MART|N'SENOUR |O0/o PURE PAINT %&VARN$HES appreciate about Toronto Stable uip- ment. This in the fact that the t" gnlvanhing method we use thoroughly covers and completely coats both the inside and outside of the steel tubing with pure zinc spelter. This method makes it abgolutely rust-defying "and nrnn` nnn:no nbusnn mink`: nn-:ol- `nu EL. There's one feature in particulu %ou'll mIEesr `Kiri iE;.;1.;{e x'y "hut-Jiinirg` `xii proof against strong stable acids for the cnnv:nnn-an OLA lu\A.kl\:l nu, PIUOI ISIIIISC IIZIUIIS ICIDIC ICICII I01" (C muimts{g1- period--while the method or- Layingthe ~ % , % Foundation i"5nk of Nova Scotia Jun ` Paid-up Cap S 9.700.000 Reserve - - l9,000.000 Resources - 220.000,000 Rust-Defying-Beca1`1se 1 Hot Galvanized oss, Barrie.) with the years. rics npocially. Barrie. f\ 1).... IDWK ESTABLISHED 1832 J. H. McCAW, Barrie, Ont. "5N36n'1'{&bE' a savings account and in accumulating . capital for a start, but it gives -a young man condence in himself because he knows that no matter what may happen, he has something in reserve. TI`! `I5 1 II `V The` a large majoriti; of business successes ave had their inception in` a` savings account. The Bank of Nova Scotia, one of the oldest institutions in Canada, invites you to open your savings account at any of its branches. T - STABLE [Ta EQUIPMENT umlruy uscu umpny appucs I sunau: coating and goes only 1 short distance inside tubing. Toronto Stable Equipment will make work euier-keep cattle healthi_er- bring more profits. Let me explain many advantages of Toronto Sta . Bull Pens. Water Bowl: and Litter Carriers--or get some of Toronto literature. dinarily used simply applies a surface 1-nnf:nn hat` on`: nnlu n o`u\rf rnnfnnt-A `A. G. MacLl-ILLAN "ri?':'EoN V St... corner 0! Phone 275. Manager, Barrie. ULL ity. Montreal. ' Elizabeth and Phone 105. p.m., 7~8 p.m. I'UI I I I lager children.` r3'1>"'s3PAmn:n Store. Barrie. OF- NURSES ch ve. Name Telephone 681. 9 services may be `E Simcoe Toronto and Church. Public mic Ont. aple Ave, to 9 p.m., or e 213. _b J; Little MB. [ac., F.T.c.;dW.~ a;A.` Boll -`nun I 5"` item` St. CAMPBELL ntlnts ge St" Toronto. gzv. Issuer . Arnold lm Pluxton. U. (`Iv _ on Engineer. ncy Department. tenses 3. Etc. Allandalo. fair; D '35`!- Barrio I U Ulrn IUKU|lV|Ic Eampbell, C. A. n A A `1)uI'| I!`- L 0. Box 1075. van 0 unupau -Eluwalo. lung`:-an-1 TUITION ---_ '-L:I..I-.. iistdsng $5.; TLE. f inmost. Tn-non`: BUTVIUX III BC or doctor. 13910 IIUI7 U a Phone 424. :j sic: I UIUUIU. Phone 683 Baud. 39 ELIZABETH s'r. `THURSDAY, MAY 3,. I023 [probnh `nnn_ and A McLaughlin-Buick That Fits the 5 Spring Tirire Deposits increase: rapidly B916 Why Wastjm; Mgney Daily! _._. _-_., __ ..-___, V Drum type head and cow! lunwl. comblnuon tall and gap lamp. trouble lama. rear vuion mirror. trunsmluuion lock. cowl ventimtnr.` wind- shield wiper. double-bur wring stool bumper. rudi- moter and gasoline nuns on inurument board. ucu rlzmv. double" tin curler. vclzod compartment In wal- nut instrument bond. non- nblc lucked. tool nblnot In door`. cigar llllmt. STANDARD EQUIPMENT 2'. 6_-_!-1$TFR 00- '-*.sraited I AO Of. all farm machines, the cream separator is the one on which you can take no` chances,` for the smallest of cream` losses soonmount into dollars. ` ' - . CK-`j1-I-v--:-,-wt w-_\_ (Nw Adam.) Head omcA,H.mi1t3n, om, Montreal, Toronto. Winnipeg. Retina. Calgary, Edmont'on.. . .. u A . 3 ..'1`he Melotte has been the farmers best friend for over 30 years.: It is the machine with suspended bowl and enamelled bowl casing. Hanging naturally on a ball- . bearing spindle, the bowl is perfectly balanced, and is guaranteed easier to -turn and to wear longer` than any other. i ~ On account of the recent ad- vance in raw materials, it is impossible to guarantee present low prices for any denite time. I35 I llv Ink. Barrio , c.. H. BEELBY, BARRIE DEALER Ten-year~guarant_ee- with every machineu . I Than `Are 15 M|.-L``mqM'n-Buick Models to Cliooui From Write for free dqscriptive Pooklet. _Don t delay. This growth is the result of condence in the sound policies" of this Bank and the willing and capable ser- vice rendered by its ofcers.. HE following compar- ativegures indicate an almost steady acceleration of the rate` of growth of total deposits. especially `during the last- few years. BAN Kofroxonro BARBIE You will get a friendly `recpiion at any branch of i Women )f Simcoo `Tho Standard 0! cammoa BRANCHES ALLANDALE In its sparkling beauty, in its lustrous coloring, and in the zest it brings to `motoring, the McLaugh- lin-Buickp Sport `Roadster ts the spirit of Spring- time. VMa,.stcr `Six 23-54 Special % Sport Rgadstef 1657 1352 ' 1s72_, 1882 1392' 1902 1912, 1917 1922 `Liri ELMVALE Have you seen the wonderful` PHONE 730 I73,67s,7s7 I . Yvarnityy A 8 Collier St. . 6.30-8 .p.m. 17 v-.---_ _ -J`-LISTER MILKER 253,100 474,722 2,303,479 - 3,730,470 7,817,429 1`s>.1 19,7s3 41,522,345 63,907,297 Simplicity Itself! Deposits 4 188 in -which it states, in effect, that the prices _ of7,Atlar_it,ic._t`rap'sp<>_rtation `service on the cuururrewu In View vuuuusnu uvuuv vn 6 has presented an interim report ar lines from seaports of this country are fixed] by the North Atlantic combine without regard to the question of supplyand demand. Everybody who has taken the slightest interest in ocean traffic, either as a study of economics, or because he has been doing business that calls for it, has known for years what the committee now own newspapers from treating the-`matter as if it were a recently` discovered condition. About the only new feature in the report is the assertion that, generally speaking. the Canadian Government Merchant Mar- ine has been governed by the North Atlan- -tic combine rates, fixed at varying intervals at conferences held in New York. There have been a few occasions when the govern- ment marine has stood by rates of its own fixing. These appear to be the exception rather than the rule. How can Canada change the situation? There's a question for the men who are entrusted with the con- duct of the country's affairs." They -will need to give it earnest/consideration in`view of the chance of building up a big trade in live -cattle with Britain now that the em~ bargo has been lifted. Since the war the rate on cattle `carriage has gone up 300 per cent. and the price of beef in Britain only 66 per cent, There's something wrong. reports. That doesn't prevent some of. our Gettin After. Sugar Profiteors Swift action has heen taken by the United States Government in attempts to check the increase in the price of sugar. Indict.-V ment of sugar profiteers, and a suit to close the Sugar Exchange are among the drastic measures. There is little" doubt that the increase has been manipulated by gamblers - who have long been used to exploiting necessaries of life and have seldom been brought to book. It is fortunate for the people of this continent that President Hard- ing is a seeker for re-election to the high office he holds, otherwise it is doubtful. whether the big interests involved in the ef- fort. to gouge millions of dollars out of the masses would need to fear any interference of a governmental nature. .It was not surprising to find some criti- cisms from Labor papers and Labor mem- bers in Britain, regarding the expenditures onithe wedding of the Duke of York and p Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon. Times have been very hard in Britain for a great many ` working people for several" years, and the burden of taxation on those who have the good fortune to earn enough to come within income laws, has been and is, grievous. But the criticism has been couched for the most part, in language that was within bounds. ` and with a full recognition of the fact that the mass of working people in Britain love a show, ' particularly when it is connected with the Royal family. Also there is this to be remembered-a large amount of the moneys--perhaps the largest part of it-- was a voluntary expenditure by municipal p councils and by tradesmen and other pri- vate citizens. It cannot be `said of_ the present Royal - family. that it is ,an extravagant or callous one, It has shown in many practical ways its sympathy and interest in the people, and has been careful to so live that` its place in the hearts and minds of theniasses is one of affection and respect. Prominent men in Britain predict a contest in the political arena that will be in` the nature of a show down". between capital and labor. One may be sure that ` the Royal family `will not figure in any such dispute. By virtue of theirposition they could not make themselves party to it, and leaders .of the various polit- ical units are not at all likely to drag them in. ------ Turks Not so Chesty Russia continues to find a place inthe despatches from various parts of the world. Barred from official participation in the new conference between the powers and the Turks she `sent an unofficial `observer to the place of meeting at Lausanne. This listening in" rproc may be all right so far as the Russi ns are `concerned,' but to others it indicates that Moscow does not hold the high place formerly occupied in the councils of Angora. The Russian government `claimed a big share in the vic- tories of the Turks over the Greeks. and planned to use the Turks as a checkmate to many of the decisions of the powers in which Russian interests were also involved. The Turks, exalted-zby victory, did not play the part of the grateful friend to the liking of Moscow. With the Russians in a chilly mood, and the Allies more strongly united than at the time of the former "conference, the Turks have been nding out`*~that they are not such wonderful fellows as they have been imagining themselves to be. The -prospects for a reasonably acceptable settle- ment of Near East affairs is the brighter because it was dark enough. a little while ago to. convince the Allies--France especial- ` ly-that they could not afford to let the Turks divide them . * _ Russo-Danish Agreement Russia and Denmark -have signed a trade agreement` which seems to be mutually sat- isfactory, The question of the claims of Danish citizens" formerly in business in Russia, and whose property there was na- tionalized by the Soviets, has been left open. British correspondents express the belief that an arrangement has been made `under which `these claimants will receive business facilities which will enable them to .make up for their losses, within a compar- atively short time, There are many other nationalitieswhich have like claims, espe- cially the French. It is probable that their governments will, in the course of time make some such arrangement as thatwhich Denmark has entered into. In the "interim the aggregate losses totradesmen, financiers ,and other private citizens from_ foreign `countries, who had establishments in Bus- sia, must be enormous. There is also .little hope of either Britain or France ever- receiving any part of the `enormous sums they loaned to Russia prior to the revolu; tion which removed that country as a V factor for the Allies in the Great War. ..-., .nl. and Musical oirmaster 0! on Church. nnservatory 0! y of Toronto. DI-mun H33 North Athntic Shippin; combino | Amy: 9; rather long invesfigation an ape-} sial committee of the Canadian House oil 7V__._.-_- L-.. __4...._L-J nun :-nduu-:cn nnnnrf |3,000e Britisher: for Canada ~ ' Under the plans made in accordance with the Empire Settlement Act some thirteen thousand people will be brought from Bri- tain to Canada this season. It is intended that nearly all should settle on the land or in rural districts. The cost to the coun- tries for this inux will `be six hundred AL .... .....I. .l..Il.-. -....l. I.....I.l -.._.I:6:...... [UK IIIIIB IIIIIIIJL `VIII UV 315 IJIQIJIIIVI-I 'i'o3.and- doumpch. Should conditions THEIR snemncmcz. ` Roya_| Weddir Qiponontures rm-:' muuuz _EXAljlNR warrant it a much larger number of new `settlers will'be received in- Canada next year. In this scheme a careful selection fa made of people who desire to go to any of the overseas dominipns and more attention will! be paid V-to-tfim on--arrival in the; lands of their adoption than was the case in the lpast years. There is aidecided swing in this country back to better times and such [periods are usually marked by influxes of settlers from the Old Land and from the United States. But it is no longer the fashion to leave them to shift for themselves entirely, though much more might be done to give them a right start. It is to the] people, however, rather than to the Gov- I ernment that the immigrant must look for enough neighborliness and sympathetic ad- vice to tide him over the period of acute homesickness. Some nationalities do this very well as in -the case of the first large party from the "Hebrides, which was roy- ' ally greeted not only by civic officials but. by Scottish organizations from the time of. their landing until `they were settled. It should be the aim of the Canadian Govern- ment and the Canadian people alike, to make first class immigrants feel that this is a country worth coming to. I Says Sun Has a cum If someone had suggested a few years ago that the sun was in danger of suffer- ing a chill most people would have been skeptical. . Science has, however, made such amazing discoveries and brought so many of them into useful contact with everyday life, that few surprises seem to be left. A distinguished Washington scientist, in a re- cent paper read to a number of his con- freres, declares that after a succession of years of abnormal heat there has been a ` falling off of the sun's heat, This decline, he asserts, began in 1921 and continued until the closing months of 1922. It has _heen carefully figured out by a system of measurement begun in 1905. These meas- urements make it possible to say that the _ sun is working some four per cent. less ac- tively, so far as heat is concerned, than was the case a year or so ago. It will be sur- prising if this report is not followed by pre- dictions of a cold summer. It will bemore surprising if, in the course of a few weeks, most people on this continent are not com- plaining about the heat. Looks Better for Law Government Premier Bonar Law is represented as recovering from the throat affection which for some time ha_s,prevented him taking `an active part in the debates in the Commons.` All members of the Cabinet have been greatly heartened by the victory of the Con- servative candidate in the Ludlow division of Salop, where there was a three-cornered fight.` The vacancy was necessitated by the elevation of Viscount Windsor, the former member, `to the House of Lords, be having succeeded to the"title of a relative. The re- stored health of the Premier, together with the generally favorable. comment on the new budget and the retention of the Lud- < low seat, which was seriously threatened by Opposition forces, has apparently strengthen- ed the hands of the Government in its dealings with a number of questions on which it had been subjected to bitter criticism. International Fishery Incident Off the Pacific coast a Canadian govern- ment boat has fired upon and captured an American vessel which it is alleged was fish- ing within the three-mile. limit. One of the American crew was wounded and cap- tured. The others fled after attempting to scuttle their vessel. We may expect an outburst from the fire-eaters south of the line and perhaps from some of our own. r , L.T.C.M.T (1 Vocal o Conservatory adinz up to .M. dezree. DL..-. .401