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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1954-09-10, Page 7• • AL S7. itfA ra SEAFORTH MONUMENT WORKS OPEN DAILY — "!ONE 308,1 T. PRYDE & SON ALL TYPES OF CEMETERY MEMORIALS B7n,Qairlea are heated. Exeter Phoma 41-J Clinton Phone 100 Expositor Want Ads Bring Results — Phone 41 TRACTOR PLOWS New Massey -Harris 2 and 3 -FOOT TRACTOR PLOWS Never used, but weathered GREATLY REDUCED 1 USED 6 -FOOT ONE-WAY DISC Good condition TRACTORS SEVERAL USED TRACTORS All greatly reduced to clear Seaforth Motors . - Seaforth Phone 541 VIM fattrOSITOR Former Resident Records Trip to His Native County Seaforth native and for many years editor and publisher of the Stettler (Alberta) independent, Charles L. Willis recently has com- pleted a trip to his native County —the first in some years, In an article in the Independent, Mr. Willis recalls impressions of his visit here. He is a brother of James E. Willis and the late Wal- ter G. Willis of Seaforth. - We reached Toronto at seven o'clock in the morning and! an hoer before that,the passengers were getting ready to leave the train. The sun usually rises under clouds in Ontario and we could see the hardwood forests and the . country- side under the dim light of the early morning. The automobiles Were moving along the streets of the villages with their lights on, but we were not interested in the villages but only the countryside, which is. the most beautiful in Can- ada with Alberta coming a good second. Th a who have been born there know what it is like in the baze of early morning. The maples and, the elms rose up like canopies of green and the tree -bordered streams meandered through mea- dows where the cattle were feed- ing. This was better than any city in the world and we were even more surer of it when we arrived at Union Station and tried to make our way through the mass of peo- ple on their way from or to the trains. Then as we turned away atter the luggage counter we ran into the first stream of commenters en- tering the station from the out - if stied 1$o a t4x hing vlllag(r 174 At 1>ql odern ernes it has becaaue duet class r4iim,mer resort,'Valk many ilne cottages. uiauY fine tresis and an extensive bathing ,beach. Bayfield has about the same re- atlonship to Huron County as Rocltou Sands has to Stettler. Ev- erybod7 goes there if they can se- cure a cottage, as the summer months are very warm in inland towns. Seaforth, ono of the inland towns, is the birthplace of the late William Aberhart, . former .premier of Alberta, and it is 1,8 miles away from the summer resort. Hence about one-third of the population of Seaforth goes to Bayfield for the summer holidays and at present there is - one brother and two nephews of the late premier there, as well as many who knew him in his early days. Mr. Jim Gardiner, the federal minister of agriculture, also hailed from Huron County. sii3:rts of the city. Hundreds of young men and young women =tithed through the corridors and their footsteps make a steady beat on the 'conerete floors, as they rushed through the exits to their offices and shops down town. The York Hotel was across the street and it stood as a symbol of greater Toronto, the largest hotel in the British Commonwealth. A Mise of stone Like a granite moun- tain. .Gleaming windows like a thousand eyes brooding over the dark canyons of the city. .. AnAndthe people were scurrying everywhere, thousands of them, reinforced by the thousands from the commuter trains, all intent on one purpose, the making or the spending of a buck. There was nothing in sight but concrete and steel—no art, no poe- try, no relaxation, no leisure, no green trees, no flowers, no panning countrysi4e no rose -scented air, nothing bu high piles of granite hardness, th ,mmbols of our mod- ern civilization and the machine age. So I took the first train out for my destination in the County of Huron, which is one of the oldest agricultural sections of the real Ontario. I stayed first at Bayfield on the shores of Lake Huron where my niece has a summer cottage. It is 125 years since the settlers first came into Huron County, and Bay- eld and Goderich are the two old- est places. The first white man to come into that section of Ontario was Etienne Brule, who landed in Canada with Champlain and made a voyage of discovery as far as Lake Huron. But that section was uninhabited, except for the In- dians, tor 160 years after the mas- sacre of the Jesuits and the ex- termination of the Huron Indians by the Iroquois. The Canada Company came in later and established colonies at Bayfield and Goderich, which be- came large shipping points. Then the railway came through after Confederation, but it bypassed Bay- field. just as the C.P.R. bypassed Content. Goderich became the county town and Bayfield deterior- SWUM suaspOW ER Biu en 6e your &Nom doilak ob Nem/ rice! econom performanc � ! appearance! Buy it for less! But as important as price is, don't overlook Chevrolet value — for Chevrolet stands unchallenged in all the important advantages of modern motor travel. Visit your local Chevrolet dealer and see how this is the one car that will exactly fit your family's needs — and your family's budget. • Compare Chevrolet economy. Ask yourself : "What's the car's reputation . How is it on gas . On oil? On service ?" It stands to reason that the car with the highest reputation in these vital ways would be in greatest demand ... and Chevrolet has been first in demand — first in sales —for over two decades. • • • We leave this up to you. Visit your local Chevrolet dealer and Road -Test Chevrolet's smooth and instant response. Test it in. the traffic, on the highway.,, oni,,,4teep"hilis: You'll agree that high compression, valve -in -head power ;cat'[ be beaten --and only Chevrolet has it in the low priced field. • • Let your own eyes tell you about Chevrolet's fine car beauty. And remember! Underneath t at gleaming finish and sweep- ing style is famous Body by F...her. That's your guarantee not only of lasting good looks, but of'greater comfort, safety, and quality, also. See Chevrolet at your local dealer's today. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ptostrated— Chevrolet 0 -Door Sedan "Two -Ten" Series Prove it yourself! Road-test... street -test... hill -test I�OTO��S$EAFORTH C -4354D ti. The early settlers had to clear the bush which covered the whole county. Roads through the virgin forest were the first necessity, and school has also been enlarged and many a resident of Central Alberta can remember when his father or grandfather chopped down the trees to provide room for small crops of grain and vegetables. Manny a settler carried a bag of flour on his back through the woods from Goderich or Stratford, - and there was no shipping except by boat at Goderich and Bayfield until the railway arrived. Later on came the automobile which brought the gravelled and the paved roads, and now at Clinton there is a radar school with 2,000 students, and the jet planes fly all over the county and snake their manoeuvres over the top of the houses. The people are just the same in Western Ontario, They are nice, friendly people, moral people, re- ligious people, as befits their past history, and you can't get liquor in the whole county. Now I don't drink whiskey, but a lot of people do when they can get it, so they drum up a lot of orders and ;end a taxi driver over to Stratford, in Perth County, which is the nearest city with a vendor's store. No doubt there is a limit on the amount his permit will buy at a time, but he delivers the goods. Huron County has had a dry his- tory, going back to the Scott Act, but it should use more judgment in its liquor restrictions. A man in Seaforth told me that he could name up to 30 bootleggers in that town alone, and in a tourist county like Huron there should be more liberality and less verbotten. W,!:W tl wwi1t'l•l`1 .tt104t u>y„ril'' ' borne but it bill eirgeptiy.tiia l f me a long dista;icebehind, when I started! 'bit.* It Bent a. tea yard Vii. Itrous so X iga:ald " tun get lost. In fact, 'I did' =She the wrong turn, but the dog stopped and looked at me until I decided th follow his route. I am relating' this trivial incident to illustrate the intelligence of dogs which know that they are breaking the statues but want to be sociable and perhaps people are the sate way. They want to be sociable, and if they think that liquor pro- motes sociability, and'it. Is verbot- ten, they bootleg, just as a dog will bootleg its freedom. Seaforth has not changed 'much in its business streets since Bill Aberhart and I went to school there, but moat of the old resi- dences have beenrenovated or made into duplex apartments, the buildings on the corners have been turned into gas stations, and the new public school is one of the finest in the province. The high meter And now a word about the in- telligence and friendliness of dogs which are also verbotten, except in their own homes. I drove over to Goderioh with some bowlers from Hayfield to see another niece who lives in the county town. There was also a plumber in the house, fixing the bathroom, but I was the only visitor who was entertained by the family, and after dinner I strolled over to the bowling greens to see the games. When I sat down on a bench, a small dog, which I had never seen before, jumped up on my knees and acted as though I owned it. I asked a bowler who did own the dog and he said that\it belonged to my turned into a district school, with bus routes for the country stu- dents. I was told when I visited the town from Bayfield that I should see the inside of the old Methodist Church. So at the first opportunity I strolled down to the church which dates back about 100 years. I tried the front doors, but th were locked. Then I tried the st and rear doors, but they were also k- ed. Now I was christened in that church. I went to Sunday School in that church and I took organ lessons from a charming young lady who was younger than I was. In fact I was converted there on at least two occasions. The situa- tion that presented itself of not getting in the old -new church re- minded me of the plight of an old darky in .Miami, Florida, who want- ed to join one of the big white churches. So he called at the manse and the minister advised him to pray about in order to get more light on the subject of join- ing. He came back to the manse the next morning and the minister asked him if he had asked the Lord about it. "Yes,", said the darky. "I prayed all night and the Ladd told me, you cawn't get into the church because I have tried to get in the last ten years." I know that there is no connec- tion here and that God has been in this old church for many years, but I could not help thinking of the old darky when I found the doors were locked. My difficulty was that the minister was away on his holidays. Mother: "Don't you think your being extravagant putting both butter and' jam on that piece of bread?" Barbara: "No, mother, I think I'm being economical. The same slice does for both." • Customer: "Why do you have only magazines with stories of murders, mysteries and ghosts on your table'" Barber: "Well, when the cus- tomer's hair stands on end, it's easier to cut." Your Business Directory LEGAL A. W. SILLERY Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phones: Office 173. Residence 781 SEAFORTH ONTARIO McCONNELL & HAYS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. PATRICK D. McCONNELL H. GLENN HAYS, Q.C. County Crown Attorney SEAFORTH, ONT. Telephone 174 OPTOMETRIST JOHN E. LONGSTAFF Optometrist Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted. Phone 791 MAIN ST. SEAFORTH Office Hours: Daily, except Mon- day, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Wednesday, 9 a.m.• to 12:30 p.m. CLINTON—Monday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (McLaren's Studio) . ACCOUNTING RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant CLINTON •ONTARIO Office: Phones: Royal Bank Office 561, Res. 456 A. M. HARPER Chartered Accountant 55 South St. Telephone Goderich 343 Licensed Municipal' Auditor. INSURANCE THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE—SEAFORTH, Ont. OFFICERS: President - J. L. Malone, Seaforth Vice -Pres. - J. H. Mea wing, Blyth Manager and Sec.-Treas. - M. A. Reid, Seaforth. DIRECTORS: E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. L. Malone, Seaforth; S. H. Whit- more, Seaforth; Chris, Leonhardt, Bornholm; Robert Archibald, Sea - forth; John H. McEwing, Blyth; William S. Alexander, Walton; Har- vey Fuller, Goderich; J. E. Pepper, Brucefieldi AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; J. F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Eric Munroe, Sear forth. MEDICAL DR. M. W. STAPLETON Physician and Surgeon Phone 90 Sea`Port1 If no answer, call 59 JOHN C. GODDARD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phone 110 Hensal JOHN A. GORWILL, B.A., M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phones; Office 5-W; Res. 5-J Seaforth SEAFORTH CLINIC Telephone 26 E. A. McMASTER, B.A., M.D. Internest Telephone 27 P. L. BRADY, M.D. Surgeon Telephone 55 C. ELLIOTT, M.O. Telephone 26 EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursda: and Saturday only, 7-9 p.m. Appointments may be made. 15 CHIROPRACTIC GLITTERING HORSE SHOW Tuesday to Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday Matinee at 1:30 p.m. Special Attrecion Dressage High School Horses Tickets — $1.00 >n...rs EXCITING HARNESS RACING Wednesday to Saturday Afternoons 16, 22, 24, 25, 28, 30, Class Paces 2 and 3 -year old Futurity Paces and Trots. Grandstand D. H. McINNES "• Chiropractic - Foot Correction COMMERCIAL HOTEL Monday, Thursday,,— 1 to 8 p.m VETERINARY D. J. McKELVIE, D.V.M. Veterinary Surgeon HENSALL, ONT. - PHONE 9L TURNBULL & BRYANS VETERINARY CLINIC J. O. Turnbull, D.V.M. W. R, Bryans, D.V.M. Phone 105 Seaforth AUCTIONEERS hri FAMOUS DANCING WATERS This world attraction is featured an this year's Midway, Over 1,500,000 people viewed this un- usual show at Radio City Music Hall. New rides, new shows! tv 5 JOSEPH L RYAN Specialist in farm stock and Im elements and household effect*. Satisfaction guaranteed. Licensed in Huron and Perth Counties, For particulars and open dates, write or phone JOSEPH L. RYAN, R. R. 1, Dublin. Phone 40 r 5 Dublin. IRISH HORAN'S DAREDEVILS Monday and Tuesday Afternoons Only—in front of the grandstand, America's outstanding Thrill Show presents a display of daredevil driving, which will leave you gasping. -z, wo x -m -r" artk • _ ..ve' EDWARD W. ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer Correspondence promptly answer- ed. Immediate arrangements can be made for sale dates by phoning 4554,, Clinton. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. PERCY C. WRIGHT Licensed Auctioneer - Cromarty Livestock and Farm Sales a Specialty For a better auction sale, Call the WRIGHT Auctioneer. Phone Hen- sel', 690 r 22. } GRANDSTAND PERFORMANCES Each afternoon and evening, eight top vaudeville acts entertain. In addition, each evening, George Hamid presents the "Grandstand Follies", featuring the Disappearing Water Ballet. CHAMPIONSHIP CATTLE SHOWS (Holstein and Jersey) No finer cattle shows exist than the champion Holstein and rersey Shows conducted at ,he Western Pair. See Canada's finest cattle or display SQUARE DANCE COMPETITION Each evening, square dance tom. petitions for sett from Canada and U.S.A. will be held. On Satur- day evening, the Grand Champions will be declared' Watch your favourites. lu Ste', ssrel HANDICRAFT DISPLAYS Greater emphasis has been placed on handicrafts and art displays Many new and amazing crafts and hobbies will be seen. ' CHILDREN'S MIDWAY Ever a favourite, the kiddies' mid- way with its many miniature rides will be back to thrill the youngsters and amuse the adults EXHIBITS AND COMMERCIAL DISPLAYS One day at the Fair won't be sufficient to see Canada on display — an outstanding showing of Canadian products and services, l'9cketa avaira#ilr' BALDWIN HARIAliit4 W. H. ELLiort HEW ii ti B NG,0 Sponsored by Clinton Branch No. 140 Canadian Legion Clinton Lions Arena Thurs.,Sept 16th Commencing at 9:00 o'clock sharp $1,900 in Prizes 12 Regular Games for - - - $50.00 3 Specials for - - - - - $100.00 SPECIAL $1,000.00 BINGO Admission: $1.00 Extra Cards 25c Special Games 25c SWUM suaspOW ER Biu en 6e your &Nom doilak ob Nem/ rice! econom performanc � ! appearance! Buy it for less! But as important as price is, don't overlook Chevrolet value — for Chevrolet stands unchallenged in all the important advantages of modern motor travel. Visit your local Chevrolet dealer and see how this is the one car that will exactly fit your family's needs — and your family's budget. • Compare Chevrolet economy. Ask yourself : "What's the car's reputation . How is it on gas . On oil? On service ?" It stands to reason that the car with the highest reputation in these vital ways would be in greatest demand ... and Chevrolet has been first in demand — first in sales —for over two decades. • • • We leave this up to you. Visit your local Chevrolet dealer and Road -Test Chevrolet's smooth and instant response. Test it in. the traffic, on the highway.,, oni,,,4teep"hilis: You'll agree that high compression, valve -in -head power ;cat'[ be beaten --and only Chevrolet has it in the low priced field. • • Let your own eyes tell you about Chevrolet's fine car beauty. And remember! Underneath t at gleaming finish and sweep- ing style is famous Body by F...her. That's your guarantee not only of lasting good looks, but of'greater comfort, safety, and quality, also. See Chevrolet at your local dealer's today. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ptostrated— Chevrolet 0 -Door Sedan "Two -Ten" Series Prove it yourself! Road-test... street -test... hill -test I�OTO��S$EAFORTH C -4354D ti. The early settlers had to clear the bush which covered the whole county. Roads through the virgin forest were the first necessity, and school has also been enlarged and many a resident of Central Alberta can remember when his father or grandfather chopped down the trees to provide room for small crops of grain and vegetables. Manny a settler carried a bag of flour on his back through the woods from Goderich or Stratford, - and there was no shipping except by boat at Goderich and Bayfield until the railway arrived. Later on came the automobile which brought the gravelled and the paved roads, and now at Clinton there is a radar school with 2,000 students, and the jet planes fly all over the county and snake their manoeuvres over the top of the houses. The people are just the same in Western Ontario, They are nice, friendly people, moral people, re- ligious people, as befits their past history, and you can't get liquor in the whole county. Now I don't drink whiskey, but a lot of people do when they can get it, so they drum up a lot of orders and ;end a taxi driver over to Stratford, in Perth County, which is the nearest city with a vendor's store. No doubt there is a limit on the amount his permit will buy at a time, but he delivers the goods. Huron County has had a dry his- tory, going back to the Scott Act, but it should use more judgment in its liquor restrictions. A man in Seaforth told me that he could name up to 30 bootleggers in that town alone, and in a tourist county like Huron there should be more liberality and less verbotten. W,!:W tl wwi1t'l•l`1 .tt104t u>y„ril'' ' borne but it bill eirgeptiy.tiia l f me a long dista;icebehind, when I started! 'bit.* It Bent a. tea yard Vii. Itrous so X iga:ald " tun get lost. In fact, 'I did' =She the wrong turn, but the dog stopped and looked at me until I decided th follow his route. I am relating' this trivial incident to illustrate the intelligence of dogs which know that they are breaking the statues but want to be sociable and perhaps people are the sate way. They want to be sociable, and if they think that liquor pro- motes sociability, and'it. Is verbot- ten, they bootleg, just as a dog will bootleg its freedom. Seaforth has not changed 'much in its business streets since Bill Aberhart and I went to school there, but moat of the old resi- dences have beenrenovated or made into duplex apartments, the buildings on the corners have been turned into gas stations, and the new public school is one of the finest in the province. The high meter And now a word about the in- telligence and friendliness of dogs which are also verbotten, except in their own homes. I drove over to Goderioh with some bowlers from Hayfield to see another niece who lives in the county town. There was also a plumber in the house, fixing the bathroom, but I was the only visitor who was entertained by the family, and after dinner I strolled over to the bowling greens to see the games. When I sat down on a bench, a small dog, which I had never seen before, jumped up on my knees and acted as though I owned it. I asked a bowler who did own the dog and he said that\it belonged to my turned into a district school, with bus routes for the country stu- dents. I was told when I visited the town from Bayfield that I should see the inside of the old Methodist Church. So at the first opportunity I strolled down to the church which dates back about 100 years. I tried the front doors, but th were locked. Then I tried the st and rear doors, but they were also k- ed. Now I was christened in that church. I went to Sunday School in that church and I took organ lessons from a charming young lady who was younger than I was. In fact I was converted there on at least two occasions. The situa- tion that presented itself of not getting in the old -new church re- minded me of the plight of an old darky in .Miami, Florida, who want- ed to join one of the big white churches. So he called at the manse and the minister advised him to pray about in order to get more light on the subject of join- ing. He came back to the manse the next morning and the minister asked him if he had asked the Lord about it. "Yes,", said the darky. "I prayed all night and the Ladd told me, you cawn't get into the church because I have tried to get in the last ten years." I know that there is no connec- tion here and that God has been in this old church for many years, but I could not help thinking of the old darky when I found the doors were locked. My difficulty was that the minister was away on his holidays. Mother: "Don't you think your being extravagant putting both butter and' jam on that piece of bread?" Barbara: "No, mother, I think I'm being economical. The same slice does for both." • Customer: "Why do you have only magazines with stories of murders, mysteries and ghosts on your table'" Barber: "Well, when the cus- tomer's hair stands on end, it's easier to cut." Your Business Directory LEGAL A. W. SILLERY Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phones: Office 173. Residence 781 SEAFORTH ONTARIO McCONNELL & HAYS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. PATRICK D. McCONNELL H. GLENN HAYS, Q.C. County Crown Attorney SEAFORTH, ONT. Telephone 174 OPTOMETRIST JOHN E. LONGSTAFF Optometrist Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted. Phone 791 MAIN ST. SEAFORTH Office Hours: Daily, except Mon- day, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Wednesday, 9 a.m.• to 12:30 p.m. CLINTON—Monday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (McLaren's Studio) . ACCOUNTING RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant CLINTON •ONTARIO Office: Phones: Royal Bank Office 561, Res. 456 A. M. HARPER Chartered Accountant 55 South St. Telephone Goderich 343 Licensed Municipal' Auditor. INSURANCE THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE—SEAFORTH, Ont. OFFICERS: President - J. L. Malone, Seaforth Vice -Pres. - J. H. Mea wing, Blyth Manager and Sec.-Treas. - M. A. Reid, Seaforth. DIRECTORS: E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. L. Malone, Seaforth; S. H. Whit- more, Seaforth; Chris, Leonhardt, Bornholm; Robert Archibald, Sea - forth; John H. McEwing, Blyth; William S. Alexander, Walton; Har- vey Fuller, Goderich; J. E. Pepper, Brucefieldi AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; J. F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Eric Munroe, Sear forth. MEDICAL DR. M. W. STAPLETON Physician and Surgeon Phone 90 Sea`Port1 If no answer, call 59 JOHN C. GODDARD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phone 110 Hensal JOHN A. GORWILL, B.A., M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phones; Office 5-W; Res. 5-J Seaforth SEAFORTH CLINIC Telephone 26 E. A. McMASTER, B.A., M.D. Internest Telephone 27 P. L. BRADY, M.D. Surgeon Telephone 55 C. ELLIOTT, M.O. Telephone 26 EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursda: and Saturday only, 7-9 p.m. Appointments may be made. 15 CHIROPRACTIC GLITTERING HORSE SHOW Tuesday to Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday Matinee at 1:30 p.m. Special Attrecion Dressage High School Horses Tickets — $1.00 >n...rs EXCITING HARNESS RACING Wednesday to Saturday Afternoons 16, 22, 24, 25, 28, 30, Class Paces 2 and 3 -year old Futurity Paces and Trots. Grandstand D. H. McINNES "• Chiropractic - Foot Correction COMMERCIAL HOTEL Monday, Thursday,,— 1 to 8 p.m VETERINARY D. J. McKELVIE, D.V.M. Veterinary Surgeon HENSALL, ONT. - PHONE 9L TURNBULL & BRYANS VETERINARY CLINIC J. O. Turnbull, D.V.M. W. R, Bryans, D.V.M. Phone 105 Seaforth AUCTIONEERS hri FAMOUS DANCING WATERS This world attraction is featured an this year's Midway, Over 1,500,000 people viewed this un- usual show at Radio City Music Hall. New rides, new shows! tv 5 JOSEPH L RYAN Specialist in farm stock and Im elements and household effect*. Satisfaction guaranteed. Licensed in Huron and Perth Counties, For particulars and open dates, write or phone JOSEPH L. RYAN, R. R. 1, Dublin. Phone 40 r 5 Dublin. IRISH HORAN'S DAREDEVILS Monday and Tuesday Afternoons Only—in front of the grandstand, America's outstanding Thrill Show presents a display of daredevil driving, which will leave you gasping. -z, wo x -m -r" artk • _ ..ve' EDWARD W. ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer Correspondence promptly answer- ed. Immediate arrangements can be made for sale dates by phoning 4554,, Clinton. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. PERCY C. WRIGHT Licensed Auctioneer - Cromarty Livestock and Farm Sales a Specialty For a better auction sale, Call the WRIGHT Auctioneer. Phone Hen- sel', 690 r 22. } GRANDSTAND PERFORMANCES Each afternoon and evening, eight top vaudeville acts entertain. In addition, each evening, George Hamid presents the "Grandstand Follies", featuring the Disappearing Water Ballet. CHAMPIONSHIP CATTLE SHOWS (Holstein and Jersey) No finer cattle shows exist than the champion Holstein and rersey Shows conducted at ,he Western Pair. See Canada's finest cattle or display SQUARE DANCE COMPETITION Each evening, square dance tom. petitions for sett from Canada and U.S.A. will be held. On Satur- day evening, the Grand Champions will be declared' Watch your favourites. lu Ste', ssrel HANDICRAFT DISPLAYS Greater emphasis has been placed on handicrafts and art displays Many new and amazing crafts and hobbies will be seen. ' CHILDREN'S MIDWAY Ever a favourite, the kiddies' mid- way with its many miniature rides will be back to thrill the youngsters and amuse the adults EXHIBITS AND COMMERCIAL DISPLAYS One day at the Fair won't be sufficient to see Canada on display — an outstanding showing of Canadian products and services, l'9cketa avaira#ilr' BALDWIN HARIAliit4 W. H. ELLiort HEW ii