Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 2 Jul 1925, p. 11

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`;_ami`nr II IJILIC `TC TZIQI IV} 130 Lewis and Grey. 1-6; 4-6. Kennedy, 8-6; 0-6. !'::Is.`t:. 39.3; 5-5; -5. ` :2:-..1_v-iJ._seou1oauon.v.P.1.euis, "11'.sunxtn1osuos.Grey,z-s; 2.5. '\-_.go-_ BARRl:(I:O.ST AT TENNIS - ritish Expgrt Trade .-1c -12 11..:;...:_.!'... -_.._.. v Increase of, pivorces nm-her nf divorces 2'1-2 Silenttitning clI`ain.,,_ .;,L-head Red Seal Continental engine. Small borelong stfoke motor. Lightweight pistons. Single plate dry.-disc eluteh. l ` Tubular_ backbone Long Senti-elliptic springs. (Rear spring undersl-ma) ' .4411 main units eparately removable. BARRIE. DISTRIBUTOR % : ? = 16 BAYFIELD 51'. Phone 1231 T : ' Res. Phone 905rl5 nuv . III navy. hptod In can ninlmtlnh d be SdtarsdC.'r1Z s orig"inal princdiple ` of_low cost with thigh-priced car design and- quality; has .lo"ng been recognizedsby .the public` and is \ endorsed today by manufacturers a of other low-priced cars. No Qther Carin the same price-`class can show as many quaiity features. HAROLD HILL formerly of the Barrie Carriage 'Co., has taken over the Rubber Tire Department andecan be depended upon to give pmmpt and satisfactory service in putting on or repairing rubber tires.` ` Vt-`11ee!s~aIso repaired. ` Shay--l94Ehe'St. (neurutwardselnool) Mm :' `KRIIIE : P.0.Box543 I-mor.row s} Car To-day BUGGY. Ruhanlinnzs n. n. BURNS Fire pgotection Low cost Cannot but-n\. . V Saws like _Lumb9r l Needs.-` ED AT ` n` % E23535. Llnhaehn mnnasnnea Can be Paperetl L Vermin Proof, Resists heat and j Cold " \ Easily Handled- ` Eliminates Repairs . Sanitnrv ` ?v`a'1`I`.';`5 rnck Keeps out moisture Keeps out dust and dirt Basil ui annnizq my "` SUV: 11-W31! applied Protects your stock. GY PR'(_)C ` Phones l09'and 390.1. `J A`. A\\l Advantages Eh- _..L_ .A:-_ ` EVERYTHING IN LUMBER . % msmmuroks FOR BARRIE. AND ms,1'mc'r ATHE`BA_|._I,_! ,LAIIlll(i%M|IK.L 90;, |`-W Hlliiiiil fy_0g1r7zause andqarage |l H| I II Phones 88 and 94. ' Limitea FUEL AND BUILDERS SUPPLIES GYPROC-the reproof walfboard, _ durable ~as.rock and workable as lumber---adds inestimably to the value, comfort, utility and economy of your house and garage. Gyproc your house and garage this year Gyproc does away with the re hazard. It pays for itself by the fuel it saves. It keeps out dust and dirt, fosters health and comfort and increases the liveability of your house a hundredfold. For additional Gyproe facts see Ins snnelenut 3 7 o.tt,`o:x-noon F _ 1-to. Sub- -angl Great \ advance `(in stun gun a I 1 T14 '"1'='1'x'$;:' 4:: pinch Q4- 1 ' I kaster 'diiE e choice ` buy one 1- Rent ED out on: um alvpn . w rated. G - - thutainout ot ant '.' hm inic of. Furnaces. Esidencea Filmy Fats ven St. trucks Ellen St. ICE ` Barrio. . |'|'E Ml, -! ' I.ttor}""'noon arr-Ii , nk- THE mm` Veil loftir. V bio at par. .318. V `~ munshat. au;.1rg, ;';%s2is. _ Phdn 931. K _ . Jresih L coun r 3: v" jyc T, R. Prop)-iot`or_ If-1=9as; ,Qf6l.UI`($\I gpln LVLIKCI _ you tmgle ail over , with clean, healthy exh,iluation.v Lather ' carries a, remarkable IIAAIQR nd Agbng 4...`- A`_-- V Over 20 yeafs experience. . _All work guaranteed. PR.0MPT`SERVICE Lathe:-`ca`rri,es a,rcmg:l: abl ' health; _fcpint_o pore. ty-1t*t\)-,nigh[t. "/- The odour-vanishes but the proccction rc`main s'. _. - Btiy Advertied . TI;in1rs. `rue RQl * nook- Wrltc the~'&>rden' Co. L_imitd. Montreal. DJ.V" I-HUN: 3 rcau. ZCSL 7: Lifcbuo bath. Malt: V B819. 1{9YsM.vith Free Bo'_ok-- Vrltc the` olden Jmited. Montragl. |ng 952w` :3 : real zcs;_`a ur Ina 1-I-u` `Al - I.`.. 3.; 336.14 St.- 4,4 Unit Bill` for Jun UOHIIHOHI It IVOITFI. _l OlB The entire world breathed a`. sigh of relief when. Amundsen and his party, . of six "returned afely-gfrom his dash td the-North Pole. He did, not actually succeedr`in reaching the North Pole, but hisexploit is none the less wonder- _ ml for all that. The party travelled in two planes, andas soon as they de- scended on the Arctic ice were frozen solidly. in, He did not succeed in re- leasing one of them. but the other, at-_ terfrantic work by the explorers. was eventually freed. and'_ they returned to safety by their own efforts. The _. story is fascinating, not only to read- ers of adventure. but to those interest- ed in the manufacture and the opera- tion of airplanes. Perhaps the most im- portant result ot the expedition is the cploding of the myth of a great Polar continent. said by Peary to. have exist-' 'ed at the North Poie.'and over "which, it has. been strongly'_ indicated. the United States was very keen to estab- lish a claim. Amunsden went within 120` miles of the Pole and was unable to discover any trace of land. Amund- sen himself, in spite of the admiration lavished upon him by thevwhole world, is quite `unsatisfied with this expedi? tion and -intends to resume his flight. to the Pole itself at some future date. strenuous" objection; to having to; bear the wbrunt German-_ reparations schenie, Under the` Dawes; scheme re- parations depend upon Germany : habit,-__ . `ity to find ajnarket for her goods. Un- `der existingzcircumsthnces Great _Bri-T u-tain isrthe only country` where she can ' tindv-agreat and unrestrjctedx market `for her output, beucausefthe United 5 States. above allyand France and Be!- slum. in ,on1e degree. are closing out !German products under `their tariff B make some | I | laws. It is an, unbearable bu en` for` Bri'tg`in to -bear; and as": result nearly a. ' llion `and a hualf>Britishers a waikin`g`_th;e streets of the British in- dustrial-`cities begging for Work. ` 211;. v-_-_.I. 'n;-____ _ A'_'.._--.. _..-....1....... ~ S,lr;Jos`ep _h Stamp; a'f6rmer member ot tliejz-Dawgs committee, caused con- sternatlonix` `the ranksot the United. States,-`members of, the- congress of. the Interhatlonal Chambers of Com- _merce.,convenlng at Brussels, when he boldly attacked the subject, and in- -dicated that the other Al-lies will have K-fn know In -nvuhn non! (ha hnr-an nf 4,-No lchsngoin Our Flag ,.'.I`he present moment prcfved itseit -=ina.uspicious. for the bpsiness of chang- .ing the Canadian flag, The appoint-4 ment of -a committee by Premier Mac- .kenzie King was followed by protests i from svarious 'parts of t'he`Dominion. The Premier has ldccided. for the time being, to. let the matter stand over, and has dismissed the committee of g81X.Wh0 were to have = investigated the `matter and tabled a report in the House of Commons. - ---u v- cw- .... The warof France and Spain with the Riffs in Morocco is still proceeding merril,v., It is difficult to decide from despatches just wha.t has been achiev- ed. It is amazing what headway the Riffs have been able to maintain `against,-two modern armies. The ex- perts of the French and Spanish arm- ies are now at work upon details of a scheme'which has for its motive the bottling up of th Ri-tfian armiesby land andisea. an by depriving hem of food and military supplies," orce them into sin-render.` ` . ' Mu I ' UIUU: I-Cu LIIUEI. to bear in reparation 1 . , Russia Fears Britain /* Soviet Russia continues to. do Great Britain the honor or regardingher as her most deadly enemy. The efforts made. to promote revolution within the United Kingdom and the British Dom- inions, co1onie`s and protectoreites are incessant, and Sir -Robert Horne has just raise; a. warning voice to say It has to be a pretty good idea` _to make -me "change the habits of `a life-time, and when I first hehrd about Hatchwayv Button- lcs__a r Underwear---well--I -`just laughed to myself. Time went on, and man after `man kept on/tellingi me about the new kind of comfort he was '~eg:perieneing and ` I began to fwkfhder. . . . . . Then one day I `bought a suit of Hatchway-I` ' took.-it"home and slipped it on. ' 'I,never would have thought`-that j asuit of Underwear-K could make such a difference to\atman s feel- ings-it was so down-`right easily I comfortable, and certainly` the no-button idea savesia wonder- ful amount of time andxtmublef Bel_i'ev`e me, I_ am `told on Hatch- way now and I have.gota.hunelI` A that T I shall any that way for io-ogigua-uiao-canna- j.u.lboycoarHdluc:y. I D , ,_, _l__._.;..l_._ '(A_n e:':peri`Vence> from. lie)`_ Continent at North Pdl , , ,1 _. _n_.I_ To Starve ouf Riffs TION ICE of` Quality 1' I-. SON, Dealers. unlop St. ended to. one 925W. Fint.'.' I-1. IJIU ULIICI` I | game part marketing. -V lllile -W Ill IIGV G the burden of HUI. ,YUL E1. SCQLICU LHIIJS. \'VlL!J_l_JU_l. LQULIUI. the government has sufficigntfstrength -to put the measure through, but there are many other elefnerrts `in the matter besides . mere voting strength. Lor ` Beaverbrook ~' has vmade ' it known through one of his newspaper organs V that in his opinion the Dominionst would not agree to the plan, and that they.preter Britain to maintain her `isolation policy. - V - inancial Pinch in China, A` China is -beginning to feel the fin- ancial pinch f the disorders. The na- tive ba ks ave suspended payment. and tho` gh they may open at any time again, depending upon the Vorderkept in the cities by government troops, Pekin has issudla proclamation for, bidding, the payment `out of more than ' ten per cent. ofthe deposits.`This is a hard blow at business men. In the` meantime, the strike is spreading,. and ` in'C~a.nton British troops-have been ob- -liged `to use machine guns against Chinese "rebels. ' The ' biggest` trouble centres are Canton, Shanghai and Hong: Kong, but efforts are being made to rouse the capit_al,`~Pekin, to the same te.vei- heat. and it is` believed a general strike may be declared on June 30. URL- C1;....!-L .l..J.-._....J.,I.. ..l-.8_.- 8... `L11 cw -no-usv -v-uu wuu ww uncu- ' Just what is going to happen be: tween the Senate and the Commons - over the subjectuof the Home Bank compensation bill? The Hon. J. -A. Robb, ' Minister of Finance, made` a virtual declar tion of war against the venerable sen tors in his nonconcur-. rence resolution following the effort of the senior chamber to cut down the sum named by the Commons in`\the bill. The Senate intruded itself. upon one of the most cherished privileges of the Com}nons in this case when it cut. down moneys authorized to be spent by the lower house. The Com- mons reserved to itselfvall rights over the money box and resented this in- terference. Mr. Robb s resolution is a -very-len thy document, and has drawn some pro est ;-`from other members of the house,`on` the grounds that its strictures of the Senate are too severe. up. an... --no-.4 -us. uvu-up vu van vs... ww- The Soviet interest` in affairs in the - Orient is evident in the words, or ino- vjeff, who predicts that: the C inese will soon shoot down the blackguards commanding the British. 'troops', , and the day is'n'ot far distant when hun- dreds of millions of Chinese, Indians and Egyptians will be joining ~.han'ds to ,overthrow British oppression. ` ---_J---:-j--- < Uwu uuuuueu pi uap:-.1u.,y. ` Evenwith -the turn of `theg ti_c1e, how- ever` last year Canada lost to the Un-`I ited Sta es.115,-000 Canadian citizens. During t e saine eriod the Domi_nion spent $3,160,000 i attracting to Can- ada.L111,000 new. citizens. This is some ing to -think and worry . about for how is ,,Canada to assimilate these new-comers while at the same time losing her own sons and daugh- ' ters? These emigrants to the Unite I States have been educated at the pub-| lid expense of the Dominion of Canada, trained in Canadian workshops, colleg- es, hospitals, etc., and are taking all their resources to the upbuilding of a na- tion with i\which we are bound to com- pete even in matters of "internal trade. on the other hand, we must take these new citizens, make them over Into the. Canadian mould. and put them to work- under new conditions of Canadian in- dustry. Canadians should encourage byeverymeanaintheix-powerthera tux-onotnatfvecanadianstotherankis the.t~fthe Bolshefvik perh in ` ;7]3'rf-` tain is by no means over. Unfortunate: ly there is`: another period` of ' increased unemployment ahead .13! Great Britain; - "and the fshuttlngpdowmof the? coal mine es sounds anominous note. Brltalnjis feeling the effect " of "the reparation scheme under-which Germany is`pay- ing'otf_part of her. indebtedness in coal supplies. Russia has plenty. bl gold" lth which to pay her agents in Bri- in and other parts of the world as is; indiated by the flow of the precious metal` intd the Bank of England In return for l.ndustri?.l' supplies. ` . A \ Seventeen years-~ago there was in- augurated at Wainwright, Alberta, the first great buffalo reservation, in an effortto prevent the total extinction of the nobleking of the prairies. Now. the wor f restoring the wild herds ha` begun, nd the first shipmentbackq to the north consisted of two hundred! a imals,- which were released on the` b nks of the Slave River, three hun- dred miles north of Edmonton. It is proposed to. release two thousand ani-' mals in the same way during the pre- sent summer. The animals were trans- ferred from Wainwright by specially constructed railway cars to Fort Mac- Murray, `the end of steel, `and trans- ._terred~ to scows and taken `the rest of, the way by water. As soon as they` were released they tore off to join their wild brothers. . - Two recent news items seem to blend! themselves in the report from Ottawa that-*Canadian emigrants to .the United ! States -are now _ returning to Canada. Some.Weeks ago a report upon the waning business prosperity of the Uni-! ited States `was followed by exceeding-I ly {encouraging . reports of Canada's crgp conditions. People are beginning] to talk of a boom in Canadian affairs} on the strength of the big crop. The; market" conditions. too, are more p1rom- | isingthan they have been for some` years, and it is evident that Canadian farmers `willxhave no difficulty in dis- posing of their 1925_grain. As though to bear out these impressions, Gttawa . points'out that the tide of danadian emigration to the` United States` start- ed to tiirn last year. While 159,000 Can-. adians crossed into the States in, an ef- fort to improve their fortunes; 44,000 returned to their native land. The number " migrating last year dropped! 23,000`-_from the total` record for the, year p vious, and it is estimated 19251 emigrat on will be half .that` of 1924.} With, better times in view Canada may hope to reclaim the greater number of- these~rnen_and women, whom she needs. very badly for the development of her own national prosperity. ` -rs , , L 4'1. - A______ _A Mi. -5 42.1- L.-__ The ate'of Britairi-`s Rhine fpoligy is not yet a. settled Lthing.'VVith.ou_t doubt fl-In anvnvnrnnhf "hon nnff{r-{Ant rafivnnafh _*-XI8I&!jh'X'u lIIj' irezr_rdsr:"!:e 1-1-.-_-*-1-23.3`: `uni ; andvthoughnothing in _asettlemen`thasbeen_a:-rtvedat. _`: ohoervasbelievethatifanagreemeute Islaidbetore thexn'in'which..bothIna In-, -Inln On naming til}: cannula unnncnnn III, Qlltlll) Wlllllllll IL: SIIIICIIIICTQ `sf 1:-incipleaxthere is reasax to hope that it vonld he accepted. I Both side: up losing enormous sums of money. l'lIeAstriking miners Imam` n-Iwilnlu-Ivan-rInnn'anI-olinffnu-n _ `Britain : `R hi_n Policy Britain`-`s Rhine `policy `nf vat 9 baffled `fhincr "K7H"hnn1- nnhf To Make War on Senhfe? lie. 'we Cahadians Corrgin/g Home A ----_;. _.__-__, :.a___-__ _-___- ;_ Cgna;i; s qffal j_ Q3131: Taxamnl-:3 A ........._ _--. . _ . _ ..A-_ , I Barrie tennis.o1ub suffered a. severe} "defeat on- Saturday, June 20, when , {they engaged in a. match with a team` [from the Toronto tennis club, in Bar-, rie: John B.Boys and Dr. W. C. Little! were the only local players who stuc-' ceeded in winning. their games in the singles. ;l`_he Toronto team were decid- edly superior in the doubles, in which they won every set played. Each team consisted -of six players, all of whom . played in singles. Lunch was served `by the ladies of the Barrie culb. - `The results were:-- \ stop there. Aitmillion and a half tons seventy-five or eighty days since the strike commenced, so the strike re- sults in- loss to railways and coal deal- ers also, and to the merchants who would have `nen selling food and clothing- to the miners families. If a. settleme t is achieved soon, it is said that the is will `be work for every man I in Cape Breton. r of coal would have been mined in the The number of divorces granted in 5 Canada has increased six hundred per cent. in the past ten years. Th year s applications for divorce are th great- est on record, 145 all told, of which 135 will actually go, before the Senate. In 1916 only twenty-four divorces were -granted; in 1917,_seventeen divorces; [in 1918, fifteen divorces; but at the end of _the War, in 1919, the number jumped to fifty-five; in 1920, the num- .ber almost doubled, at one hundred; and `in 1921 it went to 111; in 1922 the! `I total dropped to 102, and in the follow- 9 ing year rose. again to 117; 1924 the figures rose again to 130. Unsett1ing' post war"'conditions and greater ease! ! in t e obtaining of annulment decrees} Iairey probably the causes of the sjtua-' I t on. " 9 i I p . '\ -. _--,.-. - ..--- ` . One half of Britain's export trade` today `is going to the British Domin-: ions. This is a fact of immense-impor- tance both to Britain and to the Dome! inions, for the relations between the! mother country and the Dominionsg must grow increasingly close for the, ;purpose of solving the problems oft lover-population in the '-United King- ,'dom and under-population in the Do- iminions. Nothing but a vast scheme of migration can solve them both. Bri- 5 tain, beyond shadow of a doubt, has; 'too many people. ,There is no employ-jg ment for at least a million and a quar- 1 ter of them, and no adequate housing; for huge numbers of men and Women!; in their native land. Canada, Australia, ; `New Zealand and South` Africa, with- 'their\ vast territories of undeveloped lands, are awaiting the emigration |movement from the British `Isles. Qua`; -vu--wag .- V--- ~ singls J. R. Boys defeated J. de N. Kennedy 6-4: 2-6; 6-2. . ` Dr.W.C.IJttledefeatedERolph, 8-10: 6-2: 6-3. . n.. A I: `I!-nnvlau-In-lin'Pnn'Il '\. Ya.le{J nlva-sity1:?ofe-Iluarvepcrb expand `tacungansnmnmrwuehia mt-canoe thedentllraulh-3 aria ['.'::'f!9r.

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