The Huron Expositor, 1938-07-29, Page 6• 7, -Z -4,;;V, , •
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ey s BigTen ,
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illion Dollar Surprise
Cauderesed from Liberty in Reader's Digeet)
1W4laS" natie eassee° - • ••s •
asilleaaresque little. a,ttidio, hidden
ea:W. an unfashionable part of
eaVaid, .1001cs like a corner at
,01;044.. On the doom are pig -Latin
'to the -left, inside of - the
•••':.gfetesie there is. a ;tiny • garage. for
,;•;;;•441eleey IVIouse's arn little green foota
anpettanrun either andi yon•over the lot'
'Meta ..ne, apparent sense to there; a
''' • tarte--themodel..foe the (Swain Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs-arawls
•
contentedly around in the sun with
."Teaftic Department" lettered oa its•
back.
•' It is as hard to believe that thin'
Is the plant where a million -and -a -hale
dollar gamble was recently taken as
it is to believe that slim, sty -eyed
Walt Disney ia anything more than a
s • nice awing man, so unassuming in his
manner. Even the office, boys call
him by this first name, and the chil-
dren in the •sneighborhood barge over
every afternoon to see how things
• are going, knowing that their naive
Scriticisras are alWays politely "liken-
ed to.
When the news leaked out that
Walt Disney was planning to produce
his • favorite childhood fantasy as a
full-length feature, laellywood thought
Walt had gone utterla wacky. Al-
though the industry had ,bestowed on
Him every honor, it !thew Walt had
never made any greatamount of
money. For "shorts" -under which
heeding Mickey Mouse and the Silly
Symphonies --do not, as a class, earn
much. Lately too, the double feature
".
• WHEN USING
WILSOICS
saii-sana READ DIRCTIONS
CAREFULLY AND
FOLLOW THEM
EXACTLY
Each pad will kill flies all day and
every day for three weeks.
3 pads in each packet.
10 CENTS PER PACKET
at Druggists, Grocers, General Stores.
WHY PAY MORE?
THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., Hamilton. Ont.
in the average theater- age. cat their
,earnings even more. Alsoe-Hallywood
was well aware. that Diener AlwaYs
-took about two and seven eighths
cents out of every three he earned
and put it back into studio ,experi-
Ments.
What no one expected, pereaps(n.ot
even Wait himself, was that When
"Snsow White and the Seven Dwarfs"
reached the public it would cause the
second great revolution in the history
of the movies. The first revolution
was the advent of sound. in 1929. The
s.ecand is a filen which by the most
conservative estimate looks to make
at least $10,000,000, and may prove to
be the .most successful picture ever
made, yet which basua a "name" in
it, not one livings actor, not one real
background or stage setting, no light-
ing, no labor problems -nothing save
imagination and brains end beauty
and love all set to music.
The film hasbeen sound -tracked in
eight languages, and in every pla.ce
it has been shown it has left its audi-
ences .enthralled. Theater managers
everywhere are doing an absolutely
unpreeed•ented thing in demanding
that they be allowed to show the film
twice -as soon as they can get it
now, and again next winter.
Its popularity has defied its very
creator. Although he likes to pre-
serve the • personality of Mickey
Mouse, his first success, and still finds
time to be Mickey's voice in all his
reels, Disney felt that Snow white,
all her animals and the dwarfs sbould
fade away with the film. But Dopey
proceeded to steal the show and come
to life. •
Dopey bridges the gap between the
miraculous Disney animals and the as
yet unperfected drawing of thumans.
He is, yea see, half fantastic, half hu-
man, and in the affections of every-
one, quite perfect. So Walt will prob-
• ably have to let Dopey live on.
Meanwhile Disney sits quietly be-
hind his unpretentious desk, extreme-
ly gratified, but not a bit satisfied
with his achievement. looking upon
thie first feature as a very imperfect
experiment. Snow White taught him,
tor instance, that human beings are
much, harder to animate than animals
because they move so much more
slowly. His staff made over 2,000;0,000
separate paintings before he was at
all satisfied with the humans in Snow
White, and even after the film was
running' in New York, he was still
working on new animation for the
iariaces He stent eaz1 t on, teas and matte
theatree use it.
Dissaey also Iearuesii the vital ha
Portanee of an a, propriate musical
baclegratitali. The music of &VOW
Waite was evele more carefully plot-
ted out than Sae, story itself. Hada
throat had his own little Masicaa
theme; when all of teem. were • to-
gether, tie thexae_always had seen
notes. And den't think you cried, by
any accident 'when you saw Snow
White -on heir bier. 'Dhe music was
there egging you on.
Disney has now decided to make at
least one fulaileagth feature yearly.
"Pinocchio" and "Bambia are two
stories he has' thought a great deal
about, and he haeraceng wanted to put
animation to various well apown *lac-
es of music. He makes yonttlaink of
James G. Huneker's advice to the
young man who wanted ao write.
"Don't create ,pot-boilers," Huneker
said. "Create masterpieces. There's
each a big market for masterpieces."
Thera' what Disney, with the heart
Pf a child ands the mind of a great
artistalws found out. • '
Meanwhile it isn't impossible that
Mr. Gable is feeling a bit chilly de -
slate anti Ms sex ;appeal, an little
Mae Temple may have added a gray
hair to her golden curie. For the sac -
cess Of "Snow White" isn't the jol-
liest thing that could heve happened
to living actors, and Mr. Disney hai
come dose to proving that the pen is
mightier than the personality, of the
greatest eters
GOING. WITH THE WIND
(Condensed from Popular Science
Monthly in Reader's Digest)
Three years ago one of America's
largest makers of radio sets had
what seemed to him a bread new id-
ea: the 1.150 of windmills to generate
electricity for radio receivers on
farms remote from power lines. He
asked ae engineer to investigate the
Two days later the engineer return-
ed, amazed. "There are a couple of
farm boys in Sioux City, Iowa, who
already have this problem licked," he
reported. "They know just how big
a thing they have and, it's all sewed
up in patents. You'd better go out
'there."
What the boss found when he welt
to Sioux City was a pair of unaseum-
ing, country -bred brothers, John and
Gerhard Albers. They were so busy
making their windmill generating out-
fits that they were reluctant to stop
long enough to talk business. It took
the executive several day's to buy a
half interest in their company.
The Albers boys' windmill charger
originated some 10 years ago, when
Gerhard was in his middle twenties
and John was about ready for his first
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HE HURON EXPOSITOR
Established 1860
MeLEAN BROS., Publishers, SEAFORTH
..t04,1`44,
..lenieeeeselinseeekieleal" etesteseeiceee
sestese-• :se es. •,
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ine
How cati Germany
Make War ?
(Condensed from Saturday Night an Reader's Digest)
•
Calculation of the hard and fast re-
alities seems to peeve that If Ger-
many were to start a war todiay, ev-
en supported by Italy, she would be
disastrously dlefeated. And there is
evidence that many' of those in power
• in Germany realize this.
A modern technical war eatmot be
fought successfully without ample
supplies ef on and oil. Yet Ger-
many eontrolsetoday (together with
Austria) only one-fifth of, thearon ore
supply ...which she and Austria-Hun-
gary controlled in 1914. Goering has
catiated grandiose _plans intended to
quadruple Germany's domestic ore
production in the next few years'. It
is safe to. say this •will not be done;
German ore is extremely low grade
(and hence costly to smelt), and her
armament industry is at present. bas-
ed almost entirely upon imports of
the rich Swedish ore from Lapland:,
Germany's present consumption of
oil is between five and six million
tons annually, and rising. By gigan-
tic efforts she has raised her. synthe-
tic production of gasoline to som•e-
thing over 1,009,000 tone. This, with
about 1,000,000 tons of alcohol fuel,
benzol and natural oil from domestic
wells, covers one-third of her present
consumption. In wartime, consumption
would skyrocket. I have before me
a carefully worked out calculation
based on, the requirements of a moa
ern mechanized army which sons•erva-
• Lively shows that 11 'million tons of
gasoline, benzol and lubricating oil
would be needed annually at the front
and behind the lines.
British experience shows that the
synthetic production of these eleven
,million tons wetiid require 35 million
bus of coal, the labor of 400,000 men,
an investment of over 1% billiondol-
lars, and Several year of construc-
tion effort.. The artificial product
thus ...manufactured costs over four
times as much as the' World price of
natural oil.
In rubber and, cotton -materials
only slightly less vital and in a way
more pressing because Germany can-
not seize nearby territories, containing
a supply of them -the situation is the
senne: Germany is now filling ova -
quarter of her rubber needs with her
artificial product, Buna. It is a very
good substitute, but it costs 65 cents
a pound. The world price of rubber
is 15-20 cents.
Germany now covers about one-fifth
of her cotton -needs with substitute
fiber produced from wood. To even
double her annual production uf the
substitute -which would still leave
her far from independent of the out-
side world -would take 4% years' for-
est growth. And the substitute is of
poor quality.
Finally, food. Germany ouglieto re-
member the agonies of starvation she
suffered in the last war. In case some
quarters were forgetting, an article
by a retired general, quoted recently
in the Frankfurter Zeitung, reminded
'them. He says bluntly that ,it is
sheer -madness to ateach the youth of
today that the reason Germany last
the 'war was failure of the national
spirit; and that, with that spirit
much stronger now, she must win.
The men of 1914-18, he claimed pas-
sionately, made the greatest military
effort in eistory. They lost because
of lack of, food. The moral of his
article was: neither 'have we enough
food today to risk a big war.
Amazingly enough, German agricul-
tural acreage ;has been steadily dimin-
ishing since 1932. Yet an official of
the Agricultural Ministry has pointed
out that Germany, to nourish her an-
nual population increase of 450,000,
needs an increase of 84,000 acres a
year of tillable soil. The acquisitiob
of Austria, a mountatnoal, timbered
country which does not produce its
own requirements in food, will ,not
hedp Germany any in this. respect.
The truth is that the food situa-
tion in Germany is already what one
might expect after a year or more of
war. Butter and fat are rationed, and
there have been ominous references
in speeches of Hitler and Goering
that bread may not be long in follow-
ing. Cream and eggs are' alraost un-
obtainable, and only the poorest cuts
of meat are to be had at anything
near the supposedly fixed Prices. The
workers' standard meat diet, the
Volkswurst, has been adulterated;
butter is often mixed, with whale oil.
In everything quality has declined.
One might say, then, that Germany
cannot go into a big war at all. But
the Nazis hope to Win their way step
by step down through Danubia by an
overwhelming show of force, without
fighting, as they did with, Austria. If
they can intimidate these little me
tions one after the other into a state
ef vassalage, they can afford to take
their time and consolidate all this
territory economically and politically
before engaging in the great trial of
strength with Russia (France being
reduced by that time to a /Timelessly
second-rate position alon.gside the
Nazi Colossus of 150 millions).
The only real point on which Hit-
ler and this generals differ is how to
go about this. They believe his
startling coups too liable to land Ger-
vote. The Albers had a battery -pow-
ered radio set, and once a month they
had to pay a dollar to have the bat-
tery charged at a garage, meanwhile
missing a couple of days' broadcasts.
The boys- begrudged the interruption
and their father could hasdly spare
the dollar.
One day Gerhard got hold of a copy
of Farthest North, Fridtjof' Nausea's
record of this exploit in freezing his
ship into the ice and drifting across
the polar regions in 1893. In this
book the boys found the story, with
photographs, of a windmill Nansen
set up en deck to generate electric-
ity. While millionaires in great cit-
ies stila heated their mansions with
gas, Nansen in the polar seas was
reveling in electricity.
Here was a solution to the farm
radio problem, and Gerhard and John
set to work. They found an old
windmill and an abandoned steel tow-
er. They got an automobile genera -
10; at a junk yard, and connected it
to the windimill with gears from an
old cream separator. The home-made
contraption worked! It kept the ra-
dio battery charged.
But to insure a steady supply of
current, the brothers soon saw that
what their charger needed most was
a wheel that would turn rapidly even
in a light wind. In the farm work-
shop they began whittling out experi-
mental propeller blades of the air-
plane type. Since they had no labora-
tory equipment to test the relative ef-
ficiency of these blades, they 'mount-
ed the propeller on the family auto-
mobile, hooked it to 'a junk -yard gen-
erator, and wired on an automobile
ammeter. To find. the efficiency of a
given propeller in, say, a 10 -mile wind
they drove up the road at 10 miles an
hour, and back at the same speed..
The two -direction trip ironed out any
inequalities due to wind, so that the
average showed, just what the propel-
ler would do. Eventually the Albers
brothers developed, literally by cut -
and -try a six-foot propeller so effici-
ent that the wing tips travelled thir-
teen times as last as the wind that
made them move.
This problem disposed of, the bro-
thers reasoned that if their propeller
design was good enough to run a six -
volt generator for charging radio and
automobile batteries, it could be made
to work on a 32 -volt oharger for light
and power on the entire farm. Whit-
tling when they should have been
helping the senior Albers run his corn -
hog farm, they finally produced, a 12 -
toot propeller whica, by their road
tests, was the best they bad so far
designed. Mounted on a higher tow-
er whose steel they persuaded their
long suffering father to buy, this pro-
peller gave their farm all the light
and power that was needed. Itesis
still there, still doing it job, unchang-
ed since first it was erected. It has
'cost nothing for ualteep-or for any-
thing else -beyond a few drops of oil
occasionally for the generator, a
yearly coat of paint for the propel-
ler.
Meanwhile, it wee plain to the ,bro-
thers that they would nee.' a lot of
sate to produce their charge • on a
commercial basis. The ora'aal six•
foot propeller was still giving tbe
Albers family good charging service.
Wby couldn't other Iowa. farmers use
lest such a gadget? So the boys
placed. a four -line advertisement in
the classified sections of Iowa farm
"Let the winid, keep your radio and
auto batteries charged on electricit1
made with old auto generator and our
propeller. $&50. Winclicharger, Chero-
kee, lowa.
may in a big wax white, the odds
ara ' still ovecwhelmasely agaliset aer.
It was, on that score that they oppos-
ed thenAustriaa coup (end were parg-
ea), the Railletead 'emirs, and the In-
tervention 1 Spain. The .lattter' they
also eeneldeied, a gravid wastage of
precious war'materiale. °
*The real risk Of war certainly ices
in -Hitler's violent game of power Sl-
ides,rather than in any deliberate
large-ecale attack by Geentatty. Even
Goering and the other advocates of
the "lightning •war" --a ferogious on-
slaught With every idevice of fright-
fulness intended to dampletely over-
whelm and dethoralize the enemy in
a week or' Itwo-must surely realize
the weakness of their mad theory af-
ter the :experience of civilian aesIst-
alace in Spain. Phere is plenty of
reason to .believe that it was this
theory which was "tried out" at Guer-
nica, ane more recently at Barcelonia.
Besides, Britain, France and Czecho-
slovakia are not Loyalist Spain, but
powerfully armed countries. .
It may be argued. that Germany
could seize sufficient quantities of
iron, oil and food for war making be
lightning moves. Certainly' she could
seize Hungary and her food resourc-
es. From there it would only be a
250 -mile dash to the Rumaniart oil
fields. The rich iron mines of Lap-
land are 1,000 miles from Germany;
but her navy would give her the nec-
essary control of the Baltic.
Germany would then have the re-
scartes to fight a big war. But she
would be ;defending a line of com-
munications from Lapland to the
Black Sea. She yveuld have, besides
France and Czechoslovakia, the con-
siderable military resources of Ru-
mania and Yugoslavia to contend with,
probably 'Britain, .andultimately the
combined opposition of Scandinavia.
One has only to add the possibility
of Russia going in, to get the com-
plete picture of the military balance
against Germanys.
And on her side, what allies could
she count on? I am inclined to doubt
very' nrucle' if Italy would jump into
a war which Germany started, Ger-
many's only real assurance of Italian
aid is to get Italy involved first, as
she did Austria-Hungary in 1914 (and
for the same reason), and, then go to
war along with her. Even so, Italy
herself is entirely without iron, oil
and even coal, ;has no surplus food
for Germany, and has already suffer-
ed under the drain of war for three
years. What an immense bluff she is
putting up!
The Czechs understand all this.
That is why they are. keeping up such
a bold front. And there is consider-
able evidence that German staff cal-
culations are not different from mine
(for much of My data is taken from
German military papers). That ought
to be the beat insurance against war,
for a while.
-.Orders began to dribble in. Soon
they were averaging six a day, then
eight, then ten. The brothers were
whittling like mad, and hired a neigh -
bar boy to help them. Still they
eould not keep up, and they were oa
ten two weeks behind in their slap -
/tents. Finally, with more than a
thousand !dollars in the bank they
decided teediscontinue business until
they could develop a =chime to turn
out propellers.
Neroodworking experts told thein
that every attempt to Make a ma-
chine for camping, airplane propellers
01 wood had been a failure. Undannt-
6d the boys 'Went ahead; they made
cutters of stray ' bits of steel Salvag-
ed from Wilk heaps, and tied theft
Machine together with carriage bone.,
• They hitched It by a belt to the trac-
tor outside/ their, Workshop window,
and it worked! It was essentially
the same as the sleek maohines whieh
today turn out finis;hel Albers pro-
pellers in one operation.
The brothers now had what they
had begun groping for six years be-
fore. They had proved there was) a
large demand for their propellers and
they had a machine which could meet
it. But they were brake; they bad
gambled their entire savings and cred-
it in building the machine.
So the bore began looking for fin-
ancial baking. In Sioux City, the near-
est big towe, they found it. , Then
they rented a factory, put their ad-
vertisements in farm papers, and be-
gan turning out chargers. A leading
manufacturer produced .speoial gener-
ator for their outfit, and they bought
it in carload lots. They sold the en-
tire rig, propeller, generator, tower
and all -but so far in the back lanes
of trade that few people heard of
theta
They had reached this .stage three
years ago when their exploits brought
the radio engineer and finally his
company's president.. Now, baying
merged their corporation' with the
radio company in return for shares of
stock in the latter, the Albers bro-
thers are making several thousand
wind charging sets a metals and be-
tween 750,000 and 1,000,006 farm peo-
ple in Spots tiot reached by power
lines are using wadmade electricity.
Sete have beeti sold in every state of
the Union, in every province of Can-
ada, and in nearly every country in
the world. •
Pr the average farm, the 32 -volt
set gives light, runs ferns machhtery
such Se separators, shop tools of mod-
erate size, and ordinary househdld
equipment. It is not ihtended for use
with electric ranges or tefrigerators
or' anything requiring motors above
one horsepower. OS course, the far-
mer cannot add electrical appliances
indefinitely without purchasing addi-
tional storage batterlea, and the load
that it can carry depends Upon the
amount of wind, which, varies h'Sr
lo-
ca11tfeg. For example, the makers
warnecuetomers in the southeastern
states' that their wind velocitieeare
only enough for a small load of lights
and the most •neceseare •applientese
The general rule le that wherever was
ter-autimIng windmills have been sat-
isfactory, the- electric current supply
fikffri,. wind" will be eqiiatly satisfac-
tOry. Since less than 20' per cent. of
fertile In the United' Sta.:tea are eleas
trifled, the Albers -brothers think'
there% still widespreadtheir
need' for the
riven tam
WHEN I CAN'T SLEEP
Sophier Kerr, novelist: "I found
my recipe in 'Phe Lives of a Bengal
Lancer." It is simply to draw twen-
ty even breaths, then on the twenty-
fiest hold the breath as long as pos-
sible. By the time I have done this
three times 1 am drowsy."
Harrison Cady, artist: "I place my
hands back of my head, relax, and
contemplate something which repres-
ents great quiet and tranquility -such
es a drowsy midsummer noon, while
I lie on a grassy slope beneath a
shade tree and see a blue pool in the
distance."
Kitty Carlisle, musical comedy star:
"I sing old songs to myself. It's dif-
ficult to remember the acries of songs
you haven't sung for a long time, and
In trying to recall the words I drop
off to sleep."
Major Anthony Fiala, explorer: "On
my trip through Brazil with Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt, I learned my best.
lesson,: When I go to bed lase sole-
ly for the purpose of sleeping. If I
cannot sleep; I get up and exercise
until I am tired."
Orson Welles, actor and producer:
"I read eta° 'History of MacHenry
County, and if that fails, .I turn
out the and try to pretend that
it is 5 a.m. of a winter's morning and
I have to get up."
Gracie Allen, radio comedienne: "I
weed to count sheep, but they made
such a racket with their .baaing that
it kept me awake. Now I count or-
anges, on an imaginary orange tree!"
Fanny Heaslip Lea, novelist: "I sing
myself to sleep (mentally) with 'The
Young Man on the Flying Trapeze.'
It has a wave-like swing to it and a
philostophy to which!! have become re-
signed."
Frank Craven, actor: "I choose the
toughest golf course I ever played
and for a companion the one person
I'd rather beat than all others. Then
I par and birdie and eagle hole after
hole until it all becomes so easy that
I fall asleep from sheer botedm
o."
Lillsiart- Gish, actress: Black eye-
shades .and wax ear plugs have always
done the trick for me!"
• Norman Rockwell, illustrator: "New
York's noises ,supply my only sleep
peoblena I take the most ex4ruclat-
lng sound -trolley, tax, or train -and
imagine myself a character going
home in it. Perhaps I'm a jolly little
breadwinner, pleasantly tired,, carry-
ing home a surprise package for my
wife. In this imagining I threw off
my own worries by becoming this
untroubled perston-and drop
off to sleep."
Cecil 11. De Mille: "An automatic
phonograph with bedside control
piayo my favorite symphonies which
I And a good hIpttotic." •
'Albert Edward Wiggam, lecturer:
"If I wake during •the night I step
out the door into the cold tight .air,
and take a two -minute air bath. With-
in five minutes I am sleeping like a
baby. I got this frota Ben Franklin."
Katherine Mayo, novelist: "Some-
times I He on one ear and put a sub-
stantial pillow firmly over the other.n'
This not only keeps out outside nois-
es, but auppresses the chatter of
Ideas 011 the loose within. My other
practice 1 learned from a Wise old
Indian failDutch Guiana.: Put about a
half-teatspoonfel of pepper in a coffee
cup and fill the cup with blistering
hot milk:- You drink the milk ina-
Mediately and as fast as.' You possibly
can."
Hugh Ilerbert, movie star: 'When
I Cab% sleep, 1 get up atud)watcli the
goldfish. The ,firat thing I kilo*, cine
A,s weir as mistiakeitis' ic40. r
TL -
ba
tege tlec:veopOprodintleurteaivr14thilsta
Lasting relieg violets when,the live.
kidneys and bbwels are =Med tO)
action by
nn;
mows,
•laver 'Pills
Kidney_
Ismaimoominwl"°".010.0
•
of them will gape at me. Then e
yawn at Min. We keep this up for a
few minutes and usually l'm so sleepy"
that I can't find my way back to the
bedroom."
"Lady, could youse giveeme a quer-
ter to get me where my family is?"
"Certainly, m,y good man, here's a
quarter. Where is the family?"
"At de movies."
Tommy (in presence of visitor):
"Daddy, willyou please give me a
dime?"
Daddy (with forced smile): "Cer-
tainly, Tommy, here you are."
Tommy: "This time you wora't
make me give it back after the com-
pany's gone, will you, Daddy?"
••
The stranded Englisii actor went
into a sordid eating house in New
York for a cheap mea.l. In, the waiter
he was horrified to recognize a col-
league who had played with him in,
London.
"Great Scott!" he gasped. "Yost a
waiter in this place?"
"Yes, but I delft eat here," replied -
the other, with some dignity_
Fall Fair Dates
Tillsonburg .......Aug. 30, 31 -Sept. 1.
Tomnto
Woodstock
Elmira
Fergus
Hepworth
'amount
Tavistock
Chesley
Clifford
Comber
Hanover
Kincardine
Lion's Head
London (Western
Midland
Milverton
New Hamburg
Orangeville
Wlarton
Wilkeport
Acton Sept. 20, 21
Ailsa Craig Sept. 22, 23
Allis Von Sept 22, 23
Atwood Sept. 23, 24
Dresden Serie 19, 20, 21
Exeter Sept. 21, 22
Forest ' Sept. 20, 25
Galt Sept. 22-24
noderich Sept. 20, 21
Harrow Sept. 22-24
Lambeth Sept. 22
Listowel Sept. 21, 22
Mealord Sept. 22, 23
Mildmay Sept. 20, 21
Merlin Sept. 21, 22
Mothat Forest Sept. 22, 23
Neustadt Sept 23, 24
Norwich Sept. 20, 21
Paris Sept. 20, 21
Sarnia Sept. 22-24
Seaforth Sept 22,.23
Shedden Sept. 21
Shelburne Sept. 22, 23
Springfield Sept- 21, 22
Stratford Sept 19 -21
Thorndaie Sept. 21
Tiverton Sept. 22, 23
Arthur Sept. 29, 39
Aylmer 1 Sept. 26-2$
Ayton Sept. 29. 3e
Bayfield Sept 28, 29
Belmont Sept. 29
Brussels Sept. 29, 3a
Burford Sept. 27, 28
Caledonia Sept. 20, 30, Oct. 1
Drayton Sept. 27, 23
Drumbo Sept. 27, ag
Florence • Sept. 28, 29
Fordwich Sept. 30, Oct. 1
Glencoe
Grand Valley Sept. 30, Oct.
Harriston Sept. 29, le
Holstein Sept. 29, 30
Ilderton Sept. 28
Ingersoll • Sept. 29, 30
Jarvis Sept. 28, 28
Kilsyth Sept. 28, 29
Kirk ' Sept. 29, 30
Lang Oct. 1
Leamington Sept. 26 -Oct. 1
Lucknow Sept. 29, 30
Mitchell Sept. 27, 28
Muncey Sept. 211
Paisley Sept. 27, 28
Palmerston Sept. 27, 23'
Parkhill Sept. 33
Port,, Elgin
Ripley
Rodney
Straticroy Sept.
Thedforcl
Wallacetown
Welland
Windham Centre
Wyoming •
Zurich
'Zephyr
Aberfoyle
Alvinston
Brigd en
Aug. 26 -Sept. 19
Aug. 25, 26, 27
Sept. 2-5
Sept. 9, 10
Sept. 8, 9
Sept. 7, .8
Sept. 9, 16
Sept. 13, 14
Sept. 16. 17
Sept. 16, 17
Sept_ 15, 16
Sept. 15, 16
Sept. 14, 15
Fair) .Sept. 12-17
Sept. 15-17
Sept. 15, 16
Sept. 16, 17
Sept. 16, 17
Sept. 15, 16
Sept. 15
Sept. 27, 28
• s
Sept. 29, 3'
Sept. 27, 28
Sept. 26, 27
29, 3Q, Oct. 1
Sept. 27, 28
Sept. 29, 30.
Sept. 27-29
Sept. 27
Sept. 28, 29
Sept. 26, 27
Sept. 27
Chatsworth
Dorebester
Dungannon
Embro •
Oct. 4, 5
Oct. 6, 7
Oct. 4
Oct. 6, 7
Oct.
Oct. 6, 7
Oct. 6
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Erin • Oct. 8,46
Fairground • Oct. 4
Highgate Oct. 7, 8 4
Melbourne Oct. 7
Mount Brydges Oct. 4
Norton County (Siracoe)...Oct. 3-
O'vve4t Sound • Oct. 1-4
Ridgetowo . Oct. 4-6
St. Marys Oct. 6, 7
Saugeen Indian • Oct. 3, 4 4
Tara Oct. 6, 6
Teeswater Oct. 4, 6
Chsweken Oct.11-13
Underwood Oct. 11
Moraviantown (Indian) ....Oct. 18-21
International Plowing Match and
Parra Machfitery Demonatra-
Wong Minesing, near trarria
Octotbst 11, 12, 13, 44. ,
4