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The Huron Expositor, 1951-02-09, Page 7,K. eA { ,CHAPTER VI. Synopsis Timothy Hulme, principal of a good but impoverished Ver.'wont academy,'li.ves a studious e bachelor exist ace with only his aunt Lavinia for company: Timothy makes friends with a younger sister, Swan Barney, and her younger sister, Delia. Now Timothy : has received a letter from a disagreeable trus- tee of the academy, Mr. Whea- ton, calling him to New York. While Timothy is in New York he meets a Mrs. Bernstein, who proposes her son Jules for a student. Although Jules had flunked in all his examinations, Timothy decides -to give him a trial. When he keeps his ap- pointment with Mr. Wheaton he is told that he has made a big mistake in admitting a Jewish boy as a student. Timothy said, through his teeth, "There is nothing we offer our country young people more valu- able to them than those two courses. I'd rather cut out Latin and higher Algebra." Mr. Wheaton brought his wrin- kled old hand down on the table. "You're crazy, man! You conldn't How COLDS affect Your KIDNEYS The kidneys are very delicate organs, • easily adected-especully by a cold. Their shay is to filter impurities and exceu acids from the blood" Whemtyouu have a cold extra work u thrown upon your kidneys. Dodd's Kidney Pals help your kidneys dear your system of excess acids and patio= caused by colds. and give you a chance to shake infection sooner -feel better faster. lfyou have a cold get and use Dedd!s Kidney Pak. 139 Dodds kidney Mils Seaford' Monument Works T. PRYDE & SON Memorial Craftsmen Seaforth Exeter Clinton Seaforth Showrooms Open Tuesday See Dr. Harburn for 'appoint went any other time, - or Phone 41-3, Exeter. prepare for college with these. "A good many of our Clifford young people don't go to college." '"That's just the point, T. O., that is: just -the -.point I'm always Making. There's a layout there that',. could d late no newcol u c school pl Why, I love that sohool! It's get atmosphere, genuine atmosphere! It's got history! I could make it into 'one of the places with a wait- ing list years long, every name on it from a good family. Cut out the girls, of course. You'll never get gentlemen's eons to go to the same school with girls. Make your cur- riculum over -cut out everything but athletics and what's needed for entrance requirements, exclude for- eigners, raise the fees, make it hard as the dickens to get into. Ex- clusiveness! That's the secret of erestige, T. C., exclusiveness! Keep people out and everybory wants to get in! If the Academy could just cash in on its assets -it's got won- derful assets -old American New England tradition, a hundred and forty years of experience . . Timothy closed his lips over the correcting "hundred and seven- teen" -sand let it go. The inter- view was over. The secretary aco- lyte, - her skirts wafting incense, showed him out, The Gothic ele- vator dropped him twenty-four stories to the entrance hall. Not tilt the June Trustee meeting would he need to hear Mr. Wheaton's voice again. After the right number of street crossings he mechanically made the turn at the right corner, but striding gloomily ahead, hypno- tized by the dark chaos around him, he passed the entrance to his hotel without seeing it. When he saw his mistake he turned back in a temper, pushed open the swing- ing door and stepped into the small dingy lobby. A girl was sitting there. She was rather pale and looked a lit- tle anxious, and she wore a last year's hat. _, She sat nervously far forward, and kept her eyes fixed on the door. When she saw him, she sprang up and went quickly to meet him, saying his name in a deep, shaken note, "Oh, Mr. Hulme!" she cried, as if she were astonished to know that he still lived. He took both her hand in his, looking down at her in relief and astonishment as great as hers. "Susan!" he cried. "Why. Susan!" Delia, short, broad -shouldered, sturdy -legged, appeared from a door at the side, her hat in her hand, her surly dark hair freshly combed, her brown eyes snapping. "Hello there, Mr. Hulme. Are you as nearly dead with tiredness as Susan? Not me! I'm crazy about this town. Here's where I'm going to live, you watch me? What are we going to do this evening?" Your Business Directory MEDICAL SEAFORTH CLINIC E. A. McMASTER, 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. EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday and 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 Tia Waterloo St. South, Stratford Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate In Medicine, University of Toronto. Late asdistant New Yerk Opthal- mei and» Aural Institute, Moore tdeldrs Eye and Golden Square Throat Hospital, London, Eng. At COMMERCIAL . HOTEL, Seaforth, third Wediiesdayein every month, from 2 to 4:30 gem. 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. sACCOUNTING RONALD G. McCANN Public Accou taut CLINTON - ONTARIO Office: Phones: Royal Bank Office 561, Res. 465 C.N.R. TIME TABLE GOING EAST Morning) Godertch (leave) Eleaforth Stretford (arrive) (Afternoon) 'Roderick (leve) B6aforth Stratford (arrive) GOING WEST Morning) St'farttord (leave) Seaforth ICkidbrich (arrive) (Afternoon) (leave) Obratford O aforth fti(10darieh festive) LEGAL McCONNELL & HAYS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. PATRICK D. McCONNELL H. GLENN HAYS, K.C. County Crown Attorney SEAFORTH, ONT. Telephone 174 A.M. 6.40 6.20 7116 P.M. 2.00 3.46 4.40 A. W. SILLEkY Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phones: Office 173, Residence 781 SEAFORTH - ONTARIO MUSIC TEACHER A.M. 10.0 11/6 12.30 PAL 916 10.21 STANLEY J. SMITH, A.T.C.M. Teacher of PIANO, THEORY, VOICE z TRUMPET Supervisor -of School Music Phone 332-M - Seaforth 4319-52 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. Phone 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 guaranteed. For information, etc., write or phone HAROLD JACKSON, 661 r 14, Seaforth; R.R. 4, Seaforth. EDWARD W. ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer Correspondence proMptly answer- ed. Immediate arrangements can be made for sale dates by phoning 206, 'Clinton. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. They went to a rest$urant and ate fish . in a white gravy with oysters', and for dessert had thin, We, pa4caltes but not with maple 'syrup; With another kind of syrup that the waiter touched a •mate& to and it actually burned for a while. mem After a mauls, Ti ptsto* y th up Broad ettY, its myriad electric lights resonant as bugles. The most unexpected event of the winter was the solving of the old problem of how to get the basketball teams and their sup- porters transported to the towns up and down the valley where their out of Clifford matches were played. Selling that gadget for carburetors, EIi Kemp had learned a good deale about cars and he had come to know several of the mechanics in various garages. One of them was Bill Peck, a rough - spoken older workingman• employ- ed in a garage in Ashley. Peck had a brother working in St. Johnsbury who happened to tvrite him that the old bus line there was about to replace its two battered an- cient buses with new ones. When Eli heard this news ,he was awed to feel, blowing from it as from the Delphian pit, the authen- tic wind of inspiration. Dizzy, but agonizingly in earnest, he told Peck that if those two old cars•. could be had as a bargain he was sure some- thing could be made out of them at the Academy. Peck was a pool -playing old bachelor with no wife to restrain him from follies; he withdrew a few ,hundred• dollars from his savings account, borrowed a little ' more for insurance, and went into the bus business, he driving one and Eli the other. The engines were still in fair shape, but the 'bodies and seats were disreputable. The older man waswilling to put the first profits' into paint and denim, and Eli got up eagerly at dawn, day after day, to scrape, mend, paint and patch. Even at their worst, the two rick- ety buss were more comfortable, enclosed as they were, than the open pulpwood trucks in which, standing up on zero nights, the teams and a few hardy backers had, formerly' ridden to out of town games. With Professor Hulme to help him Eli worked out a season ticket plan, It was just before the beginning of the midwinter vacation, which that year was the first week in March. Susan was. to spend it with Delia who had come on. from Boston to join her. They were to visit some of their father's over - the -mountain kinsfolk. Aunt La- vinia had asked the girls to spend the evenings before they left at the principal's house and had stayed downstairs till they arrived, warm- ing her knees before the fire. Timothy had waited in the hall corner for the callers, his day-old New York newspaper in his hand, but at the sound of the knocker on the front door' he had flung his paper to the floor. "Come on in here by the fire, Delia," called Aunt Lavinia. Timothy hastened to draw near him a chair for Susan. "Do you know, I positively hate to go away -even for a week: I've had such a wonderful winter -you can't im- agine what you've done for me." From the room beyond them, "Susan!" called Aunt Lavinia im- periously. "Come here a minute." She went when Aunt Lavinia called -what else could anyone do? But, ssheltered from other eyes in the angle of the hall corner, she gave Timothy, with shrugging shoulders and a fond smiling grim- ace, the assurance she left him un- willingly, that here with 'him was where she fain would be. Glowing and confident. Timothy held up his newspaper to hide the 'broadness of his answering smile -and felt • a chilling inner wind blowing, as from Arctic ice fields. He saw that he was a fatuous fool to assume that the frankly loving ardor in the gray eyes meant that Susan was a woman opening her heart to the man with whom, she was falling in love. Although his pulse was still ham- mering in the after effects of shock his face was• composed enough to make it safe for him to lay down JOSEPH L RYAN Specialist in farm stock and im- plements and household effects. Satisfaction guaranteed. Licensed in .Huron and Perth Counties, For particulars and open dates, write or phone JOSEPH L. RYAN, DOS", Dublin. Phone 4217r x62 The Voice Of Temperance An appeal letter and envelopes have been sent to nearly all the ministers and congregations in Huron County. Money is needed by the Huron Temperance Federa- tion to carry on its publicity which includes this "Voice of Temper- ance" paragraph. Do the people of .Huron want the temperance arguments presented in a round - the -year series? Do they want the fallacy of the wet propaganda ex- posed'? Do they want the creation of a sane public opinion in regard to temperance? If they do, then they will use the envelopes provid= ed and send the contributions to tire treasurer, Mr, Frank Howson, Wingham.-(Adv.). THE MCKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, Ont. ffl QF 449 gl a pi t e and �t lite dial4 agllie'1044rn Yf a while l444.ng p'at it 'ebowett n redeeted u sorbed lfi ' a ' book, ' anti.14' in }.. a, vinic Sitting weigllttly •'iefOr* the liner, her akirts folded bads'. {to ex• Pelee .her' kn P1►by wqst ec i e d knees to the heat o caaio :ll ,an- swering over her �s{houlde r po- tion asked by Susan, who was wan-_. dering here- and there in the rem. The girl he saw in the mirror, turned to one aide, lifted her head and glanced at a faded photograph in an oval frame. Timothy+ had forgotten that t photograph hung there. He started. Good heavens! Suppose she asked about that! What a way for her to Learn -how could he not have told her himself long ago •about Ellie -the little there was to tell? If she asked now, what careless wounding'blunt- ness might Aunt Lavinia put into her answer, which he could not spring to correct, separated from Susan as he was by those alien presences in the room. Light, casual, airy, the young voice asked, "Who's the invalid - looking girl in the oval frame?" "That's Ellie. She was an in- valid. She was TImothy's wife." Wild scarlet 'flooded the girl's face -a burning reflection of it in- stantly on that of the man who watched her. "His . . . wife . . ?" Susan's startled voice faltered self-con- sciously over the word, was struck into silence, by it. She put a hand up to her flaming cheek and hung her head. Timothy was at the door. He flung it open. Till he could see her alone ... till he could tell her .. . The sword thrust of the zero night made him reach mechani- cally for a coat, a cap. Aunt Lavinia was saying, "Ellie was a connection on his father's side. An orphan, she was, 'brought up by one of the clerical cousins. Very frail in health. I myself al- ways thought that the Hulmes didn't . . . " The door to the Principal's house fell shut behind a young man who plunged down the steps and off at random; anywhere his feet took him. He had rushed out of the house and gone tearing off, not knowing where, because the prosy presence of those others suffocated him. He had been stopped by wooden bars across the road in a country lane, just beyind a small low stone house. His house now, her house, their home. His faithful knowing feet had brought him home. He felt for a match, found that .his hands, bare to the Arctic cold, were almost too stiff to bend, struck a match, looked at his watch and saw that it was long past ten. He could not believe his eyes. It was not possible! A car stood on the curve of the driveway, he saw now. The license was a Wisconsin one. Wisconsin! He stood gaping. The car was small and battered, (Continued Next Week) Tornadoes sometimes rise and fall. This accounts for the irregu- larity of their damage -pattern, 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, S aforth; S. W. Whit- more, Seaforth; Chris. Leonhardt, Bornholm; Robert Archibald, Sea - forth; John H. Melt"wing, Blyth; Frank McGregor, Clinton; Wm. S. Alexander, Walton; Harvey Fuller, Goderich. AGENTS: J. E. Pepper, J3rucefield; R. F. ' McEercher, Dublin; George A. Watt, Blyth; J. F. Prtieter, Brod- hager.; -Selwyn Baker, Bruu6ele. bt • at W,el#tlnfi flidott @taill{$ jldi�mgs apti asolxie `PR d; t'r .0.4141t..0 `#YiPt11,,&t' jgtitt041 ,140P: y ifM►Feed { 1 �� Jeafi 4e a^r m r7; ai the• C?nadla* pAtilame tr #3i1s4 v ,sit y'atf .An ei�tie4en�ce l;•.lfad aP9 ._' orwa; r r d f e` � tee . rn, e ld that I wvas -to make th : tF , " . in the, eyeniu, we were tp pf � g)lrAaaajr1ca naa, dian rta,.a' iha4. ROMP. ,�. l it a, sung . 7,t4i feverytbi?,ifg that we* said: at the show because it was 4eiiv-` 1 a bproper ,n that bread ad and p oFer EtliY`,. •lion that is not,' ag. you know, el ways spoken in Canada. Ouropinion at this early stage are naturally s ieject to revision at a later date. Herb says the girls here aren't as pretty as they are at (home, and Hugh sates he hasn't seen a new car singe he arrived. My first observations would be that England, more than five years after VE -Day, is• still suffering from the effects .of the war. This is evident in such things as the numbers of old cars, the many buildings in need of repair, and the oldefashionetl and dilapitated railroad equipment. After talking it over, we are agreed that the British people are facing and accepting their responsi- bilities with a fortitude and a fore- bearance that is to be admired. I think the secret lies in the fact that while they have less to eat, have fewer cars and do without many things that we take for granted, what matters most to them is that England survives. There can be no doubt that it will. Tomorrow we fly to the contin- ent to visit Denmark, Holland and Belgium. My. next letter will be from Copenhagen. Till then, all the best from the Canadian plow- ing team. • (Co t nued frogs Page 0o WM. Gra es are ver ri a sat'to'our soil's felriility find (IUs'., bility. The cow is the pert"vi'ay' to transfer these grasses into PAPA1, forhuman consumption. Beadles beef, you have milk, cream, batter, cheese and all yang concentrateel milk products from this one s411ree,• If the d endt o s t a,irY .f Inca iu?tu try is disrupted it is going to 'put the entire system of farming Out of balance. The income of the dairy industry was down 18 per cent for 1951. Stop and figure out how much lase money was available in your community due to that de- cline. IP the dairy Industry is worth saving, itetnust be done now. The meeting went on record as supporting the Dairy Co-ordinating Beard is asking the Ontario Gov- ernmentto control the manufacture of substitutes for dairy products and eventually ban them when •the dairy industry is in a position to put on the market an all -dairy spread that will retail at a price that will satisfy people in the low income brackets. The meeting also went on record as supporting the Ontario Federa- tion of Agriculture in their effort to have the Farm Products Market- ing Act amended. Six points were outlined where the act must be changed to give the marketing boards we set up more control of our produce. Delegates were selected to call on the local Members of Parlia- ment and express the views of the meeting. Huron County Crop Report (By R. G. Bennet, Agricultural Re- presentative for Huron County) Cattle are looking quite well for this time of year. A few short - keep steers have been moving to market during the past week at very good prices. There has been considerable inquiry about breed- ing stock in hogs. Feed supplies are holding up well. There has been considerable inquiry to date concerning supplies and prices of seed grain. Timothy is in ample supply, but red clover' and alfalfa are quite short and will have to be supplemented by consid- erable amounts of imported seed. Turnip waxing plants are working continually. A number of farmers are making arrangements to bring in married men from Holland before spring. He: "I love you, I worship you, I idolize you." She: "Do you mean you want to marry me?" He: "Please, darling, . don't change the subject." CANADIAN PLOWMEN ABROAD by V. C. PORTEOUS * Director ONTARIO PLOWMEN'S ASSOCIATION This is the second of a series of weekly stories which V. C. Porteous, a director of the On- tario Plowmen's Association, is writing about the visit to Can- ada's champion plowmen to the British. Isles, Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands. "The Queen" made good time crossing the Atlantic. At 6 a.m. of the fifth day out of New York she dropped anchor at Cherbourg, France. But she stayed only long enough to discharge some passen- gers and cargo and. we were soon on our way again to England. At 1 p.m.. "The Queen" docked at Southampton, our destination. Waiting on the dock to greet us w ei e t epresentatives of the Anglo- American Oil Co. They helped us clear custnms and in a short time we were on the train to London, There we were met by officials of Ontario House and they escorted. us to the Cumberland Hotel where we are installed. For the benefit of those who did not read the first letter in this ser- ies I would like to explain that when I use "we" I mean Hugh Les- lie of Georgetown, Ont., and Her- bert Jarvis, of Agincourt, Ont., gold medal winners in the Esso Cham- pions' Trans -Atlantic classes for tractor and horse plowing respec- tively-, at the L:ternational Plow- ing Match last October. Top priz- es put up by Imperial Oil were all -expense -paid tours of the Unit- ed Kingdom and Europe. I was appointed manager of the team by the Ontario Plowmen's Association, sponsor of the International match- es. On our' first full day In London we went by train to visit the Na- tional Agricultural Experimental Machinery Institution which is operated by the Department of Ag- riculture of Great Britain. It is located at a place called Silsoe in Bedfordshire. It consists of 250 acres and was part of an estate formerly owned by the Duke of York, now King George VT. There Cve met Mr. John Hawkins who has made an extensive study of plowing methods. When I men- tioned that we in the Ontario Plowmen's Association are inter- ested in setting u 1 a standard' method of .plowing to be used at international matches throughout the world, instead of the variety of methods that are used today, he was in agreement. He offered to lend his assistance to any efforts, we may make in that direction. This was gratifying and makes me feel that the day may not be long off when we will have a universal standard. Perhaps by the time I get back home there will be more to report on this matter. The following day R. H. Staple- ford, of Ontario House, took us on a short sightseeing tour. We saw many famous landmarks and dis- tricts and my feeling is that there is no city in the world like Lon- don! Even though there are big gaps caused by flying bombs and. air raids, it still has an air of gran- deur and solidity.To these quali- ties may be added that of homi- ness. It is no wonder that our boys who were here during the war possess an affection for the city that is only exceeded by their love for their home town. Our tour ended at the residence of Col. James S. P. Armstrong, Agent General for Ontario, where we were guests at lunch. It was an enjoyable affair and among the other guests was D. A. Bruce Mar- shall, agricultural secretaryt at Canada House, who, is the son of the late Senator Duncan Marshall, a former Ontario minister of agri- culture. Following lunch we were taken SOLUTION TO BOXWORD PUZZLE ACROSS DOWN 1. Pilot 1. Potato 4, Aesop 2. Leave 7. Coo 3. Tease 8. Excel 4. Alta 10, Tiara 5. Say 11. Taylor 6. Pro 15. Era 7. Cream 16. Scream 9. Cur 19. Teepee 12. Ambari 22. Burma 13. Lorry 23. Moon 14. Reeve 25. Nata 17s Census 26. Amiss 18. Erato 27. Rhyme 20. Enamor 30. Arm 21. Pride 31. Utopia 24. Omaha 34. Odessa 28. Hawaii 37. War 29. Moral 38. Capri. 32. Tahiti 40. Henna 33. P nda 41. Gigli 35. Digest 42. Isle 36. Sugar 45. Barge 38. Cable 46. Tragic 39. Peril 49. Sortie 43. Scarce 52. Ago 44. Ebony 53. Eolith 47. Rebel 56. Bower 48. Gowns 57. Morse 50. Ohms 58. Coy 51. Tar 59. Tress 54. Out 60. Lisle 55. Ire -tr-1 1 Highest Cash Prices for DEAD STOCK, HORSES .. $10.00 each CATTLE .. $10.00 each HOGS .. $2.50 per cwt. According to Size and Condition Call Collect SEAFORTH 15 DARLING & COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED i lg t �i eat� n6 P ?e de.0r 00.4 4n,eneD n ha 1eir'al petheiaetet "tll, 0ers",,,to,ry he , ouse'f o 0?dtv,..,,,, rr� lay, Y1ne BXidouc:@ bte� :;, yqu dMiberations and lve tP tbnri�p plc the "fortitude aud' patlotise the:. sot to a es .: . In the:trials t 1 s� . tri i h . e r iw. o>ap. tunes, 'Ys fb73iRtl.:lY :npl Will they ever strike oil in year back yard' An exciting thought, isn't it? But of course you know the odds are hopelessly against your being that lucky. In fact, ydu don't expect life to hand you even a very small fortune on a platter. Or do you? Take old -age benefits, for instance. Undoubtedly many older people really need help. Birt' no' over all security plan is going to provide all the in- come you and your family will ever ,'need 'in the future. Things just aren't going to be that rosy. Five million Canadians, among whom you are prob- ably one, want and expect security and independence in their later years. And, they are planning for it ttd'ui! in 'a way that~ suits their eivn individual and family" needs. These far-sighted men and women are enjoying morer"of the good things of life ,than ever before, and at the sam,s time protecting their loved ones now and building secur- ity for their old -age with life insurance. Surely you want to help bulli this 'kind' of''future1 Se- curity for yourself and your family. Nearly 5 million Cana- dian life insurari¢e poii)sy- holders are doing 'it now! The LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES in Canada and their Hieprosentaaves • • • WORKING FOR NATIONAL PROGRESS . . - BUILDING ,PERSONAL SECURITY L-6500 The "sure-fire" gunners of the F/E1D4?J#i1FiY The Canadian Army Active Force is on the alert. The highly -trained, expert gunners of the Royal Canadian Artillery stand by their guns - ready to defend Canada's freedom. The fighting men of the Royal Canadian Artillery are expert soldiers. They are trained to work and fight in smoothly co- ordinated teams ... and proud of it! Canada needs more men like these "sure- fire" gunners - men who prize Canadian freedom enough to fight for it. You can take your place beside men like these - as a member of a field gun's crew -by reporting immediately for training as a soldier of the Canadian Army Active Force. Canada needs you now! Report today! TO ENLIST YOU MUST- 1. UST- 1• Be a Canadian citizen or British subject. 2. Be between 17 and 30 years of ads. 3" Be single. 4. Meet Army test requirements. 5. Volunteer for service anywhere. REPORT RIGHT AWAY TO: Walls House, Woos & Charlotte/ s., OTTAWA, OM. No. 5 Personnel 6d�pot, Artillery Park, cage% St.; KINGSTON, Orit. No. 6 PirsodniiI Drepot,,Chosley Park, Douglas Detre, TORONTO, Onl. No. 7 Personnel Depot, W'oifdley' Sanwa*, Eliaebsth Sr., •LONDON, OM. waesrrse Rot: aarkling entertainment, listen M "The Voice ofr the Army Wednesday Uvenin t Sk G Ji tt