HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-10-02, Page 4I
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THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2nd., 1924.
McCORMICK - DEERING CO.:—
Spreaders, Mowers, Hay Rakes, Hay Tedders, Hay
Loaders, Grain and Corn Binders.
BATEMAN - WILKINSON CO:—
Wilkinson Plows, Scufflers and Barrows.
FROST STEEL & WIRE CO.:—
NO. 9 Coiled Wire, 4-Point Barb, Gates and Woven
Fence and Staples, all Galvanized.
PIANOS:—
See our high grade Pianos before buying.
, For Sale At
W. G. ANDREW’S, LUCKNOW-
Seaforth Creamery,
CREAM BUYING STATION
LUCKNO W SENTINEL
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2nd., 1924.
Hightest cash prices paid for
Cream and Eggs. We guarantee
service and satisfaction to all our
OBJECTIONS TO THE O. T. A.
patrons.
Give us a trial and let us prove
to you that we are a worth while
market.
Objections made to the Ontario
Teperance Act may be summed up
under
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Cecil Mullin,
Mgr. Lucknow Branch
Phone 63.
Lucknow
Phone 74
Wingham
Phone 256
Monumental Works
LUCKNOW and WINGHAM
Has the largest and most complete
stock in the most beautiful designs
to choose from, in
Marble, Scotch, Swedish anr Can
adian Granites
We make a specialty of Family
Monuments and invite your inspec
tion.
Inscriptions Neatly, Carefully and
Promptly Done.
; See us before placing your order.
Douglas Bros. R. A. Spotton
Lucknow, Ont.
Lucknow L. 0. L.. No. 428, meets in
their lodge room every second Tues
day of the month at 8 o’clock p.m.
W.M., H. M. Parker; Rec. Sec’y.. Wm.
McQuillin.
certain stage of progress this prob
lem of regulating or prohibiting the
traffic in intoxicating liquors has
come up. And in every country it
has taken the same course: first regu
lation and then prohibition in one
form or another. That is where the
people govern. There is something
that compels people in the direction
of prohibition. It may not be right;
it may be unfair, but evidently it is
the course by which mankind will ul
timately arrive (if the race lasts long-
enough) at the ideal and common
sense condition of universal volun
tary sobriety.
That communities and countries
will progress towards prohibition of
the liquor traffic seems as certain, as
that they will progress towards dem
ocracy.
Much poverty, many public and .
home disturbances are so obviously
traceable to the consumption of in
toxicating liquor, and these distur
bances are so aggrevating and so
persistent as to invite “direct action.”
Seeing these evils and suffering from
them, the average man will not stop
to consider abstract principles nor
the nicities of exact justice. He will
attack the obvious evil-doer.
There is not the slightest prospect
that the prohibition forces in the ,
Western Provinces of Canada are fin
ally defeated. The liquor traffic tends •
to bring about its own destruction. It
stirs up the commonsense of mankind i
against itself, so that everywhere the
tendency is to suppress and abolish it.
I PRIZE WINNERS AT
RIPLEY FALL FAI8
Light horses—Lady driver with
. ingle horse and buggy; 1st. W. 11.
^ameron, 2nd. Hugh McDougall, 3rd.
ames Farrell.
Roadersters Class—Buggy horses;
.ames Farrell, Alex Whytock, Holy-
ood, Wilmer Brown, Armow.
carriage Horse, single—W. H. Cam-
.ron,Robert Moffat, Teeswater, W. R.
Elliot.
yearling Gelding or Filly—John Em
merton, Kincardine.
-special
,-ennan
1st W
: ell.
Special
S. W. Pollock;
2 yrs or over;
►-0-<
HARD TO CONTROL
the Motor Ve-
not contended
many breaches
Act, we should
In his address here last week on
conditions in British Columbia under
Government Control the Rev. J. F.
Miller
United
Archie
Liquor
control
thought it might be a good thing for
the United States.
Johnston’s reply was: “Talk about
distillers! You might as well try to
control a power magazine in hell.”
Archie Johnston is a strong ap-
ponant of prohibition. He is in
charge of the government purchase
and sale of liquors in B. C. and his
statement is the result of his ex
perience in endeavoring to
the traffic and conduct it exclusively
by the government. His language
was emphatic if not choice.
said that a man from the
States recently asked
Johnston, chairman of
Control Board of B. C. how
was working out, and if he
Mr.
the
control
i-o-
GUELPH
a [Insurance]
CANADA
NEW COUNTY CONSTABLE
TAKES CHARGE
Mr. Thomas F. Bone, former mem
ber of the Owen Sound police force,
has been appointed Provincial Con
stable with headquarters at Walk
erton and he assumed his new du
ties here on Tuesday last. Pro
vincial Constable Bone succeeds
Provincial Constable Blood, who re
signed some time ago on account of
ill-health, and he will have as his
territory the whole of the County of
Bruce. The new official will be as
sociated with Inspectors Widmeyer
and Beatty, also new appointees, in
the work of enforcing the 0. T. A.
in Bruce County. Provincial Con
stable Bone has had considerable ex
perience in police work, having been
a member of the Owen Sound Police
Force for nine years and also hav
ing done much county work in that
time. He has lived in Owen Sound
for the past seventeen years. The
new Provincial Constable was in
Walkerton last week trying his
aminations before being taken
the force. The new job is a big
and will require a great deal of
ergy, but P. S. Bone will,
■be equal
Times.
are convict-
the poorer
equally en-
reason why
no
to the occasion.—
»-o-
«
Among the passengers landing
ex
on
one
en-
doubt
Bruce
r
fromH. Stevens M. P.
not long since made the
Mr. H.
Vancouver
following statement regarding boot
legging in his province:
“Never was bootlegging comper
able in magnitude and murderous
results to what it is to day.”
That is the way government con
trol stopped bootlegging in British
Columbia.
The boy who grinds usually makes
his pojnt.
No, ^fary, the breath of scandal is
Jjever atj pniop breath.
four statements, as follows:
That the Act does not work.
That the Act is not fair.
That it provides no revenue
That it makes it too hard for
those who want liquor in modera
tion to get it.
As to the law not workipg, it -is
just like all other laws: It is in a
measure successful, but falls short of
complete success. There are those who
say that there is more liquor being
consumed in Ontario now than there
was under the license system, or
would be under, government sale and
control. This statement is wholly
without sense. Everybody who can re
member the days of the bar room and
the liquor store knows there is no
comparison between conditions now
and conditions then. Under license
drunken men in public were a com
mon sight, and many men, young and
old, plainly under the influence of
liquor was a feature of fall fair days
or a day of field sports. How many
drunken men may be seen now in
town or city ? Drunken, men are so
rare that many young men and wo
men have never seen one.
Of course, the law forbidding the
sale and consumption of intoxicating
liquor as a beverage is broken. So is
the law against murder and theft, and
speeding with automobiles In the
City of Toronto in the year 1922
there were 1372 convictions for
breaches of the O.T.A. In the same
city in the same year there were 13,-
806 convictions under
hides Act. But it is
;hat because of these
of the Motor Vehicles
do away with the Act or materially
change it. It is not regarded as a
failure What is asked for is better
enforement. From a recent issue of
Saturday Night we learn that within
the past 12 months no less than fifty
million dollars’ worth of dutiable
goods have been, smuggled into Can
ada from the United States, causing
a loss of fifteen million dollars in rev
enue. Must we, on this account regard
the law against smuggling a failure?
No. We ask better enforcement.
Is the law unfair in that it dis
criminates against certain classes ?
Every law is in a measure unfair, es
pecially in its enforcement. Only a
few of the law-breakers
ed, and those generally
class. That it cannot be
forced in all cases is no
a law should be repealed. If it were,
■we should have to repeal all laws—
even those against robbery and mur
der.
As to the law not providing reven
ue as the license did or as govern
ment sale^ might be expected to do,
the reply is that the country can get
along without revenue derived from
that source. Besides the liquor traf
fic cannot be, and nowhere is, a pro
fitable revenue producer. Everybody
know’s that to the extent that it pre
vails, it impoverishes ther country, in
creases crime and demands more po
lice, more courts, more jails; so that
any revenue derived from the traffic
is consumed in that way. When mon
ey is not wasted in drink, the people
have more from which to provide rev
enue to be otherwise collected.
As to the unfairness in making it
needlessly difficult for those who
would use liquor in .moderation to get
what they want, there is truth in that;
for there are men who even if liquor
were as easily procured as ice cream,
would still use it in moderation so
that it would harm neither themselves
nor others. But society is confronted
by- a problem—the problem of the a-
buse of intoxicating liquors. No doubt
the ideal condition would be that in
which liquors would be available with
out restriction and in, which all would
be sensible enough to leave it alone
or use it in such moderation that they
would not be injured or disposed to
injure others because of its use; but
such a condition is an idle dream.
Conditions are otherwise, and we must
do the best we can under these con
ditions.
It is significant that in every
country which we call civilized, at a 1
■
Among the passengers landing at
Quebec from the Canadian Pacific
liner “Empress of Scotland,” re
cently was: Miss Margaret Bond
field, M.P., a member of the Cabi
net of the Macdonald Government
of Great Britain. Miss Bondfield
is in Canada to stud^conditions as
they affect female immigrants.
• -------------
Som^ interesting facts were made
public by E. J. Belleisle, superin
tendent of the fish and game de-'
partment of the Province of Quebec,
when in Montreal^recently. The
province is now teeming with wild
life, he says, mainly because of its
conservation policy, whereby pre
serves are rented to fish and game'-
clubs on the understanding that
they appoint wardens. There are
500 such clubs employing a totai of
over 1,000 wardens.
and will not be
The Trans-Canada Limited, crack
transcontinental express of the Ca-
nadain Pacific Railway, completed
its last run of the season'on Sep
tember 17th,
operated again until next May. The
train, which is the fastest long-dis
tance express in North America,
covered 758,748 miles in the season,
or three times the distance between
the earth and the moon; in its 238
runs, and carried the
95,000 passengers for
tances.
equivalent of
varying dis-
»
the ChateauThe new wing of
Lake Louise, the Canadian Pacific
Railway’s hotel at Lake Louise, one
of the choicest beauty spots in the
Rockies, is now under construction
to replace that portion destroyed by
fire some months ago. It will be a
nine-storey, fire-proof, steel-frame
structure of stucco, brick and stone,
richly furnished in the best style of
a mountain hotel, and will contain
280 bedrooms, bringing the total in
the hotel up to 390.
3 ______
The hunt for fur is extending
northward each year, according to
officials of the Hudson’s Bay Com
pany and Revillon Freres. They
have already despatched their.
steamers on their animal tour of.
the northern posts which each
son are being located farther
farther north as the field of
pelt hunters is extended into
Arctic.
pany now has a numerous chain of
posts in Baffinland and other areas
mil! 9f ____
sea-
and
the
the.
The Hudson’s Bay Com-
by John Bell and Neil Mc-
for best lady’s turnout—
H. Cameron, 2nd. James Far-
by David Lemon for best
Gentlemen’s turnout—W. H. Camer
on, James Farrell.
Registered Horses—Mare I without
Foal; Wm. R. Martin, W Pollock.
Brood mare with foal at side; Wm. R
Martin, W. Pollock.
Foal of 'season; W. Pollock. Wm. R.
Martin.
Two-year-old Filly; Wm R. Martin
Yearling entire or Gelding; Wm R
•Hartin, W. Pollock.
General Purpose Horses— Span
general purpose; Robert Moffatt
Arch Kirkland. *
Two-year-old Gelding or Filly Peter
Cantin.
Year Gelding or Filly; J. Lindsay.
Foal of season; John Emmerton
Harold McIntosh.
Best halter broken Foal of the sea
son any class; John Emmerton; S
W. Pollock.
Agricultural H o rs e s—Span of
working horses; M. Watson, James
Alton, Hugh McDougal.
J w o-year-o 1 d Gelding; Hamilton
McKinnon.
Two-year-old Filly; David Brooks.
Yearling Gelding; John Emmerton,
Sam Avery.
Yearling Filly; Harold McIntosh,
George McGillivray.
Brood Mare with Foal at sides; "W.
Pollock, S. A Pollock, Harry Need
ham.
Foal of season; Harry Needham,
Oliver Smith, S. W. Pollock.
Eest team*of horses on the grounds;
John Robinson.
Special by Levi Morgan and Dr. W.
J. Kelleher for the best three year
old gelding or filly on halter of
Clydesdale Breed: Thos. Morgan, Dan
McDonald.
Special by Morgan and Cuthbertson,
for the best foal of the season sired
Ly Drumburle Again; Oliver Smith,
S. W. Pollock, W. Pollock.
Heavy Draught—Best Span of
horses; John Robinson.
2 yr. old Filly; Dan McDonald.
Brood mare with foal at side; John
Robinson, Dunean Campbell.
Foal of Season; John Robinson,
Dan McDonald
Sheep—Oxford Downs class
1 shearling Ewe; John Dahmer.
I Ewe, Aged: John Dahmer, D.
Robt. McCosh.
1 Ewe Lamb; John Dahmer, John
Dahmer.
1 shearling ram; John Dahmer.
1 ram lamb; John Dahmer, D. Ro
bert McCosh.
Best pen of Oxford Downs; John
Dahmer.
Any other variety of Downs—
1 aged ewe; W. H. Henderson, W. H.
Henderson
Any other of Downs—1 Ewe lamb;
Wm. Henderson.
Aged Ram; Wm. H. Henderson,
eherling ram; W. H. Henderson.
Ram lamb; W. H. Henderson.
Fat sheep; W. H. Henderson,
Henderson.
Best pen of any breed; W. H.
erson.
Lincolns & Cotswold
of any age or class;
son.
Swine—'Yorkshire
Alton.
Sow; James Alton.
Boar over three months and
twelve; Jas. Alton.
Sow over three months and
twelve; W. O. Pollock, Jas.
Tamworth
Sow; W. Pollock.
Boar over 3
Alton.
Sow, over 3
Alton.
Best pen of
Jas. Alton.
Grade Cattle—
Dual purpose cow,
evidently m calf; ___ ________
xhos. E. Morgan, David Brooks.
2 yr. old heifer; W. Kouiston, chas
A. Poliock, W. B. Wilkinson,
yearling Heifer; W. Roulston,
Ailkinson.
1 Yearling steer; Chas. Smith,
xioulston, Ross Black.
oteer calf of season under 12 mos.;
D. Brooks,
rat ox or steer; Chas. Smith, l^oss
mack, W. Roulston.
Best half of beef breed under
mos. pail fed by boy or girl
15; J. T. Lyoijs, Peter Glahn.
Special by the Ontario
breeders for best grade steer
mlf won by J, T. Lyons.
Special by Thos. Harris for best fat
steer; Chas. Smith.
Durham Best bull 3 yrs. and upwards
Chas. Smith.
Bull 2 yrs. old with pedigree; J.
Kouiston.
yearling bull with pedigree; Chas.
Smith.
Pure breed dual purpose
cow;
..,has
3 yr. , - - „ ,
Chas. Smith, Johnston Roulston.
2 yr. old heifer, with pedigree; John
Emmerton, Johnston Roulston.
Yearling heifer with pedigree; Chas.
. Smith.
Heifer calf under 7 mos.; Johnston
Roulston.
Heifer calf over 7 mos. and under
12 with pedigree; Chas. Smith, John
ston Roulston.
Herd Cattle consisting of 1 bull, 1
yr. old and over and 4 females;
Chas. Smith; Johnston Roulston.
Holstein cow with pedigree; David
Brooks, John Emmerton, David
Brooks. . ..............
gree; David Brooks,
■Best Poll Angus bull
David Brooks.
Yearling Poll Angus
’.gree; David Brooks.
Jest Poll Angus cow
D. Brooks.
2 yr. old
ledigree;
Yearling
Brooks.
Hereford
oedigree;
Yearling '
o-ree; J T. Lyons.
Hereford heifer calf with pedigree;
I. T Lysns, J. T. Lyons.
Ladies Fancy Work and Domestic
Manufacture.
fatting; Mrs. J. S. McKenzie, Mrs.
D. B. McLeod. • {
fatting edgings; Miss Livingston.
Drawn thread work; Miss Livingston,
Mrs J McLeod.
Knitted lace, fine; Miss Livingston,
Mrs. J. S. McKenzie.
Hand hemming; Haidie Veitch, Miss
xivingston.
Tand hemstitching; Haidie Veitch,
Miss Livingston.
Embroidery, Bulgarian; Miss Liv-
Bull with ped-
with pedigree;
Poll Angus heifer with
D Brooks; D. Brooks.
Poll Angus heifer; D.
THE
•I
W.
Poll
Bull
J. T.
Hereford Bull with pedi-
2 yrs. or over with
Lyons.
.W H
RED FRONT HARDWARE
McClary’s Finest Aeheivement
In Enameled Wares
McClary’s, who for fifty years have been
makers of the very finest grades of Enameled Wares,
have produced a super ware in this “Bonny Blue.”
It is a four-coat ware, beautifully colored in White
with Blue Decorations.
“Bonny
McClary
For
Thengston.
Embroidery,
Mrs. J. S.
ston.
Embroidery, v.x.^x6u,
Livingston, Mrs. D. B. McLeod
Embroidery, French Knots; Mrs. D.
3. McLeod, Mrs. J. L. "
Embroidery Hardanger;
ingston.
embroidery, Eyelet; Miss Livingston
Irs. J. S. McKenzie.
Embroidery applique; Miss Living-
Ton.
mbroidery, Roman cut; Miss Liv-
ngston.
wadies Underwear, white; Miss Liv
ingston, Mrs. McKenzie.
Coloured embroidery; Miss Living
ston.
Lady’s underwear, any kind; Mrs.
jas. McLeod.
Lady’s night robe, crochet trimmed;
>irs. Jas. McLeod, Miss Livingston.
Lady’s night robe other trimmed; J.
S. McKenzie, Mrs. McKenzie.
Lady’s
Slight,
Lady’s
Slight,
Lady’s
work; Miss Livingston;
McKenzie.
Golf Jacket; Mrs. J. S. McKenzie,
Mrs. Slight.
Lady’s boudoir cap; Miss Livingston,
Mrs. Slight.
Shoulder shawl; Mrs. Slight, Mrs.
McKenzie.
fablerunner; Miss Livingston, W. J.
Lane.
iable centre, coloured, linen design;
Mrs McKenzie.
Sofa pillow, embroidered- Mrs
Kenzie, Miss Livingston.
Sofa pillow, embroidered; Mrs
Kenzie, Miss Livingston.
Sofa pillow, washable; Mrs. J.
ris. Miss Livingston.
Sofa pillow, another kind; Ilaidie
Veitch, Marion Munn.
Lamp shade; J. B. Martyn.
.Luncheon embroidered; Mrs
Kenzie, Miss Livingston.
Luncheon set crochet or crochet
trimmed; Mrs. D B. McLeod, Haidie
Veitch.
Tea cloth, embroidered; Mrs. J. S
McKenzie.
Tea cloth, any other kind; Miss Liv
ingston, Marion Munn.
Centre piece solid white, embroider
ed, Miss Livingston, Mrs. J Harris.
Centre piece any other kind; Mrs.
Tas. McLeod, Miss Livingston.
Centre piece coloured linen
trimmedf Miss Livingston,
Stanley.
Centre piece tray 'cloth to
trimmed; Marion Munn,
Kenzie.
Six Serviettes; Mrs. McKenzie, Miss
Livingston.
Buffet set; Mrs. D. B. McLeod, Mrs.
McKenzie.
Service tray, handwork, mounted;
Mrs. McKenzie.
Pair Hand Towels, embroidered:
Livingston, Mrs. McKenzie.
Hand towels any other kind;
McKenzie, Miss Livingston.
Guest towels embroidered; Miss
ingston.
Guest towels any other; Mrs. D. B.
McLeod, Mrs. Slight.
Bath towels, Mrs. Slight.
Pillow slips and sheet embroidered;
Miss Livingston, Mrs. McLeod.
Pillow and sheet any other kind;
Mrs. McKenzie, Mr. McLeod.
Pair of Pillow slips; Miss Livingston
Mrs Russell Osborne.
Dresser cover and stand; Mrs. Mc
Kenzie; Marion Munn.
Pin cushion, embroidered white; Miss
Livingston, Mrs. McKenzie.
Pin cushion any other kind:
McKenzie, Miss Livingston.
Curtains hand made; Mrs. McLeod,
Mrs. McKenzie.
Piece of Fancy work not listed: Mrs.
McLeod, Miss Livingston.
Applique any kind; Haidie Veitch.
Lady’s shopping bag; Miss Living
ston.
Fanck work bag; Mrs.
Miss Livingston.
Quilt pieced cotton; Mrs.
Mrs. J. McLeod
Quilt pieced wool; Mrs. J.
Quilt applique; D. Henry,
ham
Quilt crochet; Mrs. McKenzie,
Jas. McLeod.
Quilt knitted; Mrs. J. McLeod; Mrs.
McKenzie. .
Quilt any other kind; Miss Living
ston, Mrs. J. McLeod. .
Fancy bed spread; Mrs. McKenzie,
Eunice Stanley.
Comforter handmade; Miss Haidie
Veitch
Pair of hand made socks fine; Mrs.
McKenzie, Miss Livingston.
Pair of hand made socks course;
Mathew Moore, Mrs. J. S. McKenzie.
Hand made woollen mitts fine; Mrs.
Jas. McLeod, Mrs. McKenzie.
Mitts coarse; Mrs. McKenzie, Haidie
Serviceable work apron; Miss Liv
ingston, Jas McLeod. _
Braided Mat; Miss Livingston, Rhet-
Hooded Rfg Mat: Mrs, J, Harris,
conventional design;
McKenzie, Miss Living-
Floral design, silk; Miss
Well
12
H.
Hend-
Best
Hender-
Boar;
mos. and under
mos and under
bacon hogs; W.
sheep
James
under
under
Alton.
12; Jas.
12; Jas.
Pollock,
giving milk or
John Emmerton,
B.
W.
10
under
Hereford
or
shorthorn
Chas. Smith; John Emmerton;
Smith.
old cow; Thos. E. Morgan,
g p1. old holsteip hftfer with jpedir
ingston.
S. McKenzie.
; Miss Liv-
camisole, handmade;
Miss Livingston.
Tea apron, handmade;
Jas. Stanley.
fancy handkerchiefs,
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
hand-
J. S.
Mc-
Mc-
Har-
Mc-
crochet
Eunice
match
Mrs. Mc-
Miss
Mrs.
Liv-
Mrs.
McKenzie,
McKenzie,
McLeod.
Saul Gra-
Mrs.
Appoint
ed
KitchenBonny Blue
To appieciate tac beauty of this ware vou _-_1__ . • Jmust see it in our window. The price is not too high
We are offering a Special on a Two-cell Flash
light, complete for 98c. Get yours before they are
all gone.
Fresh Car of Cement on Hand
RAE & PORTEOUS
Phone 66.
Hardware Coal
- - Luck no We
Plumbing Tinsmithing
•3
1 Mrs. Jas. McLeod.
Bed room slippers; Mrs. D. B Mc
Leod, Miss Liivngston.
Dairy—
Crock of butter; 10 lbs. Jas Stanley,
Jas. McLeod, Geo. McGillivray.
Butter in pound prints; Jas. Stanley,
Harold McIntosh, Jas. McLeod.
Best 5 lbs of dairy butter; Jas.
Stanley, Jas. McLeod, David Brooks
Honey in comb; Eunice Stanley,
W. H. Jeater
Honey extracted; y2 gal light; Eun
ice Stanley, W. H. Jeator.
Home rendered lard 5 lbs.; Jas. Mc
Leod.
Domestic Science—
Loaf of home made bread; R. Stan
ley, Jas McLeod.
Homemade Bread; Mrs. Slight, Jas.
McLeod.
Nut bread; Jas Stanley, Mrs. Slight
Special by N. Bushell for best loaf
of bread made from Sepoy Flour;
Jas. McLeod, R. Stanley.
Cookies, Oatmeal & Sugar; Mrs. Lot
Culbert, Jas. Stanley
Tea Biscuits and Buns; R. Stanley,
D Henry.
Cream Puffs; Jas. Stanley.
doz. each of drop or small tea
cakes; Mrs. Slight. Jas. Stanley.
Light layer cake; Jas. Stanley, Mrs.
J. McLeod.
Dark layer cake; Harold McIntosh,
Mrs. J Harris.
Sponge cake; Mrs. J. McLeod, D.
Henry.
Ginger cake; Jas. McLeod, David
Brooks
Pies; Jas. Stanley; Joe Colling.
Best meat pie; Jas. McLeod, Jas.
Stanley.
2 glasses of apple jelly; Miss Haidie/
Veitch, Mrs. Lot Culbert.
Currant Jelly; Mrs. J. McLeod.
Other fruit jellies; Mrs. J. McLeod,
W. H. Jeater
Bottle of tomatoe catsup; David
Henry, Haidie Veitch.
Sour pickles; David Henry, Jas Mc
Leod.
Sweet pickles; Haidie Veitch, Thos.
Welsh.
Canned corn and tomatoes; W. R.
Hamilton, Mrs Lot. Culbert.
Canned Beets & Beans; Jas. McLeod,
W. R. Hamilton.
Canned vegetables, any other; Mrs.
Lot Culbert, Mrs. Thos. Welsh.
Canned peaches; Haidie Veitch, R.
Stanley
Plumbs; Mrs. J. Harris, David Henry ;
Cherries, sweet & sour; Haidie
Veitch, Jas. McLeod.
Preserved Citron
Thos. Welsh.
Preserved each of
apple Jas. McLeod,
Preserved each of
Canned fruits not
Mrs. Lot Culbert.
Native fruit or vegetable marmalade
Thos. Welsh.
Native fruit jam, Veitch, Welsh.
Dressed fowl; Jas. McLeod
Special by J. A. McGillivray for the
best apple pie; Mrs. Slight, M. Munn
Fruits—
Fall apples; R. G. Martyn, Joe
ing..
Winter apples; R. G. Martin.,
Colling.
Snies; Martin, Thos. Morgan.
Rhode Island Greenings; Martin,
Dune. Campbell.
Baldwins; W. R. Hamilton, Joe Coll
ing I — V—J
Mann apples; Martin, W. H. Jeater. j Thos. Welsh
Kings; Martin, D. Campbell.
Russets; Campbell, Colling. i ^uan.
Duchess of Oldenburg; Thos. Mor- ■ Potatoes, white; J. Emmerton, Mac
gap, Martin. 1 McGuire. ... J
R S.
Thos.
& strawberries;
rhubarb & Pine-
Veitch.
grapes & quinces
listed McLeod,
Coll-
Joe
Snow apples; Morgan, Colling.
Ben Davis apples; Morgan, Campbell
Converts; Martin, Russell Osborne.
Wagners; Robt. Watson, Morgan.
Pippin 20 os. Martin, ColLn<
rippins any other variety; Martin,
Geo. McGillivray.
Wealthys; Jas. Alton,
Wolf Rivers; Thos. E. Morgan.
McIntosh Red, W. H. Jeater.
Canadian Reds; Colling, R Osborne
Summer Apples; Morgan, D. Ruth
erford.
Fall apples; Martin, Rutherford.
Winter apples any other variety;
Alton, Colling.
Fall pears; Alton, Rhetta McLay.
Winter pears; Martin, Alton.
Crab apples, large; J. McLeod; D.
Rutherford.
Crab apples, small; D. Campbell; J.
McLeod
Plums, lombards; Morgan, D. Ruth
erford.
Plums, any other variety;
Wilson, Mathew Moore.
Peaches; C. A. Pollock.
3 bunches Niagara grapes;
Watson, Jeater.
Floral Exhibits—
Sweet peas; Allan Martyn.
Asters; Mrs. Lot Culbert,
Welsh.
Gladolio, collection; Mrs. W. R.
Hamilton, Culbert.
Dahlias; Thos. Welsh, D. Robt. Mc
Cosh.
Perennial phlox; Thos. Welsh, Allan
Martyn.
Roses named variety; Thos. Welsh.
Pot Plants-—
Begonias; Welsh, H. Veitch.
Geraniums; H. Veitch.
Geraniums; H. Veitch.
Cut flowers; Welsh, W. R. Hamilton.
Display of house plants; Welsh, Al
lan Martyn.
Coleus Fern; Mrs. T. Welsh
Grains—
Fall wheat, white; Jas. Alton, Jas.
McLeod.
Fall wheat, red; John Emmerton, D.
McKay.
Spring wheat; Jas. Alton.
Long white oats; Jas. McLeod.
Short white oats; McLeod, Alton.
Barley, 6 rowed McLeod, D. Brooks.
Peas, large; Alton, Russel Osborne.
Peas, small; Thos. Morgan, Alton..
Beans, field white; D. Rutherford,
Geo. McGillivray.
Garden Beans; W. R. Hamilton, S. A.
Pollock.
Timothy seed; Alton, B. Brooks.
Red Clover seed; D. Brooks; D. Mc
Kay.
Sheaf of white oats; Robt. Watson,
Joe Colling, D. Robt. McCosh.
Sheaf of "Wheat; Brooks, W. Roul
ston, McCosh
Roots & Vegetables— .
Pumpkins; J. Emmerton, Jeator.
Squash; Harold McIntosh.
Citrons, round; Jeater, L. B. Reid.
Cucumbers; John Emmerton, Jas.
McLeod
Celery; D. Henry, Thos. Welsh.
Sunflowers; R. S. Wilson, D. Henry.
Tomatoes; R. G. Martyn, Jeater.
Vegetable, marrow; Robt.
Jeater
Collection of farm produce;
I Lot. Culbert, Robt. Watson.
I Collection of grasses and
Robt. Watson, McCosh, D. _
Table Corn; Allan Martyn,
Welsh.
j Best display of vegetables; McCosh,I mi------ ttt
I Potatoes, red; John Emmerton, Mc-
! Cosh
McCosh,
McCosh,
grains;
Bdooks.
Thos.