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The Huron Expositor, 1937-07-30, Page 34t, • • N; • 0 I County Town Holds Old Home Week .tit 1st to .,PLAN SEAFQR,Ta-NIGHT Goderic'h',e Old ' Home Week, for which prepsratlolls• he.ye been making for many months, vowels to 'fruition next week, August lst 7th, and the old. town as expecting ,.ecting many visitors - eel elaborate program has been at - ranged for the week, of which one of tee nvajor events will be the xnair►- moth pageant -spectacle, • "Britannia," porea31•ug the unfolding of the. his- tory of Great Britain and the Empire, with a cast of more than 600 persons. This promises to be the greatest pro- duction ever staged,' in the district and will be .seen at Agricultural Park on the nights. of August 3, 4 and 5. Beautifiil costumes, lighting and scen- ery, spectacular dances, ••a large 'sym- phony, orchestra, and a massood choir of 100, voices- will make the produe. tion excellent in detail. Thu'rsd'ay is, Seafeeth nigfit. Two afternoon's will be given over to 'race meets. On Mondry'; August 2nd, the stake races for which Gode- rich odo-rich is famed in the harness horse world, will be run, with purses aggre- gating $2,500 for the five. events. On .. Thursday, August 5th,, the program will consist of. three races -2.26, 2.16 'add •a-'celt .race, with purses of $900: Baseball fans will have their in- nings on' Wednesday afternoon,•• Aug- aast 4th, with a doubleheader between two of the fastest professional teams a.vailabie--the Buffalo All -Sitars, one . +ef the smartest clubs of New York State, and the Detroit- Stars, famous colored team. 'This is a $1,000 tea - ' Imre, and the division of the money 18 .arranged in such manner as to fur- nlsh an Incentii'e to each team to play to win each of, the two games. Ah i404t' ifit l t . gi% Iiia the rola wlhl� ill +�i! 460.440 to a11- Cit#x. , 4.# I" All tlf . w,iilebr .aolln'ds fa p -044441b, died even` ieaeible u' Mimi,you commence to •peacticO - it • Then, I.f moot become obv'ioga •Gbatr ill a3'ile tiling as a 1141ffova fortaadaa is pose• Bible -in a countAT acelapying the 'bugs, stretch' of_ territory. that )nada- oe-- envies.- For local ooitdittons vary. And to make any Rae` section the standard am„ TresPect tee whish the regulations shall be fixed, is to..ea�tse.. an injustice to others: - - If wages, for • exaniple, are $xed on the basis of the most efficient Ontartc labor and cheap -Ontario. eiectrite powes•; then Quebec industry. will find it impos- Bible to compete. If, on the other hand, living costs in rural Quebec are. taken •as a ,•:wage factor,l the worker in Ontario, where living .costs are higher, will suffer. In brief, this beautiful ,dream that social vision- aries - and' vote -getting ' politicians paint of uniform industrial standards and security for the whole Dominion is a delusion. The N.R.A. in the United. States found' out to its cost the lesson of the'' impossibility of uniform regula- tion of- contineht-wide industry. It tried to meet the difficulty by a system of- zoning, and also by setting up "authorities" ., in each industry with powers to nrlodafy the general regulations to meet individual cases. The result was that the exception speedily became. the rule, and uni- formity was as far . • from being achieved es ever. The main difference from the original situation was that the various zoning administrations and industrial authorities had created a new' .class of office -holders living at the public expense, their annual salaries totalling, according to a cam- putatio'n.,- made . by, the New York Times, is exoe of $50,000,000. • Certainly, much as Canada may want constitutional' reform, there is one thing she wants much more: to cell a halt to the growing number `'of individuals Who are living on. the public payroll. , And at this' stage of the discussion it is pertinent to ask Oa Friday afternoon, August lith, a just what reforms which are desirable grand program of Highland games, cannot be made under the constitu- dancing and piping will be carried out tion as it is at...present by agreement •ender the direction of the Elgin and among the Provinces? Middlesex Caledonian Society. On • Friday evening a band tattoo will con. elude the • official program. .During the week there will be a sr;ccession of Carnivals and. other ev- ents, with eiarades and fireworks and : bands galore. The 'Goderich people, in short, promise "a week without a . dull moment." - t 'Ful The- i RA' zta>',t row table dan t 0euches, where mp.a10 are sexIlaed,: the !actual cooking a Year. 011 . r 040 0 is done in, am dof aumiA•en alien cls. 4;4001140e1 �e�al. range. Here axe tWQ' nt b a'leep ' utile bed >ar- 1m2nenae ,coffee pots, ' a bug kettle ` r god d tgrY lass t Ph in+ thF ee' •u and other utensils of g,,€gantuan, Sizes ems, mom., for a 'family which epnsum •three To ' support, hist tuzbily,_: Oneziule large loaves et bread,•a gallon of cof- Mini?* work s• a 38 ;, rented fasts: ' fee and more t a pound of butter Abele ba , of it i;tore for bi&. oPThe living room; of the Masse •home; wheat, and a titer, $fit le a ktt hen e 0a1. rb isl.eiv,-;'fid ._iu_ arden from,..•w�lti'eli tbe..fa i y obtaina�, enough p 'seat conifeetably' all the all i'te vegetable �;Seareely a eek nieurbers of the family. The beda'oopa, . ese lies but some mene.ber of the .fern- used by Mr. and Mrs.- Masse le next By needs new 6119e:494r. Masse says, to the living room. It containsa and to,keep,them all_'supplied-he also large double bed, a smaller double has taken a position r'an foremen in charge of a road co.. ruction gang. When wagh day' comes to the Mas= ses, Maris, 20, 'bangs, out nine long lines of clothes. '1 ,1esday she irons them, and by Tthureiday of the same week she often has to wash all over again. Marie also does the baking of thefamily bread, haips make butter, and looks after the -chickens. For an ordinary meal, six foai'l are served. There is one set of twins in the. 'family, Antoinette Marie and Juliette Marie, nine years' •old. Florence Marie, August Maurice, Nelson An- toine and Joseph Richard are the ‘,ierried members, and they already have presented then' parents with three grandchildren. There bas' not been a death in the 'famsily since the parents were married in July, 1910. Over a score of clergymen fromall over :Ontario attended bhe ceremony at St. Peter's Church. Sir Harry Gignac, of Windsor, a .papal knight of St. Gregory, stood .i in the traditional dress of the order with- drawn sword' ie. -attendance on Bishop Kidd. In his talk, which he 'made • both in French and .Englisl;, Bishop Kidd' warned has hearers against Interfer- ence from the governMent in the mat- ter of educating their children. "There is no sucli.`tliing as true ed- ucation witboui religion," he said: "Daft let any government deprive you of the right to give your children the kind of education you want for them-" Other speakers included' Father Marchand J 13 Lapoite and Sir Har- Seen In County Papers (Continued from Page 2) Purchased Farm Mr, John Flynn, of McGillivray, Inas purchased the 100 -acre farm, being Lot -13, on the west side of the Highway,Highway, sono) two unties south of she, with thorough accuracy that hxeter,'Stephen• Township. The;tarmi the reason Canada avoids problems le- at present being rented by Mr. H. ••Glanville, and was formerly owned by Mr. Gordon McDonald. Mr. Flynn • will get possession in the fall.—Exe- s ter Times -Advocate. have escaped injury in the original accident." When the back is broken, "gently roil the victim onto- a blanket so that he rests face downward. When tihe blanket is lifted, the victim's back sags, thus -removing •pressure from• the spinal` cord." When the, neck is broken, "gently roll th e viggln onto a plank so that be rests face upward, and under no, 'circumstances with the bead tilted' forward. This is the best position to prevent movement of the fractured, cervical vertebrae." If the victim must be .carried by hand, four first -aiders "should form a team -,one at the victim's stead, an- other at his feet, the others at each 'hip-` 'While those- at the hip lift and carry, the others gently pull and car- ry. The . traction at feet and head holds the vertebrae .apaar''t• and :pre- vents therti • grinding against the in- jured. When the victim is unconscious, -"handle him: as though his neck or back were broken.' a There is still another reason for treating the constitution of the venerable Fathers with respect. Pos- sibly it is the strongest of all, namely, the feet that decentralized govern- ment was adopted in the first place becausepeoples of two different rac- es, speaking two different languages, were being united, "andthat, on no other basis ' than that of widest pos- sible local autonomy, ;could Confeder- ation be possible. . That situation, prone as we are to. overlook it, still exists. And it is still a basic motive with both Cana- dian peoples. Because the problems. of the moment are economiie, and of a kind with which centralized gov- ernment might be more efficient in dealing, it is lightly imagined that they will always be so. No assump- tion, could be more false. It can be Jim Hunter Will Be Here Jiro Hunter, Toronto news broad- . caster, who le an honorary president • of the Old Home Week committee, will be in Goderich for one or more days of Old Home Week. Mr. Hunter, himself a Goderich old boy, revealed lis plans in a telephone. conversation -with a friend in town this week.-- Goderich Signal. ' Thieving At Grand Bend• After prying open a ventilator glass • en a car owned by a summer resi- dent . at Grand Bend, a thief on Fri- day unlocked the car door and stole $20 in cash and about $50 worth of clothing and dishes, whioh were being brought for summer use by the own- er wner of the car, H. M. Bawson; of De- troit.—Goderich Signal. - Farm Notes Care of Chicks and Layers Males. that' are being saved for breeding purposes should not be al- lowed just to shift for themselves. It is best to keep these young males in a yard or on a, range by themselves where they do not -come in. co tact with the' pullets and bother the. in order to reduce fighting to the mini- mum wrong these young males, it is a good' plant, to keep some of the older male's with those that are being held over from last season's breeding pens. These oldi males will act more or leas" as policemen among these youngsters and will be a big •help in preventing fighting. It is a good plan, on cock- erel . ranges, to have several roosts about three feet high as refuges` for males that are chased by other males from time to tifne. A growing mash should be kept before these birds all the time, ala it is kept before the pul- lets, and they should be fed regularly each day on a grain ration to help them develop sufficient body weight Fresh water and - green food are• also as desirable for .them as for the growing pullets. Controlling, Slugs Garden slugs are always most abun- dant in wet seasons or in moist sit uations. Theyemerge at night, hid- ing during the day,'beneath the soil, and they .feed chiefly on the •under-jj surfaoes of the leaves of beans, let- tuce, cabbage,- cauliflower and such like plants. They rasp off the epid- ermis of the leaves and where the in- festation is -heavy severe injury is oc- casioned. Like all other'pests, these animals can be more easily.control- led if remedial measures are applied, when they are small and few in num- ber.' Accordingly, the amateur gar- dener and ,the commercial growers whose crops are being attacked should; give the . matter immediate attention. In Eastern Canada, the ;slugs are controlled by dusting the infested) ff plants with hydrated lime in the ev-f ,ening after the sun has gone :down. and. • the feeding commended. Care - should be taken to cover the 'upper and lower surfaces of the Ieaves and the soil immediately surrounding the plants. Hydrated lime is • effective only when in the form of a light dry' powder. • ,If it -becomes hard when subjected to moisture, it is noninjur- ious to the slugs. Consequently a few light applications of the lime at intervals of three ar four days is much more effective than one heavy dose. Another -method recommended is to spray the plants, with Bordeaux mixture. as troublesome in their way as any of the economic difficulties of the years of the depression, and .more demagiu+g to the unity of the State, lies in the fact that the constitution, in its genius, confines these problems 'to the local arena and prevents them from becoming a source of national disunity. It will be objected, of course, that - the constitutional reformers . only want .government centralized to the extent necessary to deal with the economic problems,. But what assur- ance have we that the msovement would stop there? With the economic jurisdiction which, they now have the provinces are expensive enough lux- uries: To circumscribe in any, im- portant degree`their present authority could only be the first step towards their final elimuination. And then would be left on the Federal doorstep those problems of race and creed. which do not tear and divide the. nation at the . present moment be- cause a wise constitution keeps them essentially outsidi the realm of Fed- eral issues,. The .. provinces, admit- tedly, may be _ costly creations. At the same time, they are a cheap price to pay for immunity from the strife into whieh quarrels over race and creed are capable of plunging a people: The British North America Act may not be perfect. it is moon. ceivable that time should pass • with- out iaiprovemrent being made upon it.. But it is important that its virtues should' be recognized end is particularly important that a notion which is all too popul4 should be dispelled, the notion, namely, that our present generation politicians, whose possession, of genius has not been dazzling in recent •years, will suddenly become inspired by gather- ing around a table and undertaking to .draw up a new' heaven on earth. Improvement in the constitution, it may be predicted, will came about as it has ie .the past: by the force of matured public opinion asserting it- self, not by politicians tearing up the instrument we have and setting out to draft a new one. • Engages New Assistant Mr. Murray Manzer, a licensed em- ,balmer of Ingersoll, has been engag- . ed by T. W. Heath as his assistant. :Mr. Manzer has had considerable es ;perience, having spent five year's in. funeral work in London and Toron- rto. Mr. Manz.er will begin his new duties Monday next—Mitchell Advo - sate. Shipping to Britain Canadian foodstuffs are imported into the United ,Kingdom free of du- ty and are exempt from import du- rtnes -changeable on foreign merchan- .,dase, provided that .the British Cus- toms authorities are satisfied that the .conditions attached to the concession of Imperial preference have been ful- filled), that is, the inclusion in the shipping documents of the proper „certificate of origin. L -One ped . kills pies all day and every .day for 2 or 3 weeks. 3 pada in each packet` No spraying, :no stickiness, no bald", odor. Ask your Druggi t, • Grocery or Genal Store. 10 CENTS' - PER PM MET way PAY h ? 71IB!l tt.ON t 'Y PAU Ct'1",r> iamiilnsr OAS. "I ate grateful to you for the con- fidence onfidence you (have reposed in me," or- ated the winning candidate. "All right," said a voice in the rear, "but don't do any more reposing. Get busy." —And Sudden Accident (Excerpt from 'nine) To Dr. Byron Polk Stookey, Man- hattan brain and spinal cord spec- ialist, has -come many a ease of par- alysis rendered incurable by ignorant handling -of th'e patient at 'the scene Of anaccident, He has given advice not Indi led in ,any first-aid mannrai: Mae,' "never lift they head of an Injured person until he has told you whether he can ..- move bis legs or bands. If he cannot move his legs, his back is broken, If he cannot move his Mends, his neck is -broken. In both cages, the Spinel cord is 4n- jured•. If you lift his head to- give him a drink. of water, 'dr told him up to carry him, you 'inevitably grind the ®proal cord 1)etweeu parts of the broken vertebrae •and dextro - any tonefa i rem- nt Of the cord which. may • HE FOUND Mk BRAN BROUGHT REGULAR DAILY ELIMINATION Get rid of half -sick daye—with the headaches, the listlessness, the "always tired feeling." Frequently, they come from common constipa- • All you have to do is eat a de- licious cereal reguratly: "Every morning, for years, I have bad a good helping of your ALL -BRAN, and it means regular .daily elitni- nation."—Mr. E. N. Kinng (address en request). Kellogg's AurBialki is so much better than drugging yourself with patent medicines. Within the body,.ALL-13nAtc ab- sorbs Wee its weight in water, *aria a soft inass, gently cleanses the ardent Eat two tablespoonfuls daily, either as a cereal 'with. milk or cream or in recipes. Three daily in severe eases. Sold by evocete., Made cold by Kellogg Lenatnis The family, of Mr. and Mrs.. O. Passe, Consisting of ,21 ' children; all healthy and happy, receivedpapal, blessing on Sunday before a large audience. No 2 shows Mrs. Masse with the 21st child born in Febru- ary, No. 3—Each week. 42 large loaves of home-made bread, similar tothe. loaves' held by the only twins in the Masse family in this photo, are consumed by the father, mother and 16 sons and daughters now liv- ing at home. The twins are. Are tinette (left), and Juliette, aged 10 years. No. 5—Because the nearest Separate School is some four miles away,'childrenaof the Masse family attend a Hay Township school, Sec- tion 11, which Is only 200 yards from their home. In this photo the eight members of the family now -attending- the school are shown. Back row, left to right: Cecelia, 13 years;- Juliette, Antoinette, 10 -year- old twins, and Louis, 12 years. Front roe, left to right: - Ivan, 11 years; Michael, 5 years; Leo, 7 years, and Archie, 9 years. (Photos courtesy London Free Press) ry Gignac. F:F A stand that sold pictures of the Masse family, their home and farm, did a rushing business. During the ceremony the family sat on four long: benches, and alter it was aver. both -were besieged by autograph Minters. , • - In addition to those already men- tioned, entioned, the Masse family consists of Agnes Marines . 20, Anne • Ivoone,; `Ulrnque Alphonse, 17, Genaeve,.3esa I d'Am, 16,' 'on!q_ue Cecilia, .14;1.IG 13, Leo Paul Ivan; 12, Arhie,,IS 10. seam. t,e+ ke chances with your HAND SIGNALS FOR DRIVERS Meads genteelly understood by Cdonene Most accidents me nreventeble. Do yourgartbi deter signalling your itineration before making rigert Or kft arm *NM TURN Nand and amo antlended onward ar inctvad oder OW to Lira &oat or greatest safety get Blue Sunoco; we challenge you to find a quicker acting motor fuel . . In an emergency, its lightning quick pick-up snaps you to safety . . . Its high knockless power minimizes gear shifting; reduces one -handed steering . Its. freedom from harmfill chemicals and from corrosir- action makes it safer for your motor. , LETT sums SLOW DOWN OR STOP Nand and 011111 rottatadird downwarcL toi.0 .1 A. Wright, Seaforth Cornish