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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1938-08-12, Page 6'7777. k•V 'dee WIWI'S Tee Memel Weekly, in Readeee, Digest) P t Ineliaeoecuree a ehe 'Sikhs amid elle sime filth ape People Of Madras in ye six -toot healthy 4a the Mad:rests were ;84,:401d. Vin --0 day in the form of sour is, a auU antount of meat and • plenty Of leafy vegetables, potatoes end lethole wheat bread formed the •ellet of the Sikhs and Pathans. Rice, 'red Pepper., tamerind and dried fish Was the food of the Madraele. . Noting this, Sir Filbert McCarrison of the Indian Medical Service began to experiment. In his laboratory I sew 12 cages of white ratseeoffspriag of one parent stock. As I approached the first cage a beayy, stocky rat lunged viclousty et me. Hie hale wait roughe his whiskere bristled theeleteie. ingly. Be was retitle to, light at tile drop of a hat Front the -time he had been weaned he had been 'ted on wbite bread and jam, boiled beet 'boiled mettoneheiled lisle boiled vege- tables, boiled tea -the Englisb work- man's daily fere. It was apparent that he and his fellows partook of the nature of the Britone, and never, never would be staves. Next to them, pink eyes round and placid, were rats brought up on the Sikh and Pathan diet. They were as large ae the Britieh nate, but their fur lay sleek and smooth-, they were gently disposed.„ Little things, da.ealthy but no big- ger than large mice, lived next door. Tired All the Time Describes exhaustionof the nerves The usual treatment for fatigue is rest. But when the cause of tired feelings is nervous exhaustion you are restless, sleepless and irritable and cannot rest or sleep. You can worry and fret, you ean be impatient and ill-tempered, you may suffer from indigestion and headaches. But rest or calm- ness or sleep are well nigh impos- sible. It is necessary to build up the reserve of nerve force by such restorative treatment as Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. Your nerv- ous system has ,becorne bankrupt and new energy and vigor are necessary. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is recommended on the strength of its time -proven record of effective- ness in many thousands of cases similar to yours. New nerve force is created from rich red blood and De. Chase's Nerve Food is composed of the very ingredients which go to enrich the blood. For this reason every dose you take should help you in regaining health and strength and new vitality. DR. CHASE'S NERVE FOOD For New Pep and Energy , thebOirvalf4 the rt % 00,! ebeet and de * elee taidllee ellyellatr,anWieetkeee tWieled to fee Pee*. They Werteeeeneett rets eeette.. towed to Pereetefeleeleh* fete neeats. ettoetel with 'fine fetileeft, 'and salede deenceed er, tine dre*Silliee They had netglilsors who,. were Isten't ewiret 'wed tertirried, artieded gieeloadeti is higelehpe011thederiCe Wad iteelefeeeenalie aetate3et4r- ieettit foods efetitatttetTttptieeee-teetee e'en. ". setleteersearoelly :greet/ale: teeletna.W. iletie *tee of the .ateneloatteklatiettee. The Japanese ; who are seimitive about their entati st.atere; baste done, exteusive research on diet as it af- fects the size of human beings. Te Jpanese eational foods „ lack inor- ganic ealts and vitamine A and B. The Director of the Javanese Imperial Institute of Nutrition coneeived tho motion of drying certain fish in which vitamins and salts occur richly, see grinding them into a powder. This was sprinkledas seasoning on the neonday food of a selected group of Japanese school children. After four yeara of •this regimen, the sturdy ex- Periinentees suffer from fewer child- hood maladies, weigh on the average Mout five pounds more, and are sev- eral centimeters taller than the other i id Pere This eiperiment opened another gate into the uneeplored field of nu- trition as related to the development of racial characteristics and the pro- motion of growth. It showed that probably other factors besides inher- itance account for tall parents often begetting tall children. It may be because those households' serve footle which make for growth. Diet can be the cause of many dis- eases. For example, the stomachs and intestines of many of the inhabi- tants of southern India are riddled with ulcers, Bad as is the condition in Madras, it is much worse in adjac- ent Travancore, where, the natives consume large quantities of starch as teund in their tapioca root. The laboratory men put two groups of rats on the respective diets of these two provinces. Over a quarter' of those eating Travancorian food and 10 per cent. of those on the Madrasi diet presently developed gastric or intes- tinal ulcers; these figures correeporel almost exactly with the incidences of the disease among the two peoples. No ulcers occurred in the control rats fed on balanced rations. The Japa'nese in turn discovered that if diets producing ulters in rats were continued for more. than 180 days, the ulcers turned into cancers and were incurable; if the diets were reversed within that time, they dis- appeared. Such •discoveries offer hope that much human suffering may be pre- vented.. Half the 12,001,000 inhabi- tants of Sind in northern India suffer from painful stones in the bladder. onume OUR BUSINESS Is PRINTING ! • LETTER HEADS • SALE BILLS • BOOKLETS • ENVELOPES • OFFICE FORMS • COUNTER CHECK BOOKS • S1 -10W CARDS • BLOTTERS • STATEMENTS • BUSINESS CARDS Prompt Work ---Low Prices WHEN you want Printing, you naturally want good Printing, promptly done, and at fair cost. That is the kind of printing we are qualified to supply. We have modern type faces, a wide selection of paper stocks and layout suggestions, whi will en- able you to attain real quality character for yo usiness. Be the job large or small, we can tserve you. you will phone, we will be pleased to call, and, if you wig assist you in planning the work to be done. PHONE 41 UMW E)t POS IT 1) R • .Established 1860 RUM, Publishers, stAiimern exy . fed itlite Sited *o• 4iw8luatio guodee- • Cent.: develOPed 3sitionee, ineidenee of the t„,he...bannen• popuIatione No stones, litalever, formed in s group ef rats fed this same. diet with the sha- le addition of a daily teaspoound of Miller It is probable the same, result cmild be lepeated, and millions could be saved from pain if every dee they could drink lust one pint of milk. In this goentry the per capita con- sumpeen of milk provides an excel- lent index to tuberculostie The more milk drunk, the fewer the oases. Due ing the World War, in food -lacking Germany. and Austria, the tuberculosis rate rose rapidly. In the first few years after the war, despite over- crowding in sunless, unsanitary bons - es, the incidence came down quickly., the populace were once more being supplied with milk, fats and other food essentials. The person who lacks health may often leek only some essential food property. "Hog and hominy" with sorghum for sugar has long been the diet in parts of our own South. Re- sult -pellagra, Remedy -an ordinary vegetable gulden. Before the American brought his higthly milled tiour, cereals and other -foods to Hawaii', strong, sound teeth flashed from dark Hawaiian faces. But noseener hat/ Araerican diet been substituted for taro, the native tuber from which poi is made, than an SO per cent. tooth decay developed, a high figure, identical wi,thrthat in the United States. Four years ego 1,000 Hawaiian children were shifted beck to ,the diet of their forefathers. In the very first year tooth decay drop- ped to 40 per cent., and now it ap- pears to be about eight, an extra- ordinary decrease. Research in Japan has sbown that the tealing period of appendix opera- tion wounds may be accelerated or re- tarded according to the amount of vitamin A supplied, in the post-opera- tive diet. Mysterious indeed are the powers of vitamins. During the war, many Russian soldiers on night ex- peditions blundered blindly, 'some- times to their deaths. Their retinas had lost so much sensitivity, because of lack of vitamin A in their diets, that in semi -darkness they could see nothing. The average robust adult requires about 3,000 calories per day of pro- perly balanced food. Almost without exceptioneAmericare who can afford it consume 6,000 or m'oee. This re- sults in overweight, and the bloated abdomens of middle age; and it puts Loo great a strain on the digestive tract Curiously enough, over -indulgence in improper foods is actually respon- sible for some of this overeating. Highly seasoned', strongly flavored or improper foods cause fermentation and irritation. The intestinal tract, for protection, throws out a catarrhal phlegm which not only causes diges- tive disturber:Ices but clogs the sieve- like intestines. With the absorbing surface thus rdeuced, the sante amount of noerishment can be obtain- ed only by eating several times as much food. The obvious remedy is correct eating. Imatounded rats, eating ' Perforce eirat they are furnished, znay thrive and grow vigorous. Reasoning maa, with laboratory knowledge at his dis- posal, remaine a slave to dietary hab- its, sacrificing his (health, and some- times even his life. ts eCendeliand from The OoMmenetter fit Reader' e Vignat) - Otte day about 27 yeanaagO,' thew Carnegie appeared before hie friend and.- trolleetelor, "Eliha Root, With .a ,ug and complicated dome 'Mont written. in • his own hand. I was dais last will and testament dis- posing:.of an estate then aggregating $150,000,000. Mr. Carnegie had discovered that It was much easier tomate atgreat fere eune than to giye it away -wisely, at least -and lie minted to create a kind - of trust which would continue, theo- retinally forever,' distributing the In- come of the millions to be placed a,t its disposal. Atte Root suggested, "Why don't you transfer the bulk of your fortune co this Foundation now? You 'will es- cape the possibility of a will contest, and you will be abaft yourself to ob- serve the working out of your plans." And so was 'born. the Carnegie Cor- poration, with an endowment of $125,- 090,0001 -an amount that has since in- creased by some 20 millions. Noth- ing like it 'had ever existed in Amer- ica. , Stephen Girard, James Smith - eon, George Peabody, Enoch Pratt had established large public funds, but only for a particular service' - the founding of a university, scientific institution, orphanage, library. The Carnegie idea was to allow trustees to distribute a„. large annual income in any way that in their judgme•nt would work for the "improvement of mankind." That the idea was sound is evident from the many foundations that have followed in the Carnegie wake. most 600 in number, they are now es- tablished builders of American life., A conservative estimate of the amount invested in them w.outd near $1,000,- 0O ,000; annual disbursements are roughly $50,000,000. Crying "tainted mon•ey," critics held the early foundatione to be at beet huge "conscience funds" - money weieb guilty millionaires were restor- ing to that suffering public from which it had been foully abstracted. Others believed' that foundations would be devoted to stamping out new ideas of social justice: decent wages, hours and • cettditions; workmen's compensation; employer's liability. Distrust was aroused `because the larger appropriations went for educa- tion. Would teachers who insisted on inculcating new liberal ideas survive in institutions that accepted founda- tion "bribes"? What would happen to "academic freedom"? In 1915 C•ongress investigated the Carnegie and Rockefeller foundations. William. Jennings Bryan got a resolu- tion through the Nebraska legisla- ture declining all ,offerings of Rocke- feller money; and the University of Wisconsin prohibited foundation gifts. Yale 'University was severely criticiz- ed for permitting Mr. Rockefeller to add a million dollars to its endow- ment. But public sentiment has since done an about-face. The University of Wisconsin rescinded its great renunci- ation, and universities are now only too glad to accept foundation mei:ley. One reason for this. reversal of senti- ment is that the dortore' personal in- fluence in the big foundations has been largely displaced by modernized trustee control. Practically all Carnegie's gifts ex- pressed his own aspiretions. Since his greatest conviction was that popu- lar enlightenment was the one solu- tion for public ills, bis benefactions took the form of library building. Other benefactions reflected Car- negie's fondness for musicand desire for universal_peace. John D. Rocke- feller did not carry his personality into his gifts t the same extent, yet his first systematized ' giving was largely "Baptist charities." , The Carnegie Corporation no long- er gives money for library buildings and concert halls, regarding its work in those directions completed. Its library support now consists of lib- eral contributions to the educate= of librarians, to library endowments and to the eurchasieg erbooks. Rockefeller gifts have likewise broadened in scope: millions are ex- pended for medical edueation, sanita- tion in all parts' of the world, cultur- al and antiquarian enterprises - the restoration of Reims Cathedral, the rejuvenation of the fountains at Vet.- saillee, the reconstruction of colonial Williamsburg, Virginia, tbe reestab- lishment of the Bodleian. Library at Oxford. Most people now realize that foun- dation administrators desire only "to prontote the general welfare." It is a tribute to the denfiegies, the Rocke- fellers, the Guggen.heims, the Hark- nesses, the Rosenwalds and the rest that their trusts were organized in a way that makes possible this satis- faction of changing modern needs. Above all other explanation's for the peesent friendly attitude, however, is the fact that foundations' have made good. This wealth has been largely invested in the dieseminatioe raf en- lightenment 'and' the graces of life. Some of the smallest expenditures have produced the greatest results. Tere Oareregie Corporation is especial- ly proud ef the gift f a few thousand dollars, that resulted in the develop- ment of Insulin as a definite control of diabetes -one of the five or six greatest discerveriee of modern medi- IT TAKES ALL KINDS The Raleigh Touch "Fuer*, things ye see in this game,' our cab driver said. "F'rinstance, I'm drivin' along 52nd Street one night, see, and there's a guy stanclin' on the sidewalk with a dame, and he flags me. So I pull up and open the door, but no, thet won't do. 'Get out anti put your coat down on the street for the lady to step on,' this guy says to me. So I figure what the hell, it's good for a tip, so I get out and put my coat down, and this damegetsm the cab, atnd the guy gets in, and off we go, and sure enough, he tips me a buck. "But what I don't get," said our cab driver, turning around, an look- ing at us earnestly, "what I deit't get is where the guy ever picked up a crazy ilea like -,that." * * * No Word For It A middle-aged, well-dressed man crane briskly Into the restaurant, and eat down at a reserved table next to mine. He said nothing, but at once the waitrese put before him a cheese sandwion a baked apple and a pot of ',toffee. In five minutes be had dis- posed of the food, and was gone. I said to the waitress, He must be a regular." "Regular is no word for it,' she said. "What is the word for it?" I asked. "They don't make such words. For 14 years, every day except Saturday and Sray,, he comes in at 18 min- utes past. 12. Always eats the same thing, and never tales. I don't say a word except in May and Septem- ber. In September, I say, `We've got oysters.' He says, 'Oood, and I give him an oyeter cocktail instead of a 'baked apple uintli May. Then I say, 'No more oysters.' He says, 'Good,' and we go batik to cheese sandwith, baked apple and coftee. For fourteen years!" "The restaurant business DMA be curfenst bildnese," I said. • "Curious is' no word for it," she said. * ,.* Sportsman which was in' the competent bands of one of the rubbish collectors. Ile was standing on the running board -and, With well-timed, powerful strokes, was walloping a tin, can ahead, of the truck. The driver of the truck was following tee ca,n like an intelligent pony, oc- casionalle crying, "Atsa stuff, Tommy Hitchcock!" * * • "1 am not starving and I do not have 17 children to feed," ran the MISS chatter of a *atom selling 'gar- denias outside the Music Hall, New York. "I sell flowers because I love flowers and endoy ,sellliag them. If you teare to .buy; they are 25 cents A strange eight vras observed on each; arid I will thank you. If you Park Arenue, Nntv 'Yerk, tecently, are not interested, that is your busi- Nat at daWa. A DePartment of Saul. nese, and God sepeed yen on your tatien trtlek Was Initthig alOng as feat walr!' e, AS it Could go, the,nIght'S'take had She emptiedAve baskets in 15 min- ineltided ca, digearded Valle mallet, Weft clue. T e Ouggenheira Memorial Fund likes to think that the ;mach ad- nelrecl "J0l333. Brown's Body" was woitten by a young poet whose lei- sure to cornpose it was made poneible by a modest grant from Ate resoure. The exletence of millions to.clay would be ,nalade wretched by hook- worm, malaria and numerous other disease& except for the Rockefeller work. Thonsande of childrenwould die each year of spinal meningitis ex- cept for the 'mime' developed at the Roekefeller Institute. American istu- dents no longer 'have to go to Eur ope for medical education, thanks to the $75,000,000 the Rockefeller organ- ization has spent improving American medicel itehools. The billion anti a half these money - giving agencies bave disbursed in a quarter of a century covers all fields, from 'cataloguing the library of the Vatican, supporting the American Academy at Rome, and excavating tee Agora at Athe9as, to prom.oting adult education; strengthening the resourc- es of a hundrerl universities, sending thousands of students ebroad, bring- ing large numbers of foreign. students to America, building up museums ot art and science, founding schottle of nursing, constructing hospitals, mak- ing possible the publication of works of-Tscholarship, finanetag dental re- search and .education„widening the lives of the blind, and the Ilan, ex- terminating insect pests, conducting insurance associations for the benefit of, teachers -it is virtually impossible to exhaust the .fist A few critics may still carp, but it Is evident that under any system these constructive activities are de- sirable and it is likely that the foun- dations performing them will etulure. Many have feared that the govern- ment attitude toward wealth will WU- rnatele destroy them. • President An- gell of Yale expressed such fears pub- licly last June, yet the greatest foun- dation of all has been endowed since then. The new Mellen Fund is esti- mated at 200 millions, larger than either the Carnegie or Rockefeller en- . dowments. These oneeenaligned organizations hare vindicated theartselyee by the way they use their money. There is scarcely an American living today whose life has not been enriched by there. CARE OF BROOD SOWS Otos pad killa.filea all ,4i#Y Seid fpweir day' fOr 2 or weir* 3fr4eisa earls packet; No spaying* Do elikikkiciare, no bad odor,. Mk, your 711Nrerimists Grocery or,General Slam cENTs, PER PAcitElt., WHY' PAY MORE? 'MB WILSON FLY PAD CO, Haratoe, Oar - An eltundance of good pasture dere ing the summer greatly reduces the cost of maintaining brood sows. Crops such as rape or clover supply needed minerals, vitamine and other nutri- ents. The exercise obtained in graz- ing also oontributes in no small mea- sure to the general health of the breeding stock, with consequent bene- ficial results at farrowing time. Sows raising only one litter per year need but little grain after the pigs are weaned, if good pastures are provided, While it is a mistake to allow sews to become too fat, it is equally unwise to allow them to be- -some too thin. En,ough grain should be given to keep the sows in thrifty condition, and in amy event they should get some grain such as a mix- ture of ground oats, ground barley and middlings, supplemeated with skim - milk or fish meal, for two or three weeks before• breeding time in the fall. Sows raising two litters per year naturally require mere feed than those raising only one, but if early spring and fall litters can be accom- modated, the average cost of rearing pigs' to weaning age will be lower if two litters per year are raised. Market bogs make faster gains when °maned to a pen, but sow pigs which are to be reserved for breeding, shotedebe given good pasture to en- sure .good vigorous breeders. They should, be fed liberally to ensure sat- isfactory growth when .they ere on pasture, but if their yard is small and the gilts get only a limited amounteof exorcist), heavy feeding should be avoided. The Coinpleat Angler, . Oriental Style In Japan, cormorants, which excel as night fishermen, are trained to dive from a, boat, grab as many fish as they can pack into their necks, and surrender them to their boss. • They can't swallow them because at the base, of the neck a leash is tied so n,o decenesized fish can get past. Four men handle a cormorant tier- ing excursion; one to steer, one amid- ships to handle four birds, one for- ward to !handle 12 birds, and One at the bow to stoke a. fire of faggots blazing in a coarse wire basket. Rime 712 A.D., It has been considered bad form to engage in cormorant fishing without a riontinuous racket, eo the keeper of the beacon and the Steers- man beat the taffrails, whooping be- times. When the .fish, impressed with the fire and noise, school around the boat, the keeper lets We cormorants', one at a time, go overbberd to the entire extent of their leeslite:erism 12 to 15 feet; and the birds begin swallowing fish to the full capacity of their long neclue At frequent intervals, gorged almost to suffocation, a surfeited cor- morant swims drunkenly around un- til hauled in. a.nd forced, by a single elidireg stroke along his neck, to dis- gorge. With the fish. 'schooling pro- perly, a single cormorant can bag 500 a night. For reward they get the sinall fish. One bitter cold afternoon, I, saw two Chinese squatted by a bonfire on the bank of a frozen. river, A third ' stood close be, arms outstretched,. stark naked and slowly pivoting te beat hinaself on all sides. Soon the other two arose, looped a rope arculnd his body beneath his armpits, hurried him' aeroaft the ice to aqhols they bad °Pelted, and loWared hint until his head bereWeintivred above the edge. For sefeiral Minute&lae hut* thate,, then muttered eomething and his. cronies pulled him out. In each hand he held a fiela; under his -skinny arms, pressed tight against 'his body, were several others; and between bis taut, teetaightented legs, were several more fish! Chang, my Chinese companion, explained that fish make straight for an airhole and cluster around any heated object, so that rishieg in this fashion in winter • was mueh better than summer 'fish- ing! • They had decided to marry, and walked into the manse. The clergy- man eerformed the ceremony, and af- terwards gave the hridegreom a word or two of advice. "Thank ee a thoosand times, men." the bridegroom retuened fervently_ "I'm awfu' sorry I -canna pay ye as muckle as I wad like, sir, but-" "That's all right -that's all right, - interrupted the elem./Min- "If yell tak me (loon to your gas. meter," continued the other, 'eel show ye hoo tae fix it so it whine regis- ter." Fall Fair Dates Tillsonburg Aug. 30, 31 -Sept. 1 Toronto Aug. 26 -Sept. 15 Woodstock Aug. 25, 26, 27 Elmira Sept. Z -5. Fergus Sept. 9, 10 Hepworth, Sept, 8, 9 Kinmount Sept. 7, 8 Tavistock Sept_ 9, le Chesley Sept 13, 14 Clifford Sept-. 16, 17 Comber Sept. 16, 17 Hanover Sept. 15, 16 Kincardine Sept. 15, 16 Lion's Head Sept. 14, 15 London (Western Fair) .Sept. 12 - 17 Midland Sept. 15-17 Milverton Sept. 15, 16 New .Hamburg Sept. 16, 17 Orangeville Sept. 16, 17 Marton Sept. 15, 16 Wilkeport Sept. 15 Acton Sept. 20, 21. Arise Craig Sept. 22, 23 Alliston Sept. 22, 23 Atwood Sept- 23, 24 Dresden.tsSept. 19, 20, 21. Exeter Sept. 21, 22 Forest Sept. 20, 21 Galt Sept. 22-24 Goderich Sept. 20, 21 Harrow ' Sept. 22-24 Lambeth ' Sept. 21 Lietowel Sept. 21, 23 Meaford Sept. 22, 23 Mi/dmay Sept. 20, 21 Merlin e Sept. 21, 23 Mount Forest Sept. 22, 23 Neustadt , Sept. 33, 24 Norwich Sept. 20, 21 Paris Sept. 20, 2/i• Sarnia Sept. 22-24 Seaforth Sept. 22,23 Shedden Sept. 21 Shelburne Sept. 2e, 23 Springfield . Sept. 21, 21 Stratford , Sept. 19-21 Thorndale Sept. 21 Tiverton Sept. e2, 23 Arthur Sept. 29, et Aylmer 1 , Sept. 26-28 Ayton Sept. 29, 26. Bayfield Sept. et, 25 Belmont Sept. 29, Brussels Sept. 39, 30. Burford Sept. 27, 28 Caledonia Bea. 20..30, Oct. 1 Drayton Sept. ,27, 28 Drumbo Sept. 27,-28 Florence Sept. 28, 39. Fordwicb Sept. 30, Oct. 1 Glencoe Sept. 27, 28 Grand Vallee -Sept. 30, Oct. 1 Harrieton Sea. 29, 3e Holstein Sept. 29, 3*Ilderton Sea.- tg Ingersoll Sept. 29, 36 Jarvis Sept 28, 28 Kilsyth Sept. 28, 29 Kirkbon. Sept. 29, 31 Langton Oct. 1 Leamington Sept. 25 -Oct. 1 Lucknow Sept. 29, 36 Mitchell Sept. 27, 28 Muncey Sept. 28 Paisley Sept. 27, 23 Palmerston Sept. 27, 26 Parkhill Sept. 139 Port Elgin Sept. 29, 3e Ripley Sept. 27, 28 Rennet' Sept. 26, 27 Strathroy Sept. 29, 30, Oct. 1 Medford Sept. 27, 26 Wallacetown Sept. 29, 30 Welland Sept. 27-29 Windham Centre Sept. 27 Wyoming Sept. 28, 2t Zurich Sept. 26, 27 Zephyr Sepf. Tr. Aberfoyle , ''''' ' Oct. 4, 6 Alvinston Oot. 6, 7 Driplen Oet 4 Chatsworth Oct. 6, 7 Dorchester Oct. 6 Dungantron Oct. 6, 7 Embro, Oet. 6 Erin Oct. 8-18 Pairground pet 4 Highgate Oct. 7, 8 Melhourne Oet. 7 Mount Brydges • Oet, 4 •No: felf County(Simooe)...Oet. 3-6 Owen Sound Oct. 2.-4 Ridgetewn Oct. 4-6 St. Marys Oct. 6, er Saugeen Indian Oet. 3, 4 Tara Oct 6, 6 Teeswater Oct. 4, 6 Ohsweken Oct. 11-13 Enderwood Oct. 11. IVIotaviantoartt andiate....Oct. 1841 International PloWing Match and Ottrta'' MathinerY Deationstra, tion, Atitte.114ag, near Barrie Betaber 11, 12, 13,, 14. e .