Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 3 Aug 1922, p. 15

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bay, August 3, 1922 Thursday, August 3, 1922 -.1-R:I.A. `; STANDARD THE WORLD OVER V _ COPYR|CH'TED BY THE MUSSQN BOOK COMPANY LIMITED 100% _o_f itg Selling Q13; iv - San Francisco Salad One roll of snappy cheese; half in pint 70f cream; salt; paprika; cayenne; two |tAa-blespoonfuls of water; one rounded tea- !` spoonful of` gelatin, "IY__L ;l__ ___-_____ _.I_l LI_ _ _L___- ___.l LL- FIG/.2 1 E271 I: IN cANA:::x:_._"' lilzow slowlyolderlpeople make friends The child picks, up friends without even knowing the names of those he plays -with. Young people make acquaintances on sight. But old people make few new acquaint- ances, and hardly any new friends; Some- thing has died out of them. It is that quick spirit which readily attracts others, and responds to attraction. Some more of the child is gone. This time it is almost puymual, `UUI1 I]; I5 'pl'E OI H18 CD110 QOIIE. Many of us look back with regret to the pleasure we used -to get out of simple things, common scenes, outdoor games and the very joy of living. We vainly wish those days back again. They are gone. partly because we have not the physical energy. quickness and spring we once had, and partly because we have outgrown them, or think that .we have outgrown them. Again something has died out of us. In a measure the loss is physical; but still more is it mental.` It is some -more of the child gone. ~" 11.... ..!.....l.. ..u'._'_--_I- _.-L 1- - v - Aunscw uuuv ms wue II] tnese aays OI mgn costshas not the resources of forest and eld. and farm, garden -and dairy, poultry and herd at her command -as his mother -had. Second, andniore important, he has not- the boy's appetite, the unspoiled palate, the unimpaired digestion he had when he was eating his mother's cooking. The big chum-p does not recognize how much he has lost himself, and he blames it on his wife's cooking. Give her the same advant- ages as 'his mother had in the .way of source of supply, appetite, palate and diges- tion. and his wifelcould probably give his mother points on cooking every day of the week. Something has died out of him, and he -does not know it. Again the loss is physical, but it is -part of the child Manv of us lnnl: hunt: with mm-.`+ 4.. +1.- vuunuuu Iuluwulg lb. Perhaps he comes in some day in bad] humor. and he gets it off on his wife by| telling her_ that the dinner is not t to eat, I and that he wishes that she could only cook the way his mother could. First he forgets that his wife in these days of high costs has nnt tho rnarmrnnu nl-' tn.-mo mu! -- ..---.... ....vwu an-u anvv IIJ uuvulo This is a fact which it is hard for us to recognize, just "how much the child spirit has died out of us by the time we draw near to middle life. It has gone so gradual- ly that we have not perceived its low. Let us take it in its most obvious form, the loss of the physical resilience of youth. Many a. man of fty will boast that he is just as good a man as he ever was, and is as active and strong as any of the young fellows. (To tell the truth we much pre- fer robustious fellows of that type to those whimpering nuisances who are always re- tailing their symptoms, and. have degenerat- * ed into ~apothecaries' medicine chests or` surgeons experiments) But let that fty- year-oldtjust try a hundred-yard dash with his seventeen-year-old son, and the boy will run rings `round him and still win hands down. That man has lost, and lost heavily without knowing it. ptfrlxonu `IA nnnsnn : n n A n \J\ J-.. 2.. In every-day language he is saying some-| thing. like this: Get a grip on God whenl you are young, such a grip that the storinsl and shocks of life will not `loosen it. Get a vision of God in your youth, such a vision that the care of this world. and the deceitfulness of riches, to use the words of ' Christ, will not obscure it." He is teach- ing the same truth which Jesu-:4; taught when he said of the children, 0_f such is the kingdom of God." In his old-fashioned way he is saying that childhood is the time when the ideas ` of God .and goodness. heaven the hereafter are natural and easily comprehensible to us. But when we lose that child spirit it is very difficult to take hold of these ideas` and live by` them. "I'LL. 2- _ t.._; "L! - tunic VI IIIII _ Therelis an Old Testament writer who is often called by scholars, the pessimist. of the Bible." That is Ecclesiastes, or The Preacher. (Preachersare apt to be pessi-I mists; some because of the difficulty of dis- covering souls in the bodies -of many people, and others because of the diiculty of keeping their own souls and bodies to- gether). This pessimist of the Bible wrote some good things. Here is one of them: H1-)__,__,,l_,, .1 n . say,` I have no pleasure in them. ' T. , .... .., 5...... yum-bu. LLUID ID uuc \ll IAICIH. I Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not. nor the years draw nigh. when thou shalt Ree Miss Ida Cr: . Mrs . Leslie . Mviss Ardagl ._Mrs. Hamil . Miss Laidla Miss MacCa Mrs.-Stewar Mrs. J. Wall A II 11 T6.` 11. 12. `The scores oh Saturday were: Barrie : Midland : MIDLAND LADY GOLFERS WIN Twelve lar golfers from Barrie motored to -Midland on Saturday, `July 29th, for the third of the County of Simcoe Ladies Golf Association games. The home players were the winnerswvith a score of-8 1-2 to 3 1-2. The` standing of the three clubs, viz: Barrie, Midland and Orillia, for the first half. is one win and one loss each. I The July-August meeting.of the Women's Missionary Society of St. Andrew's Church was held at the home of Mrs. H. M. Lay. Blake St. Despite the fact that many members were out of town, over forty en- joyed the kind hospitality of Mr. and Mrs. Lay. - Farther on? How much farther? . Count the milestones one by one? No: no counting, only trusting, It is better farther on. I hearit singing, singing sweetly, Softly. in an undertone: Singing as if God had taught it, It is better, farther on. Night and day it sings le sonnet, Sings it while I sit alone; Sings it so my "heart will hear it, It isbetter farther on." fa$%*$*%$$%%&*$&%&*&$&&$%$&g :+&%&$&&$&%&&$**&*%+$%&&&: gob IN WOMAN S REALM -M T% A T *: Buy advertised [ things. LILIB, J.la':Cd3 U Lula. . Creswicke 0 Mrs. 1 .Mrs'. 0 "Mrs. . Ardagh - 1 Miss 1 ._`Mrs. Hamilton 0 Mrs. . Laidlaw =3 Mrs. . MacCarthy 1 Mrs. Mrs. - Stewart ' 1 Mrs. Walker A 0 Mrs V ). Mrs. Grasley 0 Mrs. '. L. Miss F. Bird 0 Mrs. I 3. Mrs. Creswicke_ . 0 Mrs. I LosI Nc7H: -CHILD swan" ST. AN DREW S W.M.S. FARTHER ON TI-IETVBARRIE EX..MlNER a uluuq usullll s. Kellar s M. Benson * s. Dann 's. Rumple ; s. Beck 1 1. Shan-acy I s W. Duncan I . T. Duncan i . Finlayson. . a. F.` Preston 2 L (Pratt I . McLaughlin 1 .- 1 Valley l ecu, uuv uuuc Lue was surely, dying. Now it is the loss of the Child Spirit which makes it so hard for older people to become religious. if they have neglected it in youth. To the child the world is full of wonder. According to the great Greek, Plato, wonder is the beginning of know- ledge. It is also the beginning of religion. The person who looks out on all this entirely mental. The Child Spirit is slowly` dying; often imperceptibly tovthe man him- self, but none the less surely, dying. l Nnw it is Hm Inc: M: H... m..:1.: q.,:..: uuxu nu uwcucu uuu went to London when a child. She is a blonde, and her beauty attracted thegattention of an English di- rector. who saw her in a restaurant, He asked her if she would consent to appear in a picture. At first Miss Holmquist's par- ents objected to her giving up the musical career they had planned out for her, but finally consented. Later Miss Holmquist had leading roles` inseveral Swedish pro- ductions. Besides Miss Holmquist those who have important roles are: Margaret Seddon, Lewis Sargent and Fred C. Thom- nnn ,_._... . . .-.`. vuv VJ uIII_IlI'_lI ` Chance brought to Sigrid Holmquist, the Mary Pickford of Sweden, her opportun- ity to win fame. in inotion pictures. Miss Holmquist, who has a leading" part in Just Around the Corner," 3 Paramount-Cos-. mopolitan picture, which comes to the} Opera House, Monday and Tuesday, was] born in Sweden but went to London when] n nhilrl mm :c u lnlm.-.,l.. .....I I.-- L----L-- ' THE-E-=`.lRLS,eTHE cums: Here s to the girls, God bless em. no `matter how they dress 'em.-- Boston Shoe and Leather Reporter. I reliable _ __.._ __ ---v-uu-`now I'll I Ivhll-I I Another bar to marriage is that nowadays a fellow can't support the Government and a wife on one income-Colum'bia Record. I Miss MacPhail, M. P., handd back $1,500 of her sessional allowance. Some day she may get married, and after that she ll look back and wish she d have stuck it away in a sock.--London'Advertiser. ,,_,_, ._r .- -___.`- ..,.,v.. var-.3. ----..:..._ WOULD-BE HUSBANDS DIEFICULTY I Can you remember when the ladies in` crossing a. muddy walk brazenly lifted tlieir skirts half way up to their boat tops? _...._ (Eastern Ontario-Review.) Two years ago she showed to me, Her 'B.A. with an honest pride, Toduy she-has a new degree- MA with B A BY her side. MARY PICKFORD or swam-:N" l`1L_,,, I A LADY HIGH OF DEGREE THIS rsA ATSTU1D%E BLAKER AYEA CAN YOU REMEMBER ? AGNES. MAY NEED H`-~ The Special-Six chassis frame is 7'deep. It tapers from a width of 29' in the front to 4| in the rear. so that the sides of the bodytperfectlywithout overhang. Five cross- members revent the dis- tortion that eventually causes bodies to squeak. Studebaker glmgag Don t Rattle or % Squ@a{=' RFYSOH 8: MORLEY, DEALERS A BRADFORD s'r., BARRIE uuunus uuu. Blessed is the man who has. learned to love God ere the Child Spirit had time to die. Blessed is the man who has been able to keep the Child Spirit through his adult years. its wonder, its warmth, its quick- ness. its enthusiasms, its readiness to re- ceive new ideas. Of such is the kingdom of God. He who has Lost the Child Spirit has lost that which the wealth of the world can not replace. MODELS AND PRICES-f. o. b. Walkerville, Ont. Studebaker bodies_rest squarely on the chassis frame- not on the body sills. The body and the ` frame form a rigid unit that successfully resists the rack of the road. `Studebaker bodies are built in Studebaker shops by men, many of whom have been build- ing vehicle bodies for Studebaker for upwards of 30 years-and their fathers before them. Studebaker has been building ne bodies for seventy years. Studebaker Special-Six bodies, because of_ their quality and soundness, weigh more than those of other cars around the Special-Six price. You cannot skimp in material and build a body that will not rattle. Freedom from rattle or squeak is just another of the ne-car renements that emphasize the extra value of the Studebaker Special-Six. ` Cord Tires Slandaytl Equipment ' *fz.f\ = .i'.a.."F'~"' __j._ Sold only LUX dissolves instantly in` hot Water `into a Wonderful suds that makes your dainty things as fresh and lovely as when you first saw and admired them. v in V sealed packages- dust-proof I Chassis .........$2I75 Touring . . . . . . . .. 2475 ` Speedster. 4-Pan. 2750 , Coupe. 4-Pun. . . . 3500 Q..l-.. `rmn 'Bes't of ail 1*1'y'1Ei11ers 10 per Packet at all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores BIG-SXX n an/I III JJUV , 3700 Page Fifteerf ` 246 TEACUP READING No. 6 Interpretation No. 2 The eozisultont is about tojourney east- ward to some large building or institution. shown by the figure at the_end of the straight line of dots. There is some con- fusion in. his: or her affairs caused by too much indulgence in pleasure and gaiety, denoted by the butterfly involved in ob- some groups of tea-leaves near the handle. The tree and the fleur-de-lys (or lily) in the bottom of the cup are, -however. signs of eventual success. probably through the Assistance of some person whose name be- gins with an "N." n u A Princ'ip:al Symbols Large trees in bottom of cup. Flemle-lys (or lily.) lutterfly on side approaching handle. Line pf dots leadixig east to lulding. T . A Initials N" and C." ]_t_ Measures '_l`__:__ Quality

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