PAGE TWENTY Treat yourself to the trailer that has everything! EXCLUSIVE PYRAMID FRAME SECTION DD) Tee-Nee's revolutionary "Pyramid" A-Frame Sectivia provide. extra strength and rigidity with less weight -- making tubular and ordinary box section wii obsolete. Shown above is the OB-1100A for boats up to 1100 lbs. . . . the most completely equipped, medium priced A-frame trailer on the market. F dj bl Semi-elliptic springs NEW Ln NEW oi irame models Strong Catwalk and Rear boat guide N E WwW centre rollers for N E WwW for easy loading full keel support. Other popular Tee-Nee features include: tipping frames (standard on A-Frame, optional on T-Frame models) permitting launching of boat without unhooking the trailer from the car, super duty winches for easy one-man launching and loading and micro adjustment of running gear to frame ensuring a safely balanced load. New "COMPACT 7' MODEL This is the ideal low-priced A-Frame trailer for boats up to 700 lbs. with the new Fibre-glass, moulded plywood and aluminum hulls. It comes completely equipped with tipping frame and winch as standard equipment. 11 MODELS FOR BOATS FROM 400 TO 3400 LBS. Parts and service are available right across Canada and the U.S.A. From coast to coast you'll see TEE-NEE moss Tee-Nee trailers are built in Canada by: CANASCO PRODUCTS LTD. 121 NOWDEN RD., SCARBOROUGN, ONT. PLymouth 9-6724. YOUR FRANCHISED TEE-NEE DEALER Smith Sports Limited Hannan Marine Oshawa - STAMP OUT BILLS! [ «+. With an HFC Loan. Bring in your unpaid bills, ar- range your loan and let us mail checks to the people you owe, at no extra charge. Or, ask us for cash and pay the bills yourself. Either way, you get a fresh start, and have only one low monthly payment to HFC. Drop in or phone . . . borrow up to $2500 with up to 36 months to repay. Low cost life insurance available on all loans (égy HOUSEHOLD FINANCE 64 King Street East . . . . . . Oshawa Shopping Centre OSHAWA « « « + Telephone RA 5-6526 . « Telephone RA 5-1139 ONTARIO TODAY Muskies from Eagle Lake. Big water, sound craft. SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1961 WATER for EVERYONE BY RAY HALSEY HE fishing season is under way --- which means, too, that more and more boats are taking to the water. The trout, walleye (pickerel) and pike seasons have already attracted anglers from within the province, other provinces and across the border. On July 1, bass and muskie fish- ing will start. And for weeks the boats have been slipping into the cruise waters. Ontario people, perhaps, do not fully realize just how fortunate they are. Where else is there such a superb boating area, stretching for hundreds of miles from north to south, from east to west, with literally hundreds of rivers, more than 250,000 lakes, not including the Great Lakes, On- tario, Erie, Huron and Superior? Nor is that all. Every waterside com- munity in Ontario has its boat sales agency or agencies, and an increasing number will rent boats of various sizes. A Toronto marina rents a sleeping cruiser accommodating four adults at $250 weekly, and the varieties of boats -- and prices -- grade down from that. A 16-foot turbocraft, the new jet boat, can be rented for $150 weekly, with trailer, and a 12- foot cartop boat with motor for between $11 and $14 for long or short weekends. Renting, of course, is only a poor second- best for ownership of your own boat. There is no real substitute for the pride and joy of ownership. Launching ramps or slopes are provided at almost all Ontario Provincial Park camping grounds and many roadside campsites adjoining lakes or streams. All resorts, of course, have the needed facili- ties for boat operators. Also, recognizing the increasing demand for launching faci- lities, a number of municipalities have constructed launching ramps at the lake and riverside end of road allowances. Several have purchased properties con- veniently located at or near the shore to provide adequate parking facilities for visitors' cars and trailers. There has also been an appreciable increase in the provi- sion of anchorage and docking facilities by communities located on the province's popular waterways. Boat cruising routes, many sales and almost all dockside service agencies are listed in. "Cruising Ontario Waters", pub- lished by the Ontario Department of Travel and Publicity, Parliament Build- ings, Queen's Park, Toronto. HIS month will see the opening of a new attraction for tourists, Upper Can- ada Village, near the Seaway city of Corn- wall. This could draw many visitors by boat as well as by land, because it is in one of the provinces best cruiseways. Throughout the Thousand Islands, Corn- wall and Rideau regions, thousands of vacation visitors annually enjoy cruising, swimming and fishing, Kirk Cove, near