Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 12 Sep 1946, p. 3

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Tm ---- BABY CHICKS FARM FOR BALK IF YOU'RE COUNTING ON FALL chicks, especially for dellvery Oc- tober-Navember (many poultry- keepers do) we would suggest you let us have your order soon. Right now we've a limited supply of started chicks for immediate delly- ery. liray Hatchery 130 John N. Hamilton, Ont. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ACCOUNTING BY MAIL A new and modern method of over- coming all your bookeeping and accounting problems, Subscribers to Accounting By Mail simply place all thelr sales detail slips, cash vouchers, paid invoices, payroll particulars ete, In our self-addressed envelope and mail periodically to our office. Ounce a month we send you a sum- mary of your business transactions, Once a year, or on request, we fur- nish you with a complete statement of your affairs, with complete (n- come tax service. Neat, efficient and confidential service, to all business men whose annual turnover does not require the services of a full-time account- ant. Garages, Grocery, Drug, Dry- goods, Hardware, Plumbing, Doc- tors, Dentists, ete. You can safely hand over your accounting head- aches ta ACCOUNTING BY MAIL Room 21, 21 King St, E., Toronto. Write for information und low monthly fees, DYEING AND CLEANING IAVIED YOU ANYTHING NEEDS dyeing or cleaning? Write to us for information. We are glad to an- Bwer vour questions. Department H. Parker's Dye Works Limited, 791 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario. ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT NISW "cycnoum" LIGHTING plants powered by Origgs & Strat- ton gas engines. A, C, or D. C. 850 to 2500 watt, British gas and Diesel engines from 18, to 200 h, p. sta- tionurv or marine type. Afr. tank, radiator ot hopper cooled Large stock of three phase motors From stock A.C. or D.C. Welding mach- ines, electrodes and accessorles, New gas engine driven portable self-priming centrifugal pulnpg 7000 gala. per hour. Total welght 90 Ibs. Operates 5 hours one gallon $165.00 Farmers, lumber and fish- tng industry -- in most cases -- tax and duty exempt. Write for prices to Alliance Electric Works Limited, Montreal -- Toronto -- Halifax -- Rouyn -- Winnipeg. FOR SALE COCKER SPANIELS, REGISTER ed, star( raising them. Guaranteed, Small town or farm sales: dogs do better there. Dreeders, Terms and we tell you how, Write Happyman, Box 110, 73 Adelaide W. Toronto, CONCRETE BLOCK MACHINE Easy to bulid, low coat. Sell blocks, bufld house, barn, etc., economical- ly. Free details. Masterprint Co. Toronto 14, Ontario. CHOICE REGISTERED BEAGLE Hound Pups and Springer Spaniel in season. Promptly shipped. Peter Porter, Burford, Ont. Phone 280. CHICK HATCHERY, SPECIALLY built, insulated brick. 60 x 22, Lot 250 x 33. 2 Buckeye Setting Unlts and Buckeye Hatchery, Capaclty - 42000, also 4 Jamesway Setting Unlts, capacity 10800, business con- nection coast to coast, location bighway 81. Sacrifice price $8500, terms. Campbell Real Estate, Mt, Brydges, ELREOTRIO MOTORS NEW. USED bought, sold, rebullt: velts, pulleys, brushes. Allen &lectric (Company Ltd.. 2226 Dufferin Bt. Toronto, Ont. ELECTRIC MOTORS 00 CYCLE, NEW 1 HORBFI'OWER and up, 3 phase, 220 & 6550 volta. mmediate dellvery, Early dellvery of 26 cycle. Wilbury Products Ltd., 800 Main, Toronto. MACHINE AND WELDING SHOP in Northern Ontario growing town fully equipped with 6 lathes, 8 drill presses, shaper, grinder, miller, ete., contained in fireproof bullding; also 3 electric weldin machines and 2 acetylenes: growing business, steady ' Income, now has 20 em- loyees: bargain for quick sale. ue 108, 73 Adelalde- W., Toronto, . MODEL D JOHN DEERE TRACTOR, First class condition with new pneu- matic tires. Douglas Cleland, Lis- towel, Ontario. PETALED MAIDEN HAIR FERN, 20c. plant postpald; other cholce Ferns, House Plants, ete, Free list, Alken Nursery, Chute Panet, Que. -- 6,000 PULLETS -- 6000 Ready-to-Lay Pullets, also soveral thousand 2 to 6 months old. These pullets all raised on clean, free range with plenty of apace and tender green feed, under the most {deal conditions. fend for Price Liat and full particulars -- OIL BURNERS -- New pot type oll brooders, new pot type range burners and heaters, Prompt délivery or book for later, LAREVINW POULTRY FARM. WEIN PROS, Exeter. Ontarlo. REGISTERED NNOWN SWISS Herd for sale. 51 head, one bull two ears, 21 milk cows, B two vear old Lofrais, hred, 11 vearling, § heifer calves, 5 bull calves, Sun-0O-Val Farm, 20578 LakeShore Rond, Dale aA'Urfe. Ouebee. Eighteen miles from Montreal, SHEEP SIXTY NEGISTERED SOUTHDOWN sheep. Bwes and lambs, All or part, A, Appel, Route 4, Brantford, Ont, TEAM OF DAY MARES, TWINS, 6° vears old, weinh 1.000 pounds each, Apply A. Ranta, 292 Nrent &t. Tur- lingtan, Ont. Tax 1° TIRES We are overstocked at the present of good used trade-in tires (Fuaran- teed. to he In excellant rhanpe) 600 X 16 $5.00 All orders shipped (*O.D Speclal equipment for wvuleanizing Truck and Farm Tractor Tires, BEACON TIRFE, corn Queen & York 8ts HAMILTON Ontarlo ONTARIO'S MOST MODERN ParIirreEnD Time Spor FARM FOR SALE 200 ACRES IN NORTHUMDER- Iand district. 140 acres suitable for mixed farming. 60 acres bush and asture, Brick house and frame Pare. 42 8t, Paul 8t. West, St Cath- arinea, Ontarfo, 100 ACRES, CULTIVABLE, GOOD pulldinga, well drained, Hydro in- stalled, good wells, 1 mile from town, achools, churches, creamery; with or without atoeck and imple- ments. Apply to Fugene Ouellette, RR, 1, Alexandria, Ont. 20-ACRE. FARM,, GRAPES. AND fruit, 10 miles east of Windsor. Buildings, big income for only $17,- 0 down. Balance yearly payments, Immediate possession. Apply 918 McDougall, Windsor, ¥F, Cisllino, Real Estate. DAIRY AND GRAIN FARM IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A GOOD Grain Farm on Main Highway with milk contract we have one of the best farms in this district, Good barn and milk house. large four car garage and f{mplement shed, Good large two family house wilh pressure water system in house and barn. This farm consists of 115 acres of light clay loam and would be ideal for growing some grapes. Four wells, chicken and turkey pens, sllo and about 25 mixed ap- ple trees. It can be bought today with the wheat and oats in the granary, 85 tons of hay In barn, 7 acres of corn, more than enough to till silo. Stock and all fmplements for the price of $18,000.00. Owner for the past 30 years retiring and has priced for qulck sale, If (his interests you come in and see us for further particulars and terms. Wm. R. Garrow, 61 Queen Street, St... Catharines, opposite Y.M.C.A. Telephone 2640. Evenings, W, R. Fisher, Pt. Dal ousle 138. HAIRDRESSING LISA SAIRDRESSING THE Robertson method Information on request regarding classes. Robert- son's Halrdressing Academy, 187 Avenue Road. Toronto. [$d HEL!" WANTED WANTED--BOYS AND ELDERLY men. Meadowmount Farms, New- castle, Ont. WANTED -- HEAVY TYPE LADB- ourers to work in Tannery, Good wages, steady work, Apply The C. 8 Hyman Company Limited, Lon- don, Ontarto. MEDICAL NATURE'S HELP--DIXON'S REM edy for Rheumatic Pains, Neuritis. Thousands praising it. Munro's Drug Store, 835 Elgin, Ottawa. Postpaid $1.00, GOOD RESOLUTION -- EVERY sufferer of Rheumatle Pains or Li hl should try Dixon's Rem- edy. Munro's Drug Store, 335 El- gon, Ottawa. Postpaid $1.00. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FRED A BODDINGION BUYS sells, exchanges musical Inetru- ments 111 Church, Toronto 3. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR sale: violins, guitars, banjos, man- dolins, clarinets, saxophones, cor- nets, trumpets, accordions, drums, etc. Write for. prices. Expert re- pairs done also. Will buy. Trades accepted. Musical Supplies, Fork River, Man, OIPORTUNIPIES FOIL WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity. Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good wages, thousands successful Marvel graduates. America's greatest sys- tem, Illustrated catalogue free, Write or call. MARVEL HAI RRRBING 858 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St., Hamilton & 74 'Rldenu- Street, Ottawa, CATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & COMPANY Patent Holicitors. Katabllahed 1890; 14 King West, Toronto. Booklet of Information on request. PHOTOGRAPHY FILMS DEVELOPED 23 CENTS, Guaranteed one day service, No galing. Bay Photo Bervice. North ay, TIME TESTED QUALITY SERVICE and SATISFACTION Your films properly developed and ) printed 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE ROLLS 25c. REPRINTS 8 for 25c. FINEST ENLARGING SERVICE. You may not get all the films you want this year, but you can get all the quality and service you desire by sending your films to IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE Station 1, Toronto, GET BETTER PICTURES AT LOWER PRICE PROMPT MAIL BERVICE Any 8{ze Roll -- 6 or 8 Exposures, DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 6c 8 MOUNTED ENLARGEMENTR 26c Size 4x6" In Beautiful Easel Mounts Enlargements 4x6" on Ivory tinted oiounta; 7x9" (n Gold, Bliver, Cir- salan Walnut or Black fchony Finish fromen, 69¢c each, [f enlarge- ment coloured, 79c each. Reprints Made From Your Negatives 2c.' Each oEeT. mM STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE Box 129, 1'eat Office A, Toronto Print Name and Address Plainly. SPECIAL OFFER FREE ENLARGEMENTS WITH each 6-8 exposure roll for 25c. Re- prints 8c. Fast efficient guaranteed work. Crystal Photo Service, 1600 Dundas West, Toronto. IEAUHERS WANTED KASHARBOWIE -- PROTESTANT teacher with permanent first or second class certificate and several years experience wanted for 8, 8, No. 1 Knshabowle; salary $1,850.00 per aonum; enrolment 10, Apply to A. Hollnshead, Hee. 8. 8. No. I, Ka- shabowle, Ontarto PROTESTANT, QUALIFIED OR academic, for 88. 1, Henwood, Tem- fskaming, Ontario; gaiary $200; duties Sommende Sept. 3rd, Phone Liskeard 2918. Mrs. Emily Batty, Seoy.-Trens., Thornlae, Ontarlo, WANTED SHORT STORIES, POETRY, HU- mor wanted for magazine publica- tion, Literary Mosiae, Box 198, Guelph, Ontarlo. FOR MY OWN HOME I AM LOOK ing for a pair of Dresden figures or Dresden candelabra and Dresden minfatures. I will Pay generoualy If ou can oblige. Pleass write to Hi Lawrence Saunders, 323 Wal- mer Road, Toronto, Ontarlo, FARM WANTED, ONE HUNDRED acres, east of Toronto, electricity, stream, Fall possession, Give full particulars. David Rowe, Highland Creek, Ontaro, = -------------- Classified Advertising King Of Greece Lucky Monarch Many Europeans Kings In Exile And Others Sit Upon Shaky Thrones The future of another Furopean King was decided, as Greeks voted whether King George II would be recalled from exile in London. King George had been conceded in advance a better chance of hold- ing on to his throne than King Victor Emmanuel 111 of Italy, the latter's son, King Humbert Il, or King Zog I of Albania, all relegat- ed this year to the ranks of Furo- pean monarchs in exile. . Still another monarch -- the youngest of them all, nine-year-old King Simeon II of Bulgaria -- faces the test of a plebiscite next. Dispatches from Sofia said Queen Mother Ionna (Giovanna), antici- pating a decision against the throne, was planning to join her parents, former King Victor Em- manuel and Queen Elena, in exile in Egypt. The Bulgarian government has offered to let the royal family re- main even if the plebiscite goes against the monarchy. The family will get revenue from royal prop- erty estimated at $20,000,000. Belgian King's Fate' Uncertain King Leopold III of Belgium is in exile in Switzerland, but his fate is still uncertain, pending the out- come of the political situation in his country. That isn't true of young King Peter I of Yugoslavia, whose country was declared a fed- erated republic under Premier Mar- shal Josip Broz "Tito" in Novem- ber, 1945. It was announced the King's return would not be per- mitted. Albania was declared a federated republic in February of this year, thus depriving King Zog of his throne, He went to Egypt, which traditionally offers exile to throne- less monarchs, King Humbert of Ttaly served only a month. He assumed the throne when his father abdicated prior to the June 5 plebiscite in which the Italians voted for a re- public. Humbert and his family. went to Portugal, while his father and mother chose Egypt, At present young King Michael is still retaining his hold on the Ro- manian crowy despite a turbulent political situation. Some Weathered The War Members of European continent- al royalty who successfully weath- ered the war and the upheavals that followed include King Christian X of Denmark and his brother King Haakon VII of Norway, King Gus- tav V of Sweden, Queen Wilhelmi- na of thé Netherlands and Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg. There has been speculation at Madrid that Generalissimo Francis- co Franco might order a referen- dum on re-establishment of the Spanish monarchy, but nothing concrete has been announced. Don Juan, the pretender to the Spanish throne, now living in Portugal, re- portedly has made a referendum one of the conditions on which he would accept the throne, If There Is One! A conceited young playwright sent two tickets for the first night of his new revue to Mr. Churchill; Enclosed with the tickets was a note saying: "One of the tickets is for you, and the other for a friend --if you have one." Mr. Churchill courteously re- plied that he was very sorry he would be unable to be present on the first night, but would try to attend the second--if there was one, & MODELS This fino medicine is very effective to relieve pain, nervous distress and weak, tired feelings, of "cortain daya"--when due to fomale functional monthly dis- turbances. This is some. thing worth trying! woiE inns Kp How to bat RHEUMATIC Rheumatic pains may often be caused by excess uric acid, a blood impurity that should be extracted by the kidneys. If ys fail, and excess uric acid remains, it din ng lb ol reat paing your kidneys in good condition, Get and use Dodd's Kidney Pills, Dodd's help your kidneys get rid of trouble-making poisons excess ac feel batter. Seo what Dodd's can do for you, 137 FOR THAT RUB IN... MINARD'S INIMENT ISSUE 37--1946 SOME OF 5,500,000 PEOPLE TRANSPORTED BY NAVY ga. . ae id ne LOTT SPORE Fay: Hin SHES WE 4% The U.S. Navy is & ie personnel and displaced Chinese and Koreans Liberty ships and former Jap warships. completing one of the greatest peacetime above shows Japanese nationals and their belongings at Shanghai, homeland. : J passenger-carrying operations in history, involving 6,500,000 men, women and children. They include Japanese prisoners of war, demilitarized who are being repatriated in Navy amphibious craft, A total of 4,226,477 Jape have already been moved. Photo awaiting embarkation for their SPOTS 0 F SPORTS Historians say that one of the earliest of all recorded pieces of writing is is the form of a letter from a father to a son, some four or five thousand years ago, in which the old gent grouses most bitterly about the terrible way in which everything has deteriorated since the days when he was young. When we first read about this an- cient document -- or maybe it was . a picce of baked tile -- the thought came to our mind that the father was probably a sports writer by trade. * » » For there is no easier -- or more common -- method of filling up a sports column than for the writer to start comparing the present with the past, invariably giving the lat- ter about ninety per cent the best of it. This is, by the way, an espe- cially easy writing mood to fall into on mornings when said writer has failed to observe the family curfew the night previous, and wakes up to find the breakfast stone cold and the missus just the reverse, * * * To hear us tell it -- for we, per- sonally, have been guilty of plenty of that sort of stuff -- in the days of our youth all the hockey players were Fred Taylor's or Eddie Shore's, the baseball pastures were studded with Cobb's, Ruth's and Crawford's, every fight was a mix- ture of battle, murder and sudden death, and the sports customer in- variably got at least a hundred and fifty cents worth of action for every dollar he pushed through a box- office window. ' * * . All of which is, of course, nothing but a Jot of plain and simple malar- key. Confidentially, there was just as great a percentage of boxing bouts that smelled out the joint -- of baseball games that seemed to drag on for ever -- of hockey matches where the sounding of the final gong was the most stimulat- ing event of the evening -- then as now. Naturally, we know that this is all rank heresy, and enough to call down upon us the dire wrath of the Sports Writers Union, but it's a fact just the same, Take off the rose-colored cheaters we all wear when looking at the past, and this stands out clear and distinct; the only reason why there are more mediocre-to-rotten sports events today than there were yesterday is exactly the same reason why the black cows ate more than the white ones. There are a lot more of them. . * * We turn up our noses and pat- ronizingly sncer at the pushovers that are being fed to Joe Louis, and talk of the brave days when Jack Dempsey was such a devastating whirlwind. But we forget, or care- fully overlook, the period when the same Mr, Dempsey was doing his alleged "comeback" and, in slightly less than a year, took on some 175 opponents, knocking out over a hundred of them. It is true that these were not billed as title fights; Lack PEP Your SEP? You can't feel your best if your kidneys aren't working normally, Gin bills help give relief from Backache, Rheumatic Pain and other symptoms of sluggish kid. neys, Your druggist sells Gin Pills on a satisfaction-or-money-back basis, Get a package today--wse broves their merit, Regular size, 40 Pills Economy size, BO Pills (In the U.S, A. ash for Give Pills) FOR THE KIDNEYS hut there were two good reasons for this, One was that Dempsey didn't have a title to stake; and the other, that the fight promoters of that era were not quite so hot -- or perhaps it should be quite so skilful -- on the scent of the ulti- mate dollar as they are nowadays. But it seems to us that there must have been at least a few who could be termed pushovers among those 175 -- one or two anyway, And as for those Dempsey beat while he was champion -- Billy Miske, Bill Brennan, Georges Carpentier, Tom Gibbous and Luis Firpo -- they don't seem to tower too colossally over Joe Louis's opponents, now do they? ' * * * We could go down the line and make similar comparisons in many lines. True, we don't personally be- lieve that today's hockey is as good as that of ten years ago -- principally because of certain fidd- ling with the rules. But, as com? pared with the average hockey game of a quarter-century ago, the average game of 1946 is far more actionfull and exciting; and if we have no players to stack up along- side of, say, the like of Howie Mo- renz or Dutch Nighbor today -- well, just how many did we have to match them when they were at "tops? LJ] * * One sport, in particular, has im- proved out of all reason, at least from the standpoint of the spectat- or. That is Canadian football, We can well recall the grave head- shakings and grim forebodings over the introduction of that new- fangled Yankee abomination, the forward pass -- the predictions that it would be the ruination, no- thing less, of our grand old Autumn sport. But the fact of the matter is that the forward pass opened up our game, and made it more color- ful and interesting to watch, in a manner undrecamed of even by its warmest advocates. . * + There are incidents of bygone football, of course, that will always stick out in memory as vividly as a sore thumb -- pictures of rough and ready operators like Smirle Lawson or Lionel Conacher leav- ing a trail of prostrate opponents strewed along their plunging path -- of Pep Leadley and Red Bat- stone eeling their way down a field without a hand being laid on them -- of Hughie Gall getting off re- turn kicks with what seemed like eight or ten of the cnemy clinging to him -- of these and many more. But, you may take it from us dear reader, apart from standouts like them -- and they were few and far between -- football of those dear, dead days beyond recall was most- ly a pretty drab affair, and don't "let any of us oldsters convince you otherwise. Much as we hate to ad- mit it, we fear that if they served up that old two-bucks-and-a-kick--1 stuff to you today, you would walk right out on it promptly. And he quite justified in doing so, at that. Arctic Democracy An independent democracy is in the making beyond the Arctic Circle. Greenland, the world's largest island in which less than 20,000 persons live along the coastline of a territory which comprises 850,- 000 square miles and Denmark's only remaining colony, is ap- proaching the age of majority. The Greenlanders now want to have only one governor and one central couscil to be elected di rectly by the people, The United States contains 630,- 000,000 acres of forest land, of which 106,000,000 are publicly owned, Here's A Lesson From The Past In 1920, labor unions in Italy achieved such power that few workers could get employment un- less they belonged to a union. And the unions were in the vanguard of a strong Socialist movement, re- lates the Financial Post. In the large manufacturing cen- tres of Milan, Turin, Genoa and Venice, the unions forcibly took over the manufacturing plants; started to operate them them- selves, The Government couldn't stop this action. Plant owners, includ- ing the Fiat Motor Company, could do nothing but say: "All right. Go ahcad and run the busi- ness." "When previously accepted orders ran out, the unions found they lacked the experience and know- how in getting new ones. They didn't know enough about selling; about organizing production; about management. Soon, there was no work. In a few months, labor threw in the sponge; turned the plants back to the owners; asked them to re- sume. Management is just as essential to labor as labor is to manage- ment. Uranium Ore Found At Krupps Three-quarters of a ton of uran- ium ore found at Krupps devastated factory at Essen has been shipped to the United Kingdom, It was known that uranium ox- ide had been used in Krupps for experimental work on producing specially hard steel for projectile noses, and the search for the ore has been going on for some time. It was found under the ruins of a store shed which had been blasted by heavy bombs. The ore was confiscated under the clause of the Potsdam agree- ment which forbids German posses- sion of such metals. Erosion By Wind and Water Steals Millions of Acres Canada, From East to West, Is Suffering Irreparable Loss Immediate action is needed to preserve millions of acres of Cane adian land from ruination by wind and water erosion, the Royal Bank of Canada says in its Monthly Letter. "Within reach of everyone, East and West, there are evidences of irreparable loss of topsoil," it states, "and unless the world it te go in for soilless culture of crops, it is time for a big effort using all resources of modern science and ingenuity, "The population of the world has increased from 465 million around the year 1650 to somewhere about 2,200 million. That means, if everyone is to have three meals a day, an additional drain on farm land of 1,000,000,000,000 meals out of every year's crop of grains, vege- tables, livestock fodder, and all the other things which contribute to human dict. Yet in 1941 there were more than four million acres of abandoned farms in the prairie provinces, an acreage which, at the long-time average yield of 15.6 bushels per acre, might produce 62,400,000 bushels of wheat a year if the land had been saved. "While the tragic history of a few decades has focused attention on sections of the Canadian West, the need for preservation and res- toration of crop-growing soil ia Fastern Canada is also pressing," the Bank states. "The 'Garden Province' is being washed away, little by little. Workmen had to gO through 90 feet of mud to reach a solid foundation for bridge piers at Charlotetown, 'mud' which was once the fertile topsoil. of crop- growing acres. "In New Brunswick, it is report- cd that onc week of high water in the St. John River carries down as much silt as would cover more than 3,000 acres to a depth of one inch. "Ontario is affected because not only are good agrricultural lands being swept away, adding new de- vastation to the abandoned lands which should never have. been opened to agriculture, bit the rivers are being spoiled because silt injures the chances of breeding and feeding fish. Quebec has set aside a ten-year fund of $10,000,000 to be spent on approved schemes of land utilization. High Death Rate On U. S. Farms The National Safety Council statistics show that some 15,000 people lose their lives in farm ac- cidents annually in the United States and approximately 1.500,000 arc injured in mishaps. It is es- timated that there are 8,100,000 farm workers in the nation; with a death rate of 53 per 100,000. this puts agriculture fourth in the deat rates of the six major industria groups. In addition, farm fires cause an annual loss of about $100,- 000,000, or 20 per cent. of the na- tional annual fire loss. oil storage. ete. Fach .... tires, ti farm wa Fach... ALUMIN Fach .............. ' AIRCRAFT HORNS, ad WAR SURPLUS MATERIALS We Are Dismantling Aircraft All Over Canada And All Parts of Same Are For Sale at a Mere Fraction of Original Cost. 88 & 108 GAL, ALUMINUM TANKS suitable $20 00 BLIND FLYING PANELS, complete with Directional Gyro, Artificial Horizon, Turn and Bank In- dicator, Rate of Climb. Airspeed and Altimeter. Each ........... LYNE EE MOTOR - DRIVEN LIGHT WINCHES. operated from a 12-Volt Battery. Fach ooo. ooo THE FAMOUS P-8 AIRCRAFT COMPASS with adjust able gridd rig, luminous throughout, complete with correc- tion box. Original cost about $375. ............ Fach ...... SIERRA 4 4 x wen ALUMINUM FUEI TANKS, capacity, Each ..... ........ 12-VOLT GENERATORS, suitable for lighting, plating or may be adapted for light arc welding ....... Fach ooo AIRCRAFT CONTROL COLUMNS with plastic steering wheel, easily adapted to boats for rudder control. Each... ... $7.00 4.95 x 3)3 PNEUMATIC AIRPLANE TAIL WHEELS can be used in the manufacture of single wheel trailers. Complete with shock strut. Fach ..... LANDING LAMPS, suitable for all types of lighting, 12 volt. Each .............. .... . $3.50 AMMETERS, precision built, and by pressing a button will on the other side, luminous dial showing amps on one side give storage battery voltage okongion 8380 Fach o.oo 0 oo . WOODEN AIRCRAFT PROPELLERS, swartz craft finish, excellent ornament or war relic... .... oie Fach o.oo oo $5.00 1100 x 12 AIRPLANE MAIN WHEELS, complete with cs and axles, these are almost new. Suitable for s or heavy duty trailers. .......... J BUCKET SEATS, sponge rubber "seat cushion, these may be bolted EERE aptable for 12-volt system of marine craft, Each .......... $2.50 WRITE TO Supreme Machinery Co. 164 KING ST. E, -- TORONTO $75.00 CABLE $75.00 $18.00 a5 gallon...... $7.00 $15.00 $20.00 $35.00 to the floor, $8.00 or Ty PEA TET a ae By

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