Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 28 Sep 1922, p. 15

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ICIISC - .1 - ' ' . . . ._ , 3.. Keachle who has pan] two nes in! 1 Another crop of `s eed ' ` . ered in recently B; P:E:i::?dlg83: ficer B. E. .'Sutton. Some ' zhem just couldn't heip st[epniug ') the gas while -,the,,.'we,L;u_-g_0h`?`i tht_'oug}} Innisfil. One of these `:4 fair drxver from Tomnto named "1\5_l.`s;. Barrie in [the las ' - as well as another onetin ;'p0`:. ::1::!L F])EF.`dCl'g C0ll1~t` she u'V "1,,; 1na'kingi.: c_-.101 40 an hnu'.'.when Spged '00` Sutton saw her ca}. flash ll-,\ on last occasion. ' " nua sp:-zanan EINED 1":\`VlCl-2;`. `WAS come 40. MILESVAN HOUR` ._.___-._-- , j *******;*******4******** 3+ IN woMAN';s% REALM %*%*$***$**$%%%$i%%%*** z-up gnwwnlrn |:'.nu:.-n -I-mm... .;..-.- -__T % G} G. SMITH 8: COMPANY, Sqle Agents` Marshall Sa'n'itary Mattiess Now iitlac icleal ` time to um V _ ' Snap up `this umj `Great Club M Offer NGW! lggilding Bl_JSlNESS% scuool. 3| Thursday, Septiber 28, i922 | Free Malttress Cover f . Toronto Makers of the Marshall Ventilated Mattress shaldown Marshall Sh -4-the Mat- Mattress--The Marshalfelt Mattress and oc_k-absorbTing` Cushions for Automobiles. .Don t wait! Remember this big offer is for Septem- ber. See the free mattress cover and New Marshall Sanitary mattresses at your . dealers-'-,-then decide. _INo obligations incurred.` . Vfort! The mattress of near- ' ` The New Marshall Sanitar};lVIattresses_ are a revelation of thoroughness` in every detail--the nal achievement in Com- t ly a thousand silent coiled steel springs, each indepen- dent, for perfect rest; The A mattress that is ventilated --sanitary always. . ` `superiority; Al- ways look `for it. ThejMar`shalllabel. is . the mark ,'of` < You need mattress-covers to protect valuable mattresses from dust, stains and` wear._WelI made from best quality Sea Island -cotton with double stitched seams. V Washes over and over again." - IIII, 10 up '1: In an .. Every young nnmend woman should equip themselves with I _ knowledge of typewritim: short hand and bullneu methods. The ELEVEN Show Schools in T0- BONTO. hgye jnled over 26.000 Itudento` from allover the-'-"r?ro- wince. Individual. instruction- atut It my time. Send for hand- book-now, f` V r. ucmuri. cum Prludnl 1 :` : 1 Q jnnnn--uh QAQAAAAQ Perfect sleep is vital--indispensable-`-it d- pends upon the `mattress. ; V Decide NOW-Y-while this spfendijd club offer is yours-4-vs_'hile. you can get a . [z_&_rnol.d. Thousands would give a fortune for perfect sleep--the blessing that other thousands venjoy on The NewMarshall Sanitary Mattresses! Sleeping cdmfcprt `from nou{ 915:! wigh every purbase of a "iTius'ii't"s's'"s"ciiab1s TORONTO H. Lee, Dockery, All raid; town of i of f. on f ing 3 5 a` [l'S. 3 in! $3. nto! I all Yum _--- vv---a svbl Tremaine, hiking is lots ofugtin,` bxiimfulv of health and a whole lot cheaper than any other mode of tra-`x 'vel. At least that's what they said last week when they stopped in Barrie to rest overnight before hit - ting the trail to Toronto. B:-.th left Huntsville on Thursday, walk to the Quee City. 'l`L..:. Ln '- Septl 14, to V -' Both girls are enthusiastic. Advo- cates of a cult that has become so j popular in the United States. _The_\' L 5-wore regulation hiking costumes with l-Jrreeches and easy comfortable walk- !ing shoes, and carried a minimum of 'lu`g-gag-e--just enough to look pre- asentable in a. hurry if a photogra- d]pher happened to come along. Hats they disdained. . Miss Tzjemaine is attending Vic- . toria University,` Toronto.- She said , she was trying to combine the prac- , tical side of pedestrianism witlrthe `jtheoretical side as seen through "a ` {college lecture book.` I I2:-M-L ...:..`l'- _.__ -_.LI__,,,-L l-' ' I 2 lb. I N OW 0.`? Q lho1igh` passing motoristshby the `score invited them to "hop iri the two hikers preferred the prospects of exrcise and adventure held out by a . hike through the crisp jautumn air ' and the ever changingscenery. . through, -These are the joys of the` open road [For--"him who travels without a load. . | l---... .. -uvyc w use one wno1_e day 3 E` For a couple; of cl girls, Miss Jean Roe Trema_ine, ibvimful a Echeaper 01;} `:1ast' when t two \cuu.s oN m:_H1x1:-: I-`ROM. V HUN'l_`SVlLLE TO Ionouro ci'i1 The Marshall label lo'ok_ for it. Th e Marshall _ Guarantee applies only when it -is at W ched. Beware ofi itations. ` couple charming Toronto ism .Tnn-. D... ..;..x u-:-- Ir- - v- vuuslllllls LUIUIILU and Miss Marie :_,_H .'._ l'-L_ an ducks, Mrs. J L. uu -ave-v J Honestyland love" of home` also characterize the Chinaman. But China, Miss MacDougall believes, is a country where the` rich.are richer! than they are any place else andithel I . . . ` ' `poor poorer. Th1_s ls evident on all- _ over one convert. 0 China now has 375,000 Christians, M-iss MacDougall states. ` This has"_ come about during the past 100.years .-j since Rev. Robert Mvorrison first i] started to preach Christianity in that 1 country. He ' labored seven years 1 1 Bobbed Hair Even In China I, Miss MacDougall states that along I the coast where the influence of 4 Western civilization is seen and felt i China is rapidly assimilating new`l world ideas. Automobiles are com- mon in the larger cities, and even! bobbed hair--that present-day habit here--is-seen among a few of the bra- 1 ver Chinese girls, It is away from 5 the coast, however, in,the undeve1op- 8 ed districts where Chinese live ini 1` teeming millions. content to exist as their forefathers existed before them, that pitiful conditions of `squalor and ignorance zprevail. Slavery is seengeveryyvhere. One can buy :1 Chinese chi1d`for as little as fifteen cents in some parts of the country. Malnutrition among children _in the Honan area is tragic. 100 Per Cent ilndustrious -Whatever faults the `Chinaman has_ h'e.is not lazy, Miss MacDougall says. He can't afford to be. He is 100 per cent. industrious. and on the. small farms the, farmers work_from dawn _to. daylight with primitive ihstr.u- mentsl "I-Iard work vital to prevent ." P 1. D u starvation, for even as it isthe crops are insufficient and a heavy toll. `l _I'....'.._A.__ __.j 1,_,x' the famine takes Interesting impressions of ilife in China are brought back to. Barrie by `Miss C. F. MacDoug'all, Elizabeth street, who is home aga'.n on :1 ye.-n- s furloughaafter spending` five and a half years in the Proviswe of North Honan, China, as a niissiunary for the Presbyterian `church of Canada.` Miss MacDougall is the daughter )1'_ Rev. J. ,MacDouga1l, D.D., who was himself` a missionary in China for several years. She possesses a deep- ly ingrained sympathy for the pitiful condition of the Chinese -peasantryh *with their poverty, their ignorance] and their total lack of information on i the veil `of their own ' isi_on, ` - ' a y L subjects outside drab ii 3033315 iii cons % EVEN IN FAR CHINA Miss M_cDouga1l Gives Inter- . esting Facts on Conditions ' in the East ` '375,ooo. Christians % THE BA(R.R_IE. EXA MINE-R. I Subscribe for The Barrie Exane erand get all the news. $2 a year. . . . V ~ . u . . ug UL yuc vv. H1. D The W. M.`S.' of St. `Andrew's church serveddinner to `the visitors. ~ {he _Exe'cutive adjourned to meet again in- January. 1ber 28, 1922 . A buttonhook will be found very useful when making jellies or putting up preserves. To remove the jars ter they have been sterilized oreto remove themrfrom the boiler after they have been processed. slip the book under the wire, You can then lift `the jars without burning your fingers. . -,.,-.-:,u Mrs. E. Smith, of Aiston, representing the Executive, addressed the Barrie Presbytery, who were meeting in the same _church on the same afternoon,-'urging~the ministers `to bring. before their .con`gregations the claims of the W. M. S. 7111... 117 It An ......,. 4..-uuo U1. uuuxauu, presmeu. The meeting was largely for the purpose of planning the wo-rk for the remainder of the year, and the re- ports` from` the different convenors were most encouraging. 11,, 1-3 V-1 up . .- -. _..__ _ _ ____-- --- II o avlo. Ila The Executive Committee of the Barrie Presbyterial W. M. S. met in St. Andrew's Church, Barrie, on `a recent afternoon. The Preside_nt, lMrs. Elliot of Midland, presided. Tho rnaaHr~:.- nun. 1.........1-. 1.--. LL- ..v.--vayuuo -(LII .u.vva|-uuulg .I:VeV. 11.1 A. Boya is the mission pastor-_ and he is; assisted' by six workers of which Miss MacDougall is one. . -.D.-uv..u. I .' Miss MacDougall spent part of her: gfive and a half years at the Presby-i Iterian mission at Hwai-Ching (pro, :nounced Why Ching) which is near! the Yellow` River, called `China's Sor-' row from the fact that every year. Vlthe great stream overflows and hun- dreds 'of thousands are rendered homeless. At Hwai-Ching Rev. A, Rnvd {Q fhn YVI:nn':4\v\ magi- ---1 L- - ---...-- ovvvn Nominally China is a repub1ic,J Miss MacDougall states, but there` is no real government. Two govern-! `i)rs--one civil-and the other 1`nili-f a'tary--at the head of each province, --retain all the `power, They do: pretty much as they please. `IH__'- , ,, V ,7 ~._ V--- xauvuvuvl Eriormbus armies are maintained in ' China, each military `governm- possessing his -own fighters. ; I it}, II vs -0 V K mothers have rebelled against the sides, throughout the vast Republic'.- Millions live in mud huts, which in! flood seasons, melt away like butter} Object To Baby Feet Binding- In coastal districts the Chinese age-old custom of binding thepfeet ofthe "girl babies. The custom grigi-I nated, according to legend, from the' decree of a Chinese empress whose feet were ugly and crippled. She caused an order to be issued compell- - ing the women of the land to bind, their feet so that hers would not be; the only crippled ones in the king-; ldoni. So ever since the Chinesef `mother has,'bound the toes of all her girl babies back under the soles of` their feet. 9 111v I PRESBYTERIXL w. M. uunfauu-311 Health record excellent. . C7 _ jare RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS nta[1o Scholarship Matriculation, Solo Singing, Music, Art, Conversational French emphasized. Outdoor games and sports. Health rpnnrrl av:-Allan! 7 i " " ` First, make `the wonder- f_ul Rinso liquid. Take half a packet of Rinso, thor- oughly dissolve it in cool water, and add two quarts of _boiling water. `Then lay your clothes to soak in the tub `of cool or lukewarm water- After one, two or three" hours or in the {.\u1Ut 13 a WOD. product, scienti made _to wash cloth: soaking - dierent soaps, chips and wa: powders, andused d ently. Do not put Rinsc to the tub from package, but make Rinso .I1'quid first. 11" `YOU USE A WASHING MACHINE Follow directions as above. ' the clothes wrin After soaking 3 them into machine, add enough fresh Rinso liquid. operate and rinse, and you will have the sweetest. cleanest clothes you ever saw. \ _ . V , . -. V l p` ` . "` / ~ i `Made All A _ .. . them: i of L1 is such a sim- ple easy way of wash- ing rompers, school ginghams, play clothes, etc., that you won't mind how many there are-- ; thanks to Rinso. venben Glollege Znrrib RI-'sIn|':n'r| Soak the Dirt out. For Prospectus apply to Principal: D}: not Rinso in- , tub tho make thq first. j".I IIU ECIID WQDVUQ Two cases were Vitdcozlrrijed, l_~I o_w.. ard A. Orr of Oakville, was served a- gain, and another "summons sent to Jo'1I' H. Stowe (if 1050 Hiuor SI , \V',, 'T..........&.\ Rinso\ is a wonderful scientically clothes by from washing powders, diEer- ` morning give them a thor- ough rinsing and the dirt just runs away. No need to rub on the wash board so that holes, come an colour` goes. ` I45 4..--- ' II the makers LUX Limited numben. `Page Fifteen ` R. 1!! .7,,W.. . M , _ The latest list includes: 1}Ieils__(_>n's ~Ltd., Toronto, whose car was knqck. ing off 39 Aaccordi,n`,; to ()t`r'_;curT' Stut- tonj` Geo. .W. Robinsm'x, ;2s'Rn.vens. Liiffe Ave., Hamilton; Wil'li'am 1-'eid, 111:`? Indian Road", Tot'ont`o'= J. M. Fm-n.tice, 310 Roncesvallas ,'-u,e_,_' Toi-. onto; B. Stillwang-2r 3.37VPAacific.f _A.\ e.', Toronto; Mrs. M. Ken;-hie, 25; I-gar Ave., Toronto; "W. Lee," I:d., Toronto; and W. J. 17 M<-`ville Ave., Toronto. All vni d;. $i4.25 of which sum the town of Bzrric gets $2.00. _ s_. '.. --> if So far more than t.!.v.r;- `in7.enVhave g,-air . fines for__peedin,t; on the Prof. ,vmcia1 Highwaysince 1`l_:e'1'oadw,,s sat with speed traps. .' ' 1 I

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