HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1934-08-30, Page 2°P°AGE TWO
HURON NEWS.
.:Leary Witt Nuptfals—
1-1 picturesone garden wedding
'tool: place .tt the hone of Mrs. John
Ralston, 47 l\-1.noro Tark Avenue, To-
ronto, when her sistee, !Elsie , eati,
youngest ,laughter of Mrs. Witt and
the late Mr. Richard 111, 'Witt, of
tWallac+.burg, t+'u married 'to How-
ard 3. Leary, of :Edmonton. Alta., sun
08. 31r. and lira. -John Leary of Stnffa.
The wedding music was played by
Mrs. >urlin„ The bride given Fn
marriage by her brother-in-law, 131r.
'ki. E. Taylor, f '\\aliacehurg, wore a
s -ow u l yellow chiffon,. with hat,
.shoes a, 1 gloves to match, and car-
eieel lintterlly roses turd orchids. She
was attended by ;Mks Maud Fisher of
\Vnllaceburg, who wore baby blue or-
ganza with white picture hat. Her
'botuluet was of :Ophelia rose, and
glue cornflowers, Mr. !Gordon \finely
.of London was groomsman. The hap-
py couple leis on a motor trip. the
:`tride travelling in a blue and white
crept ensemble with blue felt hat and
blue accessories. They visited the
gm -non -Os parents at:Staff: and left by
auto for tEdutonton,
va
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1934
712.
Orange PekoeT E A Fresh from
Blend the Gardens
'Christie, .Exeter. -•--The many friends
of Mr. Wm. Turnbull are pleased to
see hint able to 'be out again follow-
ing his recent illnett,—!illus Velma
Quail of Seaforth and !Miss :Minnie
Lee of Thorndale have been 'visiting
with their grandparents, lir, and
;NI re. ,Gen. 'Easterbrouk.--tMr, and
Mrs. Fred 'Dawson of Ushorne have
the sympathy of ehe community in
the loss of their little son Frederick
Glen, aged two years,
Lantern Destroys Barn—
The barn of William Shoebottom,
4ocatcd isn the I\Wingham and Bel -
grave roads was razed to the ground
when 'a lantern exploded. Mr, 'Shoe
ioottom bad hung the lantern in the
••,-n.stontary place ona nail, which ap-
parently 'had rusted through and al-
lowed the .lantern to fall to the 'Ibis.
'Phe barn mol contents are a total loss,
including practically all this year's
crop and a considerable amount of
,nachincry.
Regele-Higenell-
1'he marriage was quietly solem-
nized at the parsonage, First Luther-
an Church o. ',Logan, Wednesday af-
ternoon, ,,\ugusl 9L', by Rei,
Schutt, ,of Evelyn, youngest daughter
•,f \!r atl Mrs. Jacob ITigencl} of
I1.,,gan and George Regel', soil of
s.a+.l Mrs. Charles Regele of McKillop.
rte. bride was hec,o ting:y attired in
an ankle -length frock of sant beige
:retie trimmed with rhinestones. They
were attended by \!r. and Mrs.
tie rge •Siemon of Logan, Mrs. Siem -
,0;1 wearing a gown of green silk
-repo with white hat. After the cere-
otp ty the bridal party returned to the
'tome .,i 'the bride where a sumptuous es lot first two ut the comity.
Zurich Items.—
:Rev, and Mrs. 'Albert Datars of
1)esboro visiting his parents.—Mr.
IlidL tllrenner and Mrs, 'Roese of %Kit-
chener visited 31r. and Mrs. John
Brenner; --- Mr. and Mrs. Percy
Clarke and family of ;Windsor, with
her parrot Mr. and ' Mrs. Joseph
Uaschv.--t31 , Calvin Williamsvisit-
ing with his sietcr, Rev. and Mrs. R.
Weekly Crop Report MONDAY IS 'LABOR DAY
,Harvesting of fall waheat is neatinj ILabor ;Day this year fulls on Mon,
completion and threshing is well un- day September 31rd, and will be ob.:
der way. While yields are irregular, served as a public holiday.
sample is good Cutting of barley and FOOT BALL
oats is web advanced and threshin18.
has commenced, Grain is of good 1St. Columban defeated Walton 1�-4
quality. Corn is grooving well and in the football game at Seteforth on
promises an average crop. Roots, Saturday evening, The 'a'nte lacked
grass pastures and second growth al- the enthusiasm of the final schedule
(alfa have benefited by recent tains. contests but was evenly contested
Tree fruit yields Drill be considerably throughout, Hanley scored .the only
below average. Grapes continue to goal from close in on !Walton's. goal.
develop satisfaetarily. Rainfall has Several turner kicks were taken to
helped tobacco crops generally, but no adal1,
a severe hailstorm destroyed about
110 per cent o'.1 the crop iu the Delhi
area.
CHICK SEXING CLASSES I 'It is reasonable to assume, Jrom
ARE HELD AT EXETER,1 these facts, that when the complete
Istor • of this case is written it will be
iThe latest story in Chick Sexing found to implicate sten known in the
comes from Exeter where, for the' underworld of that city. And irrespec-
past week a school has been held at ti,'e of the statements given out by
the Hogarth Baby Chick +Hatchery I the 'family of the victim, it will be
instructing poultrytnett how to tell shotvtt that a .large ransom was paid
the cockerel chicks front the pullet for his release, The type of men who
chicks, The instructor of the school abduct a character like Labatt are
watt Prof. :R. M. (Forsyth, from the not easily frightened off without col -
1 tiversity of British Columbia, who lectin;; the small fortune that was
has made a study of. the subject and available to pay foe his release,
worked with the Japanese experts
t 1 I visitingBritish •h C 1
The 'Maintenance of Soil Fertility
1A more pennrauent agriculture for
OPPOSE GAS TAX
One Montreal :Motorists League is-
sues the following information in re •
-
•atd to the gas tax.
IAn increase ni 25 per cent in four
a years in doe average gasoline taxes.
Southwesternreitsol! Ontario will require paid by motorists in Canada is re -
than
as bte sop building program orded in figures of the Dominion
fhan has the
practised ort man) !B'u'reau of 'Statistics fur 119'313 just re-
leased,
in thedis•trtcC during the Past leased,
decade or tw+o. IIlane we become so It" 19310 to Is):3L, the average tax
interested' in cash crops in many ti's- ,fn ,Canada
was 5.414 cnets per gallon.
tricth that ice are overlooking ssonlc This year the average is 617I7 cents per
of the furtcba rtility in the nn e able gallon which equals approximately
ante 01 so81 £erhhty�?Shall we be
able g'
to maintain sail fertility and crop one quarter of the selling price of
yields under ,ntxny off our present syr_ popular grades in various sections of
td f 'farming? Is our whole pro- 'the Dominion,
l al ing a three Ye"' average from
gram on 'the average fill -Ill definite the Batrean's Last of'Ilcla} figures coy -
enough m rowenrent rather
1110 have been ri is o•- enougg to manic r I t
umbfa for the students, all of whom * * * * * * * * * • * than decline 2 These question; de- eying the total setting value of new
learned the past two seasons. 'there ^NEWS AND INFORMATION * serve the serious consideration of the `cars produced in Canada, at the works
FOR THE BUSY FARMER * f•or the period 1193'0-312, the last avail -
old.
1i the sex
chick, at of de- K Furnished by Ontario Depart- * matt who is thinking of the future as
terutining the sex of chicks a day . menti of Agriculture,) * well as of the present possibilities of able, the average per annum. totals
old. '.Pests of accuracy were run and
* * * * At * * * * * $6ib,097,1311 In the sane three-year
most of those taking part showed
their work to ,he from 811 to 95 per
cent. accurate, This i. especially Orchard Mulches
'\Wihtesi,ies in Addison, Ont, --,Mr,
:good when .our consider, the chart \\•here the grass is cut in the spaces
and Mrs. Gideon Koehler, Mr. and period that the students had had op- between the tree; of the orchard and
\lisp W. I. Johnston and Path spent portuuity for instruction. In fact, used for a mulch, it should be ap-
the result; were so encouraging that ;died while still green. When dry hay
Prof, Forsyth has been asked to boll is used, it will not begin- to decoru-
clae,e, in various parts of the pro -pose until soaked by rain, In the
ting• to give more hate het•rmen and Meantime, it constitutes a serious fire
pctuftry mett an ,opportunity to learn hazard and the beneath'. action o'f the
chick sexing, lie is also iemonstrat• mulch is delayed. As a general rule,
Mg prohably at Woodstock on Sept. where grass is used as a mulch, it
4, :\ny�tne to:ere.,tc.l in attending should be applied before Judy 1, of
the wnt'k-Old in i)etrait.
Beer License For Goderich—
;Beer was ,cried legally in a hotel
in t;oderich on .\tigust '24th for tite
firs; time in CO years when the il-lotel
Medford pipetted the door's of 11 bever-
age
under-
his farm.
°e e certainly have access to better
seed today than was available thirty
years ago. However, good seed alone
will not insure continued good yield's.
The humus in the soil and soil fertil-
ity must be maintained as well. These
facts are borne out in the various. ro-
tation studies o'f the Dominion Ex-
perimental Station, Il3Farrow, Ontario,
'While nothing has been found that
will quite 'take the ,place of barnyard
manure in a sail building' program.
his
period motorissts--ten per cent of the
populationhave pald out annually an
average of $44;!44_210;7W7 in gas taxes
and licenses or the equivalent of 70
per cent of the former future every
year.
IAA the sante time, ttltile the gasol-
ine tax has increased by 25 per cent,
the selling value of cars at the works
has dropped down from $911',776;SO6 in
111930 to $36,136);1796 and gasoline con -
million gallons in 11129 to 4164,3123,000
the available supply is entirely made- gallons in 119,34,
quote to meet the demands of our
!Study of the 'Bureau's figures show
trntha toe -authority"
It i1 r
of these school, tt•nrd it,, well after tite terminal buil. have been a trend to decline in the cott'sumption
,used that the ":rnthot•itc" for thel tolls •in .most sections •of Souttocs'tern
sale had been rccc • x`51!) Gie»lake .\1ennu, Torun to., liter, It r also desirable that the early
from Comnii sitmcr Odette Ga1et•-I
alb" it was understood that the voice slimmer application be comparatively
or the people wotili be consulted to a •1'he ludn'rPpet• -of Joint S. Labtt _rase being sufficient, so that it will
vote before. the. contmi,.i„n ;route. are familiar characters in the under !,e decomposed by the middle of Au-
lt beer license in the 1„tin. .\nothe, world 01 London, Ont., sat •t former
gust, in order to permit the trees to
license has hexa granted in :(• "rid' !,American police officiai, This abduc- mature and ripen the new wood. The
oiceh with the Godericb license, idly- nett was staged by either a sang with moat satisfactory tints to apply the
e ' a ;''cal conneetio,t •hv one of the mulch is i:1 the late fall, or early win -
pow ermul mobs that used London as
iced dorm e rat
ct in i ;rte h with I'roi. 'Fp,rsi 11 omitted an the new hood in late sun-
g Ontario. Where an adequate amount
THE LABATT CASE light. two tar three inches of green
wedding- breakfast win served, Later
\1n, and Mrs, Regele left .at a motor
trip to Kitchener. Ehtra, Conlon tufa
Niagara Falls and inion their return
:hey will reside in Logan 'l'ownship.
Give Away Gasoline at Exeter—
There was such a merry •aro}int
iter on at Exeter at the week. cur
hat pricy, a t only dripped iron
» tents per gallon Inn went lows
to nothing ar,l theft dealers cottl-
MacCrae-Hogg—
nprueedyne, 'Southampton, sunt- t
net. home of :ire lett .1 E. llogg, '
Siratlirny, was the scene of a
.retty wedding wltett -lean Lorraine
Li,gr, his eldest daughter, was mar-
ried to Duncan .\. \lct.'rsec, ILA., soot
f \Ir, and \Irs, Johu \lttoRae of
1. An. in. The ceremony was per-
,orrnerl iy tite father of the bride in
.1 ettitng of smuttier ltn•eiiness, creat-
--d 17' evergreen boughs tool garden
sees. The bride, wearing a grace-
.wn of white organdy with riot
itite mohair anal organdy and ear-
n.; a bouquet of blue delphiniums,
larkspur ani clarkia, was given
:t.r,rriage by iter uncle, Mr, Newton
•:lie, of 'Toronto, Little Mary 'V\'il-
•tg1by Wylie in a dainty 'French
e-- .if pink ba-tlste, scattered rose
}oats iu the pant of the bride, Miss
Ethel I!,•.o sister si the bride. was
nrulestnaid.^Tile groom was attended
by his brother, \1r. Jamieson' \lac -
Rae, ‘After the ceremony a reception
w"as held at the summer honor of :\1.r.
and Mrs, Neo ton Wylie. Later the
"ride and ;norm left :or a boat trip
ot the head of the Great Lakes, the
brine dressed in a becoming ensemble
xn sh:ulr, .,f brown. After their h•tttcr-
ninon, lir. and Mrs, 1!aeiRae willlive
in .letup where the groom I, prin-
:Opal of the eontintt:tion school.
'-;'nests were present from Chicago,
Clinton, Lnrknow•, Siaisrtlt, !'ort
Dover, Lonelon, 'Toronto, and the
:States.
Death of Mrs, R. A. Roberton—
111 is with regret that we report the
Teeth of !Ann Jane 'Densmore, wife of
.Robert r\, •Roberton, which took place
art week. \Ira, Roberton suffered an
to tack tr1 ptomaine poisoning about a
year ago, from which she never fully
recovered and in the spring of this
year contracted a very severe cold
vs'itich weakened her system. \Irs,
'Roberton received hrr diploma as a
nurse from the New York Training
!School 'for .Nurses and followed her
profession for a number of years.
Born ih East I°,Vawanoslt on 1Decenth-
er moil, 1971, a daughter of the date
Wm. Plc»ry 'Densmore and his wife,
Catherine, Williams, she was married
to her noir bereft bitsbtiud an Oct.
511,, 1119113, and lived .for a number of
rears on the Baylfrelrl Road, near
'Clinton, !Besides her htiebanl she is
survived by one sister \hiss Phoebe
'Densmore.
Exeter Items
--
Mr. ',fame • ,\V. Booty has, purchas•
-id the coal business of Mrs. E. J,
ter. when the material can be tramped
a base for liquor smuggling during into the sn.nv. It this I, done, it hilt
tite years of prohibition„ In any: event not be moved by winds an,' will be
whoever kidnapped this man was very found lysing compact atnl close •10 the
familiar with the .tu•tll town of Lon- gront•i•iu tee edi„,r tin:: spring,
don and its principal citizens, Furthermore. with tite material in
Rarely has there been a kidnapping this condition, decomposition will 1, -
neneed ;;icing away b•,i11ts1 wit; initiated by persons n' 11 could truly
mounts of incl carried off withutt ua{ic begin with the apricot of warm certainly result in a mope permanent
he cl is .d t. "o t of owners.” 1'er-
pay. Just what ,tarter! the war and hit,. weather, a eve „loci, a oiling wi!1 and prarfitahie agriculture.
I litre lived in some other r'ly but rareh•, is ever', get dry enough to
what 11 was all :11wut nobody recuts invariably they have spent a great burn.
to know dciinitely. .\ dealer ann.autc- .1 al .if tine in the city in which the
ed that wh soc•rer wanted gasoline victim resided, Some Poultry Parasites
could have it for nothing, am all the Claude Boetcher ease in Easily Controlled
folk loaded up their cars. Not to 1,. Denver the abductor was Verne San- At titi, season red mite; and body
outdone another dealer came to the icry, ohs with hi', gang had spent a
lice frequently cause serious loss in
free gasoline level and placed in , great many monts in and around
htctisn, deaths may follow' a bad
supply of cigars; every ouyrr" ra I that city, dividing thele' t1itte betweeniprncnfestation among both the young and
free itiel being rived a smoke to cheer. Denver and St. Patel. the old stork. ;uttl considerable time
him on his way. dlaskel ,Bubo of St. Taut was kid- and care may be required to bring tite
Late Rev, J. E. Ford— rapped by the sante outfit. whs were flock back into condition after the
del ,vel by a wide circle of ;deeds
in all classes of people, !Rev. James
Edmund ,Ford passed away at his
!tont, iu Gortcrich on :Sunday after -
mem in his 85th year. The late \!r
drord was born (Jct. !h, 1049, near
P1t•h'rburough, his parents having
come from !Wiltshire,England, On
June 38. 1179, he was ordained into
the ministry at London. Rev. David
Rogers of St, Thomas is the only
survivor of that class, •After 'his ord-
ination his lirot charge was at .Point
Edward. Later he served at Thorn-
dale, .Siloam, neat 1'xliridge, 'Lam-
beth, 'Westminster, Wyoming, Lttcan,
Parkhill, Forest, Essex. Lucknow,
Minta) and 'Victoria St, Church,
t oderich, In 1117117 the late \fro Fiord
was superannuated and had }iced re-
tired in 'GoIericit ever since. Dttring
Iii, active ministry of - thirty-eight
rear, he ryas chairman of a number
cd districts and in. 1912 was president
f gasoline almost siouult•
rneous'�
n manure is not ptntdt ce<i on the with the increase in the taxation of
t this product which, originally, was
farm, either more livestock should be imposed to ,pay for highways but
kept or green manure should be pro -
which, in the soil by the use of such
which, now, in most provinces, is be-
dined
craps as sweet clover, rye, and ing absorbed into revenues to be used
sa "brans, Alter all, a green manure. for general purposes,
y lt\larmed at the persistent increase
crop is the cheapest method of adding'
humus to the soil. Alfalfa, as well, in the: taxutiun, motor executives
should play a much more important,
throughout Canada are indicating to
pant in our soil building pogran• It their respective governments that
sonic aileyiatio❑ trill inevitably lead t,
is the cheapest and ,most productitc ;lie moFe 0 telisiye nsc of automobiles
hay crop we have and, in addttiai:,l and that this will se -act to the benefit
should be utilized for pastures much
more than it is at present. t\ morel it provincial treasuries,
definite snit -building program, coupl-I
err with good aril management, wdll CONTROL OF CUCUMBER SCAB
{During certain' sea -sous eu t1i tbe-
scab serves as an important litniti”
factor ill the trodtsctiou of ettctuuhc -
1
in Laster Canada. This disease is
caused by a fungus which attacks the
steins, leaves and fruit, \ITected
!caves and stents develop light green
water-sotnked spots which eventually
take on a brownish nish yellow color, In
severe cases extensive portions of the
steins and leaves may become affect-
ed. Early shapes on the fruit appear
as small gray ;lightly sunken areas.
The canker thus formed becomes
darker with age and more depressed
until a pronounced cavity is ,formed.
This cavity is lined with a dark :green
velvety layer composed of a mass of
the fungus. Front title green layer
arise spores which are capable of re-
producing the disease when brought
in contact with healthy plants. The
disease is spread largely by wind and
rails. Sometimes 'drops of a watery
substance arise from the cankers. us-
ually range front owe -sixteenth to one-
eighth of an inch in diameter and may
in severe Cases involve the greater
part of the surface of the fruit. The
disease develops more readily when
warm, Ituntid conditions obtain,
temperature of 717 degrees Fahrenheit
being most satisfactory for the
growth of the fungus. Experiments
'conducted at t'he'Dominion Field La-
boratory of Plant Pathology at Fred-
ericton, icton, NIB, show that en'cum'ber •
scab can he checked by thoroughly
spraying with Bordeaux mixture.
composed of 3 pounds of copper sul-
phate, 6 pounds of hydrated lime and
•40 gallons of water. All surfaces of
the stents, leaves and fruit .should be
thoroughly covered with the fungi-
cide in order to ensure the highest de-
gree Of protection. The spraying
should begin before the disease ap-
pears and repeated at intervals of ,3 or
4 days until the end of the season. A
sprayer capable at delivering a fine
spray at high' pressure .is reltontmend-
mend-
ed far applying the Bordeaux mixture.
-,Owing to the •faet that diseased vines
'vines and fruit may serve as egettcies
:for carrying the disease during the
!whiter months, such refuse should- be
removed 'from the field and buriped
or buried deeply' in the soil. Further
information on this subject can he
h'acl front the nearest Dominion Plant
Pathological Labaratery,
equally familiar with that city. trouble has been located.
The ntoh that virticipatrd in the
Carelessness or unsanitary condi-
August Luer rase in .\ltou, i11,, all
:red nearby, tines are usually responsible for the
John J. O'Connell of 'Albany. N.Y,,
was talon from liis home by a gang
thought tu. be made up of local men,
and one of tate mob. \lannie Strew!,
convicted of the cringe, was long a
resident of Albany. •
do the Peggy \!e\lath case the
kidnapper, Kenneth 'Bock, was a agaa
who had spent his entire life in r-lar-
wichpor Mass., the town from which
the little girl was abducted,
lltin ifearpis, _\rthur •'Doc" liar- in'q ordinary precautions the flock
kir and his brother, 'Fred rai-kers may he kept free and clean. The usual
arc wanted by American police lir practice at the Experimental 'Station
at Harrow is to apply Blue Ointment,
the kin typing of L, axil G. Bremer.
St. I'tutl banker, and all lit this broth which can be obtained at any drug
are known to be of the 5t, Paul un-' store, :-1 purlins of .blue ointment
derworld.
presence of these pests. They thrive
,in dirty hens and ntulliply rapidly in
filth if -Ft is allowed to accumulate in
corners or cracks and crevices of the
henhouse.
i'Lice live entirely: on .the body of the
bird and irritate by crawling and bit-
ing, '.their eggs are laid at the e
of. the feather, usually around tete
vent or under the wing. :Fortunately,
they are easily controlled and be us -
item the size of a }tea 1s smeared he-
l"harle; C-rschet, the Oklahoma) tweet] the thuimh 'and first and second
City oil magnate, was known' ''tiger' and rubbed in around the vent
tltruuc;hout the 'Southwest oil bele land at the base of the wing close to
of the London Conference. Mrs. Ilford and the men who -snatched" him the body. One thorough application
predeceased him in tus3
t , Surviving made this their chosen field of when the bird are being placed in
are his children, •'Arthur R. Ford, crime. their winter quarters is usually :torn -
I cient to keep them clean for the year
managing editor of the Tree Press, !Georgie "Machine *Gun" Kelley,
\!bent Bates and [Harvey
Bailey knew-� However the birds should be cxamin-
T,oudon; \Ir;, R. D, P. UaticLun'1 ed at intervals because a teil,fatation
Meiteeille; lir,• J. H. liobertson, Go- every inch of this section And hefone
tatcin, l'rscltd they had ,planned t0' itlay occur daring hat weather.
d'etdeh, and \Irs. teReul \V„1. Scutt,
l leshertou, The funeral was held on`kiduap Guy \'Waggoner, Fort 'WorthThe red writes do not stay on the
banker. Qn every one of these in -
liars constantly. As a rude they
spend the clay in some crack or cre-
ei'ce or on the underside of the roosts,
preying• on the birds at night by ,pier -
cine the skin and gorging theinxselves
with blood. The control is cnm,nar-
atirelt simple. A solation of 1 to 3
crude carbolic and kerosene or one of
London, Ont., for litany of the pro -
selected' the good coal tar preparations usually
were ,Satutrday, July 27th, 1libitionaired as a di 01n'ieetant »lay he applied
registration day; Sunday, 'July 28th, year, was the centre 'of thei with a brush to the dropping hoards.
divine services, and .Monday and 'Canadian end of ale smuggling luxe I
Tuesday, with possibly Wednesdaythe United 'States. '.l'hi'ee or four frmsts and nests after they have been
3, t 3 thoroughly scraped and cleaned. in
as (Nye of celebration, the program smuggling ring doing business on
o be. rvnrked out tai It was ex -
this
a million dollar basis used the case of a had infestation, when the
t er c mites Nave migrated to all arts of
plainer( that these dates had been set this city as the loading base for their p`
niter visiting severalplaces where re-
operations. 'Every .opportunity, there- the house, 'a thorough cleaning and
unions lead been field ani}' seeming 'fore, was presented to such men to s.pra'3•ing with one of these agents
their advice. It 16 said to be one of know Labatt and his financial stated_ wild: be necessary and should be re-
ins; and to moire him as a good pros- sleeted after an interval Of two •or
largest u undertakings ever attempted
1n Exeter,
pect for kidnappin g, three days,
\\'edncstlay,
stances and in most of the so-called
Plan To Have Re -union at Exeter , ttlittnr abduction cases the victim has
Next Year— I been an outstanding, member of Itis
con,nttnity, known to nearly every
L:nst week an organization teas. set
no and the dales set fair the holding one telt, h 1< snot some time in the
of an old boys' and an old -girls' ire- city, but rarely known to people out -
union in -'Exeter in 1935, The dates side their }house tow•os,
NEW SCHOOL REGISTERS
1loti. Dr, T. J. (Simpson, \linistet
of 1 location, has announced that a
new issue of seboul registers has been
made for use in -the -1Public and Sep-
arate 'Schools of Ontario. The new re-
gisters. embody the modern principles
.1 school- bookkeeping and are re-
garded as both effective and eco-
nomic. T-wo types are Planned: :\
daily register, which will he uniiorni
in all class -rooms and confuted to
daily reports or school attendance,
ouch a I10 -year -general register in
which the school'; reports of perma-
nent worth will be completely sum-
marized.
'In its. announcement, the Depart-
ment of Elocution noted that the re-
cords have been brought in line with
world movements towards efficiency.
"The League of 'Nations," says the
.announcement, "looking to a broad
basis of education. as a real „,round
of national efficiency and internation-
al amity, is searching out radical
causes of illiteracy beyond the con-
trol of the child and school..
1934 FALL FAIR DATES
Tavistock • 1Se'pt 7 -8th
\iilverfo•n Sept. 113 -114th
New Hamburg . ,., , Sept, 14;115th
Exeter- Sept. 17 -118th
Goderich ,,,,• .c, -, , .. Sept. 118a11th
Stratford . ,,. ,,, , Sept, 1I7 -4119th
Strathroy ., ,.. Sept. 113 -119th
Listowel ,.,. Sept. 119 -20th
Ailsa Craig .....,,. Sept. 20'm lest
Teeswater . , , . ,.. Oct. 2 -3rd
St. Marys Oct: 9-11Omth
SEAFORTH Sept. 20 -21st
Atwood .,,..l.,.,,, Sept, 2111.22u1;d
,Zurich Sept, 24 -15th
Baxtssels , ,,, s, . , , , Sept. 274284h
Inicktlow ... n. Sept. 27438th
Palmerston Sept. 28 -129th
Kirkton Oct. 2 -3rd
lily'th , Sept, 25 26th
Mitchell , Sept. 215 -?6th
Bayfield n....,.,., Sept. 26 -24th•
'For Burns and .Scalds.—+Dr. Thom-
as' Ecleetric.O•il will take the fire Out
of a burn o'r scald. It should be at
hand in every kitchen so that it may
be available •tt any time. There is no
preparation required. Jost apply the
oil bo the horn or scald and the pale
will abate and in a short time cease
altogether.,
Douglas' Egyptian Liniment reliev-
es toobliaclte and neuralgia. I'nvalit
able in cases ,of croup, sore throat and
quinsy. Keep a bottle handy,