Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 5 Jul 1923, p. 10

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PHONE c. BRov7N" vrI._ W. A. LEWIS Surgery and Diseases of Women Associate Coroner County of Simcoo ' -and-- " DR. R; E. IVES Graduate of Toronto` University mm: 81 nu-2-- -n 4- --- R. J. EDWARDS & EDWARDS I ` , I8 Toronto St., Toronto. R. J. Edwards. G. R. Edwards. B.A RADENHURST &. HAMMOND BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS. ETC. Masonic Temple Building. Barrio MONEY T0 LOAN DONALD ROSS. LL.B. B RRISTER, SOLICITOR. ETC. asnnin 'l`nmnln R..;M:.... n.....:- - on. 7E. c. TURNBULL ,, ,-,5 [,[,.r!:n rt ' v A-Lwsuxult, DUMIULIUI`. HA1-LI. asonic Temple Building. Barri: MONEY T0 LOAN k psncv HOADLEV Ennis} -anrl (`k..:._ T , , I on. MORTIMER LYON n, C} `l7-..L '7` ` { DR. FRED A. ROSS ., ,.c n..- n-. .4. LJJWICSS. U. A. big. Production Engineer. and Efficiency Department. .-__: Simcoe Marble Works ' 20 Owen St., Barrie Puxfou & PLAXTON shvhrnrunn n.-.- -..-._-__ V DR. T. ARNALL .9- n .... .- In ---- -~ ' ` DR. W. A. L'EW bru and D2 ..... _, _r :11 CHIRQPRACTIC ALEXANDEF} `COWAN MUSIE ULAXTON, L.T.C.N of Piano and Vocal \ fnr 'l`I\I'f\I\`A I`-- v I ll\II"\lJL-CY ; and Choir Leader .MptHnJnL IVL ~ ` _.RCHITECTS ;_-__._.-.---n RDY,' Mus.Bac., F.T.C.M. . Organ. Vocal. and Musiczsl mist and Choirmaster of 5 Presbvterian Church. " Tnrnnm I` nnnnnn -- ` FOR 1'H-1-:"|31-:s1' IN sAl_tgR's BREAD HOMEMADE BREAD nnnunn nun - - -`MEDICAL u,c--uurner xsuzabetb a Barrie. Phone 105. *a.m.. 1-3 p.m._. 7-8 p. . Lu1lllllU umversny 0Ffice-58 Collie: 8!. 1230-2 p_.m.. 6.30-8 p.m.._ ' .. until 1 ucullcf rhodist Church ;an. Voice and Theory 46% Clapperton St. : -_... uulllvl` younger children, ` VEQTE D % & CAMPBELL EDI] hf) nfn nu, IIUBE CHI] Info!!- -l1 a.m.`to 5 mm. To_ronto, North 3326. ___. .4 4112.1. .1111! Store. Barrie u r ..5c cm. roronto. . Campbell, C. A. Tr. A _... _-.-- V II .ovIobVOI\ every fafteruoonf at the Post Office Square. Barrie. Subscription Prioo--Canada and Great Britain 82.00 Fr year in advance (in arrears 82.50): nited States. $2.50 `per yearin advance. Both old and new addresses should be given when change of address is requested. CAN- CELLATIONS-We find that most of our Iubscribers prefer not to have their subscrip- tions interrupted in case they`-.fail,_to remit before expiration. Whileaubscriptiope will not be carried in arrears over an extendftl period,_yet, unless we are notified to cancel, we asauine tliaaubacriber wiahes the service continued. Rer'n`itt'a'nces should be made by registered Vlet_ter,r oney order, or cheque payable at per in Barrie. I A u....r....-_ nJz. ,_ uau UIJUTCD. Conservatory oi Fi nf Tnfnntn TUITIO Ina- ..L:l_I ' G`:"Cuhordon Plaxton. ? St.. Toronto. Rninknll n A ty;-5dontreaL ' Elizabeth and pm... m: Conservatory dine un rn lug UL) . degree. Phone YOUR NEE? DS- _._.__..._...________... OPEN DAY AND NIGHT b Call and see ouTel}sp'lz1y of monuments before purchasing. ' Our stock of imported and domestic granite is well assorted, and prices right. c. w. J. EASTMAN, PROP. T mane 277 ` a. c. MANUEL. MGR. . Phone 721 mos. _l_(')dE@li sc6's " ' BOOKSTORE DO NOT DELAY * Hurt ', Established 80; ` ;12-_ VPhono 82- ' msuer. ana--- effort to find a way to patch O fiddlesticks!" said 4Mrs.'Terwilliger. that it would give service again. But he,` and rode the rest of the way home in sil- didn't make much headway. _ pence. - . A. ' , His conduct so exasperated his wife that ` Abner regulated the clock as he had saidlone day she lit out" and drove over to] he would` and for a few days it gave no'her daughter 'Mary s and told `her all about` trouble. Then one day a neighbor. Mi-s.lher pa's qualifications for putting to a se-i Pattenll. who lived half a mile away. sent. Vere test the patience of a saint. Mary word by Tom Thatcherithat she was coming listened sympathetically to her mother and over that afternoon at three o clock to get soothed her as best she could but all that Mrs. Terwilliger's assistance in solving a` time she -woirea curious little half smile as` I dressmaking problem. Sarah, who had if she had a bitof a joke that her mother planned to go berrying. waited until half was.not' sharing. Anyhow Sarah went`. past three and then went aiid left the house homlegcomforted. ' _ ' locked. Wheh she returned she found stuck . _l;_fatters thus ran along for a few days. 1 into the door a note explaining that Mrs." with the clock ticking like a pneumatic Pattengill had been there and was politely hammer butgsilentwhen the time'cam'e to sorry notdoefihd Mrs. Terwilliger at home. strike. S Abner, wandered about dreamily That-eve,nir?g Sarah trudged over to_ Mrs. and fussed with the "clock spring. Sarah I 1 c Pattengillls to explain--a task that she tried to be patientlunder affliction and suc- f ' I t found especially mortifying in view of the ceeded--iu'n_'t,il the 23rd of July, which was fact .that she' arrived at `Mrs. Pattengill s her birthday. . S s twentv minutes before she hadleft her own _ It happened that on that day Sarah had home! A S . . _ aquantitv of iam and iellvtn me: tin nn r us .. - - - ~ - -V lllso A M ` Sunday morning he and Sarah drove to ldhrch as usual and allowed the1;s.. -nlenly of time for the five-miledrive. But `to Sarah's deep discomfiture they arnvecli in the middle of the sermon. Such a thing ~, . had never happened before! Her record of ifaithful and punctual attendance at church I` was a matter `of considerable pride with her. It 1 "I was never so mortified in my life. a {Abner Terwilliger, she scolded him as they V, drove home. Did you see how they all 'smil_ed when we `went in`? And all becs_u1:.-e .,nf Hint ..l....l.l LA_` vs - l i . , ...... .. nu. Jun occ uuw uicy `an "'smil_etj becaus.-e - of that clock!` What did your tinker- _;ing the other night do, I'd like to know? Don't. you see now you can't.. fix it?" `it "Well I don t know as I'd go so fur as I to say that, Sarah." answered A-bner'gent~ ly. You see,'the clock's running all right. i `It just wants regulating. You know that -` tlittle nut on the bottom of the pendulum? I Well. I'll just screw that up a little when we :1 get home, and that'll make the clock go`: faster. ' and--- ` 6 I\ IXJJI. n I no . . _- ,.- null: vv uxwnrcn saw. and Sam knew. though he may have been no mite cracked in some uother w,ays_., Well, I'll set her to-morrow-- 'get the right time from Tom Thatcher. He's bound to stop` with the Watchman." Abner closed the door of the clock and carried it carefully to its place on the kit-' chen shelf. There-." he murmured. you re fixed again, and a good job, if I do say it myself. Old Sam Wexworth could-If 11`? have llmm 11 hit Imuu... " U ' .. IZ_L_,, , I g ,_. __- ...,...n. uuu uwvlllvtl a. tune sober for a moment, but his look ol serene happinese soon returned as he fingered the delicate machinery lovingly; now and then lite would blow on it to make sure that no speak of dust or. lint lingered. Goo-.i works in.ber." he murmured whimsically to him- self as he assembled the parts and with -`I broom straw began the nice process of oil-l 3; ing. "I'd h te to have to -getanother clockl I after all then years. and I don't reckon 1 l l i will. Bet she'll -go all right now--after"I get her regulated. Guess I'll have to get Sarah zi s_undial_." and he chuckled softly. Great fishhooks._ She'd bust it with her 1 _|ro'lling~pin. Wore out? There ain't any- `. [thing wore out about Sarah. but she frets I -`too much. Poor girl," his eyes misted. l fj"She missea the children for all they are ,4` 9 so near by.`_' . l l `' He screwed the works back patiently into 9 Batheir plain. dark. wooden case. put on the,l3 ldial. affixed the hands and hung the pendu- i if lllllll on its hook. Then he slowly woun'l ll both sides. taking care not -to get the springs SI . too tight. Finally he swung the pendulum " P gently with his fore-finger. The clock 5` started off with a brave, loud tick. Wore out?" said Abner with a placid N smile. Good for twenty years `yet. Mebee 01 more. `She got good works in her," old W Sam Wexworth said. and Sam knew. though f he_ a_g flf _ Morgue and `Chapel IN CONNECTION % BARRIE. on1'. - - Phone nucnvi-I 01 we pantry. "1 should think you'd be ashamed. Abner." she went on not to have a decent clock in the house. S'long as we've got only one, a body ought ` to be able to tell time by it. That's what a clock's for. Why, when any of the neigh- bors are here and ask me what tinie"it is `I always feel as if I was lying to `em. when I look at that clock to tell `em. Might's well look at the sun and guess at it. l rob bl_v would hit it closer than that clock does." She bustled out of the kit- ' chen. She would have spoken atgreater ` length if experience had not warned her of I the futility of doing it. _ . ` I Left alnma in H... l.:o..|..... A~L.--A 1' 4 us vuu. oaran." ' I haven't a mite of doubt about it," his wife replied sharply, and no wondor;oehe-- it's got me most wore out already." _ Sarah _clatt.ered her supper dishes loudly as she deposited them, clean and dry. on the shelves of the pantry. T should You d Ehnled. Ahnnr " also .......4 -.. umy uurcy years old come August. `Mem- ber old Sam Wexforth that sold her to us? `She's got good works'in'her,' he said, and he was right. She outwore Sam bymany 8' day. `I wouldn't put it by her to outwear us too. Sarah." Y I-.........`L - --54- " ` vuuu uul, uuu you Know It." . "Well. now, Sarah." said her husband mildly as he peered through hissteel-framed spectacles at the scattered wheels and _ springs and wires on the table before him, "I wouldn't an an fun as 9,. mm on... m.-v- .=,.....5e auu was: on me table before him, wouldn't go so fun: as to say that; She's only thirty `years old August. Wexfm-th Hm. mm 1.... .. ....-2 ours ._uus gnoa works in her," said Abner Tm-williger gently. Ali she needs is 8 littlgcleaning and oiling. `I'll-soon have her running all right again." - ,` His wife Sarah sniffed, and it is doubtful I if a _sniff ,w'as ever loaded with more pal- pable irritation und disguetl So you`ve said for thevlast ten years," Abner Terwilii- ger," she snapped, and for all your tink- ering and messing up my kitchen table-you can't make it keep time. The clock's wore out, `and you know it." Cuwpn nu! Qn_"`_ H __,_:_I L I NC W, =,v ruuusu lllflUI'P SHE (10Zfl 0" again. `` nuxlv an-.zu'eu_1us HH'0[ ifll 8SKP(l C8.Sll2il~' The clockis loud familiar tick 3`reeted'l~V~ ilwhem Wm you `hm '"~' Sarah? I in her when she descended to the kitchen `the? . She l"ke`l at hh lime "lmhlly.-5 Nllnext morning. but its `hoarse. stuttering; W".'" rush hm thhh she replied-I `i-iangle. which shehad heard almost even/h I ll hggeh ll t `""" "-ii '. Kjlhalf hour of her waking m,,',.,.ied hfe` When the next day `dawned Abner went ~ m gi]em_ she a`.em,d that the circuhmmcegoif to his morning's work and left her to; t. was a blessing for which she was duly,d1Spose the clocks about the house. He; t,h;mkfuI.._.fm- this was 3 world in Which'=didn t stop in the wood shed to finger the; 0 small blessings shoum not be sneezed at; broken clock spring as he usually did. Whenf ,5 en, ;though you sh had to shffe, greatghe came` into the kitchen at noon, his eyef m|trials'and tribulations as_._ for example. alwem ""l"t``l-V t the Shelh The l`l' dgdoddering old clock with no respect for; clock was still there, ticking raucously and; g the truth! '=_una_shar_ned as if it had never spoiled a cake? If But the absence` of the clock"s half-l1ourlvi"`.`"5 hfe-,, _ h variations on the then -tetnpus fugit, how-i ` Ahheh Sahl Shhhh qa""`'lhglY- cmhlngi `.lever_they might have lacked in veracity. ob-310-V V hh: I-`I Wuldnit he 30 Phil 1 viously worried Abner. He appeared in the f the l`_l "lh h .h5'- Shefllls -`mod There kitchen many tiniesmore than usual dur-19"" 'S"`e we '9'? nlafflefl. Abner. and 1 mg the following days. getting under Sar-f""th"l `he at .""'k here "1 `he k`thh~i Shls feet. as she put it, and each time he;It woulcln t be natural here without it. I--.' . ..!'tegta.rdedAf,he cjck with thhhabstracted` med_ ; n1a)t'be_Ithn1.tan ogld final. Abner.` bfutthl cahvti V [awe gaze_. 9 came ,_ e two halves flpar w_1 1.. .\9 `put one'o e new the broken springin his pocket and speh)t:ll'l`5 `h th danlg 1'00! 8nd 0118 in the, , time fitting them carefuny- together andgsitting room an t e other in the bedroom..' , pondering over them. Whemwer he had: Twon t `be. any hardship to step into the D _sp.1'e n1olr)nent; in the course of the day he hem ) "t`) `f Iyiht t`. 1"e"t`t`}`; H l k l S sa at a enc in t.e woodshed and d he 93" app`-V 1` 9 9` -' 1 over-`ea vast collection of small miscpetllhh-l She h*`~`_S"diW"k-` h` h`"'.- he Said |0f*-" ;`eous metal articles of the thirty years`il.V- a"d.h'-` hand closed 0" S1'3h"5- ishellli accumulation. of . a tinkering man `in an `be 3"d 5 hew 50 3 I gel that sprihg "`h`l'7 effort find way patch the ehring sol ed nd the hfld xed S0 S_it Wnlf Stick` givehse,-vice he that way again. I can tinker her up,l much Sarah ` y( His nnnrlumt an Avnunnrnfnu-I Li . ...:c.. n.....3 'I`l'mrn nin t n hatter rnnn of nlmuiimsi V l I .a ,,__. .._.- ...... vv new a xuuluw .m1 118;` `finished tinkering. that clock. . Sarah was not far wrong in her firstf prophecy. It was king after Sam had left}: and she had gone to bed that Abner stopped 5 tinkering and went to join `her. Well?;'? ,she demanded sleenilv an In-.-wnlm 1.... ....+ .- I _ ,,_,, .v....... .u nu uuu auu LIB ECU! "See!" "he exclaimed. The spring s broke. _ - Well. I guess we're shut of `that clock,` ; now. Abner, said Sarah. though her voice` _ perhaps `contained more of inquiry than ofgq y fconversation. V . Well; now, I wouldn't go so_ fur as to; a ` say then," replied Abner. "Of course that . ,0 .broken snrmg dnn t rnnun n.......n. _.-n-- i I l I , - .- V - -vv---C-a CDC--_ corner Sophia and Mary Street: Manufacturers of Sash, Doors, F ramea, , Flooring. Ceiling, Moulding. Water Troughs , ' Tanks. etc. . I We, carry? in stock a large assortment of} Rough and Dressed Lumber, B. C. Shingles and Prepared Roofing. Wood Turning and 'Kiln Drying 8 Specialty. Dressing `done: promptly, _ _ ` g Consult us With your burldmg Flillt-ma --_...._- : uc ualul. I Silently she found it for ubout removing the works. had them out of the case 11 `saw the trouble. s-q--w .L, '- - He stopped to the door and softly opened. `it. Sarah was not to be seen and he went _in. His glance fell upon the burnt cake , layers. Poor girl, he murmured. and A yhough J-5t;on her own birthday. too. It ain't so,] i . ,-eas to be atient when ou're fift -five` unlesg qhe wanted to assure herself of the: ,,,',dy not so`sl:,.,,ng as you 5,35 0nce_y Hell] 'lk.5 d.5l,t`"- S`:ilft t_hi"'3e"llo()ke(l at the clock and studied it for all chuckred 3 mile 3"d'3n 35 h'5 3la"i moment. Then he heaved a long sigh and 5 ' fen " 3 3l"d`' _ha."3"`3 0 ff? W3"f.said a litle more loudly. -Well. that set- ( he seemed struck with a sudden Idea; he; ,8 it)` Moving quickly now -he found a ( IWIPPGII his -fIngers'v.1gorously and aSmd , pencil stub on the clock. shelf and tearing ( a pleased, self-satisfied expression like a .- off 3 scrap of paper. wmte, `.1 man who has Just -made a Joke. After_a5 Sa,ah___Am going to town and will get I moment he followed his parents to the kit-l you 3 cake at _]m.am s_V Don't bother to` I h"' . - fmake another. 5 " Abner tool clock tenderly from the; He chuckled a trifle Babe wmte_ super. S sh?!` f-md .3med. `t t the f .f""`"3 ""bl,;. fluous -advice , prob`bly, though `she might f where "3 ""19 -`crew d"" ~.S" h? have a change of heart after I'm out of] Y he skd' ` . _ - ;the way." He placed the note on the table he ft f hm` "1 he set .' and giving the clock one Inmr lnnlz hat...-.l labout removinz than wnv-Ira an `....-x -- t-- ' |- aucuvvc - ` ll ;. . A few days later their s_on'Sam, who had 4 1] u.,a'home_of his own now, `drove over tog. 5 spend the evening. As thethree sat around 4 : the table in the dining room, which__Abner5` d and Sarah used freely as a sitting room, 3 they could hear the stacatto ticking of the j clock in. the kitchen during the occasional , pauses in the conversation. Suddenly dur-.f 3 ing one of the pauses there came from the; C . kitchen a startling metallic sound, some-.,* 3 thing between a_ snap anda buzz with a= V l clang thrown in, as if somebody had thrustf ,. a fork into the blades of a whirringegg-_ h _ beater. In the unnatural stillness that fol-f .lowed everyone `noticed that the clock was 0 ` not ticking. ' i - . lh _ There? exclaimed Sarah, the _first to; 3 break the silence. That old clock has` ) exploded, Abner! Gone to pieces like the`; one-hoss `shay and for_ the same reason. Al good riddance, I say. _Now maybe I'll getg n a new clock." , ' ' in Oh. I don't know. Sarah." said Abner.b` anxiously, getting up and fumbling for f H matches. `lPro'b'bly she isn t broken much. _- M Spring slipped off. I expect. But that don't 2,. mean there's anything wrong with thel works. Prob'blv I mm {iv ;+ " I regulate a clock, Sarah." [ _, V n E 3 You've been at -it [ten years, and have 5 not got it done yet." 1 "She's got good works in l_1'er," was allj that Abner could say, and he said it! rather" feebly. Sarah maintained a stern, silence. M ! A I- I ing. P out` (To ISSUE TICKETS i'ro cmpzns ; IN NEW anuuswucws ronzsrs I Duran. - There ain't a better man at tinkering: {than you, Abner." said Sarah gently. at yucauu. one 1* on medial. Sarah seemed hadirather to soar than to rise and walk to to: the stove. She ung open theiovenldloor. undg Through the blue haze-that rolled forzh she ,saw three disks black when they shouldl me ;have been golden brown. Her cake was zlglruihedl The minute hand of the clock hadl I350 dallierl on its way up the left side of? in the dial that the cake had been in the oven, tuhr` for no telling how lo ' 9; of an -hour at least. me"! Sarah was both `very tired and very I 3. warm, but when she stepped to the back ustidogor and spoke to her husband, who was; 't.ggi'hitching up to drive to town, her tone-` 0" was full of energetic decision, and frostyl as,coldness. "'Abner," she said, that clock mghas ruined my_ qake, and I ll not make ;another. There s no use talking." To em- Ehe] phasize that remark the door closed withl A i an ear-racking slam. , For a moment A-bner gazed in astonish- .` g9tlment at the closed door. Then. On 21.] rampage." he murmured. "Great bumble-I r Feribeesl Haven't seen her that bad since.] .g'?Hilda- used the liquid stove -polish instead 1 t` of bluing. Time to go easy. Abner; easy is iiejtlie word." i ; opened ] 3 a in 11: ..i........ :_n H .- - - ng---for three quarters V__ ___v _Hv__' an nun! IIIr\rIf\L _ ow long---for three Eggs dropped a. little in price on the east. . i . ' market Saturday `morning but most of `the Joth butter offered sold at` the old price of 35 in cents per pound. that is. insmall lots. Hen fruit was 25 to 26 cents per dozen. with tonal` lots larger than a dozen or two going zit` ergetic frosty V ner," "that The feature of the market was the big decrease in the price of strawberries from '3 n0 USP fllnrinn l, T -~' " ' ` V --. .--v u... uauux 58311180 the oven`doo_r. Ie she a when eu brown, Hg ....1... ...n-| U N{ni3:"1"i'i`"Ai <% E RS B Mother Tells How Her Daughter -_' Suffered and Was Made Well by 1'; Lydia E. Pinlcl1am s Vegetable $140-11 ' Vancouver, B.C.- My daughter isa f young `girl who `has been having severe * pains and weak and dizzy feehngs for some time and had lost her a petite- Through an older daughter w 0 had heard of a woman who was taking it ` for the same trouble, we were told of Lydia E. Pinkham s Ve etable Com- pound. Mly daughter has '11 taking it for severa months ahd is quite all right` HOW. It has dO)'l all it was ran:-nnnnhul `fa-u= peomes were going bunch. ' Onions . . . .r . . . . . . I t Turnips . . . . 3 . Potatoes. per bag "' t Hay ` . . . . . . . . . . .. Strawberries . . . . . 4 W9" Sninach . . . . . . . .. "81" Rhubarb ` it 0v___ 7. . . . . . . .. mum: unuuunsn Mpg wen I No stomach filled with sour poisons can iigest food. Everything you eat turns into more~poison and gas. -making you nervous 5 and weak. Simple buckthorn bark, glycer- . ine, etc_._. as mixed in Adlerika. expels all [sour poisons and gas from BOTH upper ,' and .lower bowel. Removes foul, decaying food-matter you never thought was in your aystem which caused sour and gassy stom- ziach.` Adlerika is EXCELLENT to guard against appendicitis. `Wm. Cmssland. iruggist; Sold in Eimvale by W.J. Mc-` Guire, druggist. \ u-" STOMACH ~ FOOD WON T DIGEST | uuuuurl) .. I Young pigs I .-,...- .-no \.x.:uauu_y put I altogether different outlook on the crop. On the square. potatoes were 75 cents lper bag. and nice ones they were too. Little pigs less `than two, months old were l$6 each, Insitle the building plenty of peonies going at 10 and 15 cents per | v A v-v----- gnu IUUI lll'l'u "Better Than Pills For Llvor Ills ` L ' Thsoezrs Eiaaingiii 5.4.1 NR Tabla}: stop sick headaches roliovo lnlioun attacks, tone anti ngulato tho oliryuinativo organs. make you fool fun. I II 3.1:... On. , -n.. Tomorrow Alright 'I'nI|ln!n chm .:-n. n.--.u_-.__- ]'au7EHr- -an-nuullli\ Compound SATU R DAY MARKET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ICC per ton $13.00-15.00 . . . . . . . .. 2 boxes 25c . . . . . .. 20c gallon . . . . .. 5c bunch . . . . . . . . . . .. $6 each . . . . .. OUU IUI .. 25-26c.dozen 28c'lb. * . 5c bunch . . 5c`bunch 20-25c basket 5c bunch .. 25c basket .. .. -2 for 5c s.s._s;qmn&Y:E avnlvw IV]: IVICHTII FURS REMODELLED AND Over Hurlburt's Shoe Store ~ . n. 1 I w. s. ulbig. 'Manager Cost and ..nv-uuu, VVLLDH & CAMP Chartered Accountants Phone Main 5874. 59 Yonge H, J. Welch, C.A. T. E. Lawlss. `pI'I\I'IIl|5:"`- .rI:.l'1UY HUADLE Organist L Collier St. vMet.hc_>dist Teacher of Piano, Organ. Voi Terms reasonable. ( ______.>[ ...w;_y. urgamst and C St, Andrew's Presbvter Gold medalist of Toronto Music and no` +1.- V-1. ` umu mcuaust or Toronto Music and of the Unive rsity of Toronto. IIV3 Worsley St. Phone 663 nu-\uU I'.. L Teacher \ I uf)ils prepared for Toronto ( Music examinations leadi and including the A.T.C.M. Sturiio--'-King Block. ' } ul zuuora b't's,. i Office hours--9-10 : ..__..__,______ Graduate of lOffice and Big; :-vw -`Iiw-W Phoncs:-i-`Office I63, , Residence'353 PIANOH AND VIOLIN Special attention to young an`:-s -- -- Surgeon Specialist with the - Imperial Army. 4!: years. General Surgery and Obstetrics especially. Office--15 Owen St., Barrie. Phone 710. P. O. Box 1075. |_____________________________ uu. IIIVHIIIVILH LYUN 122 Bloor St. West, Toronto. will be at 91 Owen St.. Barrie. every Saturday. Diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Consultation hours-l1 Barrie, phone. 2.. , _--......,,.. .u younger cmldren BOYD SYLVESTER Bandmaster Barrie Citizens Band. 120 Bayeld St. - ,- --.... .u.ouu:11uc-'81 maple AVO- Office hours:- 1 to 3 p.m.. 7 to 9 p.1n., or by appointment. Phone 213. A. T. Little. M.D. W. C. Little MB. < DRS. LITTLE & LITTLE Physicians and Surgeons, Barrie Ont. Oice and Reside11ce--47 Maple Ave. "Office Q L . . .. Iv nus-x _ _ _ A H Un. TI. I. HHNALL Associate Coroner County of Simcoe Oice and Residenc'e--Corner Toronto and Elizabeth Sts.. opp. Central Church. Telephone 167 ...__________.___._..__-o Are Well Suppiied at-- _.__n ..- _. u. |uI \l1DUL raduate McGill University. fice Residence-Corner Eli. Bradford Sts_.. Phol nan kn`:-A 1" "` . _...--wuv an : I-r\I\lUII ` . BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS, ETC. Offices: 707-8 Kenf Building_ -Toronto, Ont. C. W. Plaxton. G. Gordon Plaxt: DUNCAN F. McCUAlG, B.A. Successor to Creswicke & Bell BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, ETC. MONEY TO LOAN - Ross Block, Barrie. __._____.________.________ .___._._._._______.__ MAUD E. CLAXTON, L.T.C.M. Piann 5...; u..-- .---r`:-curtail &\lI'I'II` Barrister, Solicitor for obtaining probate of wills, guardianship and administration, and General Solicitor. Notary. Conveyancer, etc. ,' Office--H1nd.4s' Block, 8 Dunlop 83., Barrio. _MONEY T0 LOAN BOYS &. MURCHISON Barristers, Solicitors, Notary Public Conveyancers, Etc. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. OQ'ice-l3` Owen St., in Masonic Temple Building. Barrie. Branch Oice--Elmvala. W. A. Boys, K.C., M.P. D. C. Murchisqg. .. v vuu u;-u u:.:.LuJu l\J 1J1s.7U.I\Ul'JII El-l`0NE 406 or call at oie for information on, any disease. .__________________.__. pas. BURN; & aurms 60 Elizabeth St. Opposite 'Palmer s New Garage NERVOUS AND CHRONIC DISORDERS DLIIIIIE Am: __ -_n ,- re.-` 9 - THURSDAY; JULY 5, 1923. The quick 'relief -for all Sprains andBruises Akgood thi`z.1g-_-Rub i`t`i;1 A :

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