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The Huron Expositor, 1963-06-13, Page 9DEAD ANIMAL REMOVAL For Dead or Disabled Animals CALL Darling & Company of Canada Ltd. Phone Clinton HU 2-7269 License No. 262-C-63 Seaforth Phone 863 W 1 License No, 240-C-63 ODORLESS CLEAN BURNING FURNACE OIL STOVE OIL D. Brightrall FINA SERVICE Phone 354 Every week more people dis- cover what mighty jobs are accomplished by low cost Ex- positor Want Ads. BARN CLEANER SILO UNLOADER & BUNK FEEDER YOU'LL GET BETTER PER- FORMANCE AND LONGER WEAR FROM A BADGER SALES • SERVICE - INSTALLATION JOHN BEANE, Jr. BRUCEFIELD SALES SERVICE Phone Collect: HU 2-9250, Clinton PRATTY AS 'A PiC 'URE igikOftv r f. yfi r / yiec sf 0y calf up<� :: iw''•. '::r' �YF.V x':�'>:?'9 ..: Xt'�.rrilk%4%:"� ;: Glazed Strawberry Squares are one of the many pretty - as -a -picture desserts that can be made this month with our own Canadian strawberries. The large, firm, red berries are glazed and served on a butter -rich base and topped with whipped cream. (Canada Department of Agriculture, Ottawa). NEWS OF WEEK Mr, and Mrs. Morley Lannin spent an afternoon at their cot- tage at Bayfield recently. ,Mr. and Mrs. R, $,. Aikens were in Stratford and visited his sister, Mrs. Edith Collins, at Avon Crest Hospital Last week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roney and family were in Dundas on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Stan - lake, Exeter, visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. Herb Brit- ton. Mr. Ross Murdie, Seaforth, visited on Sunday with his IN ,ZION cousin, Mrs. Mary' Malcolm. Mr. and Mrs. Neil Nairn and Scott, Kitchener, with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Aikens, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Han - .non, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bush - field and Mrs. Rhea Sadler vis- ited in Millbank recently. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Pepper, Dennis and Nancy accompanied Mr. and Mrs. George Pepper to London on Sunday and visited with her sister, Mrs. John Bar- bour, and Mr. Barbour and Ar- thur. llllt'JJ NEW EIfLQllhDe,�llffllhI!EIIAIIIII" ON �f�9 /III' HA/BONYEN fflfEl A Complete Travelling Beauty Salon Dries Nail Polish • Perfumes Hair Contains Large Unbreakable Make-up Mirror Smart, Lightweight Oyster -white Travel Case NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY A TWO -TEMPERATURE REFRIGERATOR WITH TRUE ZERO ZONE FREEZER SECTION and get plenty of capacity to store or fast -freeze fresh foods and to keep frozen foods safely frozen, longer. OR BUY A MODERN HOME FREEZER... chest -type or upright... with "king size" capacity and enjoy your money -saving frozen food "specials" in the "king size"! AND GET THIS GLAMOROUS MEDALLION HAIRDRYER... COMPLETE WITH TRAVEL CASE (A $29.95 VALUE) ABSOLUTELY FREEI THIS OFFER GOOD ON ANY OF THESE FAMOUS BRANDS Beatty • Belwood • Co-op Viscount • Coronado • Eaton's Viking • Firestone • Frigidaire • General Electric • General Freezer • Gibson • Gilson • Kelvinator • Leonard e McClary- Easy • Moffat • Onward • Philco • RCA Whirlpool . Roy Simpson's Coldspot • Simpsons -Sears • Westinghouse Wood's • And other fine makes. *ONLY TWO -TEMPERATURE REFRIGERATORS WITH TRUE ZERO -ZONE FREEZER SECTIONS QUALIFY. AT STORES DISPLAYING THIS SYMBOL May 18 to Jane 29 DUBLIN HYDRO,LSYSTEM • AVAILABLE IN DUBLIN AT: THOMAS BUTTERS HARDWARE Phone 39 R 2 DUBLIN ,ELECTRIC Phone 70 R 2 GEORGE'S REPAIR Phone57R8 Maitland A.utho.iity App�ints Field Officer Kenneth G. Muselow, B.Se,, has been appointed field officerr for the Maitland Valley Conser- vation Branch of the Depart- ment of Lands and Forests. He will be located in the Author- ity's new office which is open- ing in Listowel this week. A graduate of the University of New Brunswick at Frederic- ton with a bachelor of science degree in Forestry, Mr. Mus - clow has considerable experi- ence in conservation work, al- though this is his first appoint- ment as field officer. Since leaving university in 1957, he has been employed with the Ontario Government, He started with the Department of Commerce and Development and subsequently transferred to the Conservation Authorities Branch of the Department of lands and Forests. Until going to Listowel, he has been in the .head offices at Toronto and Downsview. A native, of North Bay, be received his elementary and secondary education in that city. Ile is a -member of the Canadian Institute of Forestry and the Ontario Professional Foresters' Association. Since the Middle Maitland was formed in 1952, the Auth- ority has shared a field officer with the Ausable Conservation Authority. J. T. McCauley, of Exeter, Was serving in that ca- pacity for both authorities. A year ago the Middle Mait- land was. enlarged to control the entire Maitland watershed embracing 29 instead of 12 municipalities. Consideration is now being given to including the Bayfield watershed into a two -river authority. 1 With all tributaries now fun- der authority control and a con - FOOD and FIXIN'S Recipes For the Busy Homemaker STRAWBERRIES AND DAIRY PRODUCTS Fresh Canadian -grown straw- berries appear on most markets in June. Growers are constant- ly striving to produce big, beau- tiful berries tl}at will stand up well for shipping and market- ing. Many varieties have been developed in recent years which are large, firm and flavorful and are equally adaptable for des- sert or freezing purposes. Strawberries and cream have long been considered a treat by old and young alike but ice cream, whipped cream, sour cream, butter and cottage cheese are all natural "team mates" with strawberries. The home econpmists of the Con- sumer Section,. Canada Depart- ment of Agriculture, combined two of these good dairy foods with strawberries in their re- cipe for "Glazed Strawberry Squares" and it got "raves" from the tasters. This pretty - as -a -picture dessert consists of glazed whole strawberries on a shortbread -like crust and is top- ped with whipped cream. Glazed Strawberry Squares Prepare the Crust: Cream 1/2 cup butter with 1/3 cup firmly packed brown sugar. Add 1 cup sifted flour and blend thoroughly with a pastry blen- der. Pat mixture evenly into an 8 -inch square cake pan. Bake in a moderate oven (350° F.) until very lightly browned, 15 to 18 minutes. Let cool in the pan before covering with strawber- ries. Glazed Strawberries: 1 quart box strawberries ,1/2 cup sugar dew grains salt 4 teaspoons cornstarch 14 cup water Red food coloring 1 teaspoon lemon juice 1/2 pint whipping cream (11/4 cups) 2 to 4 tablespoons sugar. Wash, hull and drain straw- berries. Measure 1 cup straw- berries into a small saucepan, reserving remainder to cover baked crust. Crush berries in saucepan and heat to a boil, then rub through a fine sieve. Return to saucepan and stir in the 1/2 cup sugar and salt. Make a paste of the cornstarch and water and stir into sieved ber- ries. Return to heat and cook until mixture thickens and be- comes clear, about three min- utes. Add enough food color- ing to give a light red color. Cool slightly, then' stir in lemon juice. Arrange remaining strawber- ries on baked crust, leaving small berries whole and cutting larger ones in halves or quar ters. Spoon glaze over berrie,. then chill. Cut in squares or oblongs. Top with sweetened. whipped cream. Six Large to nine medium servings. Strawberry Shortcake The strawberry season wouldn't be complete without a strawberry shortcake. The bis- cuit shortcake which many peo- ple consider the only true base for a strawberry shortcake should be a rich dough prefer- ably made with butter and with butter spread between the lay- ers so that they can be separat- ed easily after baking. The home economists of the Con- sumer Section, Canada Depart- ment of Agriculture, give us their recipe for Strawberry Shortcake. 2 cups sifted -all-purpose MOTHER DIDN'T LIKE SON'S WORK OF GENIUS On the night of April 24th and 25th, 1792, a military en gineer officer of the French army wrote a revolutionary song: Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle called it the Battle Song of the Rhine Army, but it be- came Aso popular in Marseille that it came to be known as the Marseillaise. De Lisle, . a proscribed royalist, was horri- fied at his song becoming the sacred anthem of the revolu- tion and his alarmed mother wrote him, "What is this revo- lutionary hymn, sung by bands of brigands with which our flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1/3 cup butter '4 cup milk less 1 table- spoon 1 quart box strawberries 1/ cup sugar 1/2 pint whipping cream 2 tablespoons sugar. Mix and sift flour, baking power, salt and sugar. Cut in butter with a pastry blender until mixture resembles fine bread crumbs. Make a well, pour in all the milk at one time and mix quickly to make a soft but not sticky dough. Turn on- to a lightly floured board, quick- ly form into a ball, then knead for 30 seconds by pressing and folding dough several times. Divide dough in half, then roll each half to an 8 -inch round. Place one half in a lightly greas- ed &i'nch layer cake pan, brush top lightly with melted butter, then place second round on top. (To make individual short- cakes, roll dough lightly • to about %-inch thickness. Cut in 21/2 -inch rounds with biscuit cutter. Place on baking sheet.) Bake in a hot oven (425° F.) until lightly browned, allowing 15 to 20 minutes for rounds, 12 to 15 minutes for biscuits. ' Meanwhile wash and hull strawberries. Reserve choice berries for garnish. Slice re- mainder, add the 1/2 cup sugar and stir to mix. Split cake or biscuits cross- wise while warm, butter surface again and immediately spread berries between layers and on top. Cover with whipped cream sweetened with remaining sugar and garnish with whole ber- ries. Eight servings. siderable increase in conserve. tion projects, the work became too involved for a field officer on a share -the -time basis, Hon, Kelso Roberts granted, a peti- tion from the Maitland Author ity and appointed a full-time field officer" Mr. Musclow's salary is paid entirely by the Conservation Branch of the Department of Lands and Forests. Maintenance of the office is shared 50-50 by the department and the mem- ber municipalities. J. G. Burrows Named as Inspector Ontario Department of Edu- cation has announced that J. G. Burrows, of Toronto, will succeed G. J. Goman as public school inspector ,in Huron No. 3 and Perth No. 3 inspector- ate. Mr. Barrows has been a master on the staff of the Lakeshore Teachers' College, Toronto, for the past five years. Prior to his teachers' col- lege appointment, Mr. Burrows was employed by the Forest Hill and Etobicoke boards of education. He is a graduate of the University of Toronto, from which institution he received both his bachelor of arts and master of education degrees. , During World War II, Mr. Burrows was a flying officer with the RCAF and saw service in India and Ceylon. He has retained his interest in flying since the war as a member of the RCAF .reserue. He holds a private pilot's license. Before entering the teaching profession Mr. Burrows was associated with the YMCA as membership secretary and also served for a time in the per- sonnel department of Ontario Hydro. Mr. Burrows' other interests extend to music and sports. He has been active in coaching both football and basketball teams. In the field of music, he has been in demand as a soloist for many activities of his church and service organ- izations. He and his wife are members of the United Church. They have no children. • Mr. Burrows will assume his duties in the South Huron area August 1. ALL TYPES INSURANCE • Donald' G. Eaton Office in Masonic Store Main Street Phone 75 : Seaforth J. E. LONG. TAFF OPTOMETRIST — Eyes Examined OPTICIAN — Specialists' Prescriptions Filled SEAFORTH — 791 GIANT AUCTION SALE at 'the CIRCLE "B" RANCH BETWWEN MITCHELL and SEBRINGVILLE On No. 8 Highway Monday Evening, June 17th 7:15 p.m. Sharp AUCTIONEER LEO .E. BIRD WILL SELL WITHOUT RESERVE A LARGE SELECTION OF FINANCE COMPANY REPOSSES- SIONS, BANKRUPT STOCKS, BAILIFF SEIZURES, PERSONAL CONSIGNMENTS, CONSISTING OF MODERN HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, TELEVISION SETS AND APPLIANCES. THIS IS A PARTIAL LIST OF ITEMS TO BE SOLD -2 elec- tric ranges, 2 washers with pumps, 2 refrigerators. 2 chesterfield suites with foam cushions, 2 davenport suites that make into a bed, 2 bedroom suites complete with springs and mattresses, 2 39" continental beds complete with headboards, 6 21 -inch televi- sion sets and 2 17•inch sets, all reconditioned and in A-1 working condition; combination radio and record player, 9 -piece copper - tone dinette suite and 2 7 -piece and 1 5 -piece kitchen suites; step and coffee tables, living room (amps, hostess chairs, step stool, high chair, gossip bench, chrome rocker, writing desk, radio, a new full size mattress, 9' x 12' rug, and many other items too numerous to mention. •FROM ONE FINANCE COMPANY—A 5 -piece walnut bed- room suite, 3 -piece foarn rubber chesterfield suite with 2 match- ing swivel rockers, 14 cu. ft. Norge upright freezer, a Beatty electric dryer and an automatic washer in new condition, a Gurney electric apartment size range, 10 cu. ft. refrigerator with .cross top freezer compartment, 21 -inch television set, 2 step tables and a coffee table, 2 table lamps, 5 -piece chrome set. THIS MERCHANDISE CAME FROM A FINE HOME AND IS IN VERY NICE CONDITION. ALSO WE WILL BE SELLING A LARGE PART OF A $50,000 INVENTORY OF NEW CLOTHING FOR MEN, WOMEN, CHIL- DREN AND BABIES—The following are just a few of the many items: bathing suits, shorts, slims, blouses, socks, "T" shirts, peddle pushers, work pants, shirts, underwear, nylons, 2. and a- piece outfits for children, deck pants, swim trunks, bay sets, hair curlers, comb and brush sets, and 100 other odds and ends. DON'T MISS THIS .INTERESTING AUCTION SALE ' at the CIRCLE "B" RANCH Monday Evening, June 17th 7:15 p.m. Sharp AUCTIONEER — LEO E. BIRD Terms Cash — Cheques Accepted on Furniture 3% Sales Tax • In Effect CrOltril Tat S Trust Inve5tmei0 C+artti,Icpfrf.R 5%.- 5.YEAR TERM 200 Queens Avenue LONDQN. W. E. SOUTHGATE Representative Seaforth Phone 334 BY-LAW 682 of the Town oE Seaforth A bylaw to provide for licensing and requiring registration of dogs, for im- posing a license fee onthe owners of them, and to prohibit the running at large of dogs in the Town of Seaforth. BE IT ENACTED by the Municipal Council of the Corporation of the Town of Seaforth, as follows: 1. That in this bylaw: (a) "dog" means any dog, male, female or spayed. (b) "owner" includes any person who possess- es or harbours a dog and `Towns" and "own- ed" shall have a corresponding meaning. 2. All previous bylaws relating to the control of , dogs are hereby rescinded. 3. Council may by resolution from time to time appoint any person to be Animal Control Officer of the Town of Seaforth. 4. That no person in the Town of Seaforth shall, own, possess or harbour a dog unless or until he shall procure a license so to do, prior - to the first day of March in each year, and every person so licensed shall be subject to the provisions of this bylaw. 5. The Town Clerk is hereby appointed and auth- orized to issue licenses required under this bylaw, and• every such license shall be executed n behalf of the Corporation of the Town of Sea h he said Town Clerk. 6. (1) Every license issued under this bylaw shall be for one year and shall expire in each year on the first o January. The following annual license fee shall be paid to the said Town Clerk by the person obtaining the license at the time the license is issuedi.. viz: for a male dog, -if• •only one is kept, $6.00•, for 'each"addi- tional male dog1E'$9.00; for a female dog, if only one is kept; `$12.00, fbr each -additional female dog, $15.00; provided when a- certificate in writing of a veterinary surgeon is produced showing that a female dog has been spayed,, the license fee for such female dog shall . be the same as for a male dog; owner of a kennel of . pure bred dogs registered in the register of. the Cana- dian Kennel Club, Incorporated, who is not licensed as a keeper of a shop or place where animals or birds for use as pets are sold or kept for sale, $10.00. 7. That upon the registration of such dog,as pro- vided by this bylaw, and upon payment of the pre- scribed fee, every owner shall be furnished, free of charge, with a dog tag, The dog tag shall be a metallic plate having raised, cast or stamped thereon figures indicating the year for which the license fee has been paid, the word "Seaforth" and a number correspond- ing with the number under which the said dog is registered. • 8. Every owner in the Town of Seaforth, of a dog, shall cause such dog to wear around its neck a collar to which is attached a dog tag for the then cur- rent year issued in respect of such dog under the provisions of this bylaw (subject to the provisions of Section 4 of The Dog Tax and Live Stock Protection Act). • 9. It shall be the duty of the Town Clerk to keep a record of the name of the owner of every dog regi- stered under the provisions of this bylaw, the date of such registration, the registration number and the amount of the fee paid. 10. 1'or the purposes of this bylaw, a dog shall be deemed to be running at large when found lin a highway or other public place and not under the con- trol of any person. 11. Every dog within the Town of Seaforth, when not confined to the dwelling or to the property of its owner or of the person having the care or custody of the same, shall at all times be restrained upon- leash in charge of some person. Owners and persons hav- ing the care and custody of any dog which is not so restrained shall be guilty of an offence. 12. Any Animal Control officer or Authorized Person appointed for the Town of Seaforth shall and • any Police Constable may seize any dog found• running at large contrary- to the provisions of this h •law. When- ever a dog is. seized by a Police Consta le he shall forthwith deliver such dog to the Poundkeeper of the Town of Seaforth. It shall be the duty of the Pound - keeper to impound any dog delivered to him by a ..Police Constable, Animal Control Officer or Authorized • Person. 13. The owner of any dog impounded as provided by this bylaw may, within seventy-two hours after such dog shall have been delivered to the Podndkeep- er, claim such dog on application to the Poundkeeper and proof of his ownership and on payment to the Poundkeeper of the sum of five dollars pound fee plus one dollar per day or portion thereof for board. 14, If such dog be not reclaimed' by the owner thereof within the time Limited, the Poundkeeper may retain the same for such further time as he may con- sider proper and during such time may sell the same for such price as he may consider proper. If such dog is not sold within five clays the Poundkeeper may kill such dog. 16, It is- declared that notwithstanding that any section or sections of this bylaw, or parts thereof, may be found by any Court of Law to be bad or illegal or beyond the power of the Council to enact, such section or sections or parts thereof shall be deemed to be severable and that all other sections or parts of this bylaw are separate and independent therefrom and enacted as such. 16. Any person convicted of a breach of any of the provisions of this bylaw shall forfeit and pay, at the discretion of the convicting Magistrate, a penalty not exceeding (exclusive of costs) the sum of Fifty . dollars for each offence and the same shall be recover- able under the provisions of the Summary Convictions Act. READ a First, Second and Third time and finally passed this 10th day of June, 1963, EARL DINSMORE, Mayor. C. L. HAMMOND, Clerk.