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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1935-09-06, Page 5137 4 1 4, • • • • 4. ..-1 .., PLAYING 1 , . eaf0 rth ''' • , yeS, 1i1 “PFE BEGINS AT 40" • ; ,,T ., II OWA__ 1. " UN It II4LE. • Xo modern hcene ie complete Withr AR'rtION mut CCP i'EDV, .out, a medicine cabinet ,iiiltilie batle4' NAVY', TUESDAY, '' alMIESDAY , Toone and np medicine cubinet,ie con. PREDRIC, liA4RCE and CIIARLES LAUGHTON in . - • ' eidered 'fully equipped that dees. not 4 ES4VIISERABLES" . ontain various mitts tics an asepties to Provide fillet aid for 'the One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told! injured: If the baby scratches his 'Mee or the boy ents.his thumb there is a rush for the cabinet. A bottle is opened and something dabbed on the wound and the fears of the mother allayed.' That is probably the only beneficial result, for it is doubtful if the average antiseptic does more good than hem. This is not - to say that antiseptics are no good It -is merely 44 ',.1k4te few,' lee" /111,1,11,11.174,1,221,1/U9/1?2..14.:014 4.3 P , with RICRAIM, CROMAVIAL,. EOCIEELLE STERLIPTO " •3 TV^. 04 fa 'kill' ger:Ps is leas that Pf, loOloe hut it IS ucat.irritating and „novintorions tbis- solution. I& iodix4 is used it should -44m- well eP difutO and a two per cent. solution 1§ 50 per cent, alcohol suggested. Ad& mg two parts of water to, the offie- ial tincture, will, give an approxima- tion- of this. An anthor.ity says:— "The cleansing of abbe wound with soap and water- which is always a- vailable, is the only treatment nec- essary in eine-tenths of the wounds seen by railroad surgeons or sur- geons doing emergeney work." A Modified Advertisement When bandaging is necessary it is generally better to have it done loosely for e tight bandage will close t&I blood supply, sealing up whatev- er bacteria may remain in the wound. Similarly the haphazard use of col- lodion, is dangerous because this too seals the wound. ' It should not be fergotten that while one may die from loss of bleed, the flow of blood is one of nature's ways of protecting ah Th flow is outward and tends to 'keep the bacteria .from reaching the blood stream. Speaking of oral antisepsis Mr. Ephraim notes that a certain preparation was put On the market. and thus described by ith enthusiastic *proprietor: "A delightful, refreshing and purifying mouth wash, healing, antiseptic and prophylactic, keeps the gums firm, preventive treatment when pyor- rhea is threatened." After examina- tion by Government experts it read: "A delightful, refreshing month wash." It is worth noting, also that the deodorizing devices once popu- lar in cheap movie houses do not purify the air or anything else..They merely add a more powerful odor to others present. -emaxese— m•x,emmeemm.m.r k.• / • `A/X111441/A5.1M1i N . anit 'SPECIAL _MATINEE WEIMNESD,AY, SEPTEMBER.11, AT 3 P.M. NEXT TEURSDAY, FRIDAY, SA RDAY-12, 13, 14 with pizi SQFUERN EDREL MERMAN Eddie Cantor in "KID MILLIONS" COMING -"GINGER" jirs,*ees' Sat and Pam Twe Awe Wei*, 'LSO and 0.3.6, wwwww44,4:4.4r44,44,4444444444404.4444414•4 AUBURN Shop Burns A disistnous fire occurred in the village about .3.30 a.m. Tuesday wthen the machine and carpenter shop of Charles AsquIth was completely raz- ed to the ground. The fire was of unknOvvre origin. Only the speedy work of th,e men of the village With their hand pumping' and chemical ma- chine saved the house which was just 39 feet away from the burning. build- ing. • The underground water tanks made it possible to have a good force of water. Valuttuble machines and tools were •destroyed, .•; • Both schools, public and continua- tion,,,Opened Tuesday with a good at,- tendance. eetes. Ross and Donald have come from IDengannon to Atiibtern. They will make their home with James Medd. Mr. and Mrs. 0. 1VIcIlveen have left for their home in BOvereariville. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Taylor have returned from Toronto. Misses Marjorie and Ruth Arthur etre home from Clinton. • ,MiSs Margaret .Small ls.visiting in 'Toronto. Rev, and .Mis. Sherman are in • To- eonto. Mr. IlsifeCrae has returned to his leirne in the ,Sault. Mrs. Phillip's, Arnold and Royce re- turned from Clinton.. Miss Margaret 'Jackson is in To- ronto. The two teachers, Miss N. Sharpe sand A. Hasty, are hack to commence. -their school work. Charles 'Whitman and May„White- e,urch, visited with Mr. and. Mrs. J. llovatt.' • Mr. teed Mrs. Carl Wagner and family visited with Jacob Wagner. Visitors:. Mrs. Jackson, 'Miss Mar- garet Jackson, Toronto, with Mr. and Mn. James Jackaon; Mi. and Mrs. Cerdon Ball in , the "village; Mises Roth Straughan and Eleanor .Wilson it, Toronto to. judge .at 'the Exhibi- lien; Rev. and iMrs. Wilson and fam- ily in Stratford. t United -Church on Sunday mornipg at 11 a.m. It is hoped that every member will plan, to be present. 1 he pupils and, teachers have start- ed hack . to work after the summer vacation, with only,a couple of holi- dews to look forward to till Christ - 1119S. PreParatory services were held in St, Andrew's United 'Church Thurs- day evening when Rev, Charles Cum- ming of Walton was the special speaker. Master Ivison Torrance of Porter's Hill visited for a few days with his grandfather, Mr. Henry Ivison, and aunt, Miss Jean Ivison, of Stanley. Mr. Gordon Wright left last week for Schumacher, where he is on the staff of the Collegiate there. Miss Margaret Wright and Mr. Clem Geisler, Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Perry, Detroit, spent•the week -end with Mr. and Mrs., James Wright. 44111MMINIIMINIB BRUCEFIELD ' tRev..W. A. Bremner will be home next Sunday. The services will , be !held at the usual hours, 11 and 7.30. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Landeborougn of Port Credit and their son, Dr. Arnold, of Garretsville, Ohio, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James McQueen, on Labor Day:. Mrs. A. Murdock and daughter of Detroit returned home last week af- ter spending a week at the home, of Mr. R. Murdock. Miss K. Elliott, R.N., of Strathroy is spending her -holidays at her home in the t VARNA Mr. and Mrs. Bob Woods' and little •.‘..0T1 have returned home after visit- ing friends in and around otir vicip- i ty. Holiday visitors: Mr. and Mrs. Latham, Miss Gladys Beatty, Miss Irene, Mar' and Ida, Chnter of Lon- don; Mrs. Jas. Hamilton and daugh- ter of • Detroit; Mrs. McDonald of Goderich Township. Mr. and Mrs. James Grassie, in siempany with Will Logan, spent Sun - 'lay with their daughter, Mrs. Wing- ferd, of "%Hay Tp. Mr, and Mrs. G. B. Wloods of To- ronto, who spent their honeymoon in J'Nova/Scotia, made a fiying'visit with friends here prior to their return to their'.home in Toronto. ..' Mrs. Dewar of Bayfield, in com- pany with her Son, Jiminie, and daughter, Elva, of Toronto' spent a day with Mrs. Mossop arid daughters. Miss Slavin has returned home "af- ter a visit with Mrs. M. Beatty. The members of the township coun- cil Met M. the Hall Tteesday night. BLYTH to say that there is none gqod for all emergencies, and that the only per, ion competent to say the kind of antiseptic to be applied in a given case is a doctor, and ,furthermore a doctor who has made some study_of The question. These are the viewsof modern medical science as compile in an article for The -American Men - cure, by Jerome W. Ephraim, to whose ungrudging "eassistance in preparing Fourth Columns in the past we are greatly indebted. There is a good deal of popular ignorance about anti- septics, and there is also some han- ky-panky founded not so much on ignorance as upon sound business prineiples. The Rage For Peroxide Music Exams All pupils of Elizabeth Mills, A.T. C.M., trying examinations the past year were successful. The following tried at the Clinton centre in June: Introductory (Grade II),,Annie Phil- lips (honours), Iris Lockhart, Nor- ma Deer (honors) equal. Element- ary (Grade IV),' Mabel Fear (hon.). Primary (Grade VI), Phyllis Bray, May Laidlaw; Theory "(Grade 1), Phyllis Bray (1st class hon.). LONDESBORO • KIP'PEN Rev. E.'F. Chandler had charge of 'the services again after the summer vacation. He took his text from the 7th chapter Of St:Mathew. The choir rendered 'et very pleasing number, "Anyway He Leads." The W.M.S. of 'St. Andrew's Un,it- ed Church held their September mek- ing.at the home of iMrs. J. C. Bell on "Wcdnesaay afternoon of this week. Miss Helen Chandler has returned to Blenheim to resumelter duties as a teacher on the high school staff there. Mr, Clarence McLean of London visited over the holiday week-ena with his mother, Mrs. J. B. McLean, of Tuckersmith. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McLean aril children haVe returned to Waubau- shene 'alter having spent the summer months with the Ifcrrmer's mother, Mrs, J. B. ,MoLean,. of Tuckersmith. Miss Atidrey Cochrane of Stanley visited for a few days with her MIS - in, Misg, Gladys Jarrott, of the vil- lage. t. The Sacrament of the Lord's Sup- per will be observed in St. Andrew's In Dr. Robert T. R. Morris' book, Fifty Years a Surgeon, which pro- vided us with the materiel for a column on appendectomy a few weeks ago, he .had some interesting re- marks to Ria,ke on the subject of antiseptics, and showed that at the time Lister's discovery was • being hailed as one of epoch making impor- tance there were English surgeks who could show even a higher per- centage of successful major opera- tions who disregarded his teachings. In effect what they were doing was to permit nature to get in her licks instead of doing the licking( for her. He noted somewhat wryly that most of the reforms evirieh• he had urged over. the yeats were adopted, if at all, only very slowly. There was one exception. ,He had advocated the use of hydrogen peroxide as an antisep- tic. in certain cases, and found to his horror that the world' had swiftly and almost unanimously paid •atten- 44. Hoi3Vill Rogers got his Stadia Show Rumness • Though he exaggerated the ac- counts of his laggard school days, it is a fact that the late Will Rogers wasn't much of a student. • Will once said: "My father was pretty well fixed and I being' the only tion to him and• was using the drug , male son, he tried terribly hard to as a mouth wash. This was one of make something out of me. He sent the purposes to which it certainly meth about every school in that part of the country. "In some of them, I would last for three or four months. I got just •as far, as the fourth readerewhen the teachers wouldn't seem to be run- ning the school right,, and rather than have the school stop, I would gener- ally leave." A Claremore, Oklahoma, old-timer said: "Will never was much for books. He wasn't so good and he wasn't bad. But his ready wit as contagious, 1 even in boyhood. One of his early teachers says that he'd always wan - ,der from the lesson text, but he'd never fail to make the clan laugh." 'His specialty at Willies, Hassell School at Neosho, Mo.. eva$e an imi- tation a a colored preacher. which he'd often do, mostly by popular de- mand, in the Friday afternoon reci- tation period. That is as close as enely confident that they are doing Will ever came to the ministry. His heir good deed for the day. Buti inother wanted him to become a are they? Or are they actually do- Methodist minister. ing more harm than good? In many Sent Father a Wire cases very likely . , . A few funda- Toward the end of Will's stay at mental facts must be home in mind. Kemper Military Academy at 13oone- First, the unbroken normal skin has ville, Mo., his father received a wire itself remarkable qualities of self die- from him; saying he was going' to infection. Soap and water, cleanliness skip school and help some fellows dig —washing the dirt and bacteria a- an oil well in Texas. way --are of fundamental importance. The elder Rogers wrote Willie, as Attempting to kill bacteria present is he called him, to go ahead and work obviously a subordinate procedure,. out his on sa,fration. Will went on 'Only in some few instances as prior the job and stayed•for a while, but to an operation, is skin disinfection kept firing, letters home telling, of the necessary. Secondly, on the broken hardships and his homesickness. The skin as in the case of cuts and letters made Father and Mother Rog- scretchee, disinfection is secondary p ers laugh.. Sothey sent him money in importance to cleanliness. It is to come home, still a better procedure to clean dirt When the prodigal returned, he and bacteria away than simply at- was told his schpol days were ,over tempt to kill bacteria, and in the for good. Will threw his slouoh hat ese rtf antiseptics, several complicat-il into the air and let out a whoop that ing factors arise., Iodine in strong was heard in Oologah, four miles concentration, ana certain other an- away. tii.eptics, may injure or destroy the ' Now Uncle Cern, Will's father was not ,adapted, and probably un- teld damage has been done to deli- cate mucous membrane by the un- bridled garglings, swishings and squirtings of this drug in the mouth and throat which became .almost a universal habit. Nature's Defences Says Mr. Ephraim: "The skin is our protective armour. Once it is :Punctured the way is open for infec- tion, and infection can be serious if rat fatal. So however ungracious it may be to question the well-inten- tioned activities of good Samaritan, we are obliged to inqiiire into wh is the best possible practise in anti- sepsis. Jet this very moment hun- (lreds and perhaps thousands of 13�y Scouts and Girl Guideee are binding up a nations wound. With a'bottle of antiseptic in one hand and a bit of gauze in the other they feel sere Mr. Mac McCool had the rnisfor- tune to have his car burned. He had only driven a short distance when it caught fire and was completely de- stroyed. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Joehling visit - es Kitchener friends °eel.- the week- end. Mr. and Mrs. Benson Tyerrnan' of Seaforth spent Friday at the home of Mrs. Tamblyn. .Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Miller arid family visited friends in Drayton re- cently. ' Mr, and Mrs. Corey and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bean of Carlow visited' at the home of Mr, and Mrs. J. D. Melville recently. Miss 'Jennie Cowan who has been spending some time with -friends in London, has returned home. Rev. Mrs. Dr. Medd and daughters, Josie and Elmer, were recent'visitors nt ,the home of Mrs. J. Tamblyn and Mrs. Elsley, left for their home in Chatham on Saturday. Mr. John Armstrong shipped a car load of cattle to Toronto last Satur- day. . Mr. S. D. Dawson of London called ion friends here this week. , .. Mrs. Noble of Belgrave was a week -end visitor at the home of her sister, Mrs. T. Fairserice. BLYT Fall Fair Sept. 13-14 Special Attractions and Horse Racing DANCE FRIDAY EVE.; SEPT. lath GRAND CONCERT SATTIRDAY EGMONDVILLE Y. P. s: Meets • The regular meeting of ,the Eg- mondvilre _Young People was held .on Tuesday evening. In the absence of Jean Smith, the president, Jean Gemmell presided. The meeting was opened by singing "Pass Me Not, 0 Gentle 'Saviour," after which the Lord's Prayer was repeated in uni- son. After the' minutes were read, the business was discussed. Anna Love was appointed as Missionary Convenor for the remainder of the year. After singing "Lead Kindly Light," Dean Castle read the Scrip- ture. After Dorothy Gemmell led in prayer, the hymn, "God Sees the Sparrow Fall," Dorothy Taman gave a report on the girl' summer camp and Mr. Malcolm gave the report on the boys' .summer camp. L. Stewart sang two pleasing solos, after which a few games were enjoyed. The meeting was closedby repeating the Mizpah Benediction. EVE, SEPT., 14th 'Come and enjoy yourself aid help make •this a banner' yet*. • - 3534-2 leukocytes in the The tried a dangerous experiment. -wound area. leukocytes (white .blood cells) are the In the words of an old friend of protective soldiers. The same or other the Rogers family: antiseptics injure the surrounding "On the theory that responsibility would settle him, Will's father made Soap and Water himi steward of his holft ranch busi- The ability of some antiseptics to ness. He gave him wer 'of at - hill germs is doubtful. The action of torney at the bank a d left on a known germicides may be injurious long trip. to healthy tissue, and the truth is "The moment his father was gone, that no ,antiseptic is equally effec- Will built a dance platform at the live against all germs. He suggests homestead and began giving a series that as an after cleanser a two per cent. solution of chloramine or one of the newer proprietary preparations manufactured by a so called "ethi- cal" house useful. Its power ADVANCE'SHOWING. , me 1 •NEW FALL oa $m." to $35.00 A glorious collection forming the ad- vance guard of the New Fall Styles. All Wool Suede, Diagonal Suede, Crepe Suede, and all -wool Tweeds, luxurious- ly trimmed with Wolf, Sable, Raccoon, French Beaver,Seal, lovely Lynx or Op - possum. Chick Freach, American and Canadian styles. Come in and see them The New Fall Millinery Black, Navy or Brown are the leading colors. Purple, Green, Henna andWine are also represented. There is a decid- ed change in the shapes, including the new shovel shape. si Come in and see 95 to $5 what is new. • rr tewart Bros, Seaforth .4 ST. COLUMBAN Oh. 114.1111 Mr. Peter Austin spent Sunday at the Martyr's Shrine near Midland. Mr. and Mrs. X. MicIlhardy of Luc - an visited Mr. and Mrs. G. Ryan; Miss Marie Flannery of Toronto spent the week -end here; Basil Lane of Toronto is visiting his family; Mr. and Ws, Thos. Moylan and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Moylan and Mrs. P. O'Sul- livan spent the holiday in Port Her - en; Mr. and Mrs. Rehill of London visited at Mr. and Mrs. Joe- Gar- lin's; John Fortune of Detroit is im- proving after his illness a the home of hit uncle, T. Lynch. , &you need WE CAN SUPPLY ANY STYLE CARBON LEAF CARBON. BACK BEFORE PLACING YOUR ORDER PHONE US FOR PRICES Look for The Maple Leaf The Si�n cTt - (kality Books" THE HURON EXPOSITOR Seaforth, Ontario. Mr.; Gassaway said, he noticed a youth sitting on a fence, doing noth- ing and wisecracking all the time. It was Rogers. Patience exhausted, Ga.esaway asked his boss:. "Why in "hell is he ' staying around?" Colonel Ewing replied: "In the first place he's so damn funny I can't let him go and in the second place, I'm just wondering if he'll ever do anything." • Eventually Will was taken back in- to his father's good graces,and given a herd of cattle. But young Rogers never. liked, raising cows. What he did like was to rope them. He succeeded in selling the cattle beck to his "father for $12,000 (was he a business man) and set •out to see the world. Will was twenty-one years old - at the time. _ of festivals, square dances, dance con- tests ee-ead roping shows. It was in celebration, he said, of his return home and the happy end of his school days. Spent His Father's Money "He soon spent about $1,000 of his father's money with nothing to show for it but a lot of fun. And $1.,000 was aelot of meneY in those days, Some of the cash had gone,for priz- es in the dance exhibitions. A good many of those prizes Will got back himself, by unanimous vote ,of the gang, for the prowess in doing the cake'w'alk, which ,had just come in." !Squally weathetr broke for Will on his father's return. The power of attorney was withdrawn and Will was thrown on his own resources. From that period dates an anecdote which 1.cteigressman Percy Gassaway of Oklahoma tells. • •Afbout thirty-five years ago', as he was helping dehorn 3,000 steers on the ranch of Colonel W. P. Ewing, When you have a HORSE or COW you want removed Phone or write to William Stone Sons LTD. Phone 22 Phone '215W - Set Out For Argentine With a lad who has gone down in. history as just Dick, and whose pas- sage be paid, the young traveller started out for the Argentine. "3Vhen a fellow ain't got much mind," Will obeerved years later,,."it don't take him long to make it up." The two went tp New Orleans, here they were told they'd have to ; look in New York for an Argentine boat. But in the big town they found that "this • year's boat for Buenos Aires" had just left. They were ad- vised to go via England. They went. Rogers, never a good sailor, was seasick most of the way. His diet, for the entire trip, he told friends later, consisted of a couple of lemons. Eventually, the two adventurers got to the Argentine, where Will punched cows on the pampas for the equivalent of $4.20 a . month. Here's one of the Rogers stories relating to these tlays: 'I was sorter itching to show those gauchos how we could rope and tie down a steer, so one day they wan1,- ed to etch one to pick the brand on him, so I takes me down rny little manilla rope, and 1 ven goes' so far as to pick out the exact bit of earth wnere I will lay this brute down. 'Weil, I haft% eyen got close en- ough to start swinging my rope when I heard something go whizzing over my head. A guy running about 20 feet behind rne had thrown clear my head and caught the steer." e; Will's pal, homesiek, left hiTO flat and Rogers paid his passage home. The Oklahoman now read that stock was being shipped to Soniih Africa. It was the time of the Boer War. Will shipped as a valet to a -herd of South American. cows. In his spare time, he acted as companies and nursemaid -it about 1,500 mules. "They were almost tante," Mr. Rog- ers, said afterward, "and they didn't kiek mueh." 'At Ladysmith wan got a job break- Ingersoll Stratton ing horses for the British Army. He had not 'broken many of them, when the war came to an end. Shortly afterward Rogers learned that an American showman named Texas Jack was at Johannesburg with his one -ring Circus and Wild. West Show. He worked his way to the town, where he arrived broke: He found Texas Jack in front of his tent, do- ing a comparatively simple rope trick, "spinning out,". and offering $100 to that member of the crowd who could imitate him. Will slouched up,' spun out, and threw in a few more intricate tricks. The $100 offer proved to be a, bluff. Texas Jack didn't, have a hundred dimes at that moment. Instead of cash. he offered Will a jab as a rider and rope artist. The cowboy accepted' and became the star attraction of the show. He was billed as "The Cherokee Kid." Thus ,Will -Rogers was launched in the show business. Disposal of Garden Waste In all gardens there is e relatively large amount of Waste Material such as grass and the leaves and stalks of fl • rs and vegetables, which is gen- eraly burnt or removed as garbage and is lost to the garden. Most of this waste is organic, that is, largely composed of carbonaceous matter, and is derived from the car- bon dioxide in the air, from the wa- ter in the soil and the plant ,food constituents dissolved in this water. When rotted, this material is often called humus, which is a mass of organic material which has largely lost ils fibrous structure. This ma- terial is valuable to the soil, both for the nitrogen and other _plant food which it contains and also for the Beneficial action of the organic mat- ter on the texture of the soil. The rotting of garden waste is a simple matter and can be carried out hy making a compact pile of the waste and occasionally wetting it in order to hasten the rotting. It veill be found that in a few months the material is in a fit condition to be sprend on the soil ancliploughed or dug in. At This time the coarter materials such as cabbage stalks and woody materials can be separated and burnt, the ashes being distributed over the garden. A better plan, if manure is avail- able, is to form a compost of the manure and the garden waste. This is done by placing the waste and manure lr alternate layers, and mak- ing the heap compact by traMping and watering. .0omposting hestens the rotting of the garden waite. .1, DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Tororrto. Late assistant New York Opthale mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield'll Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. At Commercial , ilotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday int each month, frOm 1.30 Pon. to 5 p.m. 58 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford. Next vigitt September 18th. t'•?3,3,, ei„„e • ee',•-• e'ete,,te• Fall Fair Dates Ailsa Craig, September 19, 20.- • Atwood, September 20, 21: Bayfield, ' September 25, 26. Blyth, September 25, 26. Brussels, September 25, 26. .0 I Clifford, September 20, 21, Dungannon, October 3, 4. Ernbro, October 3. •""r Exeter, September 16, 17. tr:--1 Goderich, September 17, 18. Gorrie, October 4, 5. Harriston, September 26, 27. Kincardine, Septafober 19, 20. kirkton, October 1, 2. Listowel, September 18, 19. Lucknew, Septerriber 26, 27. Milverton, September 12, 13. MitchellesSeptember 24, 25. New Hamburg, September 13, 14., Owen Sound, September 10-12. • Parkhill, September 26, 27. Palmerston, October 1, 2. ' St. Marys, October 9, 10, Seaforth, September 19, 20. Stratford, September 16-18. Tiverton, October 7, 8. Tavistock, September 6, 7. Tara, October 1, 2. Tees -Water, October 1, 2. ' 1 Wellesley, September 10, 11. Wingham, October 9, 10. Zurich, September 23, 24. 43 ' PBE McKILLOP MUTUAI2 FIRE INSURANCE COT. HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTH. ONT. OFFICERS: Mex, Broadfoot, Seaforth - Pre& Ja-mes Connolly, Goderith - Vice -Pre& Merton A. Reid, Seaforth Sec.-Treas. AGENTS: Finlay MeKercher, R. R. 1, Dublin John Murray, R. it. 3, Seaforth; E. G. Jarmouth, Brodhagen; James WaA Blyth; C. E. Blewitt, Kincardine; Wo J. Yeo, Goderieh. DIRECTORS: William Knox, Landesboro; Ge Leonhart; Brodhagen; /tunes Co*. noIly, Goderieh; Alex.Broatifeek '10, 3, Seaforth; Alexander metwing; R. 1, Blyth; John Pepper'Ertreefie141 lames Sholdice, Walton' Thee. Me1al `r late No. 5, Seaforth; Whle. 'bald, No. 4, Seaforth. '14* ja ' 4, • l, ••• 1