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Village Squire, 1974-06, Page 26village there way a hotel with a bar. this was a sumptuous place with dark mahogany, gleaming brass foot -rail and ornate cuspidors strategically placed. It was almost sacrilige to spit in these, but many did. There was a large picture of a naked, plump, and comely lady reclining seductively. (I never did get a real good look at that lady. The few times entered the bar I was too bashful to take more than a sideways squint). Behind the bar were rows of shiny sinful bottles. All this was made doubly attractive by a large brass -framed mirror. The mirror reflected the splendours of the bar and the only moderately splendid customers in derby hats and coloured waistcoats. Here and there a farmer with The mirror reflected splendours overalls decorated with dried pig feed added to the cosmopolitan scene. Doc was welcome here, being esteemed about equally for his knowledge of medicine, his wit and his acquaintance with bears. To this restful oasis there came one day a number of strangers, a noisy uncouth group who defied all tradition. They got a little drunk and were soon arguing with everyone, calling the regular customers hicks and hay -tossers, with appropriate adjectives. They did the unthinkable; they got into a dispute with Doc and called him a pussyfooting fat little pig -poisoner. Obviously something had to be done. Like a good tactician Doc retired temporarily. He padded across the street and returned with his latest bear on, a chain. The bar was cleared in some haste, the dispute was settled unilaterally as we say now and order was restored. This story went around the village, then up and down Huron County. It even spilled over into Middlesex where it rivalled tales of the Black Donnellys. It was embellished and elaborated. It was said that :^ar ripped the trousers off some of those slowest '- retreat. This is not so. I relate the event as it actually happened. This, then, was the mild little man who alighted in our yard, greeted us agreeably, led the way to the barn talking of the weather and the crops and perhaps cracking a small joke. He never mentioned horse. Somehow the tension and the anxiety disappeared. There was no room for these around Doc. In the Eastern world he might have been a guru. One could have sat at his feet and acquired all the merit in the world. He entered the stall and Doc the horse recognized him and stretched out his nose in greeting. "Well Doctor," said Doc the vet, as if politely greeting a confrere, "and have you got a little pain? Where would it be now? Here? Or here, or here? Oh, my, that hurt, didn't it?" So gently probing and communing, the two doctors came to an agreement on the diagnosis. Doc the horse agreed to swallow a ball. A ball was a bolus of powdered drugs wrapped in a piece of newspaper. "The paper keeps everything tidy when it passes through," Doc the vet kindly explained to me. "The paper keeps everything tidy". So there would be a happy ending to the episode and Doc the horse would soon be back in harness. I started out talking of horses and I seem to have ended up talking of Doc. And a very good way to end. As we look back through the haze of years to childhood memories things become altered or distorted, and it may well be that Doc, being human, was not quite as wise, as equal to all emergencies, or as perfectly admirable as I have made him seem here. But there are only a few individuals who can leave this sort of impression behind and it seems to me not a bad thing that we should remembei, and honour, and believe in them. Groves TV. Appliance Centre 10 Huron St. Clintor Phone 482-9414 14drn1ro/ MARK OF QUALITY Visit our booth at the Clinton Spring Fair - Friday evening, May 31 and Saturday, June 1. )4, VILLAGE SQUIRE/MAY 1974