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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1949-10-28, Page 7r •• A 4 4 ' t 02, usmesscory M)/r)/CAL LEGAL SEA'.I!'ORT.l CLINIC E. A. MCMASTER, B.A., M.D. • internist P. L. BRADY, M.D. Surgeon Office Ileurs: 1 p.m, to 5 'p.m., daily,.exeept Wednesday and Sun- day- EVENINGS; unday.EVF,,NINGS; Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday only, 7 -9 p.m. 'Appointments made in advance are desirable. JOHN- A. GORWILL, BA., M.D. Physician and Surgeon IN DR. H. IL ROSS' OFFICE Phones: Office 5-W; Rea. 5-3 Seaforth DR. M. W. STAPLETON DR. ROSS HOWSON Physicians and Surgeons Phone 90 Seaforth DR. F. J. R. FORSTER • Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late assistant New York Opthal- mei and Aural Institute, Moore - field's Eye. and- Golden Square ''Throat Hospital, London, Eng. At COMMERCIAL HOTEL, Seaforth. Next visit, September ' 21st. 53 Waterloo St. South, Stratford. JOHN C. GODDARD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon - Phone 110 - Hensall C.N.R. TIME TABLE, GOING EAST , (Morning) Goderich (leave) Seaforth Stratford (arrive) (Afternoon) Goderich (leave) Seaforth Stratford (arriv.e) GOING WEST (M9rning) Stratford (leave) Seaforth • Goderich (arrive) (Afternoon) Stratford (leave) Seaforth Goderich (arrive) A.M. 5.40 6.20 7.16 P.M. 3.00 3.46 4.40 McCQNNELL & HAYS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc, PATRICK D, McCONNELL H. GLENN HAYS 2ounty Crown Attorney SEAIRTH, ONT. Telephone 174 A. W SILLERY Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phone 173, Seaforth SEAFORTH - ONTARIO OPTOMETRIST M. ROSS SAVAUGE Optometrist Eyes examined and glasses fit- ted. Oculists' prescriptions accur- ately filled. Phgne 194, Evenings 120, Seaforth. VETERINARY J. O. 1 URNBULL, D.V.M., V.S. Main Street Seaforth PHONE 105 AUCTIONEERS HAROLD JACKSON Specialist in Farm and House- hold Sales. Licensed in Huron and Perth Counties. Prices reasonable; sat- isfaction guaranteed. Fbr information, etc., write or phone HAROLD JACKSON, 14 on 661, Seaforth; R.R. 4, Seaforth.) EDWARD W. ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer Corresp*ndence promptly answer- ed. Immediate arrangements can be made for sale dates by phoning 203, Clinton. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. JOSEPH L. RYAN A.M. Specialist in farm. stock and im- 10.45 plements and household effects. 11.36 Satisfaction guaranteed, Licensed 12,20 in Huron and Perth Counties. P.M. For particulars and open dates, 9.35 write or phone JOSEPH L. RYAN, 10.21 R.R. 1, Dublin. Phone 40 r 5, 11.00 Dublin. ' 4217x52 - GUARANTEED - TRUST CERTIFICATES 3% INTEREST An Attractive Short -Term Legal Investment Principal and Interest Folly Guaranteed CROWN TRUST COMPAN Y F. R. Hughes, Manager, 284 Dundas St., London HEAD OFFICE: TORONTO Ontario Branches at London, Brantford and Windsor Applications Received Through Your Local Agent or Solicitor P.egipa., ,areVia et 11/119 ,'.41g0 ed many of Snshate ,ewan a UM*, buld'ings, W ' C?. Van•E''en`d; ,:6b , died s+uddepW' ,'Sunday. evening, Oct, 9, en route 'te a city hospital after a heart attack.' Mr. Van Egmond~ wen stricken while on a trip to Stou0hton, eolith of Regina, to spot Saline• for shooting trip proposed for Mcadlay. Mrs„ Van trip accompanied him<. After •suffering a slight heart at- tack, Mr. Van E,ginond was exam- ined by a Stoughton doctor. Death came about 7 p.m, when he was. being driven to a Regina hospital by a friend who went to Stoughton to drive the couple home. His first attack was not thought to he ser- ious and he was to have been ex- amined in Regina. Mr. Van Egmond was one of .the partners of Van Egmond & Storey from whose McCallum Hill build- ing office in Regina oam'e plana for same of the largest and most im- portant buildings erected in the province in the last half century. The son of W. D. and Jessie Van Egmond, the Regina architect was born September 16, 1883, in Eg- mondville, Ont. He obtained„ his public and high schooling at Sea - forth, Ont., later 'studying archi- tecture in Toronto and New York. In 1906 he came to Regina and served as _draftsman under the late E. M. Storey. The next year he entered into partnership with Mr. Storey to establish the architec- tural firm of Storey & Van Eg- mond. In January, 1906, he married Mabel Isabel Ball, daughter of J. R. Ball, Toronto. When E. M. Storey died in 1914, Mr. Van Eg- mond founded the present firm of Van Egmond and Storey, in part- nership with Stan E. Storey, son of .his former associate. Hundreds of institutional and 'business edi- fices, as well as dwellings, stand throughout the province as monu- ments to Mr. Van Egmond's archi- tectural ability. Many of Regina's larger struc- tures were planned by him. These include the Regina General hospi- tal and Grey Nang hospital. One Of his most recent works was the newly -opened wing at the General Hospital, Among business buildings in Re- g;na, Mr. Van Egmond drew plans for the McCallum -Hill building, Broder buildings, Credit Foncier building, and numerous other Upholstering Chesterfields and • Occasional Chairs Repaired and Recovered Factory Guarantee Free Pick-up and Delivery Stratford Upholstering Co. 42 Brunswick ,St., Stratford For further information enquire at Box's Furniture Store SEAFORTH POWER REGULATIONS MUST BE ENFORCED A 4 -eduction in power deliveries from one of the Commission's suppliers makes it neces- sary for all consumers to avoid wasting electri- city. The Commission has advised the municipal systems that strict compliance with regulations respecting the use of electricity is essential. Voluntary conservation is also needed. Homes, industries and farms can play their full part by reducing the use of electricity at all times, particularly during, the, hours of maxi- mum use, from 10 to 12 in, the morning and 4 to 6 in the afternoon. Save EIectvicity4t4ijI Tines! THE NYORO-ELRDTRIO ,POWER: OOMMISS1ON OF . ONTARIO • c t ..::n"t• r•.`ac�,.<i�i'!«'F:,;ifjyk"M To, counter a serious epidemic of poliomyelitis regional office for Southeast Asia shows a group (infantile paralysis), the United Nations" Worldof nurses and officials how an portable iron Health Organization (WHO) has been speeding lung; just delivered, operates. Altogether, WHO iron lungs to 'India. Here the Director Of WHO's plans to send -10 of the big machines to India. • Ontario's September Traffic Toll Reaches New High g • structures. He specialized in large office and warehouse buildings and executed many of these. Institutional buildings designed. by Mr. Van Egmond include Re- gina Central Collegiate, Balfour Technical School and the Normal School buildings. He also designed Regina Armory, Assiniboi Club, Champlain Hotel, Y.M.C.A., Grain Show Building, King's. Hotel and the provincial jail. About 60 school buildings scat- tered throughout the province were planned by Mr. Van. Egmond. Mr. Van Egmond was a member of the Council of the Saskatohewan Association of Architects, and a fellow of the Royal Architectural Irstitute of Canada. He belonged to the Assiniboia Club, Wascana Country Club, and Wascana Winter Club. He served as president in all three of these organizations. He was also active in the Rotary Club and the Wa Wa T.emple Shrine. He was a member of the Regina Chamber of Commerce and was on the council of the Saskatchewan Liberal As- sociation. An ardent sportsman, Mr. Van Egmond was food of fishing, hunt- ing, boating and golfing. Mr. Van Egmond is survived by his wife, 2620 Regina Avenue, and two daughters, Mrs: J. T. Lock- hart, 2925 Hill Avenue, and Mrs. Roy, E. Irwin, Oakville, Ont. The funeral was held at St. Paul's Anglican Church onWed- nesday, Oct. 12, at 2 p.m. Dean Cole. officiated and interment was in Regina cemetery. In the Regina Leader -Post, the editor says editorially: "Wlhen two men have worked closely together as business part- ners for 42 years without a quarrel, they have illustrated surely, a bas- is lesson in human relationships. This record of amicable association since 1907 was held by W. G. Van Egmond, the Regina architect whose death Sunday broke a long- term partnership. "His quality of getting along well with people wherever he found them — and he knew the world well — was a strong facet of the architect's character. The young men who worked at their boards in his office benefitted from this quality, learned from his wide practical experience, found the patience and understanding. "Associates recall :his intense powers of concentration. Once on a job he directed all his energy, all his attention to the project un- til the last detail was completed. In the same way, he could relax aid play with the zest of a 10 -year- old. He had learnad the secret of utter relexation and preached it affably to his associates, '"The fact of his ability to con- centrate is forever established in the long list of buildings in the province which his firm designed. There are literally hundreds of buildings throughout the province which bear the familiar inscription of the firm. In the last 10 years, Mr. Van Egmond with his associ- ates, specialized in hospital con- struction. The new wing of the Regina General Hospital, recogniz- ed as one of the most modern buildings of its kind in Canada, was designed by the architeck. "If W. G. Van Egmond knew how to work, then he knew how to play too. He gardened with delight, he hunted and fished with enthusiasm. He enjoyed beach life at the fam- ily cottage at B,Say-Tah where he learned the knack of shutting his mind off completely from the busi- ness world. He was a confirmed trave,:er and over the years had seen an enviable section of the world's map. "Few men leave behind such per- manent monuments. In brick and. st, re and steel, the ',buildings, he saw translated from blueprints to actual fact are lasting expressions of his personality. They bare part of the mann-from the free simpli- city of the new hospital wing to the little green gingerbread house on McCallum Avenue. All of them typify a lifetime of work and one man's capacity for achievement." Railway operating expenses and revenues registered an all time high in 1948. While operating ex - 'Mises went from $683,045,372 to ;$7i98,47-1,1.251, an increase of 116.9 per cent, revenue increases, aggre- gated $866,548,950, a rise of only 11,6 per cent. With seven multiple -death acci- dentskilling a combined total of 18 people, fatal injuries from motor vehicle accidents on Ontario roads last month totalled 97, bringing the traffic toll for the first nine months of this year up to 590 deaths. A greater total number of driv- ers and, vehicles have drives an estimated 17 per cent more miles than last year's record traffic, ac - corning to the latest available fig- ure s from the Department of High- ways, with the year's increase in fatalities from motor vehicle acci- dtntr standing at 20 per cent. The worst part of this increase occur- red in the winter months and dur- ing June and September. Moat tragic feature of the Sep- tember accident reports is the fact that more than twice as many chil- dren were killed as in September of last year. Compared with ten child victims last September, this year the same month brought death to 21 children under 15 years of age. Four of these were ,pas- sengers in cars, and an analysis of the remaining 17 child deaths shows that: (1) All but two were between three and eight years of age; (2) Only one accident, of the 15 on which full information has been received, happened near a school at school time; (3) Most of the rest were near the victims' owit homes; (4) Two of those killed were riding bicycles, while the remai::- ing 15 were walking or playing on the street or highway. The month's total of fatal acci- dents showed a decrease in the number of single -vehicle accidents (vehicles going out of control or Something to sell . . to buy . . then Phone 41, The Huron Expositor, Seaforth. You'll get the best results. HuronFederation iContinued from Page 2) plies of other meats and continued high levels of consumers' incomes, has meant strong prices for cattle. Inspected slaughterings of cattle during the first seven months of 1949 were 729 thousand head, com- pared with 724 thousand during the same period of 1948. Slaughterings in Western Canada were five per cent below those of 1948, while the kill in Eastern Canada to date was almost seven per cent above that of 1948. Exports of all cattle to the Unit- ed States during the January -July period were 147 thousand head in 1949, about double the exports for the same period of 1948. Exports of dressed beef during the first seven months of 1949 were 28 million pounds, compared with 42 million during the seven-month period in 1948. Total hog marketings in Canada during the January -July, 1949, per- iod have declined markedly from 1948 levels. In Western Canada - colliding with fixed objects) ; but this was more than offset by the advance in the number of pedes- trians, bicycle and two -vehicle col- lisions. Fatal: accidents at railroad crossings were fewer last month than in September, 1948, although in a single one of them four per- sons ersons were killed. When your BACK ACHES... Backache is often caused by lazy kidney action. When kidneys get out of order mess adds and poisons remain in the system. Then backache, headache, rheumatic pain, dis— turbed rest or that 'tired out' feeling may soon follow. To help keep your kidneys working properly—use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Tune• -tested, popular, safe, non -habit-form- ing. Demand Dodd's Kidney Pills, in the blue box with the red band. Sold everywhere. 135 Dodds Kidner Pills F' k �0wt 1q is lowly,ti.mt they seed;. trlbilteda, b" f>ni�#als� ust m birds' but'gccatt'ionatly by the reduced u(ar4Zetixip, whicji; characterized the hog ,marl?;w tS ear . ly in tile' year, have continneda ,liar Eastern Canada, on the,,,otlier ihand,: weekly slaughterings •began . early; in July to exceeds those of conipar='. able weeks of 1948.. The average warm dressed): weight of the inspected glaughtl~r,, was about five pound& higher Oar- ing the first seven months of 1949 as, comparedwith 1948; but about the same as in 1947. Exports of cured pork products to all countries amounted to 23.5 million pounds in the January.--3vly period of 1949. In 1948 the quan- tity' was 187.7 million pounds .for' the same period. The findings of a soil test will depend greatly on the care taken in obtaining the soil sample. The sample should be a composite one, representing an area of similar soil. conditions rather than an sdugle• place in the field: Cattle that are allowed to be- come tlhoroughly infested with lice will develop a dry st trey coat, loss of hair resulting in exposed patch- es of skin and a general unthrifty appearance. Such a condition brings lowered milk production, re- tarded growth and costly mainten- ance. Early detection of lice and prompt treatnient with sprays, dips or powders will prevent any i11 ef- fects to infested animals, 1949 FALL FAIRS Toronto. (Royal Winter Fair Nov. 15 - 23 The Union Jack is properly flown with the broad white band at the top near the post. THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE—BEAFORTH, Ont. OFFICERS: Frank McGregor, Clinton - Pres. Chris. Leonhardt, Brodhagen, Vice- President - Merton A. Reid, Seaforth, Manager and Secretary -Treasurer. DIRECTORS: Chris. Leonhardt, Brodhagen; E J. Trewartha, Clinton; Harvey Fuller, R.R. 2, Goderich; J. H. Mc - Ewing, R.R. 1, Blyth; Frank Mc- Gregor, R.R. 5, Clinton; Hugh Alexander, R.R. 1, Walton; Wm. R. Archibald, A.R. 4, Seaforth; John L. Malone, R.R. 5, Seaforth; S. H. Whitmore. R.R. 3, Seaforth. AGENTS: Finlay McKercher, R.R. 1, Dub- lin; E. Pepper, Brucefleld; J. E. Prueter, Brodhagen; George A. watt. Blyth. Seaforth 13howrroolt"Is • See Dr. Ha'rburu _;i'9r ant any other time, or. Plume rf-iiou aeig/•e zd dila! AMONG THE 1,000 1StANDS Everything you want from 'a summer holiday you'll find in the 1,000 Islands with breathtaking, beauty and a sense of history' thrown in. But small boat sailing is tops. Want to know more? Write to the Chamber of Commerce at Gananoque, 'Gateway to the Thou- sand Islands'. First class rail and road service, as Gananoque is on the main line from Montreal And . Ottawa -to Toronto and Windsor. You'll meet many visitors from the U.S.; make them feel welcome to hospitable Ontario. LETS MAKE THEM WANT TO COME BACKI ...for making aluminum! RAN/ It may sound strange, but it's a fact: Every thing you see made of aluminum was made with raindrops—even the bus for which you scurry to escape the rain! It's like this: Rain falls on high land in our north country. It runs down as rivulets and creeks. It becomes tumbling rivers. By trapping it behind dams, and guiding it through powerhouses, Alcan develops electricity—and uses it to make aluminum. Smelting aluminum eats up vast quantities of electricity. Enough goes into making a singl_-. ton to light your house for fifteen years! Today Alean is prosuecting for still more waterpower because Canada needs more aluminum for use at home and to sell abroad. RAIN MEANS DOLLARS FOR CANADIANS: • Alcan jobs for 15,000 Canadians • Alcan pay envelopes holding $35,000,000 a year • Alcan aluminon for more than 1,000 independent Canadian manufacturers —some 50,000 more jobs. s � ALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA, Producers and Processors of Aluminum for Canadian Industry and World Markets MONTREAL • QUEttEC • TORONTO • VANCOUVER • WINDSOR k ,ate. ,,k.