Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 18 Oct 1923, p. 4

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Lrusuaul LVLLIDDGLIJ, 4 S 2 tins . . . . . . . . . . 23:: U Dates 10c lb. -- Cheese 30c Sutnwlu-A Wuuam Fhooucrs Zenoleum, large tin _ Special . . . . . . $1.49 International Poultry .Tonic, reg. 75c Special . . . . . . . .. 49 Stove- and Shoe Brushes . Regular 250 Q.....-:.. - 4: p r .43 Tufco Overalls '& Smocks . $1.89 per garment "":aT.Z. .`.?"f .`.".. . 2 Wonder Wash Tablets *2 pkg: . . . . . . . . . 2 Durham Mustard, 1 s 9 ;n 9 Hwson Heavy Wool Underwear - An `A Iv UUI Ullucg-{V.:9 garment Men's Fine Wool [Socks T 2 pair $1.25 'T`nf'r-n xynvnlla `Iv qvnnnlrn \:l.\\l \./I-14 Redpath Syrup, 2 s 2 tin: . . . . . . . . . . 2 Sun" Ammonia. liquid 2 bottles . . . . . . . 2 -Swift s Wash Powder 4 .pkgs. . . . . . . . . 1 Gem Lye, reg. 15c 9 0:..- `I SALES ROOM: 16 OWEN STREET _Solicits the patronage `of the people` of Allandgle and vicinity Felephone for further particulars, No. 78 LIICE unaz Special U. "F. 0. READY-MIXED PAINTS OTTON HARDWARE CO. 139 Dunlop St, Barrie, Ont. 9R9CERY_~:?E1A_'-5 Qts. 89c : H111;-G-r;1`s:;'1.6'~) .l*ARD.W.AR.E Dayapon? ----u\---1 I I-II`, IIIIIVII I I 5! Richmond St. W.. Toronto And NO SMELL 18c `.234; 29c 23 29 L19c ry----- Zenolgum, reg. 35c ti! Special . . . . . . 23c Separator Oil Half Gal. reg. 75c Special . . . . . . . . . E Butter Crocks Regular 35c ` Q-.....:..I 0 soc pair Men s V-Neck Sweaters $3.69 each 11 UV: Uuucl VVCGI $1.49 garment Men s Work Socks 05- __2., Plumbing V -'-'- Hegting Tinsmithing an u-----;u- -Tip-Top Soap Chips 2 pkgs. . . . . . . . . , 13c Potato Flour, reg. 25c 2 pkgs. . . . . . . . . . 38 Asstd. McLaren s Spices 2 tin: . . . . . . . . . . . 19c Assorted Extracts 2 bottles . ., . . . . . . 19: Challenge Soap, large bar = 2 bar-a_ . . . . . . . .. 29: Dominion Soups 2 tins` . . . . . . . . 19c : lb. -- Matches 3 for 35 Penman s Fine W 001 Underwear Q1 An THURSDAY, ocroman 13, 1923. .u.c5 Luau Special `NoAsHs No WORK tin .1 tin :l\ , 23 pair :`lIYLx n fnsoo 23c ' 69 FXE't3ii'X'c' Phone 180 : I33 Dalila] uu\vu.r- 1.5 H"H and nth!-r.-' hm :1 wf Jzmu-.- Wu(.-n T`1 in lhv (`nu !Tecc;L`:(*d. :m- rml day of Nnvmnln Jnost or deliw-r I `Wntnrio. Solicitn n-state of Hw .~ `full n:um~.-A and hf their c1:|iln.~'. mm of H10 .\`(`|l rafter whivh IMH- seed to I'.~M`i!vl I-stats uinum: M` naving rvgnrci ~f`|l".\'-.~'hlI t-ho-n nun-.~, nun u:}rz\t.ituh-; `r`ini.sh." z 4.-pectively. 7\n|I. I|I`I-`I1 nil zmd Mi.~.< Jo-n a talk am M..~ This nmvlim: wf thv mmnm . I ' n [hm- \.lL_ .......... .. in ht`? ham mud h_\' \!;.~ muly I-unk memht'r.< xx u(`.mlN.'l . aiainty him` On Mumu .'"`oopl("s (`In 'sn illh-Ir.~'ti `hinge. `HI Bryan! :m ruons, hi: :1_,,;'; NQVTIACE n nunrl VI . of x'l'ornx:l Fnllingwu 151119, wt-rw 'I`lu~ `r :1 nd can give < you PROMPT ATTENTION ,oN Au. YOUR ~ ORDERS unulllfh Tho m to: \ ya` r.~' tv. :1 ny . 'l`L.. `viuvu. (`-In-r`r _\ 'Iuy.~`. mun 3-(`Hun wh: III . .1 inllow. [CI II. \ VH1 fmlidny with an, and '1`! I'l 11 I -us. .:u an Mr. and .Ir.<. unto nn .\'un:i.u .Mr. and .\I1.~ wcr UN" ".1t`W`:Irt on 511` All 'HI.` I\.'VnIII. \| All :m- _p f~rvill~ ,;.hh- aftnr L'\`(`r.:l I I 1` 4.-uouv II fmltiorsfxig _ . 1Il\` l`\'\ Vr`I_) |\ Mrs. 'l'u)-lm are with he-r n :.ri.nt4-r. Mr. mu! .\lr. ._ | `I ,_| \| .04-.Loh(-r 16. S} _jpies Me the mu m I.h(.`.\`(` d:ny.~. ` I Kiss McKm1zin-'.~ 1:. Miss M:m1ie- H .- Torullm Illa! um-1 Mr. Muyt-r um! ll... \I,.I -uyu zvu. -znu an Rev. R. H. -. part of lnnt nu-K Mrs. Ai('.\. Hm Hora after n.~'mu,- Mr. and Mr. 1`. and S'hmnl.u-r: u Potato ;)ickin_; and not var} -.u-II II... 'I' I THE ALLANDALE LIVERY STABLE ' Thu "'-hII>I1'ht-.~ Lnaov tllvlll Illu Mfr`. 1.42 with Mr. and Mr `Ill, Jlll I Th!` Mn` THURSDAY, nu .- 192 All Best Silk` . I. . 50.0 Mnl 50V-zu-.r. farm, near Barrie, a snap. nun I: JHIX no ,~"I"I~:\\`.-\_I an n who . 1 I Two good ats, modem, for rent. f`......L_.._ L-..__ -,__4- Stove Pipes Harry Barron tn rm-prest-.nt us in your district, in mm'tg`ag'es and bonds. - A great opportunity. NATIONAL INVESTMENT REGISTER, LIMITED l:l D':_L_._-__.l 0. n1 P. cfLT3Y3-_ Funeral l_)i1_'ecfor and Pub Four YOU NATURALLY THINK or Saddle Horees Cutting _and_ General Ed. Bryson s CON!-'EC'l'IONERY Barrie - Allandale .H- A-_ HENRY `at reasonable: mtg: Big Stocks Brazil Nut Taffy V THIS WEEKEND R. C. DICKEY MAN OF coon STANDING AND. REBUTATION HOT AND cow at prides Exclusive `gen! for nus A on IIII tinny A --.1. REAL ESTATE H. A. HENRY 50c. lb. WE HAVE WHEN IT IS Dunlap 3!. OPEN BX;:r:1; NIGHT -47 Elizabeth St. Phone 218 W uuc mu, was me expression of opinion of one delegate, and criticism ; of the new Reader was voiced by sev- eral. AThe concensus of. opinion was that the teacher should protest against the change, otherwise the De- partment would think that everything _was satisfactory. ' course, one year each, for primer, . -remaining grades. -..-.. a-uuu nae uaacuu One teacher thought it would be a good idea for the County Examining Board to setthe papers for the Prim- er and the First Grade. ' Reduce Time in Grade II An important point brought out during the discussion was the sug- , gestion that an effort be made to .~ unite the Junior and Senior work in ` Grade II, thus giving this work in . one year instead of two as at present. . It was more important, it was con- 1 tended, that the pupil have two years in third, and two years in fourth. This would provide for a seven-year-i A1 first and second, and two each in the 1 Text Books Criticized 1 That the new History was not equal I to. the old, was the` expression of 1 ommon of one dnlncrni-n and mac-..:..... 1 I were uuu easy. Spelling was one `of the subjects: The primary `child should ` not be called upon to concentrate for. under fire. half ah` hour on , spelling, it was stat- ed. A sveller that was adapted to _each grade was urged. ' l'\....'. ;_--1.-__ ' -` L`,-, , ` I I b r b ' `The - a number of pupils in one room made A discussion of verygreat interest to teachers everywhere took place nearthe close of -the two-day conven- tion of North and South Simcoe teach- ers, in.Barrie, October 11 and 12, the subject being Examinations. A] resolution was passed favoring the. continua_nce of "combined examina-] tion papers. in the Second and Third xzrades for another year. The chance, it wa stated, was at experimental stage. 1 Complain of Severe Papers Complaints had been received,- it i was stated, that some of the exam- _- ination paners had been too severe. ; question was discussed by In- . spectors J. L. Garvin and E. Long-'1 man, who explained that while there J1 were those who thought that some:S 3 present in the ' lapers were too difficult, no reports'] ad been received of others being too easy. That was generally the way; it was always the hard ones that were heard from. There were cases wherei Ic one hundred per cent. on a paper, .2 and yet `there was no'complaint*from;i' any of the teachers that the papers ( were too easy. ` K .qYH3]];hO' `lino Ann A4` 4-`an ---`--`A-J---7 V l '\ The rport of the Egyptian Postal :Administration for the year 1922 re?! I I veals the] surprising fac_t that there} l __._. . T_A__T __ No COMPLAINT IS MADE ;wHEN EXAMS. ARE EASY I ..,,..... -... .. .-.u..u.;.q. oucw mu: ulupluy-I er is going` to upset his whole officei or factory routine in order that this} young` man or woman may take 400' working hours off in the course of at year in order to attend classes? The idea is ridiculous` andequite worthy of the impracticable dx-eamers wh A lframed the Act. M V i T I 3 The Act as it stands requires that children between the ages of four-;( teen and sixteen -who are given per-l mits to work shall put in 400 hours at school luring the year and that these hours shalli be between 8 am. | and 5 p.m, Supposing a youngster. l nds it necessary `to work in order to I} live and accepts a job, doesone im-- agine for a moment that the employ- :1 lm- ie rnnm 5-n n .-m.{+ l...'.. ...1....In ..a~:-- Education ea_nnot_be shoved down the throats of boys and girls. It is 21 matter for the individual. The fac- ilities are there for continuing` study] up to and beyond the age of sixteen without any Adolescent Act. If a boy or`g`irl strives for knowledge, one may be assured that it will be '1-to vvvv u Ill lazy`: ` attained. If the reverse be the case.g `there is: little use wasting` the child ;~`} time and the country s money. Andi then mrain. the average parent is; naturally interested inthe upbring-1 ing' of their children, and `as awholei they can be left with the responsib- ility without a truant officer or some other o"ieial sticking his nose into` i what is priinarily the business of the individual parent and child. . I urn _ ...._..`.-.....u._, "now" vaavld. vutuca If it is a hmlse, a farm or a m_a1'- `kt-.L 2;aI'd(en, sue me. I16! VIII GU BCIJ 0 Just now Ontario's Adolescent)` . School Attendance Act is being dis- cussed by representative school bod- ies, and the drift of opinion seems to be that it is neither workable, nor on the whole is it in the public in- terest. Aside entirely from the fact that it is going to cost Ontario a great many millions of dollars to keep children in school until they have reached the age of sixteen, the ' experiment is of doubtful worth ow- ing to the inadvisability of compel- ling children _ against their will `to continue school [an inclination to take on some vo- ication in life. `(In I , u . .' after they have ` shown a disinclination for study and . In 4,. T eaaiorigi :i-ea;1ii'r:Ev;i;;i1"`t`};'i;; question, the Toronto Saturday Night had this to say: ' 'IIaf `uncut f\~.L-_:.. .. I .I_I-_..-..L THE ADOLESCENT ACT From many ratepayers and trus- olescent Act making schooling com- pulsory up to sixteen years. .It is tees have come criticisms of the Ad-f evident that some authorities on ed- 4 ucation also are not in favor of com- pelling` children over fourteen to at-; tend school when they have lost, in- terest in their studies and want to get to work. Mr. Amoss, of the staff` of the Hamilton Normal School, told the teachers in convention here last week that the boy dropping out of school to go to work had in numerous 3 cases taken as much out of the school system as he could get. If it was `5 desired to sendhim back, said Mr. Amoss, a different kind of education would have to be provided for him. 1 wan scrvcu Uy nne ISGDEKRIIS. Following the supper, the follow- " ing toast list was proceeded with: ' j The King and Grand Lodge,'pro posed by W. Bro. L. J. Simpson and responded .to by W. Bro. W. N. Duff. St. Andrew's Lodge. proposed by R. W. `Bro. A. W. Smith and acknow- ledged by W. Bro. Kirby and V. W. Bro. Hagerman. Past Masters of Corinthian, introduced by Bro. 'E. C. Drury. with a reply from R. W. Bro. J. Little. Visiting Brethren. proposed by W. Bro. C. R. Spencer. Z with responses from W. Bros. Fred : Marl` of Kerr, A. W.` Green of Min-14 ecu uvcl u ueuuury ago. . At 10.30 the gathering adjourned from labor to refreshment, the Fourth being put on at the 1.0.0. F. Temple. where an excellent spread was served by the Rebekahs. F`nn\nhn- +In`1 nlivsvunu L]... 13.11.... After the degree work, W. Bro. Kirby. on behalf of his lodge,- pre- sented to W. Bro. Ronald` for Cor- inthian a copy of the history of St. Andrew's Lodge, _No. 16, one of the- oldest in Canada, having been organ- ized over a century ago. Af fIo'|nM:v\n` nA:nuun--.nJ `Gowan St. : Phone 202 5-;\.uurI.ul; u. 01 u., warren .Jonnson.I J Introduced by R. W. Bro. Duff, the ; visitors were received in due form] >lby W. Bro. W. F. Ronald and staff.! e,`They then took the chairs and pro-I elceeded to give the Second Degree to` .l.another candidate. The _St. Andrew's men_ in the chairs were:-- W.M.,` G. `C. Kirby; S.W., F. Brown; J.W., C. S. Ma`llett;. S.D., Ivan Carroll; J.D.. :E. W. Langley; I.G., F. J. Conboy; S.S., R. Butcher; J.S., A. Clark. . Others assisting` in the degree were: R. W. Bro. J. H- Dunlop, V. W. Bros. A. E. Sinclair and W. Lawrence, W. Bros. J. S. Whealey. E. F. Walker. G. Ritchie, W. R. Scott` and L. E. Lane. AAA.-- LL- _1_-,, a rut _ 1 Jung; 1.u., aas. anrunsole; S.S.,_A. B. Coutts; J.S., F. W. Otton; Chap- lain, Rev. C. R. Spencer; T1`eas.', P. Bremnc-1';.Secy;, L. J. Simpson; O1'-[ :p:a`nist. R. G. Manuel; Tyler, W. 17.; -`Ronald; D. of C., Warren Johnson.` Tntrndnnnd kw `D I pun hum A-1-- | .... .. ` .... H... In: uvcxuuwulg. [ The Second Degree was exempli- .fied by former presiding officers of , Corinthian, the chairs being filled as follows:-'-- i _ W.M., Alex. Cowan; I.P.M., A. W. Smith; S.W., J. Little; J.W., W. A. Lewis;' S.D., J. B. Barr; J.D., Byron King; I.G., Jas. Shrubsole; S.S., _A. B. Couttsz .T_Q,, `P W nffnho NI...- There was a`double bill at Cor: inthian Lodge, A. F. & A. M., last; Thursday night, a visit from St. An-1 drew s Lodge, Toronto, `being an add- ed uttraction for. Past Masters ]Nig-ht. A-full house was on hand .to see the work done, the Iodgeroom lbeing packed to overowing. | 'I\o Q B n A ' "1 n'`'`````` _``A .. I ll May Give Fillip to Ranching _ 2 _ Bracebridge Gazette: The Prince( Iof Wales evidently had a great time` `-5 on his ranch and-off his ranch in Al- Wberta. His visit may mean much] "good to Alberta and to all Canada.l '}He may not clean up much money `;-on E. P. Ranch. but if he makes Al-i iberta ranching fashionable it may. mean much for the province. Mostlj young aristocrats love to follow in! I the footsteps of royalty and if the fashion results in establishing a few;] thousands of ranches like the E. P. l1 it will mean a Gold River flowing< cheerfully side by side with the Bow River, Elbow River and other` .streams that irrigate the fertile lplains of _Canada s great West. l [ :_:__jj,, I 5 :I( VISIT 01-` ST. ANDREWTS T0 CORINTHIAN LODGE -..a..,...u vvnlpxv ynncy uuuu Pilllpo IE] `is not the fault of the teachers or! gthe school board; it is the weaknessf iof the system. _ 5 I _.,, ...... vb uI.avIv6$UlUll_, WllUl'UUy a Cnllfl is taught a smattering of everything conceivable, is not calculated to lmake for good knowledge of,.speu- gialized industries on the part of the ,child. Take the case of Almonte. |It is :1 woollen town, yet one never{ `hears of any special training for the! children of the town-in the matter of Iwoollens or cloth. They leave school; with no more knowledge of woollens than the children of Cobalt. where` is hnf flu: Pni1'H- A4-` 4-Inn 4.......L...... -.l `silver isthe great industry, orvColl- ; lmgwood, where they build ships. It 7 - ~ - - - -. I I . The Need of Vocational School: I Almonte Gazette: The present system of education, whereby a chilell is txma-`n+ n m`m.4-+*....:..... t\ 4\--A- L"' _ I . . ifofth co:1?de?B1'"Ji&`{f?3n7`"'F1`$ The nding Of the Court Of A})- jlnspector dealt with some of `the more} 7 peal, sustaining the judgment of Hisimportant methods used in teaching; f Honor Judge Wismer in the wood .!this subject. deal Case of Barrie vs. .McConkey It was impossible to `get-away from! justifies the action of Mayor Little'memr-V m teach"? elememary at`: . . 'th t',h `t t. T h` :9 3; mge: [hf :::%,;:ed gngzhlgfsdeigtandifgcodg - we up 1s a e . . ` - _ was not sufficient. As soon as the: He did 8 .00d Stroke Of 511510935 f0l"nupil understood the procedure. then] Barrie when he` refused to sign the git was good policy to push the memory ` $593 cheque and started the invest : 01`k fol` all it '35 W0l`th- ;3;26`g3` W "" "*` *` inn`: Z`3io"ufs3i Io'2`fZ:`;;" IYTIIICF n`z~r\' Ln..- --4-- "ln_Barrio,and Allandule, some ex-` (-optionally good` houses, at prices, considmubly below their value. YD 1. F %a%&aw&&w$mm&w& 33 AMONG EXCHANGES w$w$%mmmw&&awwawf `were in Egypt on Dec- 31 last no. _Ifewer than 166 daily and weekly} , newspapers. .Of these, 94 were pub-' , `lished in Arabic, 6 in other Oriental` , languages, 63 in European tongues. . and 3 in combinations of eastern and _ western languages. Cairo, with a ` , population of between 600,000 and 4 ,`e7oo,ooo, has - 24 daily papers, 01",; , which 12 are published in Arabic, 4}_ ' in French, 2_in Italian, 4 in Greek`. ,1 in English, and 1 in Armenian. l1 , Alexandr-ia s 11 dailies are composed" * of 4 published in Greek,a3 in Arabic. _, 2 in French, 1 in English, and 1 in |` Italian. Cairo has, in proportion tot} its size, more newspapers than anv 1`! other city in the world. The circu - H rations vary, from .3000 to 35,000 each. The general tone of the pap- ers is better than those of London or New York, in that they do not .1 feature crimes and sensational social 3`. ` scandals. \ - 1` < I` THE BARRIE; EXAMINER auu 1)1'Ub'. uuwer 3.710 mlachellan. -Vocal numbers were given by Bros. Barron, Treend and Hoover and in- strumental selections by T Lennox s I orchestra. - B_\`[. :VVul`l\ wr an n; was worth. I mm; It was necessary that the pupil bei gable to count without effor: and he! `must also have speed. .Ho should! know easily the number that follows. v0X`jany other. It was his experience '* Iathat `children zrlways found adding .3 ;doubles easy; exght and eight, seven: (and seven, and so on. The child! 3 gshould be able then. to count back-j - x.`twards. The next step was to teach, , A all the combinations up to'twent_v. In Suhtrar-Hnn flnra uuuu A fan- erva`, Ritchie, Walker and Lane (a former Barrieite). Corinthian Lodge, introduced by W. Bro. Kir- by and replied to by W. Bro. Ron_ ald and Bros. Lower and MacLe1lan. -Vnr-91 hum]-my-e rnnmn ...:....... 1.-- 13..-- .VCGlu An invitation from Alliston to hold the 1924 convention of the -South Simcoe Institute in that town was accented, subject to the approval of the Executive. -1'n1s went to St. Thomas. Ed. Sutcliife was the booster and Dr. Simpson got his prize, a pair of glpves. 7 BARRIE KIWANIS CLUB A-. W. Smith. District Trtistee, gave the Kiwanis Club a very interesting talk on the recent convention in- Quebec at the weekly luncheon last Friday. ' Among other things, he re- ported that Barrie Club stood second in Ontario and Quebec for the cup given for best average attendance. -This went to St. Thomas. `RH Qni -nl.'4`.. ....... u.- L_--Lm M - .4 uuuu u uuus uc LU]. nulbbull At a special session of South Sim- coe teachers, Friday afternoon, In~~ spector Longman addressed themv briefly, during which he commended the work of the Junior Red Cross as a practical way of teaching hy- giene in the schools, and als odisc1iss- ed various matters which had come to his attention during the school V997`, ._._- __.- -.-------v-u-: Dunlbp at Mulcaster -- Phone i3lW |,vear. uu cl Single IESSUII. Formerly It was the practice to :,take up subjects between which there ; was very little connection. For in- stance one might take an archipelligo, then a bay, and then a cape, simply because they came in the order of A. B and C. n ` o , Three important things were nec- essary in teaching Geography, first to get the ideas related to each other `and to teach them one after the oth- ` er; second. to teach the subject in `such a way that the child would have la vivid nictureof the things in his Imind: third, to secure the interest of [the child. 5 U1 uc L` V I. III wmcn me) were given. = ed by means of a sand table, and pro- gceeded to teach a lesson by telling a story which would not only tend to .develop the child s imagination, but r would leave on his mind a picture of . all the circumstances. He arralrliged D the sand to represent a fertile p ain,! ' and a mountain with a stream run-l 'ming down the side. He then proceed- jed to tell a story which would at once *,attract the attention of every child in -':the class, the while making use of 'lterms used in Geography, which the child would receive in such a manner that he never could forget their mean-; ing. There was a direct connection} between all the points brought out' lin a single lesson. F`nvn1nv-Iv 36- `Ivan LI..- '1 .- ....- -J.2__ L I Mr. Amoss demonstrated his meth- " 3 ,1 1 : Factoring in Arithmetic he consid-' tiered very. important. but in Algebrai "it was immensely important. ' t 3 In conclusion he gave several rules` `ifor the guidance of the teachers in teaching Arithmetic. ' Teaching Geography : One of'the most interesting ad- gdresses was that delivered Friday ilmorning by H. E. Amoss, B.A., B._ , Paed., of Hamilton, on .the subject? Inductive .Methods in Geography.| He demonstrated how iGeography: could be taught in the Junior grades} by means of the story method, aptly? illustrated. The old method of giv- 'ing the child his first introduction to! `Geography by announcing from -the` ldesk'that here is a map; here is a\ -mountain, and here is a volcano was inot sufficient. Geography ideas, he. ldeclared,had been too much of a ha- ibit. There had not been enough con- y inection between the subjects in the ` order in which they were given. MY`. Arnnsq r`nn1nneh lain ......LL au uu: uumumauons toitwenty. subtraction there were. four, methods used, but to the speaker.` there was really but one, and that was the method used by Prof. De Lu1',v and known as the Additive lmethod. l Inspector Garvin dealt with some irules which he had found very useful_ `in his work. One was in connection! :with multiplication. To multiply by `nine, any multiple of nine adds up to nine; To illustrate: eight times nine are seventy-two; seven" and two are` inine. I ".'\_._L__.,', i . 1 (Continued from page 1) 0 homework and fewer frills-in,_educa- V ition. Personally he had come to thei - !conclusion that homework was a very` " valuable thing. In regard to the so- 11 called frills. he was of the opinion s. that there were things being taken off a the curriculum that should be left on. 3 Perhaps there is one thing 11 on * d which everyone will agree and t at. .is that salaries have about reached 3 I !the maximum, ventured_the speaker. 4 But from the reception by the teach` I.`ers of this remark, it was evident. `.. gist all were) not in agreement upon , 1' at vita su ject. . - . The convention was disappointed in 1' inot hearing G. O. McMillan, M.A. B. Paed., of the Normal School, Hamil-, 3 Ltion, rho wjzsbto halvie sphcikleviiun The; V eac er s o . r. c i an was -:prevented from being present owing` )Ito illness in the fan1il_v. - Inspector Garvin on Methods 1 Methods, with special reference 1,to Arithmetic, was the subject of a llvery practical lecture delivered by` flnspector J. L. Garvin, B.A., on Fri-I idayrmorning. and his remarks brought; qforth considerable discussion. The} ' iimportant m thods teaching: lfthin Rnhianf ' ` SCHOOL METHODS - AND PROBLEMS; Simcoe for Alliston any uuuuucl. uuul. l.\)ll0\V$-3 always eight nd e next teach` mrtinnc uh 4-.-.+......... .... ,....... ....u.., nun-until, Ava scum Country home, convenient to Ban .rie, will sell or rent. ` 'r/\ n r\ Gives immediate heat at the turn of a tap. Will warm :1 room in a few minutes and is very economical to operate. Justthe thing for'Fall days before you start thefurnace. CAN BE PURCHASED ON EASY TERMS. 1-`on COOL MORNINGS Am I-:vEN1NE THE UNITED FA_1 C9-QB. co., `LTD. CA` I` _I_ugs_ J RADIANTFIRE IF IT IS DONE WITH HEAT, YOU CAN no rr 1312111212 Wl'l'H GAS. `S.P.. 2017 Paints, `Oils, Varnishs, Hardware, Etc. BARRIE Pints 49C . . 5 Small house-. With conveniences for rent.

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