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The Rural Voice, 1994-09, Page 44FEET ACHE? TAKE TWOEACH MORN/NG FOR ALL DAY RELIEF 2245 We carry over 100 work shoe styles in 125 different sizes and widths to fit both your feet and your job Let us give you a Red Wing prescription for all-dav foot comfort Stop in soon KNAPP'S A 10-14 s-fr 81x2.16 c 8.13 D E EE EEE H S•1212.16 6-13 6-14 6.14 8-12 Canada's Largest Dealer of Prescription Orthopedic Footwear 165 Wallace Avenue N . Listowel, Ont. (519) 291-4750 VENTILATION The AVC -5 — An Electronic Temperature Control System for the Axis -Air Ventilator • Minimum damper position setting • Heater control integrated into system • Temperature reduction can be programmed • Records high and low temperatures • High and low temperature alarms • Digital temperature readout •Will work on 2 speed or variable speed fans and 115 or 230 AC • Computer compatible Keep air fresh in winter Lower energy costs Call Axis Products (519)345-2258 Axis Products Ltd., Rrodhagen Ont. NOK 1110 Fax (519) 345-2575 See us at the '94 Outdoor Farm Sho Sept. 13, 14, 15, 1994 Burford, Ontario. 40 THE RURAL VOICE special events throughout the year: "Spoke and Bustle" (held in July) offers demonstrations of steam engines, antique tractors, gas engines, ropemaking, blacksmithing, soap making, lace making, woodstove cooking and baking, and horse-drawn wagon rides. Coming soon this fall on Sunday, October 16 from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. is "Pratie Oaten" — the celebration of the potato harvest. Celtic Music and various demonstrations are held as well as food served made from potato: potato and cheese biscuits, potato soup, "pratie oaten", and more. Admission costs $5 for adults and $2 for children. Winding up the year at the museum is a special celebration: "A Christmas to Last", to be held Saturday, December 10 from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. This event celebrates Christmas 1850 to 1930 with food and music, horse-drawn sleigh rides, and tree-lightings and lamp tight. Tickets are limited as the admission rates are $5 for adults and $2 for children. Christmas the way it was meant to be remembered on an Ontario farm ... Following a morning of learning about our agricultural past, a noon meal and a chance to stretch your legs are next on the agenda. And what place better to do both than Harrison Park, on the downtown south side of the city? Leaving the museum, travel down (west) on 6th Street East and turn left onto 2nd Ave. East until the bottom of Greenwood Cemetery Hill. The Harrison Park Inn offers fine family dining at a moderate price with everything from burgers and fries to full -course meals on the menu. The restaurant operates Tuesdays to Sundays from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. and has a snack bar for light lunches (phone 376-5151). Harrison Park has a relaxed atmosphere of flower beds and playgrounds, wild fowl and paddle boats, riverside trails and paddle boats, along with pony rides in the summer. There is camping at the campground in the Park as well. After the kids have run off a lot of energy, it's time to hit the sight- seeing/learning trail again with a unique look at history at the Billy Bishop Museum. The museum is