her hair done when she
wanted to. The idea quickly
caught on with sophisticates
arid night owls, and by 1957
Mathews was marketing his own
line of cosmetics, including such
sophisticated items as tWe-tone
lipstick ($1.50 ,a tube), and
orehici,colottred wigs ($75 to
$350),
Even today, fully half of
Mathews' New York business is
done when other shops have
bong since closed for the night.
It retains at. exotic flavour.
Mathews has coiffured a snake
dancer While her snake lay toil-
ed about her neck, caters to
sneh regulars as actress Jost
Pontaine, who often arrives at
5. in the morning to study her
ecripts under the hair drier, and
torriedierine Heribione Girigald
Who Mites hi around Midnight, -
thd custairiarily smokes a cigar
While her heir is drying.
"They used to call us intom-
titles and neurotics," says Ma,
thews. "But ii3OW people •realize
this IS net just a ghtitick,"
From NEW W1iJt {.