Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 27 Sep 1923, p. 4

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1-nni lbs. 25: $3.53 20 lbs. 27c 35c 23c . 33c Plumbing Phone ` .. ..-u \.Vull5ClIBlaB. WATERMAN, of L. E. "Wa- terman Fountain Pen Co. `X7 `XI DI YC1rI'|A hr-1. h B E PROMIJ Q % ON} THE DOMIN1 Phone l8U You c.- date mo This urated 1 resist'C: with sla shades 0 Colors ti Han 0'i _- J . onable 1 show of buy Br; uxuu I. aim famous evangelists. r 1:1 II7ArnrVh1|lA HT1 _r.`u;I1, THURS Bro Refu` If _v1c Exclu V .....---uw-.u- C. C. BRACE, M.D., Rresident of Denver Chemical Manufacturing Co.; also originator of Antiphlogistine. JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, Sr.,- Presidentv Standard Oil Co, DR. OSCAR LOWREY, evangelist. BILLY" and MA SUNDAY, fa mnnu nuunmnl 3.-.4.-. _T h -1`|`l- Ii -X ulul, xxuupyule 15181108. .155. WEBER, New York city, President` American Fede_ration of Iwllnit-innu ' -A LUHIKICIID Musicians. {V I1 v\- C. M. COTTERMAN, ex-Postmas- ter-General, Philippine Islands. .1017`. wtrpvn M...- An. HERE Angniz FACTS] WORLD FAMOUS PEOPLE WHO KEEP HEALTHY AND HAPPY` WITH CHIROPRACTIC THE BARRIE GAS COMPANY, LTD. Leave Barrie .. 7,45 a.m. Leave Stroud .. 8.05 a.m. Leave Churchill . 8.25 a.m. Leave Fennells ., 8.35 a.m. Leave Bradford. 9.00 a.m. Arr. Newmarket 9.25 a.m. Arrive Toronto 10.40 a.m. `Return Leave Toronto . 8.30 a.m. Lv. Newmarket. 9.45 a.m. Arrive Bradford 10.15 a.m. Arrive Fennells 10.45 a.m. Arrive Churchill 11.00 a.m. Arrive Stroud . 11.20 a.m. J Arrive Barrie.. 11.45 a.m. 1 16 dwlm iL"."13i.Jx;:7's. It is this ever-ready-heat-on tap service which makesgas so popular for domestic use-- heating water, cooking and auxiliary heating. I Fortunately, we are able to ` store [our gas in dullperiods against the time when every-A body will use it at once. With- out cjostly steel reservoirs to, store our product we could not guarantee a continued and ade- quate service when you need it most. ' These periods, or peak loads, may only last for a few minutes at a time while the lull in between may cover hours. .But the point to. remember is that expensive plant'equipment_ `and a full supply of laboramust be maintained just as if every hour was a rush hour. There are-certain periods of each day when everyone wants-. gas service at the same time. One of these rush periods is v at the meal-making hour, when. the demand for service reaches tremendous proportions. Display Ro.)ms`ahd Office: Chals Will: Your . Gas Man CALL` OI-\I `IUJS. u--l\ IX L D s`. _(`I. Going ,_v. -.v, . . . . II : 1n An, . et 7 Leave . . A H V ` hiropra L, ,_.-_. -__..--vuuo '60 Elizabeth st. `,,-.-v.V uuu IV superior health effective. Why to endorse it?` to become ac-i VALVERDE, Last Saturday `night Dunlop St. New Yo:-kn A and Elizabeth St. between Mulcaster ny more prom- St. and- Mary St. were lined with the continent, parked cars for nearly the entire own neighbor. ; length and in one or two places they wactic and -are were two deep. This is a condition ;upe;-ior health whichvhas obtained all summer. Such ' ffective, I parking congests traffic, is detrimen- to it? I` tal to the businessof the stores that to ac. `are thus blocked `from the street and unfair to other car owners wishing `or the asking, ito get next the curb to do business US. - with the stores; Some time ago the ` Chief of Policemade a request that E BURNSIHO parking`, except for a short time, . 'be done on the business portions of Dunlop and Elizabeth Sts. and spec- E to E P-m- ied ' certain other adjacent streets men . _ . where cars might be conveniently I 'E""*5u* placed. Most of the motorists have 'compli.ed with this request and those I p_ o_ Box .701 who have any consideration for the e , convenience. of others will follow S . their example, new that the matter "' F . has been called'to their attention. 4.00 p.m. 4.20 p.m.- 4.40 p.m. 4.50 p.m. 5.20 p.m. 6.00 p.m. A 7.40 p._m. the I vuulyuslac survey DI the Sitlla with. a view to formulating some 3 for improvement.` Now, with` Before another "year rolls around the directors ofthe Barrie Agricul- tural Society should endeavor to ' make some improvements at the fair grounds. There are too many " things required to be undertaken all in one year. Among the more press- ing- needs .appear to be complete fencing for the race track, lling in the hollow near the cattle sheds, bet- ter entrances for automobiles, means - of keeping track clear of people when ~ races are on (perhaps an overhead bridge across track at main en- trance), additional uexits in. main building, and_ modern lavatory ac- commodation. A conference of the Parks Commission, Agricultural Joint Stock Go. and Agricultural Society might be held on the grounds to make [- uatuuu Q 5&1 Owing to Hydro-Radial Metropoli- tan Division changing their time- table from summer to winter sched- ule, the following time-table will apply to our Auto-Radial Special, to. take effect September 16, 1923:-- One of the big undertakings in . city government is providing. people with an abundance of pure water. ? Take, the city of London (England) 2 for example. Its" daily average sup- ply of water is 250 million gallons. ' This "is drawn from the River Thames, the River Lea and from wells, 43,417 horse-powerbeing required for the collection and distribution of this vast body of water` through 6577 mil- es of mains. In connection with this 1 huge waterworks system there are 5 48 storage r.es_ervoirs with a total < capacity of 13,000 million gallons. i Londonis one of the healthiest cities 1 in the world and this isowing in large `I fmeasure to the perfection `of its w1- E .'t'(-3.)` Snnnlv ~ - _ ------- 1 u Book debts amounting to $12,000 9 are being carried by `the Renfrew hospital, according to a statement D which appeared in last week's Mer- cury. If this is correct there must be a considerable lack in the business management of the institution. In - no branch of-the public service is the v application .of strict business prin- ` ciples more` necessa'ry than in the 1 hospitals. Few of these institutions 1 outside the cities receive municipal.` or private support sufficient to make ` nancing an easy mater; the fact is, 1 only by most efficient administration ` can ends be made to meet and hos- I pitals in debt are the rule rather than E the exception. _ :-------:-n To be exact, 996,328 American cars crossed the border into Canada `during last year, the major portion `into Quebec. This year s total was much higher and the annual invasion of motorists froni` the United States will grow greater and greater as our roads irnproveand the charms of Can- ada become more widely known. This means the expenditure of millions of `dollars in this country by these tour- ' lists. It is a trade well worth going 5 after and Barrie should endeavor to ` provide facilities that will secure as l much benefit as-possible from this f I source. I A great deal is heard of what Can-l ada 10385 by PDle leaving for the 1United_ States. while `little is-said of ,_the drift of population in the oppos- lite direction. An Americanawriter {In Current History records the fact lthat, while in the year 1871 less than ,one_ per cent. of Canada s population [registered their birthplace as the Un- ited States, in. 1911 overifour per cent: dld so. In 1921 ther_e were considerably over a million people in Canada who had been citizens of the J {United States, or about twelve per `cent. of the Canadian population. x 1 5 I If you use postage stamps on your cheques after the end of this week, the bank will cancel the stamps-and call upon you for the amount of ex- lcise stamps to replace those cancelled. i'The sale of these excise stamps is at present confined to banks and cus- toms department. With this regula- ` tion regarding cheque stamps strictly 4 enforced, it will be possible for the f Government to determine `exactly 1 how much-money is raised annually ` iby the taxes on cheques, bills, etc. I A western land transaction jtist noted . transfers a 6000-acre farm. owned by an Ohio syndicate to a" Hutterite colony, and the signicant, [fact is added that it has, during the fteen years operated, paid an aver- age prot of '15 per cent. annually- It a pretty nice return for the money! `invested. a ,, asJE"iiI av, the .---- run na\Il\l\JL` In our gallery of Makers of Can- ada, Sir Antoine A. Dorion deserves a place.- His span of life covered the period from 1818 to 1891. `Judged by the sordid standards of -the spoils- man, says Hammond in his Fathers of Confederation, the public life of this man was a failure; out of two decades of public life he held office for but a few months. Judged, how- ever, by standards of honest duty, his 1 life was successful; h held his ideals I and remained an unbemished public - servant. And who would wish for a . higher tribute whenshis day's work is over? Dorion was at one time an ally of George Brown as Cartier was of John A- Macdonald. ' The two French4Canadjans represented the age`-long struggle between progress and reaction, but it was ,Cartier s fortune to win and achieve, while it was Dorion s to lose and oppose, and , . IBrief Biographical Sketches of So: `of .the Dominion s Big Men "b Who Have Passed Away. MAKERS _gF_ CANADA M Telephone 49 -_--_-- .. snuvu nuverusement Belleville Ontario: Gananoque ' town council decided to cut the as- `-sessment ofalocal hotels in two, as. - provided for in special provincial act. Good hotels are the best advertise-V ment any community. can have and to encourage keeping good hotels the Legislature passed an act authorizing communities to cut hotel assessments. I Hotels without the bar is an infant; industry and as such is entitled to be encouraged where conditions war- rant. ` - The. Influence of Flowers Tren_ton Courier-Advocate: It has, ; been said that a lover of owers is w I ` seldom, if ever, found among` the a criminal classes. The inference is plain and may or may not be just- ified by the facts. But it can scarce- Ily be gainsaid that association with owers and the beautiful in nature generally has a remarkably rening` inuence,'particularly on the lives of young people. Good Hotels a Good " paying , _ _ _ -7 -"A"A"L" Too Many Affected This Way Toronto Telegram: The desire of halfthe world seems to be to get twice as much as they earn and let the other half` of the world do the paving: mwwwkwwwwwwmww `m m E AMONG `EXCHANGES E mww&mmw&$$mmww&m, To mark the Old Home Week and the centenary of Renfrew, the Merw cury issued a ne special number of 36 pages, illustrated by many photo- 1_ gravures of people, factories, busi- nessplaces, residences, street scenes, etc. Recognizing the splendid adver- tising value such an issue has for a _town, the merchants and manufactur-! ers used liberal space, the Town took [two full pages and the Renfrew Fair one full page. Only by such support I is such -a number made possible. The - editionis a very comprehensive one ) and must have proved of deep _inter- E ,Iest-to Renfrewites, both, resident and r ; non-resident. Of special interest are t _ the historical articles by.Mr. Small- F ; field, who owned and edited the Mer- 4 ; curya for many years before selling` A es, beautiful homes and a progressive citizenry. No better advertisement for the town could be, desired. .....u vvnvll 1l1 _.-, v----- c ' _opposition "that led to a breach he Splendid evidence of (T`anada"sA n- `of the friendly relations with George :r- ancial strength is's'eon in the response `BI`0W11- Radical 35 they both Were already made to the announcement of the new Dominion refunding loan. In the first three days two-fths of the $172,000,000 was subscribed, a splendid achievement, the magnitude of which is better re in _some direction famous but ` short-lived. Brown-Dorion Government in 1858. On Brown s resignation from the Cabinet, the old friendly relation their death. s were resumed tilli alized by a com- Summing. up his life! work years after, one has written: Canada has had fewer nobler ser- vants than Dorion. A man of mag- nanimous spirit, of beautiful char-l` acter and of raresagacity, parison with` the results obtained during the Dominion Government s renewal loan campaign last year, ,5 when `a `total of only"'$110;000,000 was converted in considerably over two months. The offering makes an;thI`011gh 8 10,118 Public attractive" investment. Behind itgtel` and factions time stands the whole of Canada as secur- UPON his Shield, 11118011 l red by reverses ity and the interest is highfor g-ov-:and untouched by sordid bargainingsi ernment bonds. `The ve-year bond for office. . returns 5.23% and the twenty-year I` I maturity 5.14%. The average yield . ' [on eight of the United States loans at today s price is only 41/; %, while fo.ur of the War Loans of Great Bri- i pxq _r tain return only 4?/2 9'}. By sellingi . these bonds in the home y market, the ~ FF . Minister of Finance, in addition toi [ giving Canadiansthe first chance to I buy a bond of unexcelled security honored C and unusually high interest rate, al- member of the 0 so eiects a very substantial saving . _ . 1 for Canada. At the prevailing rateixltgon Cassels. As the senior member of exchange, this saving` on interest ' of the rm .0f Casselsi Brock Kelley Payments alone will be approximatelv i Falconbmdge barmsters a.nd .501 $200,000 each year. Furthermore. ` mto.rS Toronto Mr -Casselsils wide- subscribers have the satisfaction ofily,ImO}:vn my only m T0r0n.t buti `knowing that their money is staying uoiug out t 8 Country` He is even \ ntario Bar is .Ham-' _, . . . ' 'd 1' k ' at home and working m .Canada for giiolileic wiinedy pliii:iirthri`)(pic hilrsiteiieitisbil the benefit of the Canadian`. people. His chief benpfam-A ,_ G _ _ _ _. .. t~condiions at the rec 1_.fresh in- mind, wnnld Litune time for such 2; :.. L I I ent fair: be sin A. nolon II a. `to Hours: 2 to 5 and 7 8 and by appointment. Phqne 406 - Barrie - 60 Eliza? but CarEier and , \ I I _ v. b\lV`l nds. 3% l4`7r. yield States loans, pfpn {Q nn1-- A`I/ hr Advertisement Lil; sciu ` 0pp0I`- uuzvl uu ; f I 5 ,_.. -.-. . m mittee and `also on the Pan-Presbw . . . terian Alliance. Another service gowhm,-S m msura his credit is that of being one of the pames where founders and first directors of St. high Standing Andrew's College for boys in Tor- 1} Valuable me onto. In addition to hislegal worknseen that Dr. Dr. Cassels holds important director-1 many and V I t._,._, uuuwu not; only Toronto but` r I throughout the -is I more widely known for his many ` public and philanthropic interests. ' benefactionhas probably [been in connection with the Prison-l ' good Work in the past. This gentle-pl ' man also has a commendable record! ` as the superintendent for many years: i of the Central Prison Sunday School} during the existence of that institu-l tion. Dr. Cassels interest in educa-9 tion has also been a marked feature of his life, occupying for many years] the position of chairman of the Board ` of Trustees` of. Queen's University.` He has further been an outstanding: layman in the _/Presbyterian Church.: 4...... ,,___. .. uaau u1. 11121 'I he fought! :through lo_ng career in a bit-j ;ter withouta stain! too often obloquy and` forgetfulness is the penalty the latter type pays for being in this `senseunsuccessful. The same writer further describes Dorion last an honest pessimist who favored a federation of the two` pro-_-` vinces of Upper and Lower Canadail ' as early as 1856, but the idea of; a, wider confederation met with his; opposition led to breach} .' of George; `Brown. were5' directions, they formed the! V butshort-lived. ' sl i relations lifeI= E I fought ! ' bit-{ H and without a stain! Illnnn Bic c.L.:..1.I .H - ` Yardgpn Mary St. iiiierials. _--. -..e ..,.,...5 auvauba.geS OI tne Neponset Twin-less rrllterial, ' therefore le ss cost. _Slate4surfaced red and green. BIRD S NEPONSET BLACK WATERPROOF BUILDING PAPER quickly pays for itself in cutting down your fuel bills. Absolutely waterproof. -Keeps out moisture ' all.the laying advantages of the N eponset 'fwi _ _ n-less materlal, less green. are Weather-proof and will not catch r Impregnated with asphalt and surfaced Wit slate-red or green. Canada s m Made, by_BIRD SON, LIMITED. --v- 9v\JLO q_uote1" prices and show ___..: - N0 Classes - Each Taught Separately. Dictaphone, Adding Machine and all Business Subjects. "I:)R. AMOS C.` RICH, ex-presidentlLondon.is o N. Y.` State-Dental Society, chai1'n1an;in World executive committee National Dentalv?meaS'uI`e to" Assocn. and vice-president National|fe1' supply. Dental Assocn. ' Y\T| I rifif vz-u->-- capacity of T 33" B"i'!$S# College NH (xftlccpc _ l Corn Meal Split Peas Rolled Oats Wheatlsts . Pearl Barley Pot Barley . . . 6 lbs. 25c . . . 6 lbs. 25c . . 4 lbs. 25c . . 2 lbs. 15c .. 3 lbs. 15.: . . . 3 lbs. 25c 93 WHITE SATIN PASTRY FLOUR 24-Tb has 34 49-Mag $1.67 [5 lbs. - _ 0Z()X4)Z()3(lZ(j()Z\)Z(b1l>1DZ(I1ID11P- DC DOMINION sromas, Limited WE SELL TO SATISF Y '% Q a i u ;anding make him an unusual- ; table member. It will thus be I hat Cassels is a man _of varied accomplishments; .... u, \vIUv\:lrl.llu, ljlllo. CHARLES SC-HVVAB. president \ the` U. S.'Steel Corporation. ' ' CLARA BARTON. mother of t} Red Cross. , . T D. HamiI__ton, 0ntaz"io. , - _.. -...a. w uIvLA\.L \aU1uo you the quality of BirdT s Dqmestig: or Easirst SHORTENING FRESH DATES 10c lb Roman Meal . . pkg. Cream of Barley, Cream of Wheat, A TiHson s Oats, ` pkg. Quaker Oats . pkg. Kellogg s Bran, pkg. 'I594 .......u ; uuuuaul run U0. W. W.; BUSTARD`; D.D., pastor of John D. Rbckefeller s Euclid Avenue Church. Cleveland, Ohio. I DO (Vf`1YI"I Y A v'\

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