Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 4 Oct 1923, p. 3

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TOBER 4, 1923 1888 LIFE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4,1923 VT i T ` go or 1 N G EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR BARRIE % The Ball Planing Mill Co. Ltd. Also Manuracturers or beaver` wau Boatd TE `The J. M. GREENE Music co. Cor. Mary and_ Elizabeth Sts. _ 3. Soak the sample in water for 12 hours-see if its weight shows any ab- sorption._ 4. Immerse the sample in nitric, -sulphuric, muriatic or other ordinary acid-- see if it. is affected. 5. Lay a glowing hot coal bf re on the sample-see if it sets re to the sample. alking Plow. Plow is light from driver. and depth. . saving Plowa fail. in stock. HE Brunswick-Balice Coiiender Compan)? of Canada, Limited, maicers of the Brunswick phonograph, hash been rec nized as the leading manufacturers of high- ciass cabinet-Wor for nearly 80 37ears. The9 own vast timber limits -from which they get the choicest woods. Their factories are models of up-tovdate equipment, manned by the most expert work people. They maice the Brunswick completei` , including the motor, and the)? stand `behind even-,9 Brunswic with a positie guarantee for your protection'._ V-.. -_.. L.._\ _ D_.__..:_i. DL__-..a...._L ....a.L -L-..i..o.. ....-.._ Brur'1swicl:"9Jitl1 `yvaositie guarantee or profectior;._ You can bu)? a Brunswick phonograph with absolute assur- ance of satisfaction. com; `IN AND HEAR` THE BRUNSWICK Thes Tests Prove Yulcanite Quatity 1. Lay the sample on a hot radiator for 12 hours-see. if it will melt or dry out. 2. Lay the sample on ice for 12 hours--then pour boiling water on it. See if the sudden extremes of temperature affect it in an-nu I115`! Consider The Makers of PHONES: Office 109: Res. 642 and 390 Thorold, Ont. END the coupon below for a sample of the Vulcanite Hexagon `Slab Shingle. You put the sample to the tests listed here. Do your best toiharm it. You never saw a roof which will stand up like Vulcanite. Then you will realize that in its heavy, rigid tough- ness; its re-resisting and weatherproof qualities; its beautiful and distinctive appearance-lies the solution to your roong problem. Vulcanite Hexagon Slabs, because of their exclus- ive, patented design, insure double protection everywhere-.a tight seal against any weather-a deep tile effect and a heavy shadow` line. More square inches of roong than in any other slab shingle. Made from tough, long-fibre, pure rag felt, impregnated through and through with nest asphalt. Quickly and economically laid over roof boards or righton top of the old shingles. Fin- ished in green and red crushed slate. Vulcanite Roong of the same high quality also comes in individual shingles, four-in-one slab shingles, and in rolls, both slate surface and smooth nish--for home, farm and industrial buildings. You can identify the genuine by the Vulcanite name and the Beaver Trademark. ETH ST. NE'441W The Beaver %Cempany,_ Limited `.'_.._`__`_4_-4_'__. t\_'- __ a;;;23;;;-;;;; Thorold, Ont., and Winnipeg, Man. Also Manufacturgrs of Beaver" Wall Boatd aavllulvu Q1_dt-n;'nis;t'.a't;:;1-1r(;;1::"e;: Bualo, N. Y. _.f__ ANS, , _, Hone; . Heavy DVraught--2-year-old. C. Grigg; yearling. Walter Rowley; span. Mrs. Leo. 0`Neil, Colonel Bell. ` A.--}m.In.....I__`ll-.....l nun-u. n-`J `An 1] u, ucurr uuu. LICCH rrencn. Polled Angus---~A2ed cow. Richard Antler- son; bull calf. R. Anderson. .1` muzn wmums AT I-ZLMVALE ma Agricultural---Brood mare and foul. H. 11. Mel; spring colt, H. J. Fm.-1; 2-year- low. H. J. Friel; yearling. .11. J. I-`rial; span, Cecil Kidd. Geo. Fleming. Wm. Kell. \'n...... Gnnnrnl pun-nnnn_.cnon D I laynu, Ltuu xuuu. utu. rleuuug. VVLII. RUSH. General Purpose--span. R. J. Young.` {Jack Trace. c - carriagksiugle driver. A. M. Tudhope. it Roadater-Sing|e driver. H. A. Grose. nun nu" `I7 Avnna ' \4lllA3Cg :1.` 4']. Auuuupc.'~ l Sweepstakes_---Hea\'y horses (classes 1. 2. !3). Mrs. Leo O'Neil. Light horses (classes E4. 5|. Dan Bell; best yearlinf colt. alter ifiowley; best Clydesdale colt. H. J. riel; {best Clydesdale colt shown by boy or gnrl }at previous school fair. A. Friel. ' . n_AAI, , UCIIIC Durh:uns--.~\2c-d bull--Sim Cotton. R. J. iR`e_vn'olds;A yearling bull. Bocliffe Linton; aged cow. Jno. Houden. Rocliffe Linton. Jno. .>Hou,den; two-year-old heifer. Jno. ifiouden. 1 and 2; yearling heifer. Rocliffe iliinton. Jno. W. Coe. 2 and 3; heifer. Jno. W. Coe; bull calf. Jno. W. Coe. C. A. Far- `ney. R. J. Reynolds; best herd. Rocliffe Limon . Jno. Houden. p 7_1,._,_:,__ ,.|._ A_.__11___n mL,, n n n 5,21 trial vA.lI_ulUlI. uuu. llUU\_|ClIo E Herc-fords---Aged bull. Thos. Dewall. Free- iman French; aged cow. Thos. Dewall. F. L. 9Ney. Freeman French; 2~year-old heifer. Bert French. 1. 2 and 3; yearling heifer. `Thus. Dewnll. Bert French 2 and 3; heifer lcalf. Freeman French land 2. B. French; bull calf. Francis 1.. Ney, Thos. Dewall. Freeman French; best herd. Thos. Dewall. jut-uAIvu_11n" I urn... nl.-I I` I1` I`,._...l.._.l. nxcculuu rlcuuug uml ueru. 11108. uewuu. Jerse_vs.~Bull. 1-year-old. C. E. Copeland` aged cow. C. E. Copeland l and 2; heifer. 2~year-old. C. E. Copeland; heifer calf. L`. E. Copeland 1 and 2; bull calf. C. `E. Cope- land. 1l'-I_._:.__ A _,, I v` n - . - m;I`<.3lst.eins--Agetl cw. F. Grigg l. 2 and 3; heifer calf. Cecil French. Dnllml A......... A--.) -,,, n` I, I A I |l>'IlI I-JCII. WV. 4'lUK$a ' ' 1 Special--~Lady driver. Mrs. George N. 1Campbell. A. M. Tudhope. Mrs. B. W. ;Smith; single turnout. `Dun Bell. H. A. `iGrose. A. M. Tudhope. I Q\unnncvaIrnc._._-Inn`-u Ln.--_..-m l..l..-...._ 1 -) ` Illlttl 8711151!` L it aan B_el!. ?'.`AnnJ1s_. London",`En. xv-.. `nu nuuwnvuu m(Continu.ea on p;:ge 6) % i:"iiae" 1 L..lI C `nu: niuuua axluauu-:3 linut St. Louia. Totals ' unuuuTLJCuuUJL, Lnunu ufuu omen. _ Summarv ` Earned runs--~Barrie 2; Allister) 0. Two-base hit-Small. ' First on balls--off Lennox 1. L Struck out---by Lennox 8; by Small 2; by Emms 5. Left on baees--Barrie 4; Allistoln 8. I Double Vnl'ays--L. Emma to Lynch so Armstrong to Copeland; Doyle to White- side; Small to Black to Whiteside. IXHIA n3`o..l.' `!7'.......... a-uu, uacozu a. vruuuuue, 110318 A. , 7 Innings pitched-b_v Lgnnox 7 1/3; by Small 1 2/3. H11... 41 1. -_'._, A change in the type of cargo car- riers on the Mississippi will result if the proposed $10,000,000 `manufac- turing, assembling and distributing plant of the Ford Motor Car Company at the High Dam, between St. Paul and Minneapolis, is completed. The box score is as follows :- Barrie AB. R. H. D. Emms 2nd. ....3 2o 0 Dobson lst . . . . . . . . . .4 I 1 Armstrong c. .. . .4 0 0 Lynch s.s. . . . . . . ..4 0 2 L. Emms p. . . . . ..4 0 2 Copeland 3rd. . . . . . .4 0 0 Livingston c.f.. Li. .4 '2 1 Hart. r.f. . . . . . . . . ..l 0 0 Clark H. . . . . . ; . .4 0 0 Cooper c.f . . . . . . . ..3 0 1 Alliston J. Bergin 2nd. Caesar 1;f_. .. . .. A. Bergin s.s. .. Whitesidc lst. .. Lennox p.. 3rd. Handc.f. [Small 3rd.. D` . . Doyle r.f. Black c. . . . . .. Totals . . . . . . . . . . . .35 Score by innings :- `I 0 '1 A E u:o;1n.n 0105 0 000 1 1 7 0 0 7 7 Batteries :- Barric.~-L; Emma and Armstrong; Al- liston--Lennox, Small a._nd BIack._ Rnrnrrmrv muc, oxuuu nu 1312105 to vvnuesme. Wild pi1ch'--Emms. Passed ball.s--`Black 1. First on_errors-Barrie 3; Alliston 3. Stolen bases--D. Emma, Lynch, Living- ston, Caesar 2. Whiteside, Doyle 2. Inn`3nl:rc nifn}1nrl__l-aw Innnnv `'7 1/9.. I... IJLLJKIII I GIG : _ Time-2 hours. I Umpires---AJ. Hindle, Thornton, at. plate; Arnold, Cookstown, on bases. ' ' ounces of ill quickly g process d `by good lave them or DYED. luu. a uua. A t`I"l'Ul'.". Alliston-~J. Bergin singled to left; to 2nd on wild pitch; Caesar safe on fielderk choice. Bergin going out. at 3rd; Caesar stole 2nd and went to 3rd on A. Bergin s out at. 1st; Whitesidepopped to Lynch. 0. runs. 1 hit. 0 errors. Ninth Inning Barrie-Livingst.on struck out; Cooper was robbed of a home run by Hand s spec- tacular one-handed stab of the former s hard-hit ball to centre; this was the feature catch of the day; Clark fanned. 0 runs. 0 hits. 0 erron. `:_L-__ Y ,_,, _ a yr . 4. - 4 V nun. U cllula. Allist0n-Lennox and Hand fanned for first two outs; Small doubled to left; `Doyle out to Livingston. 0 runs, 1 hit. 0 errors. We Barrie----D. Enims and Dohson safe er- rors by A. Bergin; Armstrong struck out; Lynch singled, filling bases; L. Emms drove one at Lennox hitting him back of ear and D. Enuns tallied; Small then came in to pitch. with basesvloaded and one out; Cope- land hit into fast double play. Small to Black to Whitwide. retiring the side. run. 2 hits. 2 errors. AIlZ_L-__ I Y`l_,, I I - ` 3 ll I llllr. I Clllllg Alliston-~Hand singled; to 2nd bad- throw by Copeland; to 3rd on Smalfs out at 151; out at home on Dnyle s fir-lder's choice; Doyle stole flnd; Black fanned. 0 runs. 1 hit. 1 error. Seventh Inning _ Bzirrk-~- L. Emms and Copeinndnut -A~. Borvin to Whiteside; Lix-"ingstou safe er- ror by A. Bergin; stole 2nd; scored on Coop- 'er s hot single down 1st base line; Clark forced Cooper at 2nd for third out. 1 run, 1 hit-. 1 error . AlI2,,.,__ IV , I `, I I . n BARRIE sums OUT ALL1sTg1g_ NINE, 5~o (Continued from page 1) First Inning Ban-ie--D'. Emms out on Hand`s nice catch; Dobson fanned; Armstrong rolled to White-side. 0 runs. 0 hits. 0 errors; Alliston--J. Bergin out to Livingston; Caesar and A. Bargain out I.-. Emma to Dob- son. 0 runs. 0 hits, 0 errors. Second Inning V 'Barrie-Lynch struck `om; "I... Emms singled; Copeland out In Doyle. doubling E-mms off 1st. 0 runs, 1 hit. 0 errors. A":n6nn Tl-'L1on..i,l.. ..n6`.. ......-.. U. 9...! L'4'IIllll III] l5l. U IUII3, I Illg U Clllllbn All`L:tou--Whitcside safe . error by 3rd. stole 2nd; Lennox safe error by pitcher`; both out on double play. L. Emms to Lynch to Armstrong to Copeland; Hand out to Liv- ingston. 0 runs. 0 hits. 2 errors. Third Innimz > Barrie~-~Livingston. Hart. Clark, all struck out. 0 runs. 0 hits. 0 errors. . Alliston- mall out D. Emms to Dohson: Doyle singled-; stole 2nd; Black fanned; J. Bergin out Lynch to Dobgon. 0 runs. 1 hit. 0 errors. I.`__._.AL ',, ,',. , 1 AIM.` U ClIUlBn Allislon--D()_vle'0ut at 1st; Black singled to left; J. Bergin put an easy oneVto pitch- er; Caesar fanned. put. out at 1st. 0 runs. 1 hit, 0 errors. .\?__.L `I ,2-- ' Work -as - ---------- ---a 1 'Barric--Dobson out on Doyle"s good .c::tch; Armstrong out at 1st; Lynch fanned. 0 hlna. 0 hits. 0 errors. A Il2.....- A n.v.~~- I 1111-. `u U nuur. U lute. U l'l'1'Ufh'. Allis!on--A. Be:-gin and Whireside out at 1st; Lennox out on Cooper's nice catch. 0 Iruns. 0 hits. 0 errors. llllu U VIIUIB. Fourth Inning B:irrie---D. Emms walked; stole 2nd; Dobson singled; Armstrong rolled to 1st. Emms scoring; Lynch singled tallying Dob- son; stole 2nd; to 3rd on passed ball; L. Emms out to Caesar; Copeland popped to Small. '2 runs. 2 hits, 0 errors. All:.`o.... 0.....- ..:....l...a. -...1_ n...I. _..; Dlllllllu Kllll. 6 LIKED, U Cr_X1 r5o Alliston--Caesar singled; stole 2nd; out at 3rd on A. Bergin's fielder s choice; Whiteside singled; Lennox safe on fielder's choice. A. Ber-gin going out at 3rd; Hand safe error by Copeland; Small out D. Emms to Dobson. Oruns, 2 hits, 1 error. Fifth Inning Bz_m'ie,-L-ivingston singled; to 2nd erlor by Caesar; to 3rd error by Lennox; scored error by Hand; Cooper (batting for Hart? fanned: Clark popped to Lennox. 1 run. 1 hit. 3 errors. AH: Y\ ......- _._.!_ _._. . 1 . V\V I - 1 u Hand s Catch A of Cooper s Drive Fielding Feature of Match. Subscribe hi Tu Rnmincv! Eighth Inning `Sixth Inning The Sarjeant Co. made quite a' commendable improvement this sum-I mer when they cleaned up the un- hgres Sold by '$5000 Reward` For over 30`years we have had a standing offer of $5000 to anyone who can prove that there is any im- purity, or any injurious chemical used in Sunlight Soap. No one has ever claimed the award. Sunlight embodies a blend of the purest cocoa- nut and palm oils, good enough for the nest toilet soaps. There is no lling material in `Sun- light-you get full value in pure soap for every cent you pay. That s why Sunlight is so economical and eicient--so harmless to clothes and A hands. The stove-heated home can have no better stove than a Happy Thought Heater. ' Every corner of the home heated by a Happy Thought Pipeless Furn- ace is a place of comfort. ' PUUIIIIIIY In|JlU|I"Rl`Y' I-INIITEI RANGI.-'.sI=unNAce' Their homes have been brightened and their labors lightened by Happy Thought Ranges. They are satised. You will be. Baking, her bi-oiling, frying, preserving - no matter what--the Happy Thought peless `Range is always dependable. f mf t- For forty years Canadian women have been using Happy Thought Lcated Ranges because of the satisfactory results they give. .The large oven, py with its even heat--the large cook- ' ing surface--easy regulation ~-small fuel consumption--excellent appear- ance-and all the little attachments that save labor have made this range their Choice. Ask the woman who owns one. She will say: I like my Happy Thought because it : such a g..d baker. iOTTON Hardware Co. BARRIE, ONTARIO yak ofzo 300,000 app gggfughf |sig'htly' dump heap facing High St. gand the Collegiate Institute. 1).--- A.l---_.L:_-.I nu_:-_.___ \/\Iln\.basoI\4 ; a --i3uy Advertiser-l`"'.I:}`1`i:;'s. Sayeld St.` nd blockd_

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