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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-03-29, Page 7L when 1 say minion times to be dead, ve on as the ain insen- rld made ubjugation it again. g Province, p in Ameri- ur responsi- . boy and girl, serve. Every ver form, is a om. 00,000 acres land is at all acres into her crop. maintained. mers sons are rie. Working in the Second work two fe ne. Whatever Nature waits Many farmers because they any are afraid. they fear they harvest an un - f•• C..1= placed solely )e placed upon 1,ligation upon in every farm, ice of Ontario. i—CO-OPER- hat the farmer >w_ criticism in cripple your r -estimate the e Fight IIGHT be, but the ages of mized as "Sol- ri° farms this of these boys resentatives or ex at Toronto, from military n work. Mar- xperience on a rork for a sea - 1 to assist men townsinen to n in the inter- cy. Imes Commit - or the Public ter intermedi- the cry for htening their Committee ei Ontario. VICE.Cfl A I - Prime Esq., KC.,. Leader t H. Abbott, Esq., ..= ROIL 29, 1918 frAKEg OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS FALLING aaa....0mninga./•/••••••••• ente your Habil 'Vet_ a small bottle Of Dandeelne eight now --Also stop* ithing scalp. ein, brittle, colorless and =say hair tis mute evidence of a neglected of dadruff—that awful seurf. Is nothing so destructive tee flee hair as dandruff. Itrebe the har el Its lustre, its strength and. its life; eventually producing a fevoilsh- ease and itdhing of the scalp, rill& if sot remedied mums the hair eroots to *brink, looses and die—heit the hair falls out fast. A little Danderine to- usght—now—any time--oeill surely save pox hair. Get a mall bottle of Knowlten's Danderine from any drug- store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots ee it If you will just try a little Daa- derie. Save your hair! Try it! LEGAL. R. S. HAYS. arrister, SolicitorConveyancer and Rotary Public. Solicitor for the Do - inion Bank. Office in rear of the (*- inion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. J. M. BEST. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveya t fie and Notary Public. Office upsh rs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main treet, Seaforth. 1.1....101••••••••••••••.••••• PROITDFOOT, KnitoRAN AND ea, COOKE. Brriaters, Solicitors, Notaries Pete. S, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth en Monday 'of each week. Oilfee in IirM Block W. Proudfoot, K. C., J. L. Moran, H. J. D. Cooke. VETERINARY. F. HARBURN, V.S. Honor graduate ef Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario IntiaiiriarY College. Treats diseases of 011 domestic animals by the most mod - Atm principles. Dentistry and Milk Fey- *, a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street„Seaforthi Al dors left at the hotel will ret Ivo prompt attention. Night calls re 4- .d at the office. JOHN GRIEVE, V.S. Honor graduate of OntarioVetas in-: my College. All diseases ol domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at - tided to and charges moderate. Vet- e:tin:try Dentistry a spcialty. Office and residence on, Goderidh street, one oloor east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. •••••••••••0•MIN.E..•••1113 MEDICAL. ea DR., WJ. GLANFIELD, MA., MB, Physician, Etc. Honor Graduate of University of Toronto, six years' xperience. Brucefield, Oatario. DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteopathic- Physician of Goderi t. Specialist in womn's and children's **eases, rheinnatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye ear, nose, aid throat. Consultatzion free. Office In the Royal Hotel, Seaforth, Tues ays and Fridays, 8 a.m..till 1 pm. 210111•0minramsalk.amismommasam...... C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. 426 Richmond Street, London, 0 e. pecialist, Survey and Genito-Ur i)- axer liseases of men and women. Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR Physician and Surgeon =flee and Residence, Main Str t, Phone 70 Herm ••••••=t•pa• DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medic, McGill UniversitioMontreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons 01 Ontario;Licentiate of Medical Coun- en of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montral, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Haman, Ontario. DR. F. 3. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street at of the Methodist church, Seaforth. P'hone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and college cf Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trin ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member a Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital London, England, University HospitaibLondon, England. Office—Back of °minion bide Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria street, Seaforth. AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN. Licensed auctioneer for th._co lee et Heron and Perth. Co ante for sale dates een be made calling up Phone 97, Beal tk ale no alter Ofiles, 1/4.1harges 411ate Rad satisfaction guaranted. R. T. LUKER iidesmed Auctioneer for the County 4 Ivrea. lisise attended te ha all pals ef the County, Sem aims' m- odems in Manitoba and Teem reemoaahla Phalle Mo. batai, Contr& P.O., 2. R. ble, 1. thrlielri left at Me Ewen Its= rifts, Oillee, yrimiPity EN. =7" at- • HAD BOIL$ and PIMPLE ON FACE . AND "BODY. . • Boils and pimples are et bad blood that is Otter,. tins t4e. Ytem, Owing to the srface. • The only way to rid yourself of these ul and unsightly blood diseases is to have your blood purified by. Burdock Bldod Bitters. It removes every par- ticle of foul material froM the blood, and the skin becomes clear and smooth, and free from all erupions. Mr. Roy A. Bovay, Trenton, Ont., writes:—"Two 3ars ago I was very touch troubled with boils and pimples on My fn" ‘ and body. A friend advised me to I.:: Burdock Blood Bitters. I crot thr bol thee and before I had tele Pedro rine, my boils and pirap; disappeared, and my face re ele write as clear and as smooth a., eta- ty's could be." Burdoek !sit trs has been on the market fur over 4,0 yeers. You are not eepeekaenti :g when you buy it. manatee, :wed erdv by The T. burn Co., ei tee: loronto Ont. LEMONS:WHITE,N AND • • ° BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your fae, neck, arms and herds. At the cost of a aaall jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full quar- ter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin -softener and comple*en beautifier, by tqueezing the Juice offtWo fresh-fem. ons WO a bottle containing three einiees of orchard white. Core should he taken to strain the juice through itefine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo- tion will keep fresh for menthe. Every -woman knows that lemon' juice is used to bleach and remove eich blemishes as freckles, sallownessandtan and is the ideal skin soeaner whitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and =eke up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. James Watson Generel Inset ance Agent Real Este, e alfd Loan Agent Dealer in iewing Machines Four good houses for sale, conveniently situated in the Town of Seaforth. Terms reasonable and possession given promptly Apply at my office for particulars. 10 cgra "CASCARETS" ettes to be sent out, beca.use he, was ' FOR LIVER ANDBOWU: afrai he wouldnt be thre to receive , • aor ' ;IMIHNIIINSIMIllt111101011111110010 riOiligIIIIIIIMIIIII1011101111111001111110011 .t t . 0 0 s' ';;;11 ts 0 a 0 0 The r ft) 44- 0 •eepeseeeteeereeseeeemesee keep from being bit. "It was an observation sure enough. That's all the use it woe. Just observe all day, but never a mes- sage hack for our battery to open up. You see at this point of the line there Were strict -order? not to fire a shell, P Brigade Headquarters. Blime me, if unless specially ordered to do from • anyone disobeyed that command, our General—yes, it Wu Old Pepere-- • weuld' have courtmartialed the whole Expeditionary Force. Voree. Nobody Went out of their way disobey Old Pepper in those days, because he couldn't be called a parsn; he was more like a pirate. If at any time the devil should feel lonely, and sigh for a proper mate, Oki Pepper would get the first call. Facing the Germans wasn't half bad compared with an interview with 'that old firebrand. "If a company or battalion- should give way a few yards againet a su- perior force of Boches, Old Pepper would send for the commandi offi cer. In about half an hour the offi- cer would come back with his face the color of a brick, and in a few hours, what was left of his c By ARTHUR GUT EMPEY 501111110:111111111111111411111111111111111111111111110111110011111!011110111101.1111101111111111111111111110 ,mtinu(&from onr last issne.) CHAPTER XVI. Battery D 238 te day 'after this I received the id Uclinga that I wcrold occupy the .1 11ne-2ininers' dugout right near the advanced artillery observation ret- This degelat was a roomy affair, • - ry as tinder, and real cot: in it. These pots had been made by the'R. E.'s who ee' prviously occupied the dugout. I N as, the firet to enter and prow-ptly ade a sign board with my name and number on it and suspended it from 'hi foot of the most comfortable ect. t rein. In the trenches, it is always first come, first seived, and this is lived up' to by all. T e -o R. F. A. -men (Royal Field (lute. ig Artille ) teem the nearby obcrea- thin pis - were allowed the priehiege of stepping in tieis dugout while off One of these men, Bodabadier W ilson • by, name who belonged to •Battcry D ' 23 seemed to take a liking to me, an : I returned this feeling. ri two days' time we were pretty chninmy, and he told how his battery in the early days of the war had put over a stunt on Old Pepper, and had got away with it. I will endeavor to give the story as far as memory will permit in his own words: Ilcarne out with the First Expedi- tionary 'Force, and like all the rest, thought we would have the enemy licked in jig time, and be able to eat Christmas dinner at home. •Wiell, so 'far, I have already eaten two Christmas dinners in thtrenches,e and am liable -to eat two more, the way things are pointing. That is, if Fritz don't drop .a 'whizz -bang' on me, and send ne to Blighty. Some- times I wish I would get hit, because, it's nogreat picnic out here, and twen- ty -t 0 months of it makes you fed up. "I 's fairly cushy now compared to w114, itused to be, although I admit this trench is a trifle rough. Now, we send s 0 eir one. e are getting our own back, but in the 1 daysett was different. • Then you ear had to take everything without a re- ply. In fact, -we would get twenty shell in return for every one we sent over. ° Fritz scented to 'enjoy it, but we British didn't we were the suffer- ers. I Just one casualty after another. Sometimes whole • platoons would dis- appear, especially when a 'Jack John- son' plunked into their middle. It got slo bad that a fellow, when writ - ng trine, wouldn't ask for any cigar - . 0 be holding their original position. "I have seen an officer, who would- n't say 'damn' foTtee thousand quid, spend five minutes with the old boy, and when he returned, the flow of lan- guage from his lips would make a navvy blush for shme. "What I am going, to tell you is how two of us put it over on he old scamp, and -got away with it. It was a risky thing, too, beceeise Old Pepper would- n't 'here been >exactly mild with US if he had got neat to the game. "Me and my Mate, a lad named Ilarry Casell; `a_Boinbadier in D 238 Battery; • or- -Latce-COrporal as you call it in the infantry, use.d to relieve the telephonists, We would do two hours on- and four off. I would be on duty in the advanced observation post while he iv-ould be at the other end of the wite in the battery dugout sig - nailing statism. .We were supposed to send' through orders ler the battery to fire when ordered to da so by the observation officer in the advanced post, But very few mesfsages were • sent It was only in case of an actual attack that we would get a chance to earn our `two .and six' a day. You see, Old pepper had issued orders not to fire except when the ordere came from hirne And With Old Pepper orders is orders, and made 'to obey. The 'Germans must have. known about these orders, for even in the day their transports and troops used to expose themselves as if they were on parade. This sure got up our nose, sitting there day after day, with .fire t• argets in. front, but unable tifi send over a shell. We heartily cussed Old Pepper, his orders, the gevenment, the people at home, and eversrthing in general. But the I3oches didn't mind cussing, and got very careless. Blime in, they were belly inslting, Used to when using a certain road, throw their cepa into the air as a taunt at our helplessness. "Cassell had been a telegrapher in civil life andjeined upewhen war was declared. As for me, knew Morse, learned it atthe Signaler's school back in 1910. With an officer in the obser- vation post, we could not; ea on the kind of conversationethat's sual Mtwoeertese ctode. maTfelo send, one of eawottellide' tap the transmitted With his finger nails, and the one on the other end would get it through the receiver. Many an lour was whiled away. in thni,d,sbainafothier.oh pseryassaintigoncoprnosplti,ments back the officer sed to sit for hours with a powerful air of field glasses to his eyes: Thra' cleverly concealed loophole he would scan the ground behind the German trenches, looking for targets, and finding many. This officer, Captain by name, had a habit of talk- ing out loud to himself. Seinetimes he would vent his opinion, same as a common private does when he's wrought up. Once upon a tittle the Captain had been on Old Peppers staff,. so he could cuss and blind in the most aPProved style. Got to be sort of a habit with him. Cure Sick loeadache, Constipation, Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Bad SreathCandy Cathartic.. No eidde show b your neer, stomaeb or towels; how ueh yt& head aehes. how miserable ou aro- from constipa- tion, indigestio bi sness and slug- gish bowels -4h ays get reli with Oascarets. immediately eanse aid regulate the stomach, remove the sour, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the conetipated waste matter and poison from: the inteetines and bowels. A 10 -cent box fromeyour drug- gist will keep your liver and, bowels clean; ertainaeh sweet and head clear for month. They work while you sleep. Wlli S DIE amiseiatorestiniiammaineeeneenoli Every year from Conuzinption, Millions could have been:saved if only: common sense prevention had been used in the first stage. If YOU ARE a Sufferer frens Asthma, Bron chitis; Catairh, 1 Teurisy, Weak Lungs, Cough and Colds—v.n. Dis- eases leading up to Consumption- - Tuberculosis, YOU ARE interested in Dr. Strandgard's T. B. Medicine. Write for Testimonials and Booklet. DR. sTEANDGARD'S =DIVINE M., 263-26E Yonae Street, Termite. anaininagglinnallinalatagEM $200. • to lend on Fa 8, First, Second Mortgages. Cali or write me at once and get yOur loan arranged by return No advance( charges. B. B. EYNOLDB, 77 Victori Bt, Toronto. ' - eeeiteete wee them. "After the' drive to Paris was tur4ed ack, trench warfare started: ur General grabbed a map, drew a pencil line a ross it, and said, 'Dig here,' then he went back to his tea, and Tommy Arinedl himself with a pick and shove -4j and s arted digging. He's been 'dig- ' a ging ever since. "Of course, we dug those trenchee u at night, but it was hot work what .1) with the rifle and machine-gun fire. a The stretcher -'bearers worked harder than t1ie diggers. "Th se trenches, bloomin' ditches, call them, were a night mare. They were nly- about five feet deep, and you ued to get the backache from bending down. It wasn't exactly safe to stand upright either,because as soon your flapper showed over the top, a bullet iwould bounce it off, or else come sO, close it would make your hair stand. "We ;used to: fill sandbags and stick them Qi tOp of the parapet to make it highr, but no use, they would be there about an hour, and- then Fritz would Ilurn loose and blow them to bits. My neck .used to be sore from ducking shells and bullets. "Where Trig battery was stationed, a hasty trench had been dug, which the boy- nicknamed 'Suicide Ditch,' and believe me, -Yank, this was the original 'Suicide Ditch.' All the oth- ers are mitations. "Wite a fellow went into that trench, i was an even gamble that he would • s me out on a stretcher. At one time a Scotch battalion held it and whe they heard the betting Was even money that they'd -come out on stre hers, they grabbed all the bets in ight. Like a lot of belly eral of the battery men fell aine, and put up real mon: Jocks' suffered a lot of cast the prospects looked bright ttery men to collect some y. So when 'the battalion idiots se for their ey. The ualties an for the b easy mon was rehe std, the gamblers lined up. Several 'Jocks' got their money for emerging safely, but the Ones who clicked it, weren't there to :pay: The artillerym n had never thought it out that way. Those Scotties were bound to be sure winners, no matter how the wind blew So take a tip from me, vi never bet th a Scottie, 'cause you'll lose mone;. 1_ "At onelipart of our trench where IF YOUR CHUE, IS CROSS, a cortanimlication trench joined tee . FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED hook Mother! If ,•tongue, le boated, cleanse lIttle bowels-wth "Calle fertile Syrup of Fit" 4 im•mo•poimmar,•••••.• Mothers can restea4r after giving "California Syrup of igs," because 111 a few hours all the logged -0 waste, sour bile and fermenting 'food gently moves out of the bo*els,' and you hive a well, playful child again! Sick children needn't. be >coaxed to take this ha.rmlesa tifruit laxative." Millions of Mothersakeep it handy hee cause they know its action on the stemaeh, liver and bowels is prompt and sure. - .Ask your druggist for a bottle a "Californ-ia, Syrup er Figs," which eel, tains directions for babies, children ef all ages and for grown-ups. front line a Tommy had stuck up a wooden sign -post with three hands or arrns on it. One of the handspoi/1th* to the German lines read, `To Berlin,' the one pointing down the cc.nununiee cation treneh read, 'To Blighty,' while the other said, 'Suicide Ditch; Change Here for Stretchers? Farther down from this guide post the trench ran through an old orchard. On the edge of this orchard our bat- terY had eonstructed an advanced ole - servation post. The trees screened it from the enemy airmen and the roof was turfed.l It wasn't cushy like ours, no timber or concrete reinforce- ments, just walls and roofs of sand- bags. FrOTY1 it, a splentlid view of the German lines could be obtained. This post wasn't exactly safe. It was a hot corner, shells plunkings all around and the bullets cutting the leaves off the trees. Many a time when reliev- ing the signaler at the 'phone, I had - to crawl on my helly like a worm to "About six thousand yardsfrom us, behind the German lines, was a vied in plain view of caio post. For the last three days, Fritz had brought companies of troops down this road in broad daylight. They were never shelled. Whenever this happened, the Captain would froth a,t.the mouth and let out a volume of Old Pepper's re- ligion which used to friake me love him, "Every battery had a range chart on which distinctive landmarks are noted, with the range for each. These landmarks are called targets, and are nurabered. On our battery's chart, that road was called, Target Seven- teen, Range 6000, three degrees, thirty minutes left.' D 238- Battery con- sisted of four '45' howitzers, and fired a thirty-five pound H.E. (means high explosive). I dent like bumming up my own battery, but we had a record( in the Division for direct hits, ate our boys were just pining away for a chance to ° exhibit their' skin in the eyes of Fritz. 'On the afternoon of the fourth day of Frites contemptuous us b a the Itimmmtormays.....munosa. Daughter, SOK STOMACH FLOATMG SPECKS. Mather, BEFORE., EYES. BOTH CURED- BY MILBURNTLAXA-LIVER PHIL They stimulate. the sluggish liver, clean the coated tongue, sweeten the breath, clean away all waste and poison- ous matter from the syttem, and prevent as well as cure all sickness arising from a disordered condition Of the stomach, liver and bowels.' - Joseph Therieau, Saulner- ri 11, NS, writes las troubled sour stomach, ancl: took five virile f Orlhurn's Laxa-Liver Pills, and they also used theen for floating os• • ' 1, -re the eyr. Thr-2,-eured her four vials,' We 6-'41 high!1- reemme-rid them to all :rer9 from liver trobles." f ; u ride T'a,xa-ti,,,Tr Pi is arc 25c. per n t ri9 :ff.naiI. d direet on ipt of pire by The T. Milburn Coe -Limitd, Tomato, Ont. 1 = e• The bigger Comfort Soap bar for the same money is pretty good news in these days of high prices isn't it? - What does it mean? Simply that our tremendous buying power in the soap -materials market can give you infinitely better value in Soap than it eanin preaoiums. Owing to the war hundreds of factories are now making more essential goods than premiums, and the premiums still offered us are too far under Comfort standards of quality? and are certainly too high ire price, to be good value for yo. ) So we will discontinue pre ;urns until after the War, anyhow. prerniumbearing Con#fort &MP wrappers and coupons now oat will still be relearned from our present ample Premium stock. • No premiurns--but every fraction of eiery * cent you pay is returned to yori in splendid Comfort Soap—the best way in war time. road mentioned, the Captain and I were at our posts as usual. Fritz was strafeing us pretty rough, Ant like he's doing now. The shells were play ing leapfrog all through that orchard. - "I was carrying on a conversation in our lap' code with Cassel at the ether end. It ran something like this: "ay, Cassell. how would you liketo be in the saloon bar of the King's Arms down Rye Lane with a bottle of Bass ite front of you, and that blonde barmaid waiting to fill 'em up akain?' "Cassell had a fancy for that par- ticular blonde. The answer came back in the shape of a volley of cusses. I changed the subject. "After a while our talk veered a- round to the way the Bodies had been • • Children Orli' FOR FLTCER'S CASTOR LA Children Cry roirMWEN'S CASTOR, CASTOR -IA 1. Whigs and Childre. Tie Di You an Always Bears the Signaters of exposing- theMselves on the read known on the chart as Target Seven- teen. What we said about thoese Bociws would- never lithe passed th,e Reich- stag, though 1 believe it would have gone through our Censer easily en- ough. "The bursting shells were making such a din that I packed up talking and took to watching the captain. He was fidgeting aroeind on an old sand- bag with the glass to bis eye. Oc- casionally he. would let out a grunt, • and make some remark I couldn't hear on acount of the Wilma but I guessed what it was all right * Fritz was get- ting fresh again on that road. "Cassell had been sending in the `tap code' to ee, but I was fed up and didn't bother with it. Then he sent 0 .S , and I -Was all attention,, for this was tr call used between us which meant that- something important was I Was all ears in.an instant. Then well turned Ioose. 'You blankety yank dud, I have been trying. to raise you for fifteen utes.. What's the matter, are you asleep?' (Jiist at if anyone could sleep in that infernal racket!) 'Neve mind framing a tasty answer. Just listen.' - • 4 etrre.you game for putting some- thing over on the Boches and old Pep -- per all in one?" In answered that 1 was game enough when 't came to putting it over the Bodies,. but confessed that I had a weakening of the spine, even at the mention Of 100.1.0•61. Old Pepper's name. "He came back with 'It's so absurd- ly easy and simple tIat there is no chance of the old heathen rumbling It. Anyway, if we're caught, 1'11 take the (Continued on- Page 2) LISTEN TO THIS! SAYS CORNS LIFT RIGHT OUT You reckless mien end women- orbs! arepestered- rilt4 -. at 'east once a yr, death froin loc - arieerow told bir U. la 'drag the moment a tw to any torn t a soreness ad and soon th; - reoo °liftsout with •itiasti dries .the siniply shri Ing or ter ig theme euOter onnees of st Very Itt1e it any of the rug stores. at it '«cIenttor1d�nVgfeot 40$ every Isar or ott tan or ealltat e Tuu are,iurther warned that auttina at a corn hi a suicidal habit, ',' • .t. ". _ , . 1:4-• . _ .•=s ' -.44t..:4‘.. .0. rt aisti......, vpeo 0. RI*. With a Ford r". g••••••• • Ay ORE than 100,000 Fords are owned byi people in Canada in preference to the old horse-drawn buggy and other makes of eas. .Your neighbrs, and farmers in every section of the Dominion are abandoning their old buggies—sellig their driving horses and buying Fords. • Ford cars are utility cars. They are built to endure the strain of constant daily use over rough road. . These are the tests every farmer gives his car. The Ford meets them" in a satisfactory manner. It is the frmer's car, so why not replace you" horse and buggy with a Ford? .0,0}lart •=', "I - ALY BROS. Runabout,. $575 Touring -• $595 Coupe - • $770 Sedan - ;$70 Chassis = = $535 122\ri 7E514 L CAR One-t9nTruck 4750 P. O. B. FORD, ONT. Pealtr Dealers • • r. Seaforth Hensall mmmommaimmennsaseeemmorememem 107