The Huron Expositor, 1933-09-29, Page 26BURC
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CORN SYRUP
pure, wholesome,
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THE CANADA STARCH CO. LIMITED. MONTREAL
,
i1
II:
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich,. Ont.)
iGzeat God of wondersVall Thy ways
Are worthy of `Fhyse1f--divine;
But the bright glories of Thy grace
Beyond Thine other wonders shine;
Wisp is a pardoning God like Thee?
Qr who has grace so rich and free?
,Samuel Davies.
PEAYER
May we learn, our Father, that
Thy plans are full 4f goodness and
mercy to the children of men. Help
us to acknowledge Thee in all our
ways and lean not upon our own un•
derstanding and to Thee we w:11 give
the glory. Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR OCTOBER 1st
Lesson Topic—Saul in Tarsus.
Lesson Passage—Acts 21:39.; 22:3,
27, 18; 26:4-7; Philippians 3:3-6..
Golden Text -2 Timothy 2:15.
This quarter's 'lessons deal with the
life of Paul and the aim is, by such a
.study, to discover how Christ may
dwell in our hearts by faith, to learn
of the spread of the gospel by anis-
sionary work in the first century-, and
to gain a world view of the task of
the Christian Church in the twentieth
century.
!From reading Farrar's Life of St.
Paul we learn that '=besides a few
scattered remnants of ecclesiastical
tradition, we have but two sources
whence to derive. his history — the
Acts of the Apostles and the Epistles
of Paul himself."
Though we cannot 'etate with per-
fect accuracy the date .of the birth
of the great Apostle of the Gentiles,
it is inferred to have been in the
same decade as that of our Lord
Himself. But •all the circumstances
which surrounded the cradle,anci in-
fancy of the infant Saul were widely
different from those amid which his
Lord had grown to boyhood. It was
in ;an obscure and lonely' village of
tine, and surroundings almost
xclusively Judaic, that Jesus "grew
in wisdom arid stature and favor with
God and marc"; but Saul passed his
earliest years in the famous capital
of a Roman provipce, and grew up
conversant with 'the language and
customs of the Pagan world. in the
verse chosen for to -day's study St.
Paul asserts that he was "born in
,Tarsus," Tradition tells that his
parents or grandparents had, from
eolnre cause or other, been compelled
to remove to the capital of Pagan
Cilicia. If this be the case, it helps
us to understand St. •Paul's claim, in
which he gloried, that he was "a
Hebrew of the Hebrews," even
, though -Greek was his native tongue.
It 'was his birth at Tarsus which
determined the trade in which, dur-
ing so many days and nights of toil
and self denial, the Apostle earned
his daily 'hread. The staple manu-
facture of the, city res the weaying,
first into ropes. then into tent -cov-
ers and •garments, of the hair which
was supplied in boundless quantities
by the gua.c flocks of the country -side.
It must not, however, he inferred
from his occupation, that the family
of St. Paul were people of low posi-
tion. The learning of a trade was a
duty enjoined by the Rolrbies on the
parents of every Jewish boy. The
wisdom of the rule h:came apparent
in the case Of Paul. as dou.htless of
!hundreds of other, when the Chang=
es and chanc•rs of life compelled him
to earn his own livelihood by manual
labor., It is clear, from the educa-
tion'provided for Paul by his parents
("taught according to the perfect
manner of the law of the fathers hy-
Gama.lieb•') that they could little have;
conjectured how absolutely their son
would he reduced too depend on •a toil
so miserable and so tnremuneratt"vc'.
But though we see how much he felt
the burden of the wretched labor by
which he determined to earn his own
Bread rather than trespass on the
charity of his converts, yet it n d
one advantage in 'being so al:solute-
ly mechanical as to leave the
thoughts entirely free. While he
plaited the black, strong -seemed
goat's hair, he might be soa •:ng in
thought on the loftiest themes which
can engage the mind of, onan. We
further learn from Paul's own asser-
,
Flavor that can't
be copied
"When .you are offered a
substitute for genuine
Kellogg's, remember it is
seldom in the spirit of
service." Made by Kellogg
!A./Won, Oitltario.
A
a..
tion that his family claimed the dis-
tinction of Montan citizenship. This
claim on the occasion referred to in
chapter 32 was made use of by Paul
to gain an opportunity of declaring
himself a follower of the Nazarene
whose disciples he had once perse-
cuted to the death. Nevertheless his
family had not, through residence in
a foreign city, become denationaliz-
ed. St. Paul was then, to the 'very.
heart a Jew—a Jew in culture, a
Jew in ss-mvathy, a Jew in nation-
ality, a Jew in faith. He puts it
thus in his epistle to the Philippians.
We further learn from Paul's own
assertion that his family claimed the
distinction of Roman citizenship.
This claim on the occasion referred
to in chapter 22 was made use of by
Paul to gain an opportunitS' of de-
claring himself a follower of the
Nazarene whose disciples he had once
peirseeuted'to the death. Nevertheless
his family- had not. through residence
in a foreign city, become denational-
ized. St. Paul was then. to the very
heart a Jew—a. Jew in culture, a Jew
in sympathy, a Jew in nationality, a
Jew in faith. He puts it thus'in his
epistle to the Philippians; "Of the
stock of Israel, of the tribe of Ben-
jamin, a Hebrew of the Hebrews; as
touching the law a Pharisee; con-
cerning zeal, persecuting the church;
touching the righteousness which is
in the law, blameless. But what
things were gain to me, those I
counted loss for Christ." For no
earthly possession. would he' have
.bartered his connection 'with the
chosen race, yet in his own words he
declared that he could wish hiniself
accursed from Christ for his breth-
ren. his kinsmen, according to the
flesh.
THE MISSIONARY AND THE
BIBLE
By the Rev. Edward Shillito, M.A.
"I' read the whole Bible through
four times whilst I was in Many--
uema." So Livingstone' wrote in his
last journals, he was lonely and sor-
rowful in his hut, but the `ford
which had shed light upon his way
did not jail him at the end. Living-
stone reading the Bible in Many-euma
is representative of all 'missionaries.
!To write of The Missionary and the
Bible is difficult, riot because of the
scarcity., but because • of the abun-
dance of material. It is impossible
to study the life of any missionary
without discovering what the Bible
meant to him.
Ilt would be an interesting study
to find it was in the Bible. which first
arrested the'minds and captured the
'hearts of particular missionaries. As
i we might expect, there is a great va-
riety , in 'their experiences. Moffat,
"living alone in a lodge. in an ex-
tensive garden," used his leisure in
poring over the Epistle to the Rom-
ans. One evening the familiar words
! appeared different. "The Book of
!God, the precious, undoing Bible,
'seemed to be laid open." The man
l who was to become an Apostle o•f
Christ in Africa was • awakened.
Henry Martyn was "broughf , to a
sense of things gradually;" he had
worked through the Acts and th_'
Epistles, and afterwards turned to
the words of the Saviour, which he
devoured with delight. Robert Mor-
rison owed much to his readings of
Isaiah and the Epistle to the Philip-
pians; "I" was charmed," he said.
"with the mercy, the benevolence, and
the purity- which breathe throughout
that letter. •' I embraced the religion
of the blessed Jesus, with an interest
that seemed quite new, notwithstand-
ing my previous education:" Far
away in Macao he lectured on his let-
ter twenty years afterwards with un-
diminished interest.
But when he is in the midst of his
•work, the missionary is by the very
character of his service a close stud-
' silt of the Bible. He has to trans-
late it into a foreign? tongue; that
means an unceasing attempt to r v-
enter into the heart of the Bank; s
translator cannot evade a difficulty
or be content with a vague render-
ing; he must get within the mind of
the writr. r•. If a minister in his pre-
parations for Sunday had not only to
read carefully through the chosen
passages, but to„translate then! into
a language with widely different
idioms and images, he would inevit-
ably become versed and learned in
the 'Scriptures. Mori'isin gave his
life to the translation of the Bible
into Chinese. In 1834 he wrote, "By
the Chinese Bible, when dead I shall
yet speak.” Sometimeir he found the'
work dry, hut no one can read his
story without seeing how that hard
tack. made the Bible more and more
his 'hiding -place and his sanctuary
and his power -house. Sometimes the
conditions lead to the discovery that
certain ,hooks have peculiar value to
the tribe to which the missionary has
come. Coillard, who was a French-
men with a natural gift for fables
and proverbs, fatee.n.s1 the Basuto pen-
'ple eager to accept the translation
of the Book of Proverbs. There was
an affinity between the Basutp and
the wise men of hsrael. But in al-
most every missionary biography
there are illustrations, not only of
the gift which the missionary gave
in his translations, but of the gain
which he himself received as a stud-
ent of Scripture.—(The Bible in the
World).
The coastal regions of British Co-
lumbia have a climate so mild and so
different from other parts of Canada
that roses, which are not hardy else-
where, do well there without 'winter
proteotki 1.
Cat
• TEXE HURON EXPOSITOR �.
Exeter Fall Fair
(Continued from' last week.)
Horticultural Products.
Apples—(Six varieties of winter
apples, Earl McDonald, F. Triebner;
4 varieties of fall apples, E. Mac-
Donald; any variety apples,
E. Idle:Donald, F. Triebner; Rhode
Island Greenings, Earl MacDonald,
Cecil Rowe; Northern Spies, Mrs.
Clayton Sims, Frank Triebner; Rox-
boro Russets, Earl `4u•denore, Mrs. H.
Desjardine; Golden russets, Jacob
Battler, F. Triebner• S'pitabutgs, E.
MacDonald, E. J. W'illert; Baldwins,
Earl Cudmore, F. Trielbner; Snow
apples, F. Triebner, J. Battler; Col-
verts, E. MacPon.ald, H. Truemner;
Fall Pippins, E. MacDonald, ,E. Cud -
more; King of Tompkins, E. MacDon-
ald, Jacob Battler; Alexanders,' Mrs.
W. Smith, Clifford Heywood; Cana-
dian Red, E. MacDonald, Mrs. H.
Desjardine; Wagners, Earl Cudmore,
F. Trieibner•;• 'Maiden's Blush, E.
MacDonald, F. Brock & Son; Ben
Davis, Mrs. H. Desjardine, •E. Mac-
Donald; Ontario, E. :MieDonald,
Jacob Battler; Wealthy, E. McDon-
ald, F. Triebner; Duchess of Olden-
burg, Mrs. Clayton Sims; Blenheim
Pippins, E. MacDonald; Talman
Sweet, F. Ellerington, E. MacDonald;
St. Lawrence, E. I'-Macbonalu,
Triebner; North End Special, Eitel
Cudmore.
Pears—,Duchess of Anjouline, E.
Cudmore; Clapp's 'Favourite, J. Bat-
tler, E. Cudmore; Beurs •Clairgeau,
E. MacDonald; Fall Lucrative, Fred
Brock;, Sheldon, E. 'MacDonald; East
Beurre, Fred Brock, .Earl MacDonald;
Bureau Anjou, J. Battler, E. Mac-
Donald; Bartlett, Mrs. M. Young,
Earl. Cudmore.
Plelmis—(Golden Drop, HI. Truenn-
ner, E. J. Willard; Imperial Gage,
Fred Brock; any variety plum's. H.
Truemner, F. Triebner; Pond's Seed-
ling, H,• Truemner.
Grapes --)-Moore's Early, J. Bat-,
tier; Niagara, C. Heywood. J. Bat-
tler; Concord. J. Battler, C. Heywood;
any' other variety, Mrs.• G. MacLean.
Peaches—Early Crawford, C. Hey-
wood.•
°
Jud•ge—J. Grieve.
Domestic.
Honey, extracted, 'Mee, E. Darling,
Mrs. E. R. Pym; maple syrup, Mrs:
J. Selves, Mrs. Stone; hoine made
bread, white, Melvin Smith, Mrs. W.
H. Dearing; homemade bread, brown,
Mrs. L. Reynolds. 'Mrs.' W. H. Dear-
ing; home made rolls, 'Mrs. NV. H.•
Dearing, F. Brock & Son; nut bread,
:Vers. M. Young; tea biscuits, • Mrs.
W. H. Dearing, Mrs. E. Darling;
tarts, maple, Mrs. 0. Cunningham,
F. Brock & 'Son; cookies for after-
noon tea, Mrs. 0. 'Cunningham, J.
Battler; angel cake, Mrs. W. H.
Dearing, 'Mrs. 0. Cunningham; light
cake. Mrs. B. Desjardine. Melvin
Smith; dark cake, Mrs. W. Smith.
Mrs. L. 'Reynolds; apple pie, Mrs.
Clayton Simms. Alex. Smith; pump-
kin pie, F. Triebner, Mrs. 0. Cun-
ningham; •lemon pie, Mrs, George
Jaques, Mrs. 0. Cunningham; red
currant jelly. apple. jelly and berry
„jelly. Mrs. H. Desjardine, Mrs. W.
H. Dearing; 3 varieties sour pickles:
Mrs. 0.• Cunningham, Mrs. E. R.
Pym; 3 varieties. sweet pickles, Mrs.
0, Cunningham; catsup, H. Desjar-
dine, J. Battler; canned cherries,
raspberries and strawberries. Mrs. W.
H. Dearing, Mrs. 0. Cunningham ;
canned pears, ,plwnt's and peaches,
Mrs." SV'. H. Dearing, Mrs. 0. Cun-
ningham; canned apples and• grapes,
Mrs. W. H. Dearin,g, Mrs. 0. Cun-
ningham; canned corn, peas and
tomatoes, Mrs. Cdnningham, ,Mrs.
W. H. Dearing; two varieties vege-
table marmalade, Mrs. W. H. Dear-
ing; canned chicken, Mrs. 0. Cun-
ningham, Mrs. W. '.H. Deering;
lunch for two. Mrs. 0. Cunningham;
cured ham, Mrs. H. A. Fuss, Mrs.
C. Sims; assortment of cured meats,
H. A. Fuss; meat loaf, Mrs. George
Jaques, Mrs. 0. Cunningham,
.Judge --+Mrs, William Consitt,
Special Prizes.
!Harvey Bros., for best leaf of
white bread, Melvin Smith; for best
loaf thrown bread, Mrs. W. H, Dear
ing; Micidleton's Bakery, home-made
rolls and tea 'hiscuts, Mrs, W. H.
Dearing; •Miss V. Essery; .best plata
or cookies, Mrs. 0. Cunningham; B.
Smith, Springhurst Dairy-, best apple
pie, Mrs. C. Sines.
Dairy Products.
Five tbs. butter, .J. Battler, Mrs.
L. Reynolds; 10 lbs. Butter, Cecil
Rowe, Roland Geiger; pound eel's or
prints, H. A..,Furr, Cecil Rowe; most
neatly arranged plate of butter for'
table use, H. Desjardine, Mrs. Clay-
ton Sins.
.Judge --.James Francis.
Vegetables.
American I onder potatoes, Milne
Rader, Mrs. H. Desjardine; Beauty
cif Hebron •potato<•s. .Jacob Battler;
Red I•;lephant potatoes, Jacob Battler,
Carmen No, 1, Mrs. H. Desjardine,
M, Rader; Rural New Yorkers, E. J.
Willard; Irish ('elihlers, Fred Brock,
W. R. Doaaell; Green Mountain, M.
Rader, Mrs. H. Desjardine; Early
Rose, Jacob Battler, Roland Geiger;
any other variety potatoes, J. Sutton,
W. R. Dougall; three varieties, H.
r)esjarclir•re, Wm. Northcott; blood
sheets, Clifford Heywood, Warren
Sanders; Globe beets, J. Sutton,. W.
Sanders; sugar beets, F. Ellerington,
'Cecil Rowe; sugar beet r angolds,
eteifittlest
tka
ACID STOMACH
IS DANGEROUS
Sufferers from Iidigeation
CUT THIS OUT
"Stomach trouble, dyspepsia, Indi=
gestion, sourness, gas, heartburn.
food fermentation, etc., are caused
nine times In ten by chronic acid
stomach," says a well known
authority.
Burning, hydrochloric acid de-
velops in the stomach at an alarm-
ing rate, The acid irritates and in- •
flames the delicate stomach lining
and often leads to gastritis or atom,
ach ulcers. Don't dose an acid atom=
ach with pepsin or artificial diges-
tants that only give temporary relief
from pain 13y driving the sour, fer-
mentit)g food out of the stomach into
the Intestines.
Instead, neutralize or sweeten
your acid stomach after meals with
a little Bisurated Magnesia and not
only will the pain vanish\ but your
meals will digest naturally. There
Is nothing better than Bisurated
,Magnesia, to sweeten and settle an
acid stomxph. Your stomach acts
and feels fine in just a few minutes.
Bisurated Magnesia can be obtained
from any reliable druggist. It is
safe, reliable, easy' and pleasant to
use. is not a laxative and is not at
all expensive.
W. R. Dugall, E. J. Willard; long
mangoldi il+fRolana, Geiger, E. J. Wil-
lard; ' glo'be marigolds, W. H. Dear-
ing, H. Truemner, C. Heywood; early
Horn ' carrots. Fred Brock; Nantes,
Mrs. Stone, J. Sutton; long orange
"Or red carrots, E. MacDonald• white
or yelloev field carrots, E. J. Willard,
C. Heywood; Indian corn, C. Hey-
wood, W. !Stanlake; Bantam corn, E.
J. Willard, Mrs. H. Desjardine; wat-
er melons, E. J. Willard, Warren
Sanders; puntpkgns, C. Heywvcod, C.
Rowe; squash, C. •J- eywoc War-
ren Sanders; mus'krnelons, Jacob
Battler, F. Trielnier; Swede turnips,
F. 'Triebner, E. MacDonald; •turnips,
any other varieties, R. Geiger; Red
oniony, W. Sanders, E. MacDonald;
white or yellow onions, E. MacDon-
ald, H. Desjardine; Spanish onions,.
H. Desjardine, C, Birney; tomatoes,
J. Battler, Mrs. J. Selves; citrons,
round,,,H. A. Fuss, W. Sanders; cit-
rons, long, H.. Truemner, W. Sand-
ers; parsnips, E. MacDonald,- War-
ren Sanders; Hubbard' squash, H.
Truemner, C. Rowe; table squash,
J. Senior, H. Trueinner; fall cab-
bage, E. J. Willard; winter cabbage,
E. J. Willard; collection of vege-
tables, Fred Brock, Warren (Sanders;
Times -Advocate special for 'best col-
lection of, vegetables, F. Brock.
Judge—Rd....-Coates. .
• Grain and Seeds.
Fall wheat, white, W. R. Dougall,
H. Truemner; fall wheat, red, Milne
Rader, H. A. Fuse; any variety of
spring wheat, Mrs. 0. Cunningham,.
H, True:reser; 6 -rowed barley, Milne
Rader, H. Truemner; black oats, H.
Truemner; white oats, W. R. Dou-
gall, H. A. Fuss; timothy seed, Mrs.
0: •Cunningham, R. Geiger ; flax
seed, Jas. Cottle; white beans, Milne
Rader, J. Battler; clover seed, H.
Truemner, HI. A. Fuss; collection of
grain in ear, Mrs. L. Reynolds, R.
Geiger; ensilage corn stock and ear,
H. Desjardine; large peas, Mrs. H.
Desjardine,- Jarnes.Cottle; small peas,
Milne Rader, James Cottle.
Judge—Rd. Coates.
Manufacturers and Implements.
Pairblankets, all wool, Southcott
Bros.; 'woollen yarn, Milne Rader;
Mrs. E. Darling; 10 yards rag carpet,
Mrs. E. Darling, Mrs, E. Lawson;
tailor custom. suit, W. W. Taman,
Southcott Bros.; collection 'of gener-
al goods, Southcott Bros., W. W. Ta-
man; best collection tailor's' goods
and furnishings, W. W. Taman;
collection of groceries, 'Southcott
Bros.; collection of boots and shoes,
Southcott Bros.; assortment of
tweeds, W. ,V4r, Taman.
Flowers.
'Begonia, tuberous, Mrs. W. H.
Dearing; novelty in potted plants,
J. Glenn, Mrs. Jeff Jaques.
Cut Flowers.
Antirrhinum, Snapdragon, Mrs. G.
'Heywood, Mrs. L. Reynolds; Antirr-
hintrr„ Snapdragon collection, Mrs.
G. Heywood, Mrs. W. H. Dearing;
.Asters, white; ,Mrs. W. H. Dearing,
W. H. Dearing; Asters, pink, W. H.
Dearing. Mrs. W. H. Dearing; Asters,
white, 6 blooms, Mrs. G. •Heywood;
Aeters, Comet, Dearing, Reynolds;
Asters, 6 blooms, purple, W. H.
Dearing, Mrs. • W. H. Dearing; As-
ters. 6 blooms, pink, W. H. Dearing;
Asters, ostrich plumes, collection, W.
H. Dearing; Coxcomib, display, Mrs.
L. Reynolds, 'W. H. Dearing; Cox-
con:'rs, display, feathered, W. H.
Dearing. Mrs. L. Reynolds; cosmos,
single and double, Mrs. G. Heywood,
Mrs. L. Reynolds; Dahlias, decora-
tive variety. Mrs. G. Heywood; Dah-
lias, cactus variety, Mrs. G. Heywood
Dahlias, pompon variety, Mrs, W.
Snaith. Mrs. C. Signs; Dianthus or
Pinks. W. If. Dearing, :Mrs..1. Selves;
Gladiolus, spike, Mrs. G. (Heywood
Gladiolus, bolt 6 spikes, Mrs. G�.
Heywood; Gladiolus, hest collection,
Mrs. •G. 'Heywood; Impatiens or Bal-
sams, W. H. Dearing, ,Mrs, L. Rey-
nolds; Marigolds, African, Mrs, G.
Heywood. W. Ii. Dearing; Marigolds,
French, Roland Geiger, W'. H. Dear-
ing; Matthinla or Stocks, Mrs, G.
Heywood; Phlox, Drumvnondi,• W. B.
(rearing, Nil's. L. Reynolds; Phlox
Perennial, W. H. Dearing; Petunia,
siii le; 'Mrs. G. Hes-wood, WV. . H.
Dearing; Petunia, double. W. H.
nearing, Mrs, G. Heywood; Pansies,
best collection, W. H. Dearing; roses,
cell. etion, .J. (:. Stanhury, Mrs. 0.
Heywood; rosea, single, Mrs. G. Hey-
w•odrl. .J, G. Stanbury; Salvia, " Mrs,
L. Reynolds; Sweet Pegs, W. H,
Dearing; 2nd;Verbenas, Mrs. G. Hey-
wood, NV, H. Dearing; Zinnias, crest-
ed or curled, Mrs. L. Reynolds, Mrs.
G. Hese-owl; Zinnias, dahlia flower-
ed, Mrs. G. Hee-wood, Mrs, L. Rey-
nolds; Zinnias, display, Mrs, 0. Hey-
wood, Mrs. W. Smith; collection of
annuals, IM!i's. L. 'Reynolds; collec-
tion of perennials, Mrs. G. Heywood;
bride's bouquet, W. H. Dearing,
Mrs. 0. Hey.yood; )basket of cut
flowers, Mrs, 0, Heywood, Mrs. W.
H. Dearth¢; hand bouquet, W. H.
Dearing, Mrs, L. Heywood; novelty
in cut flowers, Mrs. G. Heywood,
•Mrs. L. Reynolds,
Flower Special.
° Latimer ( ieve—+Collection of an-
nual, Mrs, L. Reynolds.;, 1'}i': E. S.
Steiner, basket cut flowers, Mrs. G.
Heywood.
Judge --D. Roweliffe.
Fine Art and Crafts.
Oil Paintings-4Mhs, I. J.. (lore,)
Miss L. Grant; vegetables. or fruit,
Mrs. J. W. Batson, (Miss Grant; mar-
ine, 'Mies White, Mss. Batson; scene,
Mrs. Batson, lat and 2nd; flowers,
Miss (Grant, Mrs. Batson; still life,
Mrs. Batson, Miss Grant.
Water Colors --Seascape, Mrs. N.
J. Dore, !Miss Grant; flowers or
fruit, Miss Grant, I14rs. Dore; single
work, Mrs. Dore and 2nd; original
study, Miss White, 'Miss Grant.
Miscellaneous --Pastel marine view,
Miss White, Mrs. Batson; pastel
landscape, Miss Harrison, Miss Grant
charcoal, study, Mrs. Batson; char-
ecal, Mrs. Stainton, Mrs. Batson;
sepia, landscape, Miss Grant, Mrs.
Batson; pencil drawing, scene, Mrs.
Batson, Miss Grant; single pleas of
a'•t work not listed, Mrs. Dore, Mrs.
Batson; tooled leather, Mrs. Batson;
new craft not listed, Mrs. Dore and
2nd; wood carving, Mrs. Batson, H.
A. Fuss; sealing wax display, H. A.
Fuss, Mrs. Batson; best made arti-
ficial waxed flowers, H. A. Fuss, Mrs.
'Stainton; basketry, Mrs. J. Jaques,
Mrs. G. MacLean; E. R. Hopper's
special, Mrs. N. J. Dore.
(Hand Painted China—iConvention-
al painting, Miss Grant, Mrs. Batson;
realistic, Miss 'Harrison, Miss Grant;
lustre 'work, Miss Harrison, Mrs.
Batson; bridge set, Mrs. Batson; one
setting of tea set, 'Miss Grant, Mrs.
Batson.
Photographs—(Tinted "snap shots,
Mrs. Batson; photographs, amateur.
Mrs. Batson; photo.gi'aphs, Jos. Sen-
ior; collection of photographic views.
Joseph ,Senior.
Judges—A. R: Brown, M. E. Ross.
Ladies' Work.
'Living Room Aceesepriest—Centre-
piece, colored, Mrs. Wm. Smith, Myr-
tle Willis; table scarf, colored, Mrs.
Ed. Lawson, Myrtle Willis; cushion,
Miss White, Mrs. G: Jaques; card
table cover, Mrs, E. Darling, Mrs.
M. Young; Afghan, Charles Birney,
Mrs. Stone.
!Dining Room Accessories—White
buffet set, Mrs. G. McLean, Mrs. E.
Lawson; colored buffet set, ,.Mrs, E.
Darling, Bessie Brooks; centre piece,
white, Mrs. B. Pfile, Mrs. E. Darl-
ing; centre piece_ tatted trim, Mrs.
•
L. Reynolds, Mrs.. B. Pole;- tray
cloths, 'Mrs. E, Darling, Mrs. E. Law-
son; lunch cloth and serviettes, (Mrs.
G. Jaques, -Mrs. W. Smith; break-
fast set, •Mrs. E. Darling, Mrs. B.
Pfile; tea cosy, IMr•s. E. Darling,
Miss White; doilies; -Mrs. E, Darling,
Mvrtle Willis; table mats, Mrs. , B.
Pfile, Mrs. E. Darling.
'Bedroom accessories Pillow
easels, embroidered, 'Mary Spaeck,
'Mrs, Hyndrri'an; pillow cases, other
sort, Mrs. E. Darling, Mrs. Jeff
Jaques; guest towels, .Mrs.. W, Smith,
Mrs. J. Jaques; bath toel, fancy
trine, Mrs. E. Lawson,s Mrs. Clayton
Sims; 'vanity set, 'Mrs. Stone. Mrs.
W. Smith; dresser scarf, Mrs: Ed.
Lawson, Mrs. B. Pfile; boudoir
pillow, Mary (Spaeck and 2nd; bed
spread, any fancy sort, 'Mary Spaeck,
Milne Rader; comforter,' silk or cot-
ton, 'errs. E. Darling, Miss G. A.
Harrison; quilt, any material, Rol-
and Geiger, Milne Rader; quilt,c'new,
design, Mrs. B. Pole, ,Mrs. George
Jaques.
Kitchen iAjccesrsories--Tea towels,
•.Mrs. Hyndman, Mrs. Jeff. Jaques;
pan holders, ,Mrs. H; •Staintpn, H. A.
Fuss; curtains,~, Mrs. B. Pfile, H. A.
Fuss.
Domestic Class-eFloor mat, braid-
ed, Mrs. B. 'Pole, R. Geiger; floor
mat, hooked, Fred H. Carbert, Mrs,
Stone; men's work shirt, Mrs. E. R.
Pym, Mrs. 0. Cunningham; knitted
men's socks, Mrs. C. Sims, Miss. E.
Lawson; knitted 'mutts, Mrs. H. Des-
jardine; knitted sweater, Miss White,
Milne Rader.
(Ladies' and Children's Wear—Ap-
ron, dainty, Mrs. M. Young, Mrs. W.
Smith; apron, serviceable, Mrs, C.
Sines, 'Mrs. W. Smith; house dress,
H. A. Fuss, Mrs: W. Smith; night
robe, Mrs. E. Darling, •Mrs. G. (Mac-
Lean; knit indoor 'wrap, Mrs. Ed,
Lawson; baby's carriage cover, Mel-
vin Smith; child's play dt•ess and
hloon•ers, Mrs. .Jeff Jaques, Ii, A.
Fuss; child's wool sweater, F. H.
Ca/best, M. Smith; child's knitted
costume, Mas. C. Sims; ladies'
fancy sweater, H. A. Fuss.
Miscellaneous — Italian hemstitch-
ing, Mrs, B. Pfile, Mrs. Hyndman;
fine cut work, Mrs. Hyndman, Mrs.
('file; fancy crochet, Mrs. E. Law-
son, Mrs. E. Dearing; fancy knit-
ting, Mrs. E. Lawson, Mrs. Hyndman;
tatting, Mrs. L. Reynolds, MVlrs, B.
Pole; new cross stitch, Miss White,
Mrs. G. IMcLeao; small articles
suitable for gifts, Mrs. MacLean,
Jlrs. Stainton; new needle craft,
Mrs. .Jeff. .Jaques, H. ' • A. Fuss;
specimen of smocking, Mrs. C. Sims,
11. A. Fuss; article made from old
stockings, Mrs, Stone, Mrs. .Jaques;
article from 1 yard factory cotton.,
Mrs. Jaques, Mrs. Stainton; piece of
fancy work done by darty over 75,
Mrs, E. R. Pyne; Laird Bros.' special,
Iles. W. .SmJth.•
Special •Prizes --Griggs', Stationery,
hest Afghan, Charles Birl-ley; Jones
& May, for hest •quilt, Roland Gei-
ger; Southcott Bros., best 'hooked
mat, Fred A. Carbert; Chafnevay
Store, new style house dress, Mrs. H.
.4. Fuss; Women's Institute, for best
boy's stilt, made from old garment,
Mrs. W. Smith.
Judge'—Mrs. M. T. Kerr, Newton.
School Children's Prize List.
Vegetables—Green Mountain pota-
toes, H. Desjardine; Irish Cobbler, H.
Desjardine, Fred H. Colbert; Eureka
.potatoes, H. Desjardine; Golden Ban-
tam corn, F. H. Canbert, 'FII, Desjar-
dine; any outer variety of table corn,
H. Desjardine; blood beets, long, C.
Heywood; 'blood beets, rounds, Mrs,
PERSONAL
"I will not be responsible fof
any member of my family
who takes stomach tonics, in-
digestion remedies, soda, calo-
mel, salte, laxative pills, ete.
to try to get rid of indigo --
tion, constipation, bloating,
sour stomach, bad breath or
headaches. I have told them
all to use Sargon Soft Mom
Pills the new liver medicine
which makes tha.Jleer get
busy and furnish enough bile
to digest their food and atop
Constipation. Everybody engirt
to take Sargon Soft Mass
Pills two or three times a
masa If they Want to feel
good. All good druggists
have than."
i
ti
j.qy�'�'✓r fi F[�.
• S F''EMBER 39I 1933.
DON'T TAKE CHANCES WITH
INFERIOR BAKING POWDER.
USE THE BEST. WITH MAGIC
THERE'S NO UNCERTAINTY
ABOUT YOUR BAKING,.,
SAYS MISS JESSIE DE BOTH ,
Director of the famous De Both Home Makers' Schools
AGIC
—Costs not quite i/4°of a cent more per bak-
ing than the cheapest inferior baking pow-
ders. Why not use this fine -quality baking
powder and be sure of satisfactory results?
"CONTAINS NO ALUM." This statement on every
tin is your guarantee that Magic Baking Powder
is free from alum or any „harmful ingredient -
Made in Canada '
(inyy t
L. Reynolds, F. Triebner; Chautenay
carrots, F. Ellerin.gton; yellow on-
ions, Mrs. L. Reynolds, H. Desjar-
dine; red onions, C. Heywood, H. Des-
jardine; Dutch sets, R. Geiger, E. J.
Willard; Swede turnips, H. Des-
jardine, Mrs. J. Selves; celery, Mrs.
L. Reynolds; toirnatoes, F. Triebner,
Mrs. J.. Selves; cabbage, H. Desjar-
dine; table beans, F. Ellerington,
Mrs. L. Reyno}ds; dry white (beans,
F. H. •Canbert, H. Desjardine; man -
golds, IR. Geiger, Mrs. J. Selves:
Cut Flowers—Mrs. L. Reynolds ;
Phlox, Mrs. L. Reynolds, C. Hey-
wood; Nastrutiums, Mrs. L. Rey-
nolds, C. ;Hleywvood; Geranium in pot,
Mrs, J, Jaques; '.Balsams, 'Mrs. L.
Reynolds, C. 'Heywood; Gladiolus, C.
Heywood; collection insects, itanied
and mounted, F. H. •Canbert;,,, best
writing, pupil 10 years old or under,
ales. L. Reynolds, F. Triebner;
drawing of 'Huron County, ten years
old or under, Mrs. L. Reynolds, J.
G. Staid:eery; drawing Province of
Ontario, over ten years, Mrs, J.
Selves, Margaret Clarke; collection
of woods, Mrs. L. Reynolds; collec-
tion of leaves, Mrs. L. Reynolds,
•Grains --Winter wheat, F: Trieb-
ner, H. Desjardine; oats, F. Trieb-
ner, H. Desjardine; barley, H. Des-
jardine. • •
Domestic Science — Home made
bread, J. 'Glenn, Mrs. 0. Cunning-
ham; school lunch, Mrs. 0. Cunning-
ham; jar of Plums, Mrs. L. Reynolds,
•Mrs. Cunningham; jar of raspberries,
Mrs. L. Reynolds, Mrs. Cunningham;
jar of strawberries, Mrs. Geo. Ja-
ques; apple. pie, T. Hockey, Mrs. 0.
Cunniegham; fancy .tea apron, Mrs.
Ed. Lawson, K. Kestle; dressed doll,
H. !Snell,. "Mrs. J. Jaques; doll's
clothes, Fred Brock; pair.hand work-
ed towels, 'Mrs. E. Lawson, Mrs. J.
Jaques; sofa pillow irnlounted. .Mrs.
E. Lawson; fancy apron, Mrs. Ed.
Lawson; fancy pin cushion, Mrs. J,'
Jaques, Mrs. Lawson; crochet work,
Mrs. Lawson; laundry!, bag, Mrs. E.
Lawson.; knitted socks, liVlrs. Lawson;
pillow cases, Mrs. Lawson.
'Miscellaneous—!Best hammer han-
elle, Fred H. Canbert,'Mrs. J. Selves;
gate, F. H. Carbert, P'. "Triebner;
milking stool, F. li. Carbert, Mrs. J.
Sellves; birdhouse, F. H. •Carlbert; best
school display' of vegetables grown
by school children, Jacob Battler. .
'School Children's Special Prizes—
Miss M. Armstrong, best writing of
child 12 years and under, Mrs. H.
Ford; Dr. W. E. Weekes, best colles-
tion of stamps by public school child,
J. G. Stanbury; British Empire col-
lection, Grant Taylor; Dr. M. C.
Fletcher, best map of the Dominion
of Canada drawn by pupil in grade
5 and 6, Mrs. J. Selves;. Dr. Dunlop,
hest collection of named butterflies,
by boy 15 years or' uncler, Mrs. R.
H. Dick; B. W. F. Beavers, best dis-
play of carpentry by 'boy under 17
years of age, Fred H. Carbert.
Judge --ID. Rowcliffe.
The Houses We Might Have
'Prejudice alone stands between us
and the creation of houses which
would provide comforts and joys yet
untested. Science has produced en=
ormlous stores of knowledge which, if
employed in the 'building of houses,
would complet'@ly .change their form.
'One of the main obstacles to pro-
gress is the false value which has
'been placed on anything old.' Some
people think that by furnishing their
houses with antique furniture they
achieve respectability. We have new
materials to -day with which we 'can
achieve equal or better service front
well-designed" modern furniture at
less cost. Yet people seem to prefer
to collapse in antique chairs, rather
than accept new feline.
It is the same with our houses. We
have become slaves of tradition and
make our needs subservient to our
pr:conceived notions of esthetic edit -
Very little has changed in the form
of our houses in the last century, in
spite of the considerable improve-
ment achieved in building science and
material's. When our houses had to be
constructed of brick and timber their
forms were determined by the limita-
tions of such materials. It was nec-
essary to limrit the area of windows
on •account of the structure of the
wall itself as well as on account of
heat,, osses. The development of eco-
nomical central heating and the use
of steel and reinforced concrete have
made it possible to arrange windows
of any size. and number. Yet even
to -day adequate sunlight is refused
admission to a- living room for no
other reason than that the windows
shall he of traditional farm.
The conditions of living have also
altered considerably during the last
hundred years. The problem of ade-
quate domestic service necessitates
more compact planning and, the in-
sertion of many labor-saving devices.
,lt iseemis, therefore, logical that
the resultant forams shall be new. Yet
present-day, houses appear similar to
thowe ofra hundred yeass ago, either
heoayse of 'the clinging to tradition
or beeliligirof ignorance on the part
of the people responsible for building
them s •
1Il}te onI$r hope tappeare to lie in a
more, enlightened public Opinion. The
public must be taught that the qual-
ity of a building nvus't not be judged
by its appearance alone, For if we'
are to make progress, we must treat
building, not as a platter of taste,
but of logic and judge a building in
relation to the service it provides -
Buildings should serve men, and mart
should not be made subservient to
buildings. Yet this is what has hap-'
pened.
New materials and increased know-
ledge are not •being exploited in the
Service of man, because they pro-
duce forms which he is not used to
and which he, therefore, considers to
be bad. The simple detail of the
window is enough to illustrate this.
This is still, built according to pre-
conceived nations, although with con-
crete and steel th;re are far less
limitations. The splitting up of the'
glass of 'the windows into spill
panes, obscuring the view and in-
creasing the cleaning difficulties, i;;:
purely a relic of the days when the
limitations of glass made it neces-
sary.
tI'.'believe that the solution of mod-
ern problems by the use of modern
materials would result in new forms
of beauty, transcending anything that'
has yet -been achieved—forms 'of a
I freshne,s and virility which could
never have been achieved by any pro-
' cess of esthetics.
I The builders of' medieval cathe.,-
deals have left us unrivaled examples
of beautiful .buildings, the form of
which was the inevitable result of
the problems which faced them in;
those times. Their great knowledge
of the°!bearing capacity of stone, and
'the desirability of lesurestricted floor
space made them evolve the Gothic"
I style. But their sim'pl'e approach to'
!building was lost in the Renaissance,.
when they began to camenstiage the
buildings with classic forms. This
'may have been sound" then, but now
' steel and concrete have changed the
situation. •
!If we donsider the house as• a ma-
chine for living in, and demand the
same'efftciency- from it as is demand-
ed from an airplane, the sight of
which produces in everybody, old and
young, a sense of extreme satisfac-
tion, we shall progress toward a new
type of hone which will be worthy cif
our times and a joy to live in; a home
designed from the inside; carefully
planned and offering every- conveni-
ence and comfort, at a considerably
lower cost.
In towns the modern problem will
be solved by 'building much• higher:'
buildings in the form of flats. Ther'
traffic prablens will demand .this if
nothing else does. By 'building tall,
isolated towers, says 500 feet apart,
sufficient accommodation could ' be
provided at much less cost. We conk)
acquire, much more space for traf-
fic and for gardens, and encore ade-
quate air space, and, eliminate from
our homes the inconvenience of dust
and noise caused by traffic. Surely
such homes are worth while, butaif
we are to have them we must,' ta••
quote Socrates "follow the argument
wherever it may lead."
For •the first seven months of this•
year 31,335 head of cattle, 14,5. calves.
195,030 hogs and 33,746 shiep were
shipped from Western to Easterrs
Canada. •
You'll like
this sturdy little
stove. It meets practically
every cooking need in kitch-
ens, cottages, hbme laun-
dries, dairies; in fact, any
place where clean, quick
cooking heat is required:
Cairy and use it anywhere.
It makes and burns its own
gas from untreated motor
fuel. Lights instantly with
a clean, blue -gas cooking
flame. Available in Maroon
Brown baked enamel or.
Soft Green porcelain finish.
Priced surprisingly low.
'The Coleman Lamp Cr Stove Co., Lod.
,Toronto, $, Ontario
' (HPX)
'1 1
} '
i•