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Port Perry Star (1907-), 20 Apr 1950, p. 2

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tS te Me Ea - bgt! . Looks Like Snow --Feeds On Wood That strange looking fungus we call dry rot is probably as much re-, sponsible for the damage and deterioration of property as any other cause. Once it gains a hold on any building, it can do irrepar- able harm, and severe measures are always necessary to obliterate its traces. - La Why is it called dry rot? Merely because of. the dry appearance of the wood ofter the fungus has at- tacked it. "Actually the fungus re: "quires Continual damp in order to survive," Wdod standing out in the open, though subject to damp, is not attacked by dry rot, since this fun- gus doesn't flourish in sunlight and frost." Dry rot works unscen and un suspected, and its presence is only too frequently' detected after -its ravages have made seribus inroads into the -sonndness and stability of a building. Its botanical name is "Lacrymans:" This refers to the drops of fluid it exxudes. Sometimes the floorboards of building are taken up to reveal a sight which is both shocking and marvellous. Dry rot has gained . a firm hold. In some cases "the joists may be complétely clothed with a light cobwebby substance, hanging here and there in tassels and fringes. In many places the deposit resembles fine, freshly drif- ted snow. This represents the immature stage of dry rot. When more lux- uriaht "it forins cobweb festoons in the corners which are often, tra- versed by threads of orange, purple and magenta hues, and distilling drops of amber fluid. } A singles plant of this fungus re- produces millions of spores which are so small that they can be borne about by the slightest draught. By means of strands the fungus spreads within the wood, feeding upon it and forming felt-like sheets over its surface, or over brick, stone, or metal surfaces, and even through the mortar of walls in search of new wood which it can eat away. "Dry rot which starts in a cellar may even spread across substances drom which it receives no susten- ance as far as the roof of the house. The only method of getting rid of it is to cit out all the affected tim- ber. Surrounding brickwork should then be sterilized with a blow lamp and creosote used on all exposed wood. : hb J3 LIER TAPS Practice Makes Par--Slammin' Sammy Snead gets off a long drive in 3 [Fhatics round. Watching are (left to right) Byron Nelson, Johnny Bulla and Herman Barron. THEFARM FRONT hnRussell Everybody knows, of course, that "the old gray mare, she ain't what she used to be" But pos- sibly, when you start your trae- tor on some real work--such as spring plowing--you'll find that it has slowed down just like the ray. mare, and you'll be won- dering "how come?" » * » Not long ago a couple of agri- cultural experts took a farm trac- tor into the university. shop. It sounded pretty good, but when they put it on the testing machine It registered only 25 horsepower. --- » - » * This is hard to believe--but in less than 30 minutes they had shoved the horsepower needle up -dust and dirt out of the air filter. Then, cleaning out the radiator pushed the needle up still another '3 horsepower. . » » *- In other words, they gave that tractor 9 more horsepower in less than an hour, * I Ll * At AN gs etme Dry rot cannot develop--though it may remain latent--in wood to which-air currents have free access. Sometimes dry rot starts when air vents become clogged and air fis prevented from circulating under- neath the house. It is a wise plan to clear these vents of aH encumbran- ces pt regular intervals, "Rain-Making" Is An Old, Old Story A native of New Guinea would be puzzled by the interest shown by people in Canada and the United States in rain-making. It would be an old story to him. Lvery well-ordered community in his part of the world would have its rain- maker, who would be expected to bring on a good shower whenever the crops nceded it. There would be other .experts who would under- take 16 "prop up the clouds" and stop the rains when there had been too much moisture. There would be many ways of doing this, all more or less imitative. To bring on rain, water would be sprinkled about with appropriate public cere- monies. To stop rain, fire would be used to dry up the clouds. Control of the weather, which only now is being undertaken on a "scientitic basis, is one of the oldest and most widespread uses of magic. Sir James Frazer in his great com- pendium, of magical lore, "The Golden control of rain, through many lands and ages. In some primitive com- munities the king or head man is supposed -to look after the weather for the benefit of the, tribe. In others this most important matter is turned over to a professional magician, of to a special class' of, magicians, Since their livelihosd, and perhaps their lives, too, depend on their success, these weather wizards are pretty sure to take an interest in meteorology. In this way, Frazer points out, | science gets a start along with all the arts of iinposture. The rain- . maker naturally observes scasonal . cieties variations, the clouds and the winds, Ii he can stage a making ceremony at" the proper time he is rewarded by a downpour and his prestige soars. In a long "dry spell Tis life is hard and full of danger. The tribe may plame him for the -drought awd put him to death, Yet rain-makers scem. to have flourished in all primitive so- wl still flonrish in the the South Paeific, in Africa and other out-of« and islands of ~f -e yaw the-way plices. THE POLICE COMMIS- SIONER in Chicago announced that he- was planning to introduce television as an anti-crime mea- sure. Pictures aid descriptions of wanted criminals will be felecast te policemen. oil," traces {hie magical = rain=-="-- "thing like 9,000 more gallons of alr for every gallon of fuel it con-- sumes. That's why the air n is one of the best things to slow down wear in your tractor, engine, . or car. 'When the air cleaner is clogged, the engine gets short of breath, -and loses power. It has trouble getting air, so it sucks MORE FUEL FROM THE TANK. * * 5: Your carburetor can be just as "costly. You can waste as much as a dollar's worth -of gasoline a 'day just by being LESS THAN A TURN OFF THE "LOAD AD- JUSTMENT SCREW." If you aren't sure just where that screw is;" dig out your instruction book and find, out. Then, here's how to set it properly: : { » * * Run your tractor wide _ open. Slowly turn the load needle IN until the engine starts to miss. Then turn it back OUT until the | engine runs. smoothly. Now try pulling a load. If it won't quite do it, open the needle another six- teenth of a turn. Then ycu have the setting where most engines make the most power with a gal- lon of fuel. : * » * You can probably make your tractor 'run on less fuel than that but it doesn't pay to be too stingy cither. Too lean a mixture. is too hot for your engine to handle properly--it burns and warps the. valves, » cd * cq Perhaps without your even sus- pecting it, bad valves can let as mych as 5 horsepower go out the exhaust instead of to the drawbar. Have yout valves ground regularly, keep tappets adjusted, and vou won't need to worry about wasting 5 or 6 gallons of gas a day. ; * M . -} Keeping the valves cool calls for a radiator that's clean. Buy some" cleaner and flush out the collected scale. Refill, using soft water--such as rain water from a' cistern--as the minerals in well water can make your rad look like the inside of a teakettle. Put in a shot of one of those rustipreven- tion compounds too. » \d * Better take a look at the fan belts; too. If they appear a little frayed, it would be a good idea to pick up some new ones at the carli- est opportunity. ~~ * > * Poor timing cuts down power and wastes fuel. A worn governor- can rob you of two or three horse- power. But better not tinker with the "insides of a magneto or gov- ernor yourself. Give the fob to a mechanic who is a specialist on such things. » * * Do you do your greasing in the, morning before you start work, or after you come in from. the field? Fvening, when bearings are still (wir, is best; and the grease keeps the -moisture in the night 4 rair from sneaking in; and Jeausing rust, as they cool off. i ¢ I - fit. to--3l--just--by cleaning --a-lot---of --| TA tractor engine will use some- Avanted to. Or were allowed "fort for "the man who appointed him, Oil filters are rcal collectors of grit and grime; that's what they're meant to be. But the filter ele- ment needs to be changed as soon as the oil starts to feel and look dirty, to better keep a few spare elements on hand. i L | - * So, before 'you get too busy, why not make these--and other-- checks? Protective maintenance of your tractor, car or truck is the. best" way-to cut down operating costs -- and you won't have to worry about expensive breakdowns when you're hurrying té get some- thing done. Ld * * And here's an item [I picked up from an exchange. You can take it seriously--or not, just as you see "A doctor says that farmers ought to wear girdles. around on tractors shakes up their insides. The doctor says they'd feel better with something to hold gizzard, backbone and other odds "and ends together. » * * "Sounds sissy, doesn't it? Well, the buckaroos of Spanish Califor- nia--real tough horsemen--used to wind yards and vards of cloth around their waists, tight. It helped them when the bronchos jack-knifed. * 3 - it. But the ones that do will at at least find out what the wife means when she says 'My girdle is killing me!"" & be ASwaiTCRITIC A) As we write this, it is still uncertain whether the famous Stan- ley Cup--proud emblem of world hockey supremacy, or some such-- will find a resting place, for the next twelve months or so, in De- troit Olympia Stadium or New York's Madison Square Garden. * x * . (In passing we have often wonder- ed why it should be Madison Square GARDEN and Maple Leaf GAR- DENS. But we've never bothered to find out. With- or without the "8," neither one of them ever re- minded us of roses, hyacinths or even lillies-of-the-valley.) » * * If The Cup should land in New York--a real possibility consider- ing, what Detroit went through, compared to the soft touch Rangers found in Les Canadicns--there"s a. Scriptural quotation that just about sums it up. To wit, "The last shall be first and tlie first, last." Rangers just managed to edge into the fourth and final playoff position. Detroit led the league practically from start to finish. Yet, should Rangers win, inside of a month 99 out of 100 fans will think and talk of them as World -Champions. We've heard plenty of much poorer jokes on high-ranking comedy air programs. ; . * + Still, maybe it won't happep. Per- haps, by the time this appears, Red Wings will have done right by "the world's fastest sport"-and managed to come through. i + * * - The playoff series between Red Wings and Maple Leafs -- or at least two or three games thereof-- | proved-one point which, for several years, has been in doubt. In spite of the widespread belief that the modern fan pays money to see blood, bumps and © attempted mayhem, hockey -can- still be played cleanly and provide plenty of thrills. It all "depends on the officials, who could clean out all the undue rough stuff in twenty minutes or less if they to. . * + For in hockey--fiore than in any other sport--the attitude-of the paid officials is a direct reflection of that taken by the top brass. Someday, under present conditions, there's going to° Wl areal liockey fatality. (It's sry come to close to com- that 'one or two ocea- sins.) When and if such a thing occurs the responsibility won't. be that of the referce who allowed the game to get- out of harnd--or even The blame will fall directly on the type 1 we'll pass along a few. (We may Bouncing | of coach, manager or owner who tells the press and public, "We're going to have a real battling team" and who send their gladiators on the ice in the same spirit as that of the fight handler yelling, "Get in there and slug, kid--he can't hurt Us." . te . * * ~ Too much roughness killed field lacrosse. The boxing game is in a worse plight than ever before, large- ly because decent-minded fight fans are sick of watching "boxers" whose only ability is that of absorbing pun- ishment, and nauseated with the "steadily growing list of ring fatali- ties. te kk. * * * The latest of these occurred when : young Lavern Roach died follawing a recent bout in New York City. Colonel Harvey L. Miller--better known as "Heinie"--had some in- teresting things to say "about it, and about the need for more atten- tion to safety in the ring--of which say that Col. Miller is no raw hand, having been connected with boxing for almost 30 years as fighter, sec- ond, manager, referee, sports writer, and National Boxing Association official.) * 0 "Unlgss the mantle of intercolleg- Jiate (safety) rules is extended over prize fighting, its existence likely will be abolished by mounting indig- nation over continued fatalities such as the recent death of young Lavern Roach in New York." LJ »* * { "Dramatic safety "rules will not be popular, we appreciate, with the fellows who believe Gettysburg was a frameup and that Iwo Jima should be 'repeated every Monday night. They'll probably denounce larger gloves and proposed head harnesses as sissy equipment. But the wise ones will prefer that to velvet cas- kets with silver handles." , * * * "At the next NBA meeting, Michigan will report on the tests of a-90-second interval, rather than the usual minute, between rounds, ~~ Witli the 10-second warning buzzer for "seconds out of the ring" and . other interiuptions, the boxers haven't been .getting the full rest intended by the rules, Of course, the extra 30 seconds will evoke howls from blapdthirsty fans impatient for the. sight of slaughter. But it would give the possibly injurious punches and his handlers opportunity to staunch his wounds." . + » » "During 'the past year, NBA bulle- tins, which are issued every 10 days, have suspended or retired close to 400 boxers. I wish that we had sus- . pended -Lavern Roach months back when I saw him lose to a second- rater and realized that the beating he had taken from Marcel Cerdan had left him a hollow shell. He promised me then that he would quit and did for a while ,only to meet death trying a comeback." ~~ . » * "Beyond a doubt, television often is responsible for the staging of bouts that would not aor-should not have been staged at all. The promo- ter ig obligated by video agreement to produce a show at a given hour on a given date, And the show must 'go on--even if it's a mismatch or It's time for the idealists" in box- ing, those dyed-in-the-wool fans to whom the prime concern after a bout is "who won and how" to save the game from the "what-was-the- take" coteric." : * * * Space, or the lack of it, will not permit further coniment at this time. But with hockey off the sports map for a few months, we hope, it might be an idea for those in control of that game to take a little thought as to whether--if 'present tendencies aren't checked -- it isn't heading down the same road that brought disaster to boxing. ren Ascot Metals To Make Profits During the recent war lead; zinc and copper supplies were urgently sought in- Canada which became an important war arsenal for the allies, The scarch for these metals was in- tensified. Government geologists collaborated with private companies in an effort to locate new deposits and in several instances this team work. was successful: In Ascot township, Quebec, a Donrsnion Government geologist discovered a structure which he. thought deserved test and Aldermac Copper Corporation subjected "the hrea to a- geophysical survey and extensive diamond drilling, with the _ result that a lead-copper-zinc deposit was outlined. A shaft was sunk to metallurgical and mining experts WHY SUFFER PILES Grateful users quick results, Relief from Pain--and = ing comfort --from Mecea Pile Remedies. Two kinds--Number 1 for protrud- ing Piles, Sold in tube with perforated for internal applica 780, Number 2 for external Piles. Bold in Jar, 786, Order by number from A Ee Sd Sa --fighter more -time-to-recover--from--{ BABY CHICKS Breeding quality, one of the best. logue, Monkton Poultry Farms, Monkton, On MONKTON OHICKB--Government Approved. 's wuess, be certain. Write for prices and cata. t. SCHUMMER CHICKS JOVERNMENT approved, Top quality, Free Catalogues and price list explain: details. chummer's Quality Hatchery, Linwood, Ont. TWEDDLE R.O.P. Slred superior egg, and meat production Inher! heritance. trouble, expense, lost efforts, catalogue. Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limi ed. Fergus, Ontarlo. 1 Chicks--glve * you t- ance, That's all you buy In baby chicks--in- If you get wood egg and meat production Inheritance you get value. 'If you don't you get nothing--ndihing, that .is but wasted feed. Prompt delivery on day old, started 2 weeks to 6 weeks, oldér pullets, turkey poults. Free t- you? That's right. We don't know, strain or cross in the country. "THE VERY BEST"? Wea doiry ¥RoW---deo. 3 n fact we never "will know as It 1s. obviously impossible to test our chicks against every But we do know that hundreds of cusfomers come back to Lus, every year for thelr replacement chicks or FOR SALE RCYCLES Harley Davidson. New and unl "bought. sold, exchanged: Large stock of guaranteed used motorcycles. Repairs by factory-trained mechanice. Bicycles, and com- plete line of wheel goods. Open evenings unt nine except W:dnesday Strand Cycle & Sports, King at Sanfor), Hamilton. _ GUNS--Large assortment new and used, Bought, sold, sxchanged." Guaranteed repairs. Beopes. wights installéd. Fishing Tackle. Hunt- ns Equipment. Sporting Goods. Spe ial Team Prices. Open until alne except Wednesday. Strand Cycle, Hamllton. . ers, bought, sold, exchanged. Large stock used motors. Repairs by factory-tralned ufechanics. Oper' until nine except Wednesday. Strand Cycle, Hamilton. HORNET SAWS--SALE MODEL D.J., 1l-man, $218, fo0.b. aelpniy equipped with 16", 20" or 24" attachments. Sales tax extra. NEW AND GUARANTEED. D. J. Smith Sales Co. Ltd., 647 Woalwlh Sti, Guelph, Ont. 'every time they fill thelr broiler turkey poulta. Free Gulde, h and | that it seems to us, Is sufficient evidence. that our stock performs far, far above the average. Prompt delivery on day old, started chicks, p catalogue and Turkey Top Notch Chick Sales, Guelph, Ont. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES tions and full information sent free. Ramsay Co.. Re Bank Street, Ottawa. DYEING AND CLEANING AN OFFER to every Inventor--List of inven- tered Patent Attorneys, 373 ing? Write to us for Information, Street, Toronto, Ontario. HAVE YOU anything needs dyeing or clean. We are glad to anawer your questions. - Department H, Parker's Dye Works Limited, 191 Yonge EMPLOYMENT WANTED EXERIENCED, reliable Holland immigrants = available: arriving soon. Write to L, Van- denburg, Box 92, Brockville, - Ont.; phone 2854 (after 6 o'clock)." . FARMS FOR SALE 44-ACRE FARM in village of Lynden, 1 soll for vegetable growling, small raspberries and strawberries, bank barn 432 benutiful 7 room frame house, room, Hydro, plenty of water, church, public and high school, bus. ment. Apply Tel. 1TW. 2 minutes t Harry Wald, Lynden, 5 miles Hamilton, 40 miles Toronto. Excellent acreage 52, chicken house, Implement shed, 3 garages, 3 piece bath- 0 railway, Price $10,500 with $5,000 down i nt. BARGAIN, $11,000, den land. 70'x38' steel barn, good wells. 1 road; ghould be seen to be appreciated. fam Ashby, R.R. No. 1, Wooler. - 145 acres, 10 cholce gar- brick. house, with hydro, modern conveniences, spring creek, miles from village on ¥aved il- 18-28 OLIVER Hart Power tractor on rubber; Mechanically good as new. Gordon Mr Thornten, Brampton, Ont, 'H.R. 1, } CASCADE WHEAT--New high yielding soft spring wheat, Certified No. 1, $3 bushel. Harry Strang, Hensall, Ont. . SHEPHERD COLLIES PUPS -- also choice Pekin Duck eggs. Rose comb Black and Golden Sebright Bantam stock and eggs. Cholce stock. John J. McMaster, Greenfield Box 60, Ontarlo. APPLE TREES, Pears, Plums, Cherries, Peaches, Bush Frults, Strawberries, Shrubs, Roses, Perennials, Lowest prices in years. Catalogue , free. Norfolk Simcoe, Ontarlo, Nursery, MANOR .LUCKOO CLOCKS Beautiful, Atcurate. Fascinating. Write for free prospectus to: i MANUFACTURERS MERCHANDISING x (CANADA) LIMITED, 2067 Stanley Street, Montreal HEAVY TRACTOR, International W3i0 on loaded rubber. Perfect mechanical shape. Located West Erindale. See Howard Buck, Streetsvillé. Ontario. < CANVAS Tarpaulins, 8 x 6', new. 8 oz. waterproof, eyelet each corner. Boat, 'Trail- er, atack, implement covers, $4.50" each. In lots of six $4.00 each. By-Products, 93 Ontario St... Toronto. SPRAY WITH A SPRAMOTOR Sprayers for orchard (engine and tractor- driven), row crops (traction), weed, disinfect ing. whitewashing, cattle spraying and fire fighting; farm wagons, Shallow Well Pressure Systems!; "TIFA' (Fog Applicator); Portable Irrigation Systems with aluminum pipe, Buck- ner Sprinklers, McDowell Couplings. Free catalogues. Write today. Spramotor Ltd., 1000 York St., London, Ontario. ~ | OPPO) RTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOM} America's greatest system. BE A HAIRDRESSE JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOO Great Opportunity Learn Halrdresslng Pleasant dignified profebsion, good w thousands successful Marvel gradu lustra logue free. Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING 'SCHOOLS 350 Bloor Bt. W., Toronto Branches, 44 King St. Hamilton : & 72 Rideau Streat; Ottawa, cate Ontarlo. : AVE CAPITAL to asaiat in Jarketing yo 3 { f vention. All 'information kept NEW JOHNSQN Outboard Motors. Canadian | 1dea or Invent ont, ¥ : > , Trajle pstrictest confidence, Send particulars, . C, anos. Co, Pelerbara lioats, Canes Fortier, 1096 Plerre "Ave., Apt. 3, Windsor, '.* WRITERS!" Author of more than €00 pu lished storf®g now offers personal assistan to beginners... Write for particulags. C. V, Tench, P.O, Box 680, Vancouver, B.C, NURSERY STOCK. 8 BEAUTIFUL' DAHLIAS--Only $2.00 ei paid cash with order. A grand assortment of Holland grown dahlias. Extra large tubers, 5 different varieties. 5 different colors, Won- derful selection. Well worth twice the price. Holland Bulb® and Elizabeth Nursery Company, Quee Port Credit, 'Ont, Way, P.O. Imported from Holland. ited, Deep Pink, White, Rose. Speclal offer, 4 large roots of these Garden Champlons for only $2.50 Postpaid, Cash with Order. land Elizabeth: Way, Exhibition Varletles One each, Brilliant PEONIES., Cholece Hél- Nursery Company, Queen Port Credit, P.O., Ont, Bulb and For from Write for Gardens, B.C, DAHLIAS exhibition and the garden. Buy stralght the grower, as low as $2 per dozeh, catalogue _ to: Johnson's Dahlfk R.R. 2, Dilworth Road, Kelowna, RESERVE now for Spring Delivery--Chiness Elm Hedge--will grow 2 feet first year--28 plants suflicient 'for 25 feet (12 to 20 inches bushy) $2.98--seealings 12 Inches high $4.80 per 100 (plant 6 Inches apart)--Glant Exhibi- tion Peonies In colors red, white or pink, 8 for $1.89--Apple trees 3 feet high In varieties McIntosh, Spy, trees 3 feet high in varfetles: Burbank and Lombard, Gulde way Nurseries, Bowmanville, Ontarlo, Delicious, 3 for $1.98--Plum 4 for $2.98. Free Colour Garden with Every Order. Brookdale--Kings- ROSE Husky, White, postpaid. Casgh- with Order, money ¢an- buy. Company, *.0O., DO YOU WANT a good garden? seed values in Vegetable, root seeds. . tomer. ONTARIO SEED COMPANY, WATER- COLLECTIONS--5 of thy Grown Ilybrld Tea Roses. Big, 2-year-old bushes. Yellow, for only $4.50 The fineat roses Holland Bulb and Nursery Queen Elizabeth Way, Port Credit Holland Hardy, Pink-Scarlet-Orange, Ont, Then write for our free catalogue of Canada's. Best Flower and Fleld- Once a custonfer; always a cus- 160 ACRE farm, well fenced, good building fishing, also hunting. $5000 cash. W. son, Port Carling, Ont. on excellent site; spring creek for stock and J. Jack- wood bush, 40 acres wheat, 7-room house, nearly new. Hydro, road. e Guelph, R.R. No. 7,.or Guelph 4082J12, 100. ACRES clay loam, rolling, 6 acres hard 14 acres hay, 4-acres-pasture;--}-aere-orchard,-solid-red-brick telephone, bank barn, drive shed, hog pen, 7 miles from 'Guelph, 2 miles from Maryhill, 2} miles north No. 7 Highway, 2 miles trom schools, on open Write or phone Wilfred Fehrenbach, 300 feet and three levels were open- ed so successfully that a mill was ~ built and operated for about a year. produced nearly. $2,000,000 metals but shut. down after the war because of low prices. Later the markets for lead, zinc and copper advanced sharply and "the mine was bought by Ascot Metals Corporation which has proceeded to deepen the workings to five levels and to install a more modern mill, The earnings possibilities of a 250-ton mill are not generally recog- nized. It has been computed by for its concentrates, on cars at Sher- brooke, Quebec, approximately $116,000 per month, with only min- ing and milling costs tobe absorbed. These costs will not exceed $60,000 a month, leaving about $56,000 a "This rate of profit, which is com- puted on current prices for lead, zing, copper, silver and gold in the ore, would mean $672,000 a year, or at the rate of 25 cents per share for the issued capital of 2,700,000 shares. earnings, due to variations in the prices of metals and average content of the ore. However, it is obvious that substantial profits are predict" able, i People unfamiliar with mining operations often do not recognize that there has been immense im- provement in recent years in the development and production of base metals ores and in the treatment of them to recover high values. New mills have given remarkable per- formances in employing improved processes and machines. Such prop= ertics as Ascot and East Sullivan would not, even five years ago, have offered much chance for money mak- ing whereas today they can realize substantial profits. : Ascot Metals Corporation started with considerable advantages. It had been opened to 300 ft. depth, had installed mining equipment, new buildings, power lines, water sup- ply and a highway to the door. The mine only required additional de- velopment and the installation of new milling equipment, which will start operation next July. Markets for metals are good and promise 'to persist. When in production the company will resume testing of the large property which formerly had two other producing mines on it, closed for years, but now of interest because of the high price of their _metals, ECONOMICAL size 68¢- . 17.4 Just inhale the sooth healing [ fo .jquick relief, It's fas acting! Get a bottle today MECCA PILE REMEDIES month for operating profit. -- "| OLIVER 80 Standard Tractor, 43 horse power, ___In eleven months _Aldermac _ in that Ascot can expect' to receive There -may be fluctuations "in the - ia LOO, Ont. JOHN DEERE 1942 Model D Tractor on rub- ber, also 1948 model A gas tractor. Both in excellent condition. Willis Crane, Grand Valley, Ont. ) LM.M. WATERLOO pickup bgler, Self tieing ----with.-14-or-15-gauge-wire.--~Baled -approxim= ately 7,000 bales, $800 below list price. Robert Quenville, St. Joachim, Ont. Phone Belle Rfver 15R32. FINE LEATHER bargains--scrap for craft reinforcing, etc. $1.00 per pound or $5.00 for ten pounds, postage prepaid. John McCualg, 52 Charles St., Waterloo, Ontarid. Would payment. tires, part Almost new drill reconditioned. 'take 17 run fertilizer Wm. Harris, Route 5, Milton, Ontario: - PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & f'oronto. Company Pate) Solicitors Established 1890. 350 Bay Street, Booklet of information on request. A.M. LL. ent Attorney, Patents of Invention, 66 Sparks St., Ottawa, LAIDLAW, B.Sc., a \WWANTED SMALL hospital General Duty. : full maintenance. Excellent living conditions, Ay _ly: Superintendent of Nurses, Lady Minto Hospital, in attractive northern On- tario town requires Registered. Nurses Salary $140 -per month plus Cochrane, Ont. - CHINCHILLAS all ages up to § years; give details In first letter. Write to Ontario Chinchilla Ranchers, GOOSE__ EGGS -- Safe delivery, ASPLEY | RR. 3, Hannon, Ontario to GOOSE FARM, Comox, British Columbia. | --e g SEE -- MEDICAL DON'T WAIT--Every sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. : = MUNRO'S DRUG STORE _. | 335 Elgin, Ottawa : $1.25 Express Prepaid CRESS WART REMOVER--Leaves no scars. Drugglsta sell Crean Ingrown 'Toe-Nail Salve. None better. 'POST'S ECZEMA SALVE Banish the torment of dry eczema rashes and 1 skin tr Post's Egzems Balve will not dlsappoint you. tching, scaling, burning eczema. ache, ring: worm, pimples and athlete's foot, will respond readily to this stainless, odorless ointment, regardless of how stubborn or. hopeless thes seem. : : PRICE $1.00 PER JAR > Sent Post Free on Recepit of Price POST'S REMEDIES 889 Queen St E., Corner of Logap - Teronto "PEP Up" - . Try C. C. & B. TONIC TABLETS for low vitality and general debility, At druggists, One Dollar, UNDER THE SUN! - US. Army Air Force Type SUNGLASSES wi, J. Genuine Leatherette Case Included ~BIG VALUE $ 88 (Sensationally Priced at only see Y Cool green meniscus curved, polished lenges. * % Gold Plated adjustoble frames: xX Pearloid Sweot-bar and Nose-pads * postpaid Reinforcing bar for greater- durability Lenses meet specification of U, S. Gov't, Bureau of Standards, LIFETIME GUARANTEE Included with every pair of glasses 10-DAY TRIAL e MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE Fad MAIL THIS (SUL LRT ENE - ey VICTORIA OPTICAL CO., Depr. 547 273 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont. SpuTTING wip And the RELIEF IS LASTING For remarkably fast relief from head- ache get INSTANTINE, For real relief get INSTANTINE. For prolonged rellef get INSTANTINE! 4 vn Yes, more people every day are finding that INSTANTINE is one thing - to case pain fast. For headache, for rheumatic pain, aches and pains of colds, for neuritic or neuralgic pain you can depend on INSTANTINE to bring you quick comfort. INSTANTINE is made like a doctor's prescription of three proven medical ingredients. A single tablet usually brings fast relief. Get Instantine today. and always keep it handy nfine E 0 Enviord find $e Moll Portpold. 12-Tablet Tin 25¢ | Nome I Economical 48-Tablet Bortlp 694 i= Address | wr Ivo. comrummmnmpisaerzs HOVE: hermes i) ~~ mR ee = Sm ; ISSUE 16 -- 1950 - « ~n loveliest Patent Attorney, for : ELE a J vo ® 1C) [0 ' PY . »

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