Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 13 Sep 1923, p. 14

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nusoana. The doctor laid he could do nothing for me. My hus- band's mother advised me to take the `Vegetable Compound and I star ted- it at once. I was able to do my work once re and it was a pleasure, not a bur- l. Now I have a ne bouncing baby and am able to nurse her and enjoy do- my work. I cannot he] recom- mending such a medicine, an any one ~-aoeing me before I took it, and seein me now, can see what it does for me. `In only too leased for you to use my l testimonial. _--Mrs. EMILY DAVIS, 721 ` McGee Street, Winnipeg, Man. 1 Lidia E. Pinkham s' Private Text- = 300 u n Ailments Peculiar to `Women will be sent you free upon ggquest. Write to the Lvdin F1_Pinm..m Koilrl IIXEIII .~'iL'hei 111 sure we- Pa should :~",N`-1 1.-2 hurry p:'.. whispr-.r.~': "Dr driving muvh J ..H 01... `-nu--max.` we gaily ,-...... .1... /Z2! `Wm You (- jellies wxt MA AN (By I` x .-In \\'hr' . caucus Iusalul ll lqllll Do I ;ilI_lII.llI'l Vegetable Compound '99 thal- Will spoil "your summer snd msko gut company distressing to your `ends unless you get relief. 1: . 1 ,, pi-ssn1tAf1n._J_.. `ll--L uuuu-u Inalnurnvuv ;x-- 9 & a box of RAZ-MXH. 1&2}. Most geople feel better from the first dose. 0 ur druggistwill refund your money I`. O1 L-.. Jana -In` I.-ha... -n`:n` Ah- [He Lite! UCI-Ix!` Lluul use In DI: uunco `:11 if a $1 box does not bring relief. Ab- Iolutely harmless. Generous sample 10: 4c. in stamps. Templetons, To- ronto. _ 312 HAY FEVER -Page `Fourteen _Summer Asthma_ It is now just 80 years since Beecham's Pills first began cor- ; recting disordered stomachs and 1 stirring sluggish livers and bowels to natural activity -~- and feeling '.'like a ghting cock" is associated as inseparably with Beecham s Pills, as the pills are with good health. e CK-FIGHTING was beam with the cocks. ` { Consequentlty, this person has a good night's sleep and arises in * the morning with clear brain, bright eye, keen appetite, and full of energy for work and play. vvvaucu w\!Vlltle uest. ri e agdicinn Co.. Cobourg, again: valunbloinformation. free ydia E. Piqkham Out. This book 0 But it is only 80 years ago that the first man elt'like a ghting no-10", \ ulu sacs wun nan stomacn, nun ` and heavy headache, takes- 'Beecham s Pills just before going to bed. Immediately the Pills be- gin tc harmonize the digestive and eliminative organs. Now he has brothers. sisteu. i nephews, nieces. all over the world -oil" HLA II n-lath-In nnnlrl" uvpluivv, IIICUCB. ill UVCK IJIC WUTICI -all feeling like a ghting cock!" It hhppns th' w : Aperao half sick with l'>8ad asgomach, du and hosnnv lunnnnhn lrglrnn At Ail Druggists For sale by Wm. Crossland. In Allgndale by A. E. Patterson. Wu uyulll n. r1m(nam'l Vegetable Com- ? pound has done for me. I was a nervous Awreck andl just had to force myself to do my work. Even the aoundof myown chil- dren ylaying made me fee as if Imust ' scream if they did not et away from me. could not even speak right to my I husband. The doctor i H1;:1rv*FAu nan Ila. I..- Iauu auruc vruu Lucul 01 me our. But as the visitor passes from one mem- orial to another and reads their names and `dates and epitaphs, there comes back from those hidden recesses in which memory stores up so much which we rarely recall, many a strange -story and curious tale of the habits `and doings of these men. who are entabled_ here. Some had great, pure qnames, unsoxled by any stain. But many, oh so many! of these greatest represenvta-T -spise of their greatness, been the victims [or low habits and evil appetites, Mighty ,rnen! Master minds and conquerors in many sin! I .; ,,, tivu of the English-speaking race had," in 1 lines of life! But themselves conquered by k ., ., . N`. .` .. .. . . mu; _ A I - t us be honest. Sin is no fiction of `the preachers nor is it u conventionality of .the churches. It is the most. terrible fact uuc xugucat 5| uucs U1 300160.) . ! -`Strange to say there are few places in ithe world where this thought strikes one lmore forcibly than in Westminster Abbey. There are the tombs and memorials of kings and queens and princes, nobles" and com- moners, soldiers and sailors, statesmen and explorers, poets, painters and sculptors, amhitects, novelists and musicians, the heroes and benefactors of a great `and `an-. cient nation. Here for -thirteen hundred` years a proud people have buried their [mighty dead, and written the honor roll of their race. It" is a` library of, history in which one might with profit study` for months and even years. a Glorious names are there, whose deeds are a part of our : lnaxional heritage, which we of this new . iland share with them of the old. ' I `Rue .. 5].... ..:.:.... ......-.... :_-.._~ -_- _--..- -And who was that architect? Stanford White, whose voluptuous banquets and obscene orgies, when they were made pub- lic, shocked even -the blasei votaries of the great American city s fastest life- The man who caused all the miseries and trage- dies of that wretched Harry Thaw and his wife, and who was eventually murdered by the half-crazed Thaw in those Madison Square Gardens which he himself designed. . IHe had every chance, reared in a home of wealth and culture, given the best that literary and `technical education could pro-' vide. gifted with extraordinary genius, [moving in the highest society of the land, . nd all the time the poor slave of degrading lain. Sin is very up to date even among {the highest grades of society. -Rfrantrn, tn nun el-nun-n urn Bun |\`nnnc~ 2.. lIC UIUCI EICCII WUIRU. ! VVV IIIIVC IIU BUUU EIIIB 1 1/115 : That is a very great mistake. It is very often among those whose abili-ties, educa- tion and opportunities fit them for the noblmt lives that we find the most ter- rible manifestations of the power of sin. A traveller visited the state of Virginia _ and was shown the beautiful buildings of the state university. He asked the name "of the architect, and was told that it was a cer- tain distinguished New Yorker who had designed many other noble structures. He went to New York and there` he saw the University of New York. the Washing- ton Arch, ~two fashionable and stately clubs; many beautiful- private residences, and above, all that vast place of amusement i and entertainment in the very heart of the city, Madison Square Gardens. he asked the name of the architect. the same name was given, the most gited and Whenever i brilliant man of his profession in the land. ` He went to Boston, and there was shown as the finest piece of ecclesiastical architec- ture in -the city, Trinity Episcopal Church, the church in which Bishop Phillips Brooks preached his wonderful sermons. Again he asked who was the designer, and was told that though he was nominally only chief assistant to the architect, the real genius behind that magnificent pile was this same splendid exponent of his art as had planned - the other great works. .Antl urban urn: +5116 ni1n`|:5nn`9 Q6.`-`C,.-.II V 4 Dlll IB V01 UP _l'U HI-Co But respectable people will say, Why remind us of such unpleasant things? These occur only among the lower classes of the population. the crude and `ignorant and un- clean. Why compare us with such people? We have no such sins as they. - of H: n unru nuonnl rI1;ofnl.rn '0 :1! cunn- -.....J .-V`... .-..x...J -.-.... V-.. ..._.. V..- v- -.-.vs Unfortunately sin is not out of date. It is very up to date. It is not a theolog- ~ical fiction. It is the most terrible practical lfact known to the world. It keeps busy the governments and legislators. of every nation. It is written on everyycrimin-al code. It calls for endless assizes and courts of justice. It is visualized in the grey, hopeless monotony of prison and peniten- tiary walls. It reeks in every filthy and` unsavory episodewhich bubbles up to the surface of the underworld of our great cities. Sin is very up to date. nu} ronnnnfol-sln nnnnla I|r:`l non mu: Iiu our or DATE? Is sln out of date? There are some whol -`say that it is. They say that there is nol lsense and consciousness of sin "among well- lbred people today such as there. used to be. i'I'hey look upon it as-bad taste even to `refer to sin in polite society- Of course ithereis the submerged tenth, composed of ipeople who -are sometimes very objection-I able. But among respectable people suchl a conduct as theirs is not to be even men-' tioned. Sermons which charge universal _mankind with sin are exceedingly.unpopul- Far. Such a thing would` be unheard of to- lday as we aretold took place under the; `preaching-of Jonathan Edwards, the greati New England divine of two hundred years, gago, when it is said that men grasped the}; [pillars of the `church to keep their feet `from sliding into hell. Very many church -people would resent the implication that ` they were ever sinners, such -as Edwards declared all men to be, and would be indig-- gnant if sermons such as his were preached in the pulpits of today. They would say that the preacher was a mere ranter, that he was talking a lot of theological piffle `which was not borne out in common life. They would imply that sin was out of date.` r1_.2,,.,,,,,._I_, ,2 t J... ` an vvvu `us uruuu auu EIUHICOKE. I I The logical and shortest route from Barrie to orinis "is the old Ridge Road which fol- - lows the lake shore from Barrie, passing through the- old settled and thriving villages of Shanty Bay, Oro Station and Hawke- stone. That H-awkestone is an important village is obvious now that the residents of Oro are trying to obtain a continuation school there, and -Hawkestone is the largest trading centre in Oro township. Oro Sta- tion has long been "an important shipping point for live stock andgrain. The whole lake shore from Barrie to -Hawkestone is lined with summer cottages and more are being built each year. The. strong protests of leading merchants and old time residents along the lake shore prevented the Govern- 7 (Orillia News-Letter) It is now generaliy recognized that a mis- . .take was made in locating the `highway be- i tween Barrie and Orillia. The road itself :. is a splendid piece of work, anti links the -' two towns by less than one hour via motor. But the road dc-es not pass through a single . village of any size enroute, and between the Penetang road and Hawkestone corners 'loe_stnot front on half a dozen farms, as the farmers live on the concewon lines V running north and south. Theroad as built 2 is" not the `shortest distance between Barrie and Orillia, `and is a compromise road. It i is well known that Premier Drury favored and endeavored to have built, a route fol-V lowing the Penetang road north through Crown Hill to Dalston, and east to Orillia through Edgar and Rugby, or favored the highway leaving the corners north of Crown `Hill, east to the 4th concession, north one- half mile and east through Mitchell Square to East Oro to the -Highway as now built. Either of these routes would have passed Premier Drury s farm, and in a. letter to a prominent resident of Oro Premier Drury claimed that by building eight miles north on the Penetang Road before deviating for Orillia the Highway would serve the double purpose, i.e., serve Penetang and Midland as well -as Orillia and Muskoka. A Ina-:An' .._.I ..L-..L-_L __..L- l_-r 3" V ' Tellswomenliow She Was Restorel V 9 to Perfect Health by Lydia E. D:_l.I.-__v. u-_-..I.I- n-__-__ 1 SAYS HIGHWAY suouunl HAVE com-: ALONG LAKE] lul 5 ugurca. ! On all fees-for cost of award draih, lots 25% and 26. Cons. 3, 4 and 5 not paid by Sept. 15. 1923, the Clerk was instructed to place; name on Collector s Roll with statutory in- terest added thereto. The various accounts before the Council were ordered paid and Council adjourn- ed to meet at the call of the Reeve. W. B. TUDIHOPE, Clerk. on u1v_. W. ' ' A by-law was brought -in and passed an- thorizing the Reeve and Clerk to borrow the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars. A nlohn nf "F1-"nun.-. Y 1..-). t-; I_'_.I, I -n I I E uuun un uwcut-y-uvc uunurea (lOll8l'S. I A claim of Thomas J. Luck for lamb kill-1 ed by dogs was ordered paid at the valua- tor's figures. (in 1; 0.... 4`..- ......A. -1` .___._.I 34,-, n . A.` yulcvlllu cuuurucb, no -acnon was taken. H. J. Packard was appointed to do the T Township's share of` easterly award dram and Alex. Graham to do the Township's share of westerly award drain. 7 nnnrnfu Donna `M'..!\..u` A2,! L. DE 00 ;|1u1'c on westerly awaruv aram. Deputy Reeve McDuff paid in $5.00 re- ceived from W. J. Scott for sale of trees on Div. 99. A L-: l..-_ __.-. L I ` I ' ` ' ' cu uuucuuur 101" 13%`) W. A. Smith put it; a claim for damages to his car on Con. 8, at bridge in swamp. As notices were posted up at each end of road that it was closed, no action was taken. nn rnnnnalv at `I? if I'l7:l..-.. _J-!i - luau 1-uuo lb was closed, no act-ton taken. On request of E. V. Wilson asking the Council _to release him from his Hydro Electric contract, no -action taken. I 11 J v....u,.....: .; ..... .:_;.J A; 7- .- The Clerk presented four applications for the office of Collector: T. H. McMahon. Edmund J. Moran, Harry J. Caldwell and Percy Crawford. The application of T. H. McMahon was accepted and he was appoint edn( }ollector for 1923. , . Q._.:A.L .___4 xuuuryauu In we CD811 . -Reeve Thompson reported he and Coun- -cI~llor Luck had gone over Div. No. 72, as per instructions from last meeting and had found it in" poor shape. They had ordered some repairs to be done and had made ar- rangements to buy a right of way around a bad hill from Percy Robbins. The report was adopted and the `Reeve instructed to ar-' range for the procuring of a deed of right of wav. - W` i g, Man.-"I annot speak too of what Lydia Pinkha.m I Oro Cquncil met at the Town Hall, Sept. 6, with all the members present, Reeve Thompson in the chair. Danna "!`Lnu-..-...-_ ..-..-_A-_l I.-. , I fl nave nus people lrom men` SIDS. Sin is very modern. It is very up to date. And whether or not we hear so much of it as was heard by some generations in the past, it is still the deadly force from which all classes and~ conditions of men re- lquin to be saved. T. H. MMAl-ION NAMED COLLECTOR F OR ORO Hill: . . A Sin islman's biggest problem, as witness lall manner of judicial, `political and inter- lnational machinery he has invented to deal lwith it, with small success. Sin is God's `biggest problem, `as witness; the fact that all _ His teaching and training of men through all the ages has been to save from` gin. And at last He gave His own Son to save His people from their sins. Q! :n `nanny vnntln-on '6 L. -....... .._ 4- `of life. It is the source of life's miseries, life s tragedies, life's cruelties. the world s bloodshed. All the unimaginable horrors and sorrows which have been inflicted on unhappy humankind by the Great War were -the fruit of sin. They sprang out` of the covetousnws, the greed, the hatred and cruelty of some men. Su_gar-coat it how you will, call it by what euphemisms you `may, but the fact remains, and the man |who closes his eyes to that fact, and shuts his delicate -ears against the word sin is "a fool, an ostrich burying his head in the aunt. V ma nannui exuunzn lb were a umumc to 6108-ITBCK mem. As a `result of counter agitations. thew route was finally compromised and placed in! the middle where it serves the least. people; and pleases nobody. The northern route, through Rugby and Edgar would have op-I ened a large farming territory to Orillia` and diverted -some farmer trade that now: goes to Barrie. If this route had been, fol! lowed it is possible that the Government at some futureedate would have built another = ment- from following either the Rugby or? Mitchell Square northern routes, and the Highway was diverted at East 010, two: miles north, but turned west quarter of 3; .mile north of Hawkestrone, and passing} `through Guthrie joins the Penetang road; south of Ex-Premier Drury's farm. Thej ;road as at present built does not serve the: lake front from Barrie to Hawkestone and` tourists passing through imagine they are! travelling through a sparsely settled coun-l try like Muskoka, instead of one of the old-5 est and richest farming communities in '_ Canada. : YE -L `KY5 I, I I I I - ` I vauauu. E If the Highway had been continued south; another quarter of a mile, it would have "entered the `village of -Hawkestone, ;and' `turning west on the old Ridge" Road would! have passed through Oro Station. Shanty? Bay, and would have served and opened upl the whole lake front to tourists and summer? cottagers. These villages pay a good por-I tion of the township and county taxes, and it was a mistake to side-track them. 1 A: u -nnnlb AC ..,......4.._. .....A-7A7 A` l mas. DAVIS I NERVOUS wnscxi _1ggoIuNc TOBACCO I I VVVVVV g ``` lll 1 - Now, for the first time in years, you can buy the finest sun-ripened tobacco Virginia produces for 10. a package. The kind you like to smok;~-the price you like to pay. Get a package of LONG TOM and celebrate. WILSONS Still the most for the money , I Motorists who desire a pleasant drive ,when they are not in a hurry will do well I to turn ~ou.`h from the Hi2 hwa_v on the 14th iconcession (the. first road past the big hill ` [two-and-a-half miles east of East `0ro) go 1 `one mile south towards the lake, and at the j lfirst right turn follow the old Ridge Road into Hawkestone village. and on, followingil ~ The National Smoke ? uuury II to app! sumac`: uncut bill- 1 :..<=:.::;:.:.-; .-.a:=:.=---*-- nothing to equal ihighway along the old Ridge Road connect- ing Barrie and Orillia by a shorter route, land serving Shanty Bay, Oro Station and_ {Hawkestone. Ninety-nine per cent. of the: itourists would take this Blue Water Route gin preference to" any northern inland route. [As a result of continued agitation and rec- Iognizing that an injustice had been done the `residents of Hawkestone and the entire ` ilake front, the County Council have now utaken oxer the Ridge Road as a-iiounty ihighway. and immediate steps are to be ;taken to have the road widemd and improv- E Ml THAT IT HAS BEEN SOLD FOR NEARLY FIFTY YEARS AND IS TO-DAY A GREATER SELLER THAN EVER BEFORE IS A TESTIMONIAL THAT SPEAKS FOR ITS NUMEROUS GURATIVE OUALITIEC. d V nun-`nu Ina: uyllul I-I\I;l Ila! T3 are promptly relieved by :__'_r_|gI_qyIAe`T.A { ECLECTRIC OI L` $ Internal and E).<,ter|J1._l_ Pains` avg nnnnannnnmlvlqn no. .-..- the blue water all the way through Oro Station, Shanty Bay, into Barrie- This `road is splendid in dry weather, and the Idistance to Barrie via this route is four miles shorter. Another advantage, motor repairs, air. gin, and oil, can be obtained in several villages en route along the old Ridge Road which motorists cannot obtain `along the present Highway. I We `pay boarding-out rates for those under 13 years. Full particulars from Lady Superintendent, Dr. Barnardo s `Home, 538 Jarvis St., Toronto, Ont. - 35, 37 __z __--- T-. employment. Beading the advts. is protable \ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1923 Nice Homes Wanted fa; Little English Girls J Kill them germs too. at Druggi and Gen Ma KJIIVIIIR llllll And all the` M dang:-'r.~ of And k('l`}x~' him on-nH...4 ..`..-_ 4-u_I.`I. I until I rhink I don"! In it may be `That I am hhnd righ! in {rum If Pa .1 Before we take am : "My dear. Now just rexnmniu-r from the .ro~:n'- If you will ju.~: .-it in chvck _\-mu` I. take you wht-r.-j you hack all R.en_1$_rnbe-r that m_\ _. _,. ll` 1 > And `1}'-I.n"}i}-i\3.'3"1 from behind.' Ma 3521 '3'?-'n?s' Th. 1:... cm... 9... .1- ...u.... Fullrn .II II. V.-\ml then hr :1. will xnakv . By pmtimr, hm woxnv_nfolk.~ 1.35! l)Ill auull bill` 11` his cart . You'd better I , "Io lerv him` He mi,e,ht turn . shriek :11 hi .I , \ A little farthur r for :1 turn . I1, .. Id] IUI L3 |\|I And Pa x-_\ .~`i TI-IURSDANY, .31 Stem and cm: 3 lbs. grapes. Ad until boiling and in closely-covert cooked fruit; in <- squeeze out jui< cups (3% lbs.) .= Tluu I n na_\n_ I V hot en_nu;:h "Oh. Ih(`T('.~ :1 H .-\v 1

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