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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1949-09-16, Page 5• te • +d :4 (Copti>(lueii• xranz..Pa. a �) flicked up in. the district by :the : sthdpnttE, 'obey I U led ,:a.e-heads, arreMl4heada and ebarnzs, all ceaade ox.. stone; °aizd rounded roGka that C were used • In a game /similar to • the IuesQnt-day duck -on -the -molt. A. Iarge inodel Of a windmill was the highlight 14: n.e Manual, train ing displ&y, >1rollbagett Band pro - Titled innate .for the fair;, Results of the races Weare: OrirIer4IIPder eine, Mayda ..auer- inann R.R 1 llubiin T'oar ton, R,R, 2 1lublin; Anne' Dalton, R.R. 2, Du.bljiz '.jean Moylan, R.R. • 5, Seaforth;�pi>el1a..MQylau; R.R. 5, Seaforth Under 11, Grace Sie- mon, R.R. -2 .Walton; Rosemary Lane, R.R. 5, Sedtrorth; Mary _Me- Tlil@'$ RunningShort Make your arrange- ments NOW for your steel requirements to get that building un- der way before the weatherman starts playing his tricks. Our Warehouse is well stocked in all types of STEEL ! ! ANGLE BEAMS, CHANNEL, POSTS, FLATS, SHEETS, PLATE, PIPE, WiNDOW SASH, REINFORCING BARS, REINFORCING MESH Hot and Cold Rolled Bars PROMPT DELIVERY Satisfaction Guaranteed M. BROWN AND SONS. 1254 Union Street North Off Lancaster ., KITCHENER Telephone 5-5645 • 4 ftRr-, "'AO►I k4, 7�eIFn • 0, nspn,ltlilcr 13, 40,3 O'i@InaoEft $ ti , VfWo1G0' MQai2' .Nllei�zzla'�izi J I .i�R �, .nN�rMfud•e Dgr50 Cdtbillx 4;4 1, 'Vflalti`in l: los 4:14.4ilz 1140b4i•,ine, RR '2, Pub-' lin E;40' 1 , >wl'aicJoris 40010r00.:. 1 ',4 Wabtonl USSe • 010194; 11,(4 inn RAach. Vit. Gotumban,, ,:Afiariazl Maloney, -i.l .5, S.eafortb._i Alban.,l Betterments, . D... ire.1tter ;tine, Terry Ryan- Y, Wal $•11•, �; S.ea$ort4, FerR11 , 01one R,1 . 1~, bubiiizr Rea Ryan, „R,R. 1 Walton ; Reg, Stone, R.R, 1, Wa ton; Donald Ryan; Ft,Ii, 1, Wal ton,.: 'Under, .11, Joe Murray, R.R 1, Dublin; Lean Murray, R.R. 1 Dublin; Cyril 'Murray, R.R. 1, Dub - Jack Melady, R.R, 2, Dublin; Fergus Kelly, R.R. •2, Dublin, Un- der 13, Joe Murray, Blit? Kelly, R. R. 2, Dublin; Ray Maloney, R.R. 5, Seaforth; Robert Regele, R.R. 5, Seaforth; , Leon Maloney, R.R. 5, Seaforth, Tinder 15, George Dove, R.R. 4, Walton; Jimmy Malone, R. R. 5, Seaforth; -Robert Regele, Leon Murray, Ken Lane, R,R, 5,. Seaforth, Mon -Single, IrwjiJohnston, R. R. 1, Dublin; Martin Murray,, R.R. 1, Dublin; • Laverne Godkin, R.R. 2, Walton; Laverne , Hoegy, R.R. 1, Dublin; Tom Sloan, R.R..5, Sea - forth. Married Men -Martin Murray, Louis O'Reilly,, R.R. 5, Seaforth; Alvin. Byermann, R.R. 1, Dublin; .Rill. 'Ryan, R.R. 5, Seaforth; Ed. Malady, St. Columban. Other prize 'winners were; Horses -Farm team, Mac Bol- ton, Ralph Beuermann, Joy .E1- liott; heavy colt, Wayne McMich- ael, Rae Maloney; pony and sad- dle, Glen Nixon, Jack Mcllwain, Don Hulley; pony colt, Arnold Campbell, Marion Mcllwain, Jack McIlwain; best halter broken, Wayne McMichael. Comic vehicle -1st, Doug, Dal- ton and Marjorie Smith;" 2nd, Don and Roy Bauerman; 3rd, Arnold Campbell. Ilorse drawn vehicle - Gerald I3auerrnan, Pat Sloan, Arnold Campbell. Cattle -Best dairy calf, Louis Murray, Joy Elliott; best beef, BEANS WHEAT and BARLEY I am still representing George Thompson, • of Hensall,so give us a call for information re prices and bags, also trucking. WM. M SPROAT Phone 655 r 2 Seaforth for Your Home .OIL SPACE HEATER Here's double -comfort heating fox your home -circulating and radiant, both at the same time. A Coleman Oil Space Heater puts the heat in action ... and the heat warms the floors ... blankets the room, move,a.4tito far corners. The model shown above, finished in attractive duotone brown enamel, delivers nearly 20,000 cu. ft. of warm air per hour -- 75% circulation, 25% radiation. CLEAN, QUiCK AUTOMATIC HEAT Yes, you'll like the cleanliness of Coleman oil Space Heaters. The heat is so clean -- no dusty fuel, no kindling, .no ashes to track over floors and soil walls and furnishings.' See This Famous Coleman On Display COAL AND WOOD STOVES • .McClary -- Wingham - Beach - Good Cheer Clare Jewel Easy „terms available on any purchase 0 'The Store That Carries the SO* PIIONg:61 t.A.' , OIt�J Seaforth High School student, Cecelia Connolly., R,R, 1, Dublin, was elected Miss McKillop of 1949 at the McKillop School Fair Wednesday afternoon. She is seen here being given the title by 1945 Queen, Miss Loreen Doerr, R.R. 1, Dublin. Between them is the Junior Miss McKillop, seven-year-old Mary 1elady, daughter' of Mr. and Mrs. M. Melady, R.R. 2, Dublin. Catherine Moylan, Don Moylan, ton. Peter Maloney, Dorothy Keys; best pail -fed, Peter Maloney, Gordon MacMurran; Pat Sloan, Robert Regele; best senior beef, Louis Maloney, Paul Murray, Mac Bol- ton; sweepstakes, Louis Maloney. Best showmanship - Louis Ma- loney, Mac Bolton, Audrey Godkin, Donald Moylan, Peter Maloney, Robert Regele, Dorothy Keys, Pat Sloan, Louis Murray, Catherine Moylan. Best beef calves in any school section -No. 6. Pig's -'Sow, Louis Maloney, Pet- er Maloney, Gloria Boyd; pair, 2. months or less, Mac Bolton, Louis Murray, Rudolph Burki; pair un- der 100 lbs., Stephen Maloney, Jean Hillen, Gloria Boyd, Peter Maloney; pair 3 months or less; Peter Maloney, Gloria Boyd, Don, old Moylan, Jerry Eckert. Special, Merle Godkin. The school grounds of S.S. No. 6, McKillop, was the focal point of nearly two thousand people on Wednesday afternoon. The yard was filled with a record number of entries which featured the annual McKillop School Fair. Sparking the organization which conducts this great event in McKillop's school activities are Foster T. Fowler, secretary -treasurer, and teacher at S.S. No. 6, and Ed. God - kin, the president. Getting under way with a parade which formed at a nearby farm and which included the Brodhagen Band and gaily costumed school children, the fair program contin- ued until late in the afternoon with stock judging, contests, rac- es and displays of farm machinery, oil paintings and shell craft. Ex- hibits of all kinds were on display in the schoolhouse. So heavy were Lambs -Long Wool, Mac Bol- the entries that it was late in the Attention Plowme 1 afternoon before the judging was completed. Features of the fair were the best unique means of travel and the beauty contests. The:public-speaking contest was conducted Monday night in Win- throp Hall et a concert held in con- junction with the Fair. A. good crowd was in attendance and the parts well taken by the contest- ants. Music was supplied by Miss Loraine Smith, Miss Iris Beuer- mann and Miss Eileen Smith. Judg- es were Mr. Jeffrey, C. A. Trott and E. N. Eastman. Results are as follows: Grade I -Mary Melady, Loretta Connelly. Grade II -Edith Boyd, Verna Bauers, Joan Dalton, Fergus Kelly. Grade III -Robbie Scott, Mary Cronin, Marie O'Connor, Jean Bauers, Grade IV -.Audrey Godkin, Nor- ine Dalton, Grade V -Helen Connelly, John Melady, Margaret Boyd, Harold Jantzi. Grade VI - Rose Ducharme, Robert Kelly, Rdse Siemon, Mary Dennis. n - Grade VII --Marie Dalton, Fames Axtman, Clarence Walters, Ken Lane. th, Miss • CLASS There were thirty-eight speak- Held at the Farm of James M. Scott Seaforth SATURDAY,SEPTEMBER 24th at 2 p.m. . 'Expert Coaches will be on hand to assist both Juniors and Seniors. BRING YOUR 'OWN PLOW -IF POSSIBLE Don't forget the NORTH HURON PLOW- ING MATCH, which is being held Tuesday, October 4th, 11/4 miles north and 2 miles east of Londesboro ers in competition. HYDRO HOME ECONOMIST • Turnip' Scallop 3 cups turnip 14 cup margarine 14 cup flour 2 cups milk Salt and pepper. Slice turnips thin, cut circular pieces in strips. Place a layer of turnip in greased casserole; sprin- kle with flour, salt and pepper. Now add second, then third layer, lightly sprinkling with seasoned flour. Cover with milk. Bake in a preheated oven for 50 minutes. .As schools reopen I have been thinking of the meagre results of the literary study that goes on in them. Year after year a boy or girl is required to read books or i,ar.s of books that most people 1:nnk valuable and interesting, and that some of us think as valuable and interesting as anything on 00 'Fr 044 Pll0,6 '44ti' `, 1k0 or tli0 st . }'ti toxJ a4 loo *Ay( e5i. how tP!3040'. VOA tits #pY or i , ;,t t1i;s ono +2 , lis y axs gt aciis� izt lea on ?regi a .h'°Rkl� like tf��' a hitt *egg r+t' %�aJliEiWO Je tO. bQ 4oiin4l lr4 , abstnpe of bgokat re all hilt' foo lastest olt3es, acrid in tb� eller }r, tioik pf bAolta in fib:.. w Atorfp that contrive t;4 keel.iso Ropefui people e y ilial at�`:least` the • panels encourage OW: "read . ing hd,bit." Na d+fllbt.t.hey,• do. Tile. reading habit is. ao widespread lora* it can be regarded aria, trait of our civilization. But 1 do not. see that the fact a person'reads is a result; that ai?yone can drew over. 'Math', thew Arnold was 'gltite right -land he spoke, from ,years, of contact with schools - and children. -when. he said that perhaps'no time was more completely a waste than that given to aimless hurried reading. One of- our mistakes is in not understanding that literature is an art. An understanding of a' work of art can be imparted only by some one who feels it. No one should 'be permitted to teach literature unless he has shown his understanding of it as an art. No one else can make .the teaching of a book an experience. Q1c'.er readers will recall editions of Shakespeare intended not for research scholars but for school- children in which the notes filled more pages than the text, and the notes were not primarily aids to understanding the art of Shake- speare, but learned divagations on et r as, sources, historical allusions. Those editions were prepared by people who did not have much un- derstanding of Shakespeare's art. They were chosen by administra tors who had even Iess. They were taught by instructors who were better than the administrators, no doubt, and perhaps no worse than the editors, 'but not good enough for their job. No wonder the boy or girl ex- posed to that sort of approach to Shakespeare was turned against the "late Swan" for the rest of his life, or most of it. Recently there .has been a turn towards books that are more like- ly to appeal to the student. But this is no certain gain. Often the books selected are not in any real sense works of art. They are not literature, but•merely •ephemeral printed matter. What I should recommend is that we appreciate that this is an unpoetic age. The greatest writers of our century are not poets, but novelists, dramatists, biographers, historians. This is not an accident: and in choosing books, or parts of books for study in school we should re- duce the proportion of poetry and make sure that among the works of prose there are some of the very best things in the language, ancient and modern. These great works of prose are no less artistic than our greatest poetry, although anyone who is devoted to literature will probably draw most pleasure and insight from the poets. But a school coarse that Ends its centre in the. great novels, prose plays, biographies and histories, some of them the work of men still living, is more likely to liersmade a boy or a girl to gown reading after be is on his own. Who knows? Perhaps we might have a book series of our own, and it Might be profitable. The schools have the key to the problem. But who has' fire key to the schools? A SMILE OR TWO A would-be soap -box orator who had reached the argumentative stage sat down next to a clergy- man lergyman in a street car. Wishing to start something, he turned to the clergyman and said: "I won't go to heaven, for there ain't no heaven." The expected rise was not forth- coming. "I say there ain't no heaven. I ain't goin' to heaven," he shouted. The clergyman replied quietly: "Well, go to hell, then, but be quiet about it." "BEST UNIQUE MEANS OF TRAVEL" �k. , `,::ilii;' ll�tdlt ` til''. ltil+etaliit of ravel" at p ..!tt �^!i�! '� , tlY,�.:11i1tS16 illy Fate'��iiri!�, Itialtbn Iii +Enrtold_.; ail,,ef. kir, "aitii � itlltii .Carl •iiaitoni RRt �, Walton, and hia't1x�*Yeai'+ 0,0 Aldx mirth,, .> ,• i, $sa f,orthi tote f(ic bttgyyr Was supplied by 22.4Ol t.li , tiny aftiytitrio et, went tb r'neWlyeareds'i C3iauylas Eo'arvin, Marj oeie Sthlth; daughter of Mr. orod 1 . 4wetyn l;000. < l p #ec,ce C4+atinos.( WakJ tly i9ti a; ani ;0114.ioas ( .100.104.", >t lgli . tlatteriyng1y' iii new ' ody fitt k p or' 4040" 0* a coatq:' L,W9 do! The new Fail shaded include Black, Wine, Royal, Green,, Grey and rown, ,14Visiliy>'furred:, 0th .; 1 fox, lamb, mink and squirrel, or in classic untrilntlied models, Sei these new'coats` flow at, . 29.10,,; fl0. FLATTERING HANDBAGS To Compliment Your FALL OUTFIT Soft leather, bengaline, plastic or suedene, in new FaII shades of black, brown, green, wine or grey. • Small pouch and box shapes at 3.50 to 6.50 ifinery Lovely wool or fur felt numbers, cleverly feather plumed or ribbon trimmed,. inn ,,1he newest Fail trends. See these delightful new hats in our Millinery Department at , 3.95 to 8.95 A PERSONALIZED SERVICE FOR PROSPECTIVE_... ;BRIDES You lucky brides-to-be are invited to avail your- selves of our new personalized bridal service. Competent advice in selecting the right gown for bride and bridesmaids, wedding veils. and coro- nets. Also going -away costumes and dainty lingerie .. needs. A gift portrait of the bride will be taken without charge by Mrs. Loraine Ziegler. STEWART BROS. �ifirilt��e�ere����i•sAi��ii��i, Farm `chines Owing to shortage of winter storage we are offering Reduced Prices ON ALL OUR LARGE STOCK OF BOTH NEW AND USED MACHINES FOR A LIMITED TIME - SAVE MONEY - by purchasing your future regnirements now from Seaforth Motors .SEAFORTH PHONE 141 of ENNI=MIRUMIME®iIRMIMRMRM®SiI111IO11■Ilr1MIP PEACHES SUPREME IN QUALITY ELBERTA and KALHAVEN NOW RIPE A. Grant ox Shakespearealesroe . �' a ., TELEPHONE 49. i .,WHOLESALE WHOLE LE en ... d RETAIL AJ,L