HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1924-10-9, Page 10Mss E. Switzer, J. Pringle; Egg plum,
C. Atki son,; other variety, R. W,
Switzer, Mrs, Barnett; COIL plums,
Mrs. Be nett, J. Pringle.
Pears- Duchess, A. M. Doupe, R.
Doupe; �hekion, W, Switzer, F.Stew-
art; Bay lett, W. Hern, A. M,Duupe;
Clapp's Favorite, W. Swtzer; Flem-
ish Beatty, A. M. Doupe, R. W. Swit-
zer; other variety, R. W. Switzer, A.
E. Doupe
P-caches—Crawford, Mrs. H. Barnett.
Grapes—Concord, Dr. Grieve; Nia-,
gara, A. Doupe, W. Switzer; Rogers,
Dr. Grier^e, other variety, Mrs, 1-I,
Barnett, A. Rundle.
DAIRY
1,5 Its- butter, G. Hazlewood, Mrs, D.
R Baer; ( Ills butter, F. Pridham, Mrs,
D, Roger. •
Judge—H. C. Facey,
FLOWERS
Cut—Asters—white, A. E. Doupe; pink
G. Heywood, Mrs. W, Atkinson; pur-
ple, G Heywood, C. Routly; collection
G. Heywood, J. T. Hern. Dahlia—stan-
dard, R. Doupe, E. C. Aa
.Appleton; cac
the, F. Gollings, Rev, Thompson; col-
lection, Miss E. Switzer, E. C. Apple-
ton, Gladioli, E, C. Appleton; collec-
tion, C. Routly, E. (2. Appleton; Zin-
nias, col., G. Heywood, G. Jaques; col!
Cosmos, J. Anderson, T. Pridham; col.
Panusies, E Lancaster, E. t.. Appleton;
Petunias, C. Routly, G. Heywood; Bal -
,'ams, E. Lancaster; Nasturtiums, C.
Rowdy, J. T. Hern; Antirrhinum, (snap
dragon), A. Cole, G. Heywood; Peren-
reels, C. Routly; Annuals, T. Wash-
burn, C. Routly; Bouquet, Geo, Jaques,
C Routly; Salvie, E. C. Appleton, C.
Routly
Potted—Begonia, T. Washburn, R.
Mills; Geraniutns, T. Washburn; Ferns,
C. Routly; Fo liag,e, H. Hanna, T.
Washburn; Best single plant, T. Wash-
burn, C. Routly.
LADIES' WORK
Useful—wilt, pieced, cotton, Mrs. H.
Barrett„ Dr, J. Grieve; Quilt, :oaten
quilted t•onsidered, Miss J. Rohlnson,
jas, More; Comforter, wool filed, Rev.
I). Thompson, Jas. More; Comforter;
down filled, le 'Les 1`1. Doupe, Mrs. H,
Barnett; Bedspread, fancy, J. Ander-
son, A. Cole; Lady's sweater, Miss E.
Sw itzer, Mrs. J. Creighton.; Shoulder
scarf, A. E. Doupe, Miss E. Sw itzer;
Lady's Blouse, Mrs. J. D. Graham;
Lingerie set,'.leIrs. D. j, Grahams; Bed-
room curtains, Mrs. W. J. Urquhart,
Mrs. J. Ge,t;tles; Rag floor mat, A.
Cole, N. Heal; Hand knit socks, ;Mss
K. Doupe, Dawson Brom.; Band knit
mitts, A. Robinson; bliss K. Doupe ;
Child's dress or romper suit, Mrs. E.
Aneaster; Work apron and cap, Miss
E. SW itzer, N. t-leal; -�;can plLlow
cases, ,Mrs. J. D. Graham, Dawson
Bros.; Horne made: soap, W. Sw. etzer,
Mrs J. Creighton.
Fancy—Lady's night robe, Mrs. E.
Lancaster, Mrs. j. D. Graham; Lady's
convalescent jacket, wool, Miss E,
Sw itzer, ,Mrs. Jas. Brown; Lady's con-
valescent jacket, fancy, N. Heal, Miss
E. Sw itzer; Table centre, white, N.
Heal, Mrs. 5. D. Graham; Colored, Mrs.
L. Grose, Mrs. J. D. Graham; Table
runner, Miss E. Switzer, N. Roach;
Buffet set, T. Washburn, Mrs. L.
Grose; Tea cloth, Mrs. Jas. Creighton;
Mrs, L. Grose; Tea cloth crochet
trimmed, Miss E. Sw jtzer, \iiss NI.
5.olleek; Pillow slips and sheets, A.
Wiseman, Miss E. Sw. itzer; Dresses
cover, Miss E. Sw itzer, Geo. Jaques ;
Dresser runner N. -Heal;. Child's
dress, H. Gregory, Mrs. E. Lancaster;
Child's jacket and booties. A. Wise-
man, Mrs. E. Lancaster; Sheet end
pillow covers, N. Heal, G. Jaques ;;
Day pillow slips, R. ,Miils, Mrs. Gra-
ham; Camisole with crochet yoke, Miss-
E.
issE. Sw itzer, Mrs. J. Creighton; Cami-
sole, silk, Mies E. Sw itzer, A. Wise -
sone Handkerckiefs, N. Heal, Dawson
Bros.; Shopping bag, Mrs. E. Lan-
caster, A Cole; Hand. bag, A. Coee,
Miss E Sw, itzerl; Table doylies, Miss
E. Sue itzer, A. Cole; Serviettes, :Mrs.
E. Lancaster, Miss, Sw •itzer; Bedroom
towels, Miss Sw itzer, Mrs. Graham;
Guest towels, Mrs. Creighton, Elsie
Wilson; Embrotidery, convert., silk,
Mrs. E. Lancaster; Embroidery, daisy
loop and French knot, Mrs. Creighton,
N. Heal; Colored emb. J. Andersen,
N. Heal; Tattted centre piece, W. H„
Sw itzer, Mss Robinson; Tatting, N.
llodch, E. Wilson.; Infalnts pillow and
carriage cover, Mrs. L. Grose; Crochet
filet, Miss Sw itzer, Mrs,. Graham ;
Crochet lace, A. Wiseman, Dr. 3.
Grieve; knitted lace, ,Miss J. Robeenson,
A. Wiseman.; Boudoir cap, H. Hanna,
Mrs, E Lancaster; Apron applique,
Miss M, Folltic:k, Muss M. Doupe; Soft
cushion, silk emtb., Mrs. E.. Lancaster,
A. Cole; Sofa cushion, Miss J. Robin-
son; Ronnan,cu.t work, Mrs. J. Creagh
ton, Mrs. Graham; Service tray,. Mrs.
L. Grose, D. Goulding ; Work by lady
over 70 years,, ,Mrs. J. Anderson, Mrs.
Anderson; 5 useful styles of needle,
j 1lss. Sw itzer, N. Heal; Special for
hooked mat, Jas. Robinson,
FINE AND DECORATIVE ART
011 painting, landscape, from na-
ture, Mrs. H. Sweitzer, N. Roach;
oil painting; marine, from nature,
N. Roach; oil painting, vegetable or
fruit, W. H. Sweitzer; water color,
scene, copy, Miss M. Follick; water
color .scene, froni nature, Miss M.
Follick; water colors, flowers and
vase or bowl, Miss M. Follick; Sepia,
any subject, copy, G. Heywood;pas-
tel, any subject, N. Roach; crayon,
or charcoal scene from copy, Miss
Follick; pencil drawing, any subject
Miss Follick; pencil drawing, geo-
metrical, Jas. More. 11. Hanna; pen
and ink sketch, any subject, F. Gou-
lding, G. Heywood; pen and ink
drawing, G. Jacques, Jas. More;
stencil design, II. 1'lanna, F. Gould-
ing; basketry, Mrs. L. Grose, Miss
M. Doupe; ameteur photography, R.
Shier, F. Pridham; tinted snap shots
Miss Follick; penmanship, G. Hey-
wood; painting on china, conven-
tional, Mrs. W. Atkinson, Dr. Grieve
painting on china, realistic, 1\Ir.
Blaekler, Dr. Grieve; painting lus-
tre work, Dr. Grieve, M. Blackler.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE
Iioney extracted, M. Brethour
Mrs, J. Squire; maple syrup, A.
Doupe, H. Copeland; maple sugar,
Dawson Bros., G. Hazlewood; home-
made bread, white, A. Shier, Daw-
son Bros,; home-made bread brown,
Mrs. J, Squire, J. T. Hern; home-
made buns, J. T. Hern, Mrs. J.
Squire; coffee cake, Mrs. J. Squire;
angel cake, Reuben Shier, Mrs. J.
Squire; light cake, Reuben Shier,
Jas. Malcolm; dark cake, ,I. T. Hern
Ray Mills; apple pie, A. Robinson,
A. Shier; pumpkin pie, A. Shier, R.
Shier; lemon pie, A. E. Doupe R.
Mills; red currant jelly, R. W.
Switzer, Chas. Atkinson; apple jelly,
0. Atkinson, R. W. Switzer; berry
jelly, Mrs. H. Barnett, Mrs. W. J.
Urquhart; sour pickles, A. Robinson,
A. E. Doupe; sweet pickles, Mrs. E.
Lancaster. G. Jacques; catsup, G.
Jacques, A. E. Doupe; rhubarb, J. T.
Hern, Dr. J. Grieve; cherries, E. N.
Shier, Mrs. E. Lancaster; raspberries
Mrs. D. Roger, Geo. Jacques; pears,
Dr. Grieve, J. Urquhart; plums, C.
Atkinson, Miss J. Robinson; peach-
es, Grieve, W. Hern; strawberries,
C. Routley, Mrs. E. Lancaster; ap-
ples, Chas. Attkinson; grapes, C.
Routley; corn, E. Doupe, J. T. Hern
peas, G. Jacques, A. M. Doupe; to-
matoes, A. Shier, J. 'Urquhart; chic-
ken, C. Atkinson; noon lunch, Mrs,
J. Squire, Mrs. Goulding; gooseber-
ries, A. Wiseman, A. Rundle
Judges—Mrs, W. C. Epplett and
Mrs. Switzer.
SCHOOL CHILDREN
Pencil drawing, G. Gallop,Winone
Gallop, Ward Hern; specimen of
writing by pupil in 3rd or 4th read-
er, Audrey Paul, Netta Shier, Alma
Hern; writing by pupil in 2nd or 3rd
reader, Victor Chatten; col. of wild
flowers, pressed, Ethel Pridham, E.
Hern, Grace Gallop; col. of weeds,
Winona Gallop, Ethel Pridham; col.
of weed seed in bottles, E. Copeland
E. Pridham, E. Hern; col. of injur-
ious insects, Grace Gallop, Elaine
Camra, D. Camra; col. of grasses,
grains and clover in flower, Ethel
Pridham; col. of photos G. Hazle-
wood; col. of native woods, Ethel
Pridham, Ward Hern; potatoes, ear-
ly, 3. Ratcliffe, A. Pringle, L. Stone
late potatoes, C. Stewart, Marguerite
Ratcliffe, V. Chattel; carrots, J.
Ratcliffe, B. Ratcliffe, Ina Gallop;
parsnips, Thos. Hern, A. Pringle,
Kathleen Gregory; cucumbers, W.
HernA. Pringle, Jas. Ratciiffe;blood
beets, Thos. Hern, Burns Ratcliffe,
Ward Hern; sweet corn, Grace Gal-
lop, C. Stewart, Arthur Pringle; pop
corn, Violet Squire; pumpkin, pump-
kin T. Brock 1, 2, and 3; citron, A.
Pringle, Ina Gallop; onions, Margt.
Ratcliffe, E. Copeland, G. Heywood;
tomatoes, T. Hern, Margt. Ratcliffe
Alda Squire; Northern Spy Apples
Evelyn Routley, Arthur Pringle, C.
Stewart; King of Tomkins, Evelyn
Routley, Chas. Stewart, special late
Astrachan apples Margaret Rat-
cliffe; apron, Alda Squire, Alma
Hern; cookies, Muriel Robinson, V.
Squire, Grace Gallop; soda biscuits,
Alma Hern, Violet Stone, V. Squire;
light cake, Alma Hern, V. Squire;
best dressed doll, Jean Cole, Carrie
Wynn, Netta Shier, special,; Water
color painting, Ina Gallop, A. Hern,
Winone Gallop, Carrie Wynn, bou-
quet of cut flowers, Scott Thomp-
son. Thos. Hern, Alma Hern; sun-
flower, Philip Hern, Thos. Hern, T.
Brock; hens' eggs, Evelyn Routley,
Violet Squire, Thos. Brock; postage
stamps, Scott Thompson, V. Chatten
Public school exhibit, Anderson
School exhibit, Winchelsea School
exhibit; special tatting, D. Cann;
special postage stamps, Margaret
Switzer.
Here and There
Ouebec was the leader among Cane
adian provinces in the production of
creamery butter last year with 60,179,-
616 1lUs, ; Ontario came next with 54,-
773,150 lbs,; Alberta third with 17,-
626,155; then Saskatchewan) 10,S67,-
.010; Manitoba, 10,730,060; Nova Sco-
tia, 3,556,666 ; British Columbia, 2,901 -
164; Prince Edward Island, 1,537,437
and New Brunswick, 1,23.1,471.
MOTHERS' ALLOWANCES
Mothers' allowances, paid in the Pro-
vince of Ontario for the month of
August amour ted to S145,281, Over
12,000 rhiidren benefit from this
money which was pad to 4,067
mother.,, Of these mothers the great-
est number'were widows, and only 138
had be in deserted for, as period of f`•v
years and upward, 1Nfothers with i,n-
eapacitated htasbands, numbering 468
were assisted by this money, tine 106
of the beneliciar es were lost;rm then;,
The proper study of mankind ie the
kind ofe ostµcard a man buys.
Inspector Geo Tusliau of the Humane
Society who has been making an in-
spectioa. of Huron County, reports
.that from the viewpoint of the Humane
Society, conditieons are Lad. He
further adds.. ""There is no society in.
Duron county and one pis needed in
the worse way At one farm I sae-
nine
eo'nine horses and seven of them wer'
not tit to work.
"I ordered four horses out of a
gravel ;ret; and I saw many others lame
tiled without shoes, I po.stud the
county police there on the work of
the society, and I think prosecution
wal follow,"
Two years ago Sir Edward Blos-
som, ,etni.nent Breti,sh dietitian, broad-
c•a.;t ed the opinion. that per.,ons who
habitually ate whole wheat bread or,
brown bread, would never get ...teeter
Since this statement was pubFshed
i•onsumptiop of whole \vhcat brad has
freer increased and is becoming more
popular every day.
Sir Edward mentioned in this state-
ment that civilized people were mak-
ing a tremendous mistake in eating
white bread, a food which he claimed•
did not possess the fibre huliding
qualities of the. whole. wheat produce.
AN ACTIVE LIFE
A Carly woman sat dolwe with 11er
pencil one rainy, dull day and figur-
ed up all. the work she had done in
the thirty years o1 her married life.
In that time she had served 235,-
425 meals,
She made 34,190 loaves of bread.
She made 5,930 cakes,
Aid 7,960 pies.
She canned 1,550 quarts of fruit.
Raised 7,660• ducks.
Churned 5,460 pounds of butter,
Put in 36,460 hours sweeping, wash-
ing and scrubbing.
Sbe estimates the worth. of her labor
cons'ervaiively at S115,485.50, none of
which she ever collected, but she
swears she still loves her husband and
her children and would not mind
starting all over again for them.—
Clse,ley Enterprise.
Every Government: Sal Province is a
rl p � �� , X.
Boot ' e 3'�. -I^; , 5, , ,fA.. hs�+ t' � 'a nh �.. rMIse
LIQUOR once sold cannot be controlled. The evil lies in the liquor, not in the method
of its sale, nor in the form of the package. This is proven in every Canadian pro-
nce where government sale, in varying forms, has been tried. ¶ With easier access.
to intoxicating liquor., drinking has increased enormously. More drunkenness and crime
associated with drunkenness have naturally followed. Bootlegging—instead of being
CURED by so-called government "control" — is flourishing to a degree that makes
®ntarih,'s illicit sale seem small and insignificant by comparison. ¶ A ghastly failure,
serving only' to MUMII'IPLY the very evils it was heralded to cure! That is the story of
government sale of liquor in BRITISH COLUMBIA, in MANITOBA, in QUEBEC.
British Columbia and
the Rk oetleggers
The Vancouver World, a newspaper
friendly to the government, has declared
in an editorial: 'British Columbia is the
bootleggers' paradise".
The Attorney -General of that province
—who is the official administrator of the
Government Liquor Control Act—said in
a recent speech: "The greatest bootleggers
of all are the brewers and export liquor
dealers".
Du; A. E. Cooke, of Vancouver, in The
Canadian Congregationalist, asserts: "The
Government controls neither the manu-
facture; importation, transportation, nor
exportation of liquor. ,The distillers and
brewers control all these, and the Govern-
ment simply acts as one of their sales
agents, controlling about so per cent. of
the *tail end of the trade. The whiskey
ring and the bootleggers control the rest."
Manitoba Sick oS "Control"
in Less Than a Year
Eleven months after Manitoba adopted
its government control system, an open-
minded investigator of conditions in that
province, sums up the situation in these
words:
"I leave Manitoba impressed with the
evidence that both wets and drys are dis-
satisfied with the government control sys-
tem—the wets because there: is no legal
sale of beer by the glass and because there
is some delay and trouble in getting hard
stuff, and the drys BECAUSE BOOT-
LEGGING AND DRUNKENNESS
HAVE GREATLY INCREASED."
The same neutral authority declares:
"There is no dispute in Winnipeg about
bootlegging. Everybody—dry, s, wets,
moderationists, police, government officials,
busiaaess men, professiohal Bien and round-
ers—tell the same
story. The unanimous
verdict during the
week of August 24th,
when I was in Winni-
peg, was that bootleg-
ging was being carried
on on i tremendous
-scale, that the city was
wide open, tlfat the
hotelmen had no re-
gard for the will of the people as expressed
in the disapproval of sale of liquor by the
glass, and that something had to be done."
tube* under
Government Sale
Eelises Open 3:; r Evil
Quebec, with its longer experience in
government sale, has drifted still further
back toward the evil days of the open bar.
In fact, the only difference between the
Quebec "tavern" and the old bar -room is
that customers sit down at tables to drink,
rather than stand up at a bar!
And while Quebec goes on spending
more money for booze than for educa-
tion (x$28,000,000 annually for liquor and
$26,000,000 for educational purposes),
crime is rampant. The Montreal Gazette
was recently constrained to declare: "Mont-
real is a perfect Mecca for evil -doers, with
vicious, immoral resorts and gambling
joints, the hiding -places of the alien and
other criminals from all corners of the
continent."
Ontario
Has Higher Mopes
Ontario citizens do NOT want THIS
province to become "a bottleggers' para-
dise". They do not want their government
to go into partnership with the distillers
and brewers, splitting the booze business
"fifty-fifty" with bootleggers—which is the
best any government has been able to do
under "government sale".
The responsible electors of t nta io
DO want the happier homes, women and
children, made possible by The Ontario
Temperance Act. They DO want to defeat
the liquor traffic's insidious effort to turn
back the clock. They DO want Ontario
to be spared the costly experience of such
bootleggers' paradises as British Columbia,
Manitoba and Quebec.
In this belief, and with the Government
pledged to "give active
and vigorous enforce-
ment" of The Ontario
-Temperance Act, the
Ontario Plebiscite
Committee asks, with
every confidence, that
Ontario citizens give
the Government an
unmistakeable mandate
on October 23rd.
For he H<a:nee of
:stark Tour Ea
zt y, 410:tOrr
va
?�t
fy
The a ?mel®
Id Ontario
of thus
Are you in favour bf the con•
1 tinuance of The Ontario Tem-
perance Act?
Are you in favour of the sale
63 as a beverage of beer and
spirituous liquor in sealed pack.
ages under Government control?
2 Toronto Street, Toronto
lebisdte Committee
G. B. Nicholson, Chairman
22