Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 27 Apr 1922, p. 15

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fence is FULL IRE throughout anizing will not ack. It has the .DIAN knot and than lighter and nces. Barrie, Ont. show I you the * GAD .An ache in the back and` an ache in arms, All on account of the baby. A fear and a fright, and a thousand alarms. All on account of the baby. And bottles and rattles and whistles and rings, A ?From cellar to attic a clutter of things. 'From morning to night and to morning i A joy in the heart and light-in the eyes, I Alb on account of the baby. ' I A growing content and a growing surprise. All on account of the baby. i ' .And patience that conquers a. myriad frets. And a sunshiny song that another begets. And pureness of soul as 9. baby is pure, -.And surenesa of faith as the children are miig " " '5'" "._'| ,And a glorv of love between -husband and wife, ' And a aaner and happier outlook on life---l All on account of the baby. I * .""ai{i'ia' . " '"' ' W " More fuse and more fume than an- army of men. ~ And a head. that is stupid for lack of its sleep, - And a heart where a flood of anxiety leaps- All on account of the baby. %%%$%%%*%&%%$%&*&%$%**w$$. :&%%&w*%w$$%**%$%*w&$$%%&: 3: % 1NwoMAN's REALM >253; "If your oven` is slow to beat. you will find Egg-O ` `list as slow to act- its double action insures eavening with a `slow or hot oven. ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROOER nav- ' eyes `wide open wikh: r- aHmoment`a thought: ory you've got!" ALL ON ACCOUNT OF` THE BABY Every time_y.ou bu_y+SUI_llfRISE. TTUVU Viriwvvvjiuu When you lift an Edd Washt_uh its lightness wi surprise. you---*yet. it is. prac- . tically indestructible. You `will nd mo, that it keeps the water hot longer- that it can't leak `or become dented. rusty or odorous. Simply because an Eddg Waahtuh is a one-piece tu with a glazed surface that is as hard as int. It costs. less than the old-fashioned, back-breaking kind. It lasts twice as long. The E. B. Eddy Co.. Li.m'.a u. Corinth Makers of Eddy : fuuouo Matches. Great labor Savers % Epov WASIFQQS Thursday, April 27,4922 ` Minard's Liniment forTDandruf you `get a Eig, brizght, sohd Bar of the highest grade househvoldsoap`.;1 ` EGG-O Baking Powder ggvmscaood [gen-t :9. Twelve thousand schools` in the United" States use motor-buses nfot their pupils. - uuu I Augc ."" y My dear child :--Here is time enough and ; leisure enough for -me to try to,pour out my heart to you, -and to tell you what'I hope you know--how much I hope for your happy life. Yes, I make air castles for you ~--and you must make then all ten-fold nobler and- brighter than all my dreams. I do not say this, as you know,` to the boys and girls. But, in truth,-life does not be- gin until you are married. Till people are married. or engaged, it is very hard-`to `preach about love---about -hearing` each oth- er's burdens. There is a great deal in Geo. Hayward's joke that a man ought to have someone to brag to--M-and that `someone. is his wife. My one bit of advice, or injunc- tion, that the bride and bridegroom shall have no secrets from each other, comes in 'here. Love is a life outside oneself. - It is the _life for which everyone is made and `without which everyone i_sinco'mplete. To ithink for an hour,` or a day, "What will make myself happy?" is certain failure. To think and plan all day, What will make `William happy. or Margaret. or_John or Jane? it is to love, so far forth as God lives. Here come in what you hear me say so often---that you must never give up the romance of it; and do notlet` him give it lup. ,Put a pansy in his -button-hole when `you. are ninety--and _W3V9 your hand to him when he passes the window--when you are ninety-six; A People suffer a great` deal by not being demonstrative enough to each other. You know better than the most know how to carry out my mother's advice to brides, Make yourself so useful to your ' husbandthat -he cannot do without you." This is no Philistine advice--nor Ben`ha- mite, poor utilitarianism. It means that you can now honestly and without shame think inghis thoughts, wish with his wishes. d'ream in his dreams--as you plan in his plans and work with his purposes. So you get over that ghastly weariness which com- es and ought to come with sel-f-culture," self-ex:amination," self-improvement" - and-al'l other damnables which follow on the lonely or selsh theories--first of which and worst. perhaps, is the poor wish to save ` one`s own soul alone. --You know how I can rage about that--and how` essential it is that we shall say OUR father when we P""V' . . . . . A Always your old companion in daily life, vnvsrlvai-\v\'v1 vvsvva Pittseld, July 1, 19037 e To the Boston celebrationoi the centen- ary of that `famous `divine and writer,. Ed- T ward Everett Hale, the world owes the dis- covery of the following letter written to one of his secretaries on the occasion of her ~mar riage :~- Mu r`t|nI ..L:IA., .`'.u... 2.. 4: m . . _ . . ...L .....l "i>u'r A wmsv m HlS.BUTTON- HOLE wuzu HE Is um:'rv:" "i:i$v?i}xii}n*i'.'1iL&iLE. xnn 12': "GD MHU EIUIILUI 111311 UL UIIU uwu. We doinot need to dwell on the very ob- vious lesons from the story of these two brothers. The newspapers and advertising managers can point out that it pays to ad- vertise -as '1`. De Witt did and not try to run a business on silence as did his brother, J. Van `Nani. ' Vauu Aauuca unu 5IvUu um luv IUI EU 10115. Because he loved God more than he loved either money or fame he chose to be lost sight of and forgotten. And he was for-_ gotten; so much -forgotten that the relig- ious encyclorpaedias which give long ac- counts of '1`. De Witt's life do not even mention that he had a brother, J. Van Ness; so much forgotten that` his death would never have been chronicled in the public pres if it `had not been for the re- lationship to his famous brother. Yet he was the greater man of the two; W. AA-VIA` Dunn!` 61: Anon" an LL- uoAn-c .4`. There are `other lesona which people do not so readily see. Oneie this. A man is frequently judged by the bigness `of the place `he lives in, and not by the bigness of the man himself. One brother lived in uy fence anywhere; ` How many who knew his name so well ever heard the name of John Van Ness Tal- madge? We will venture to say not one in 100,000. Yet these two men-were bro- thers and -both ministers of the gospel. Of the two J. Van.Ness 'Ilalmadge was a better scholar and a greater orator than '1`. De Witt. Then why did he not gain fame and wealth and a world-wide name like his brother? Because he chose to go as .a missionary -to China, to bury himself ~ out ofsight there, -to give his life to preach- ing and teaching the gospel in a strange tongue to a strange people, and, dying after a long life, `to lay his bones in a strange land. `When we landed in Amov in the year 1902, the year in which T. De Witt Talmadge died, the widow and daughter of John Van Ness Talmadge were still car- rying on the work to which the husband and `father had given his life for so long. Rnniumn lmn lnvm-I fin:-I vnnl-A than I-m Irumri By his oratory; by his originality and audacity, by his writings and by his wealth Talmadge made himself a world gure. known in all the continents, and receiving much praise and fame from men. If that was what he was seeking, verily he had his reward. T. De Witt Ta1madge's name was` published far abroad and when he died the fact was cabled to the ends df the earth. " SERVING coo FOR NOUGHT Just twenty ycarsago there died in Wash- ington, D.C., a very noted orator `and preacher, Thomas De Witt Talmadge. For forty~six years he had stood in the forefront , of American pulpit orators. For part of that time he had been classed with Beecher as the two foremost preachers of the United . States; After .Beecher's death`. Talmadge was, in the estimation of the public, in a class by himself. His oratory drew great crowds to his Tabennacle" in Brooklyn , and his sermons published in hundreds of newspapers made his name? a. household word "all over this continent, and indeed wherever the English language was spoken. He was a somewhat melodramatic person- ality, fond of publicity and notoriety; drew a large salary,-made a lot of money by his writings and lectures, and -died a compar- atively wealthytman. When we take into consideration that he was a preacher of the gospel, we must put him in a category by * himself, for he left an estate of over $400,- I nnn \l!lUIl VLIVVIIQ Fruit Piqs -How often the fruit pie is spoiled by th juice running out and making a soggy un- dercrust. Next time you -bake such a pie, insert esniall f_unnel of sti paper into one of the vents in the upper crust and it will keep the juice in the pie. I Dancing Slippers When dancing slippers begin to look shab- by at the toes, an application of wood al- cohol rubbed the same way as the satin will make them look ' like new. Insertion Repairs ' i Footings of the same width placed under the lace insertion when the threads begin to `break `will give you something to which to" fasten the pattern without altering the open eect. - ~ re-nib Dino V --- , ,;._ Water spots on waxed floors can be re- moved by rubbing in a circular motion with a cloth saturated with turpentine. -Dry with a piece of uannel. ' l\,_ ,s_._ An, IU HEHIUVU NIUII IK"l Mud~stained garments will look lilze new if. after thoroughly brushing the spots with a_stiFf brush, they are rubbed with a piece of raw potato. can \Aln6An Qnnbo The very high wages that have to be-paid to workerslon the tea plantations in India ,and Ceylon, due to social and political U117 rest, has caused the `price of tea to rise con- sistently in the primary markets and in London. This `influence is now being felt farther along the line and it is to be ex- pectedthat the price of teavwill increase to the consumer in the nearfuture. The vBoston_English "Opera Company is making the biggest hit of its career inits present tour and the reason is so simple that no doubt other opera companies in the future will follow its example. It is. a well known fact that" opera singers may be excellent in*certain'roles and bad in others, therefore. where more than one opera is carried`it is necessary to have casts for the dierent `operas or else general utility people who can get by in- any of them. Manager Beck of the Boston English Opera Company, not satised with either of these methods, determined to select one opera and get the best people for each individual , role. In making Il 'I`rovatore_" his choice of opera, he niade a happy selection, as I! Trovatore" is without doubt` the world's most popular opera. Its famous "Anvil Chorus" and the beautiful Miserere" in the Tower; Scene" are known and loved the world over; To hear this beautiful. tuneful opera with a cast of noted stars. each and every" one selected for the special role in which they appear, together with the famous Boston opera chorus, will be an unusual treat. The seats are now on sale and from all indications every seat in the house will be sold, especially as the prices are within the reach of -everyone. Prices are from 50 cents to $1.50. FAMOUSOPERA COMPANY" cdmmc I in BARRIE OPERA House,` MAY I car Toronto to ourist Slecpin Saturdays an TEA GROWING VERY EXPENSIVE HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS To Remove Stains WF'or Wqter Spots True BARRIE EXAMINER I u-wvovuina `IIVUIIIF HIM) MIC LXHIIS, J mg, sneenng, cynical countenance of the Father of Lia. There -are multitudes of men who sq:-ve God for nought but a good conscience. ' . ` ` Instead of wetting and re-heating the left- over baking powder biscuits, split, toast and butter them, and spread with marmalade or jam. They will be good with tea br cocoa for a light lueh_. Do not swallow the Satan's slander that all men are moved by only one motive, selfishnws and greed. Wherever you hear a man repeating that old fallacy of the devil besure that thereyou have met'one of the few thoroughly selsh men, who is imput- ing his own motives to others around him. He is seeing himself in a glass. And if he only looked at that `glass closelyenough, he would see his own face changing as in a diaolving picture into the leering, jour- inz. sneerimz. cvnical nnnxnmnanna at elm .-_-., -._. 1...- . _ . . . -. It `is not alone in the foreign eld that such deeds are being done. There is not a walk of life, not a legitimate occupation in which you `cannot nd some men living and laboring unselshly for -the good of others. There are statesmen. public ser- vants, doctors, lawyers, ministers, priests, sailors, trainmen, engineers, explorers, sci- entists, scholars, pioneers in every eld of human endeavor, artisans, la=borers,- doing their d-aily `bit of work to the best they are able, who are working not merely for what they can get out "of it, but also for the best that they can put into it for their fellow- men. ` I\_ ,,,n II .1 A .- .1 u u .- . _ | the great metropolis of New York, the other in a little christian community in Amov.` The latter was the bigger of the two. But} of course the big unthinking public judged` `that the man in New York must be the big man, because he lived in a. big place. It is a curious fallacy arising out of our mania for bigness that -people get the idea: that the big cities have a monopoly of all the brains, all the medical and surgical skill, all the legal acumen, all the orator- `ical ability. and that what is left in the 'smaller places is only a remnant which fell justbelorw the line of being. smart enough to get to the big places. fl Agent or Trunk Rys. a LAIIIIAU UIALIU o Still more important is the lesson` that there are men who are willing to be for- gotten that other men may prot and God's love may be made known. We all know the devil's jeer, Doth Job fear God for nought?" We all know Satan's lie that all those who are doing -good are doing it for what they can get out of it. Men like that almost-unheard-of missionary who might have had world fame are `doing good for what they can put into it. 74 I 1 I I 0 lIII.I.. After all, the standard whereby to judge a man is not the bigness of the place he lives in; but the bigness of the man. It is not the amount of notoriety he receives or advertising he pays for, but the amount of good `he is doing. .The 'l`ah_nadge in Amov laid foundations so deep and strong in that Chinese community that the church he helped to establish has been one of the great forces in both the religious and pol- itical life of _-that part of China. The Tal- madge in New York spread himself out sol th-in -and shallow that before. he died there was not a fragment -left of the great con- gregations he -gathered around himself for a little time. GLEII ,,,,_ 3,, ,,, A,,.A ,' A1, I, , - :1 n Appetizing Left-Overs NY kind of cake, from a simple sponge to an A elaborate marble cake, can be made irresist- _ ibly delicious with an icing of FRY S Baking Chocolate. It will gain in nourishment as well as in appetizing qualities, for F RY S Baking Chocolate is very rich in food properties. F RY S comes in powder form, ground very fine, so that it is most convenient, quickly prepared, and easily digested. (lg; n t:-\ at DnI;:nn (WI...-.....l..4... -...J I_L___-7# onvenient, q'u'ickly prepa'red, ahd digestd: Get a tin of F RY S Baking Chocolate and let your family enjoy an exquisite chocolate cake tonight. ' course, remember, nothing will do but F R Y S Beeton World-A consignment of 13,000 tree plants arrivedton Wednwday to be used in the reforestation scheme in the Awa- tershed area. Coun. Chapman, who has always taken a keen interest in the whole lproposition, has been appointed foreman `for the whole operation, and a. supervisor from the Department of Lands and Forests {is also onghand. The entire cost is being ,borne by the Provincial government and if `sufficient help can be mustered the work `will be expeditiously handled. It is thought likely that the average acreage planted this spring will amount to about twelve acres. , First, make the wonder- product, scie: ful Rinso liquid. Take half made to wash c] a packet of Rinso, thor- soaking - differ oughly dissolve it in cool soaps, chips and water, and add two quarts powders, and use ofboiling water. Then lay ehtly. your clothes to soak in the Do not put R tub of cool or lukewarm to the tub in water. After one,~two or package, but n-, three hours or in the _ Rinso liquid 1'. IF YOU USE A WASHING MACHINE s. Wednesdays through train lonist car and inta West. . HERE is such a sim- ple easy way of wash- ingv rompers, school ginghams, play clothes, ;etc., that you won't mind how many there are - thanks to Rinso. At . Mule by All the makers R009 b H _ of LUX R. 11) Sqak the Dirt out. Follow directions as above. After soaking the clothes wring them into machine, add enough fresh Rinso liquid. operate and rinse, and you will have the sweetest, cleanest clothes you ever saw. ' This action on the plan of the Councill taking immediate advantage of the go_vun- _ment s oer will meet with the hearty ap- proval of all citizens who nurse 3 health desire that our water supply should be c served in quantity and quality. [A deliciougiil; gi;-en` `:1. -gusting I51 by basting it with a few tablwpoonsful J` grape juie. DAIQIHDQOHA-n Claim. 5: uyv ; unac- Perspiration Stain: To remove stains from perspiration but your clothes, soak the garments in atraq salt watehbefore laundering them. Dio Rinso in- from_ the make tho _Rinso x-st. Rinso is a wonderful scientically made clothes by different from and `washing powders, used diEer- NGOUVER `RUPERT VICTORIA morning give them a thor- ough rinsing and the dirt just runs away.` No need to rub on the wash board so that hdles come andx colour goes. Grapejuice and Hgm _l_ _gge Fiffeexl ` R. ill I25 Eis ha;'>pened more thaw V, April 27, 1922

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