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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1951-01-12, Page 6I M slowing new books have been added to Seaforth et A?te -Doctor Alice's . Dough- lt(1; l elen Enchanted, iDitimonde To Amsterdam, Les; From Claudia to David, sen; pordelia,. Graham; M1 lanes Down Under, WOW; Spies ft, Betteridge 4:18y Pursuit, ell: Helen Vassart, Rieb.worth; e Outlander, IGueveornaiit;- Fold Me, Williams; Tattered Tartan, ameron; Thine ''1'.inemy. Gibbs; laze of Noon. Beattie; Storm ch Doc- ss�ept, Tiller--; Witte vlTit tear, Stine orf; The' King's Wife, Silpom ; The Ninth Earl, Farnol ; Hunt For Heaven, Barber; The Wdorld' My Wilderne:is, Macaulay; Melody, Thane; The Spanish Gar - ;Itch ■ * ■ Itch • a . Itch 1 Was Nearly Crazy until 1 discovered Dr. D. D. Dennis' amazing - b fast relief=D D. D P.rezcrtpption. World opular, this pure cooling, tieule mediation cypeeds u ce sz,4 go'mfo itching aused by acseme,grit. era hos alete's foot o1c other itch asTrial bottra r e. selmo money back. css, cstlokr raw rad Itch or mosey odin ry druggist extra for sD.n D. D. Prescription (ordinary � •zfttf �itrenstb)- dener, Cronin; Prodigal Heart, Ertz; Too Little Love, Henriques; Plaiffe Family, l emelin; Nymph and the Lain'p, '1tatidell; Sorm ,ot: a Hundred Kings, Costain; Home is the Stranger, lidcCourt- High Val- ley, Sieft; 'l`he 4Guardian °Heart, Yales; Blandiny's Way, Hodgins; Jahn Neelson .?ad a tDatiebeer, Hill; Horne of Capricoen, Miller; Fleodtide, Yorke"; Follow the ;:Sed enth Man, Standish; Owen Glen, Williams; A Murder is Aniumnc+. ed, Christie; Music In the, Hills, Stevenson; Mansoen, Johnston;; The Grandmothers, Coburn. Non-Fiction—Out of the Earth, Bromfield; Here's England, Mc - Kenney; The Fraser, Hutchison; Eastern Approaches, MacLean; I Spied For Stalin, Murray; I Kept My Powder Dry, Coburn; Isianda in the Sun, Forbes; The Revenge, Nicol; Thy People, My People, Hoemberg; Stay Of Ernie Pyle, Miller; Nuts in May, Skinner; Belles on Their Toes, Gilbreth; Anybody Can Do Anything, Mac- Donald; Stillmeadbw Seasons, Tab- or; My World islAn Island, Ogil- TUCKERSMITH Federation Banquet HENSALL TOWN HALL Friday, Jan. 19th 7:00 P.M. SPEAKER — Cameron McTaggart Gordon Bennett will discuss the Warble Fly Entertainment by Paul Bros. OLD-TIME DANCE — Desjardine's Orchestra Tickets may be obtained from any Federation Director -11.50 R. McGREGOR, President. 1. O'LEARY, Secretary. • ;'ave 1e--'1`lte, Volcteu, Pine Cones Clarke Hello Canada, Hewitt ;' Delta CM ,Pinleed . Steeet,, Coa1r; �kblti I ;,d,dn* 14 fur',, • ambleton + Just 'Mane' Slue 'S.teries,•,;Granean; Alice in WonteMiehd, Carrell; We' night, Meek; Land and Peciele of Sweden, Nana; Franklin of the Arctic, Lambert; Spice and D,ev--. it's Cave, Hawes; Mystery Horse; Riley. Pioneer Perils In Canada's early days smallpox was so Common• that most people regarded themselves as lucky if they escaped it. In 1775, called the Great Smallpox Year, so many people in Canada died of the Ate ease that the dead were buriedin groups of 20 in common era'v s. Today, a case of smallpox in Can- ada rates newspaper •headlines, a happy state of affairs that can be attributed to vaccination. Portrait of a Chest An annual chest X-ray is assur- ance against tuberculosis develop- ing unsuspected. The X-ray dis- covers the condition in its earliest stages and makes it possible to have the care and treatment which can usually cure the disease in its first stages. The X-ray "portrait" is easier to take than the studio variety—the smile comes later and lasts longer when the examination shows you to be free of any signs of the disease. Care With the Medicine Cabinet Carelessness in the storing of bottled or packaged drugs or chem- icals may mean serious danger in case the bottles are confused'. No medicine intended for internal use should ever be taken from a bot- tle or package without checking the label—in dim light the wrong bottle can easily be used. To add a reminder that the contents are dangerous, it is a good idea to .wind rubber 'bands or adhesive tape around the bottle or jar con- taining drugs not intended to be taken by mouth. Keep handy in- formation on poisons and their antidotes. rah pull/ pike, At mwm, Qact4tvde 11 The Skilled pSolderTradesmeri • h of the R. C. E. M. E. ji The workshops of the Royal Canadian Electrical 1) and Mechanical Engineers are expanding rapidly — in step with the growth of the Canadian Army Active Force. The men of the R.C.E.M.E. are doing their part to make Canada strong. There is an urgent need for skilled tradesmen to man the workshops of this vitally important corps of "soldier -tradesmen". Skilled craftsmen are required to fill the posts of automotive mechanics, fitters, toolmakers, radar and radio technicians, instrument makers, welders, watchmakers, machinists and other key jobs. If you qualify as a skilled tradesman, there's a place for you in the R.C.E.M.E. You can serve now — when Canada needs you — as an expert "soldier -tradesman". 11 if .4..✓ayy4Cst1-41, tti Help make Canada strong To enlist set the R.C.E.M.E. you must: 1. Be a Canadian citizen or British subject. 2. Be between 17 and 40 years of age. 3.8e single. 4. Meet Army test requirements. 5. Volunteer for service anywhere. REPORT RIGHT AWAY TO: Wallis House, Rideau & Charlotte Sta., OTTAWA, Ont. Na. 5 Personnel Dept, Artillery Park, Banat St., KINGSTON, Ont. No. 6 Personnel Depot, Charley Park, Douglas thrive,. TORONTO,. Ont. No. 7 Personae! Depot Wolseley Barracks, Elisabeth St., LONDON, Ont. A26ee-0 ACTIVE FORCE,Oige/ rile listen to lite Voles of .the Army"— Wednesday amusing* — Doi 1,,loit Netwak (By Aniline McIntyre in the Canadian Liberal) Walter Cunnlinghare Thomson, K.C., M.P., Toronto lawyer and Pickering Township fernier, is to- day the widely-acolaimed new lead- er of the Ontario Liberal Party. When he •becomes Premier of the Province of Ontario, as all° his friends and associates are coevinc- ed he will, it will he because of his willingness to give of •himself, utterly and completely, tq the cause to which he has dedicated himself. When the delegates to the con- vention of the Ontario Liberal Ase sociation selected him from a field of eight candidates on the after- noon of November 10, they did so because he looked like a leader, and showed all the attributes of successful leadership. He inspir- ed all who came in close contact with him with the conviction which he has made his ownb that the forces of Ontario Liberalism can be united and organized through- out the Province of Ontario so ef- fectively, that the process of Tory disintegration will be completed, and Liberal government will once again take over the reins of power at Toronto. Walter .6:- Thomson is a man of strange paradoxe0 He is a vigor- ous, igorous, two=fisted fighter, fearless in his approach to problems waiting to be solved, one of the hard-hit- ting school of politicians so few in number in Ontario politics. Yet at the same time he is a man of strong human sympathies, with a great .fund of understanding of the innermost needs of men and wo- men, and, a great gift for neighbor- liness. He knows and has experi- enced life from many angles, and as he showed in his whirlwind tour of Ontario constituencies, visiting 47 of them, before the convention, he has the background of experi- ence to make an appeal to all classes and kinds of people, whe- ther they be farmers on the soil, workers in the factories, or busi- ness men wrestling with the prob- lems of industry arsd commerce. This many-sided approach t5 the electorate of Ontario is one aspect of the new Liberal leader which will make him a man to be reck- oned' with when votes are being sought in the next provincial elec- tion Walter Thomson is a lighter. He has always bad to be. He was born in the Presbyterianmanse at Hast- ings, Ontario, 55 years ago, and the stipend of a minister in a country parish in those days did not pro- vide' much in the way of amenities of life. At eleven years of age, he was working for some of the neigh- bors of the district. His leisure time in high school days was spent in hard work. Before he was 21, he was in the Canadian army ov- erseas in World War I, fighting on i 11 • 4. the Western front and •became ten officer in the 21st Infantry) Bat- talion. The war over, he worked his way through law school, and step by step, he bas fought ahead every inch of the way, and won through to success. Thus the fighting spirit is innate in Walter Thomson, and he be- lieves in it. To quote his own words, 11e believes that "if a man wants anything enough to fight hard for it and work hard for it, he can attain It." The first impression one has on meeting Walter Thomson is that he radiates vigor and vitality. Standing a full six feet high, with a stance which is commanding, his well-built frame, carrying no sur- plus weight, is that of a man of physical fitness for the strainsand stresses, of political combat. His vigor is apparent when he goes in- to action on the political 'platform. It is reflected in his tireless en- ergy as he travels around the province, crowding intense activity into' every day, and allowing no time to be wasted in useless mo- tions. As a platform speaker and ready debater, Walter Thomson is equal- ly at home delivering a polished and thoughtful prepared address and in the rough and tumble of political campaign heckling. He never has been known to back up in debate. And he has that qual- ity, of being able to stir the emo- tions of an audience as well as to, appeal to' its reason. That. faculty was demonstritted' when he was addressing the Lib- eral convention on being nominat- ed. It was a tense gathering in the Royal York Hotel. Everyone was in a deadly serious mood, too serious to the mind of Walter Thomson when his turn came to speak. With two timely and well- placed stories, he had his hearers rocking in their seats with laugh- ter. 'Then he went on to the stir- ring appeal that won him the lead- ership. There is no one in the up- per ranks of the Tory party in Ontario today who can match him for his ability to marsball facts and. present them convincingly, for his colorful vocabulary and his ability to use it, and for his ready wit and his power to command the undivided attention of all within the range of his voice. Walter Thomson has a combina- tion of sound executive ability and a great faculty for successful or- ganization. Politically. his organizing talent has already proved its worth. When he was nominated as candidate for the riding of Ontario in the 1949 federal election, few people gave him a tlog's\chance to win. Only a year before the C.C.F. had won a squashing by-election victory. The Liberals were disorganized and spiritless. The previous Liberal THE MiXING BOWL Illy ANNE ALLAN , Hydro Home Economist Hello Homemakers! Cream soups, better than any dish we can name, fill the desired need for a nutri- tious, satisfying food. The milk and fat, that are apt to be lacking in lunch -box meals and the vege- tables that pfovide so much iron and variety in winter meals, are in a cream soup. They are more satisfying than clear soups and not as filling as chowders. The flavourful vegetable, usually sieved or pureed along with the liquid' in which they were cooked, are combined with a smooth creamy white sauce. (A combina- tion of cooked vegetable and one freshly cooked one is a good way of using leftovers). However, the secret of a goods cream soup lies in making the smooth white sauce. Master the basic recipe and you will have the basis for many kinds. (The only exceptions are potato 'soup and cream of tomato). Take a Tip 1. For sure success, use low heat. Either the double boiler or the element turned "Low" pro- vides steady, even, low heat and prevents scorching. ' 2. Measuring the flour before the fat is a good idea. It saves washing the measuring spoon, or cup. We measure 1/4 cup flour then fill the 1/4 cup measure with part butter and part bacon dripping. 3. For cream soup accompani- ments, we cube fresh bread in 1/2 - inch pieces and toast on a cookie sheet in a hot oven for three min- utes. Or we serve cheese bites, salted soda biscuits ' or rye wafers, 4. Serve hot cream soups in hot soup bowls. You may garnish with minced parsley or celery leaves. Basic Cream Sauce 1/4 cup butter or other fat 1/4 cup flour 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 3 cups whole milk. Melt fat. over low heat. Add flour and seasonings. Mix until smooth, Add milk. Cook over boiling water or low heat, stirring constantly, until thickened. Basic Cream Soup (for 4 to 6 servings) To the prepared cream sauce, add 11/2 cups sieved or mashed cooked vegetables. Reheat over hot-water or "Low" element. Cream of Pea Soup Cook 2 cups canned green peas and liquid for five minutes. Press YOU Should Be Our Reporter Every now and then someone tells us, "Why So - and -So from Somewhere visited with us all last week and you didn't have a thing about it in the paper !" Perhaps we neglected a wedding ... or a death, even ... or a club meeting. WE WANT THESE NEWS ITEMS IN THE HURON EXPOSITOR But we simply can't keep up with all of you, all of the time. Not without help from you. If you have a news item, from a two-line local to a head story— TELL US ! The Huron E ositor PHONE 41 *a 91 I494 _�eRly a3 rx�o? Qe �,�► ictia .'21Ye�"1"' tui0e , &li. at IQQ RI ,e lout 'Wa;1 er Tlrq n .. was net 4 pqt g $e °d, eI, am going to win this election, ' 'Ss.. the `!fent td,,. tree rk ., to create .aIy. organs ear tion• in spry cosier of the riding. H.e;dreve,tbe• highweyie and iietwatya clay find night, 1ined,up s pportera, oslrganiznd Peery .poilig ,eul divi- Oen, Meal • and urban, ,and set the Wee time in Aired" the workers with his .OWII theme of Victory. He. brought together, the d}Eljointed wo- men's groups, saw to it that they were egiven good .leaders and de- veloped a women's organization the like of which had never •been seen in Ontario riding. His work of or- ganization paid off on election day with his election by a majority of over 3,6,00. There were other difficulties Walter Thomson faced in that same election campaign and over- came. vercame. His chief concern was to reach the Oshawa factory workers who had been the main'support of the C.C.F. So he decided on a di- rect approach. He hired, a sound truck, and one day, went to the gate of the largest •factory, and proceeded to address the workers at the noorahour. He was greeted with boos and cat -calls, and could not obtain a hearing. The next day, he was there again, with the same result. But he kept it up, and the workers began to respect hispersistence and coullege and began to listen to him. So daily he ,appeared at the factory gates, and keenly interested and atten- tive groups listened to him with- out interruption or heckling. On election day, it was found that he had won over the workers to such an extent that he beat the C.C.F. candidate in his own stronghold in Oshawa. Walter Thomson's experiences through life have given him a broad, human understanding. As a packing plant worker, a practical dairy farmer on a Pickering farm which he acquired in 1930, and as a man in close touch with the problems of war veterans, he has seen at first hand most of the prob- lems which beset his fellow -human beings, and he car discuss' these problems with understanding. And no matter which group or class he may be addressing, he has the per- sonal "know-how" to take a practi- cal approach to its particular prob- lems or grievances. As a veteran of the finest world war, he under- stands fully the special needs of those who suffered in the defence of their country. In his days as a butcher in a Toronto packing plant he learned all about the hopes and aspirations of labor, and has defin- ite ideas on how labor and manage- ment, working together in harm- ony, can achieve a balanced indus- trial .structure. As a successful dairy farmer who served as presi- dent of the 'Canadian Ayrshire Breeders' Association, he is able to talk to the farmers in their own language and deal with their prob- through a sieve. Make a cream sauce from the basic recipe, re- ducing the flour to half quantity. The peas helpto thicken the soup. ?ream of Corn Soup Mix 13 cups creamy style corn, one slice onion and 1 cup hot wa- ter. Cook, covered, over low heat for 15 minutes. Press through coarse sieve. (Should be approxi- mately 11/2 cups). Add to 3 cups cream sauce. Sprinkle with pap- rika._ Cream Carrot Soup Mix 1 cup finely grated carrot, 1 grated onion. Cook, covered, for 10 minutes. Add to 3 cups cream sauce and reheat. Sprinkle with 1 tablespoon chopped toasted nuts. The Suggestion Box Mrs. R. K. Suggests: When lin- ing cake tins, anchor the paper around the rim with spring clothes pegs as you go around, and do not remove until the batter has been poured in the tins. Mrs. B. G. suggests: To make a ring tea biscuiit, prepare the dough, roll in a long, inch -thick strip and place in circular fashion in a layer cake tin, then place a pint sealer in the centre. Pour an inch of water into the jar and it will not crack in an oven tem- perature of 400 degrees When baked in 15 minutes, it can be turn- ed out and filled with creamed chicken or fish. Mrs. T. M. suggests: Prepare toasted rice for a more tasty pud- ding. You simply measure -the reg- ular packaged white rice (1' cup for 4 servings) and sprinkle into a baking pan, then bake at 400 de- grees for 30 minutes, stirring it occasionally with a long handled, spoon. As the rice takes on. a gold- en brown color, it may smoke a bit but do not be disturbed. After toasting, wash, add milk, eggs, sug- ar and flavouring and return to oven. Spiced Crumb Cake 1 cup sugar 2 cups pastry. flour 3t teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon ginger 34 teaspoon nutmeg % cup shortening 1 beaten egg 1/2 cup sour milk 3 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon baking powder 34 cup raisins 3 cup nutmeats. Sift together sugar, flour and spices. Cut in shortening as you would for tea biscuits. and take otu one cup of this mixture. 'Mix to- gether the egg, milk, soda and, baking powder and stir into the dry ingredients. Fold in raisins and nutmeats. In..a greased cake pan, spread half of the reserved cup of crumbs, pour in the batter, and sprinkle on remaining crumbg. Bake 45 minutes in an, oven at 350 degrees. Anne Allan invites you to write to her c/o The Huron Expositor. Send in your suggestions on home- making problems and Watch this column for replies. .v leztie end aa a la ren xvl Oeltzpil 1n )l11444tr41 TO WAR .. �eieAle,C93,4 'pt vie 1040 444)* y}� purl, . b j talents., : p O need l "1, ,4;, The good neighbor policy ie a great tit lig'. ip,., politica, ; and ill,.. a home to ' e ofPi k wash, p c gring, known as a good neighbor. 773is policy with his neighbors is "If' there is anything en my farm that you can use, come and get it" Tbis neighborliness comets from the heart, but it also paid political divi- dends when his, neighbors, regard- less of their own political affilia- tions, gave him 'practically a solid vete in the 1949 election. The strong point which will Lead welter C. Thomson to the premier- ship of Ontario is the fact that he is fuedamuentally deadly in earnest in his.' political aspirations. He sees the party leadership, not as an'in- strument for his own advancement but as a means for raising stand- ards of government in Ontario, through the application of the Lib- eral policies of which he has been an ardent and devoted advocate for the last 32 years. He has accept- ed the Liberal leadership at some personal sacrifice, for it means de- voting all his time to the job, and giving up his lucrative law prac- tice. "I have faith in myself," he said as we sat and talked in front of a log fire a few days ago, "1 have faith in the Liberal party and the program which it has adopted at the convention, and I have •faith that the people of Ontario will ac- cept our policies and put an end to the Tory government with all its ineptitude." And Walter Thoinson is going to leave no stone unturned to achieve that objective. He knows •there is hard work ahead, and he is geared for it. He knows that he has to undertake a gigantic job of re- organization, and he has already startell-it. He plans to go into ev- ery riding /in the Province, to en- list and enroll local leadership and personnel to give every riding the kind of organization that will win elections as he won his in Ontario riding. So he will go on and on, until he, with the support of all like-minded people in Ontario, has' again given the people of Ontario the blessings of ,Liberal govern- ment. Walter Thompson expects and he deserves the support and co -opera - ilea of all -cella Iih e ,yd,lyy..; t{� Ips PfeM"te lii, 'E7, f"tT!A1f it�aM "&F ll�p! team,,%" 1 4 •�Nm i or success w�yltUi `htg taw for gathering amend sd tlxu l�tJc f{1e440;)444 OROrtel*. ig.1$, ;+(rq d@>fGe in the outcome. isl w.e)i $ Rind. And that is ithe.j'esii tette of 1etederabip, that ability to win friends, to in ii Ce people and. ti carry the party omvarib' to Vie- friends, tory Tlh;as'e who Itnow Walter Thomson ,best are satis'ded that be io-�,iist the man to 'do it.. • Thin, rundown wife gains 16Ibs. Gets New Pep, Steady Nerves "I was very much under- weight, also rundown ner- vous. I took Ostrex. Rained 16 lbs. I felt fine, tired feel- ing and nervousness were Mat- tagami Heights Ontrd, 2iat- What a thrill! Thin limbs round out; hollows MI up; Cody looks healthier, more attractive. Thousands. praise Ostrex, weight -building tonic. Daddies blood, aids appetite, digestion SO food gives more pep, nourishment- puts flesh on bare bones. Don't fear getting too fat. Stop taking when you reach desired weight. Introductory or get -acquainted" size only 600. Try Ostrex Tonic Millets for new pounds, new pep, today. At all druggists. Mrs. L. Savard !il i>n 'BSE ,MtTAKORS - #RY.MAIO ' Hot atter -Ipaters J. B. • HIGGINS PHONE 56 r 2 BAYFIELD - Authorized; Surge '•Seryl 3' D.ealer Seaforth Mooned Works .. PRYDE & SON Memorial Craftsmen Seaforth Exeter Clinton 8eaforth Showrooms Open Tuesday See Dr. Harburn for appoint- ment any other time, or Phone 41.3, Exeter. THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE—SEAFORTH, Ont. OFFICERS: President - E. J. Trewartha, Clinton Vice -Pres. - J. L. Malone, Seaforth Manager and Sec.-Treas. - M. A. Reid, Seaforth. DIRECTORS: E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. L. Malone, Seaforth; S. W. Whit- more, Seaforth; Chris, Leolehardt, Bornholm; Robert Archibald, Sea- forth; eaforth; John H. McEwing, Blyth; Frank McGregor, Clinton; Wm. S. Alexander, Walton; Harvey Fuller, Goderich.. AGENTS: J. E. Pepper, Brucefleld; R. F. McKercher, Dublin; George A. Watt, Blyth; J. F. Prueter, Brod- hagen; Selwyn Baker, Brussels. Your Business Directory MEDICAL SEAFORTH CLINIC E. A. MOMASTER, B.A., M.D. Internist P. L. BRADY, M.D. Surgeon Office Hours: 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., daily, except Wednesday and Sun- day. unday. EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday 4nd Saturday only, 7-9 p.m. Appointments made in advance are desirable. JOHN A. GORWILL, B.A„ M.D. Physician and Surgeon IN DR. H.H. ROSS' OFFICE Phones: Office 5-W; Res. 5-J Seaforth DR. M. W. STAPLETON Physician and Surgeon Phone 90 Seaforth DR. F. J. R. FORSTER 53 Waterloo St. South, Stratford Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. G Late assistant New York Opthal- mei and Aural Institute, Moore - field's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hospital, London, Eng. At COMMERCIAL HOTEL, Seaforth, third Wednesdayin every month, from 2 to 4:30 p.m. JOHN C. GODDARD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phone 110 Hensall CHIROPRACTIC D. H. McINNES Chiropractic - Foot Correction COMMERCIAL HOTEL Monday, Thursday — 1 to 8 p.m. ACCOUNTING RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant CLINTON — ONTARIO Office: Phones: Royal Bank Office 561, Res. 455 C.N.R. TIME TABLE GOING EAST Morning) A,M. Goderich (leave) 5.40 Seaforth 6.20 Stratford (arrive) 7.16 (Afternoon) P.M. Goderich (lea'v'e) 3.00 Seaforth 3.46 Stratford (arrive) 4.40 GOING WEST -1N'6t'ning)• A.R. Stratford. (leave) 10.46 Seaforth 11,36 Goderich (arrive) 12,20 (Afternoon) P.M. Stratford (leave) 9.36 'eafortb 10.21 Goderich (arrive) 11,00 LEGAL McCONNELL & HAYS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. PATRICK D. McCONNELL H. GLENN HAYS, K.C. County Crown Attorney SEAFORTH, ONT. Telephone 174 A. W. SILLERY Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phones: Office 173, Residence 781 SBAFORTH - ONTARIO MUSIC TEACHER STANLEY J. SMITH, A.T.C.M. Teacher of PIANO, THEORY, VOICE a TRUMPET Supervisor of School Music Phone 332-M - Seaforth 4319-5s. VETERINARY J. O. TURNBULL, D.V.M., V.S. D. C. MAPLESDEN, D.V.M., V.S. Main Street - Seaforth PHONE 105 T. R. MELADY, D.V.M., V.S. Main Street - Dublin PHONE 80 OPTOMETRIST JOHN E. LONGSTAFF Optometrist Eyes examined. Glasses 'fitted. •~ Ishone 791 MAIN ST. - SEAFORTH Hours: 9-6 Wed. 9-12.30; Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. AUCTIONEERS HAROLD JACKSON Specialist in Farm and House- hold Sales. Licensed in Huron and Perth Counties. Prices reasonable; sat- isfaction atisfaction guaranteed. For information, etc., write or phone HAROLD JACKSON, 661 r 14, Seaforth; R.R. 4, Seaforth. EDWARD W. ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer Correepondenee promptly answer- ed. Immediate arrangements can be made for sale dates be phoning 200, Clinton. Charges moderate and satisfaction guarantee& JOSEPH L. RYAN Specialist in farm stock mid im- plements and. households effects. Satisfaction 'guaranteed, Licenked In Huron and Perth Counties. For particulars and open dates, write or phone JOSEPH to RYAN, R. R. 1, Dublin. Phone 40 r 5, Dublin. 4217x52 1