Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 12 Nov 1925, p. 2

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*x&\ _ , ;Statement to the . Dominion Government (condensed) September 30th, 1925 The Royal Bank of Canada LIABILITIES ASSETS LJCDDCL xucu. KXCD 111511 F]. ALCD IUUACU for this Fall. Slome ofbest companies represented. Yielding from 4% % to 7 iFu1l inforxhation furnished on any of the operating mines. Better market; high price looked `nil 441:: 1391] GORDON STEVENSON 1'HuRsp'AY; Novamsniz i2, 1925. = um/v FOR EYES . IRRITATED BY ' 1IIfl'I IIYll1l\1'\1Y'I` n nvxvnrrna London Phorie 120 or 1114 ` 'r~*--3;s:;;;:;;;;;g . . $339,92l,750.15 .s125,27s;sos.94 . 14,5oo,ooo.oo . 123.127.994.34 . .s 24,4`oo,ooo.oo 24,4oo,ooo.oo 1,143,806.90 3s,352,6s4.74 ." so3,o44,7s5.o7 I 7,232,362.24 l9,292,076.20 2l,282,2l8.13 50,294,486.57 "A.F.A_.MALCOMSON 6,2 14,903.90 28,436,728.91 28,436,728.9l 16,074,461 .19 V2,544,8l 2.27 "1 ,032,l77.06 1 .440.000.00 BR THE muasxl vPa`o Two WIT 109 Gooc ml F6854 grcn an: (Ill L7 clczm kccn l I Ztl\'VI1:l \vIII3Vl'll4` cheap. l'I'\L- POP XVRI Oakland and Chevrolet Dqalar -A-u-`III AQIIII we would strongly advise-that you afrange for . A - . - PASSPORT AND ACCOMMODATION ASA EARLY AS POSSIBL J \J\I plp; HUI` I w-i"?1iwoNrse`XiA"e V Nan MupieVA_v:e.`, We have rc.{1-3rMadEl_e?1_t~O ouri`-s-c2-rx}i;;tl1~e~Yz'1t;est qt1ip- mentfor Re`-Lining~BrakeS and* carry a complete stock of all sizes of ASBESTONOS, Brake Lining; ; Inuuulvtu inn crgiuln inn`-n `r-Au-1 "unt:-on 4-(nu Bmi~iGLi1~i%"!fOV!%JR %iA 1iI3S If -- * .GET OUR PR1cEs.--*---T--~-j-T Dominion/A Stores Ltd. Up-Town \Ticket Office - Information and Tickets` _ CANADIAN NATIONAL` RAILWAYS - WHY wom ABOUT BRAKE mshzcrnou ....---- N O'l`(tl1e coarse, outer ledves, but thetender, inner-buds, carefully ' packed and imported by us, where it is blended b e one into a tea that will please the most exactin `in its delig ti aroma {and taste and sold direct to you at a price ar below its-especial quahty. RICHMELLQ BLEND sELEc" 1"'1'i_END. " n-_ nn- CHOICE ` HANDPICKED PACKET PEAS 3 for 25 3 i'1`, . ." _- 29 lb.` Special'Blenl Collee 55 lb. CURRANT S 2 lll8._`27 CHOICE RICE 3 ll. 29 SEEDLESS RMSINS 2 )8. Maple lee! Matches 3for 29 FLAVORING EXTRACT8 - 9c Fry's or Baker : Cocoa 95 lb. 24 Bordeaux Shelled Walnuts 49 D.s.;.."i3"*'l`3'i.1< FRESH MILLED MAY IELD BRAND 3Ays[DE ' "8.`;`i'1='~," % 3385B SWEET CORN 6lbs.25c 40 lb. 2 u~s25c CHIPSO 9c & 2396 MMENDED (v.`ULD BY DHUUUISTS 0U|'lll.'ULlV3 i I703 t'l\B IV! CAKE noon MUNN! cn.culc,Aoou.I4 `way. The above are only a _few. v.-.--- -v ----u- ----- j---u--u-----v:- jtt ' `F22 Use Asbestonos Brake Liniing A1_.wAYs GRlPS,- NEVER sups 1 -- w-um. w--.- -uwyauyu-w-w-----wu-w --- .-----1- cunt - vw-v--- Passport applications and full information at this office. IF YOU VWISH TO SPEND ` / ` CHRISTMAS [N 01.0 ENGLAND A ---- w--- v p --v- _BARRlE. om`. A(;ET1'?jQE2`lif:' WELDING No 903 'g'oo~31g; nous froo SMALL TEAGA ,.=,.._,,__.,..,RDEN-5_'| 'ii'e.'E9E' Where Quality Counts EE. 6?? TQC If "Z._7c ' WHITE BEANS 5u._. 11-` w'1sH' A cuorcz * BLEND O!-`INDIA 55 A and CEYLON TEA A ||,, WHU um: Uuuusuuvcu a. Bywvaun/-Q1. U9 on the subject to the Boston Trans- cript. .Mr. Bone bases his assertion, on the estimates of Canadian Govern- ment officials and points out that in all probability $150,000,000 will this year be derived; from United States tourists alone. Last year` the sum from this source T of revenue was $143,000,000, anwamount which ap-` proached half the value of `the wheat crop_ and approximated the whole mining output of Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia combined. . The tourist industry now ijahks in third place among all_~Canadian indus- tries; according-. to "John R. Bone, managing editor of the` Toronto Star, virho has contributed a 'jspecia1.s;rtick .. 4.1.... ...nl-.~iAn4- 4-A I-Inn Rnui-nu Twang- In In 5LIIUI&Jl'Il5 uv nuvvv vouvvv no-up ada's total wheat yield, this year is 30,000,000 bushels greei er than the preliminary estimate m e by the Dominion - Bureau of Statistics, the amount now being placed -at 422,- 327,000 bushels. Of the thirty.mil- lion excess difference,` 27,306,000 bushels is for the single "province of Saskatchewan; where threshing re- sults have exceeded expectations. The LNowisthetimetoVpI :rchue`a 'gooduoedcuj.' T Fiuczs -ARE LOWEST NOW. ' us? rams If mzsuuzn. During the past shipping season, 2,47 .000 seedling, cuttings and tran plants were `sent out" from In- dian Head to .3080 farmers and 2,-. 500,000 were d,istributed.from' Suth- erland to 3010/farniers in Saskatche- wan. To date approximately 81,-, 000,000 seedlings and "cuttings of broad-leaf trees and nearly 1,500,(hl0 young spruce and pine transplants have been distributed. If this is kept up it will not be many years until the word bald will no longer be ap-. plicable to" the prairies. U A-x ',EDITORIAL ~C(_)MMENT 7 . -It is gratifying` to" know that Can-' .`l_ .. L_L..I -.1.`-`L uun'n`J `-`Ago: vvnnu `Q , ENGLISH BREAKFAST . CEYLON | J: ASSAM`-\. 41 DUNLOP STREET Phone ,447W, BARRlE._ $75 '65 lb. (3 lb. Dr. Frank Crane, in an article dealing with? the New York. public library, says: We can scarcely ap- preciate the value of a public .librar_y in a large centre of population. It is a nucleus of o\1r intellectual life and an encouragement to many peo- ple who_,cannota ord to own books themselves. As aiman gets older his -library becomes` smaller. He depends more and more upon- public collec- tions'of books.. What Dr. Crane ap- plies to New York is equally applic- able to other places, even. with a small populatlon,',Barrie being no ex- ception. Barrie very fortunately has a ne public library whereby a.won- derful fund of information is made available free of charge to citizens. In all libraries, ction form's'_'the larg- est proportion of the issues. but the librarian and board of the local lib- 'rar_v have been ndeavoring, with some success, to increase the reading of other classes of books, of which ourlibrary has a very ne selection. People who read ction only are us- ing the library largely for entertain- ment and are missing the most valu- able jfeatuifes. llnnv Unuy yvlllv UL EI_5OII\vI_LulaIvU-I.\IlIo `.`This waste is. prevalent every- where `in the Valley, though more n- ticeable the Vernon` district be-' cause the _marketabl'e -percentage of our crop - is smaller. here this year than elsewhere. -T\hV'e same 'waste.:vas `apparent last year. V It will be so next ; ` Good Used Cars Fox SALE The PorcupineV"Advance ' Tim-- mins in the following language` deals with a. local individual `who never loses an opportunity of knocking his own town: To the sn/eering gentle- man`, .one word! If you know of a better town or a better people, why linger here-? Why brand yourself as a silly soul..by staying in a town from V whence you say can come no good? Loyalty is the rst law of good cit- izenship, and the man who is not loyal to his own town will `have, little spirit of loyalty for country! or, for king. >- Every good town and yery good country has_'beevn built upon the faith, the condence, the loyalty of those who are ready to believe the best of their fellows. V . mi: '*THAi~{i HABIT. London Advertiser! The head of one of the largest retail stores on the continent offered $5000 tokanyone who would tell _him how to improve his business methods. Students_ of economics came,` investigated and re- tired to write reports; experts troop- _ed in and returned with charts and diagrams; A young man saw about the. contest, took a post card and wrote. Tell your clerks to say `Thank you . He rbrnped o an-easy win- ner with the $5000. f 7 I\.. LL- ..L---.__.LL -1 J.L_L .L`l_____ 'I.__ toal yield of wheat _now estimated is` the secondjargest on record for Ca}:- ada, the` previous hi'ghest;_t6tal hav- ing been 4`l4,199,000 bushels in~1923__. Other high_records were 399,780,400 bushels in 1922, 300,858,100 buS'he1s gin 1921, and 393,542,600 bushels in 11915. On the strength of that there has been organized an American Thank You League to promote the idea of `courtesy in business. The wonder is that such an org`anization.should be necessary, because a man can `learn in one short day in business the value df saying Thank you and of ex- tending` every other courtesy to those with whom he deals. One wonders, how long the new-born league will last, but if it only survives long enough to put a little more kindness and a greater degree of the Thank you idea" into life generally `it will have` done` something. UH voav povuuavnvu can Vlllhi vvua Though our apple crop isla fail- ` .ure, there are tons on tons of apples rotting on the ground in the Vernon district._ A` walk in nearby orchards, or a whisk throughthe valley in a motor car, leaves one the impression of a blur of red under the appletrees; An impression that becomes acer- tainty on investigation. a True, the apples are windfalls and the' small and misshapen `ones that under pres- ent `marketing conditions are "Value,- less. They rot on the-ground. under thetrees because there is /no. prot- able market for them, `as the market- ing is at present organized; u ,' uv..a. ...:u..:... '..*.....aa....e..a' - .n.........~`...1 III 50 BOU ysuuvuv \IaIlllIl\v\AO- Yet within a'radius'of a thousand miles eastward" there-arep 1,956,000 people hungry for apples. Never in any Year under any circumstances do these people have all the apples they want. They may have all they are able to pay for at presentprice lev- els, but the limit of consumptio`n_is controlled sole1y,by economic factors and is in no. other sense related. to the true point of saturization. * `Ul|`I... -......A... :.. ...........'l -..A. ----..-- WASTE ll,\'l'HE APPLE CROP Thousands` of bushels ofne apples have gone to waste in `Ontario this year; partly through lack of A proper systenv - of distribution, partly be- cause of low prices that-reduce pro- -ts almost to thegvanishing joint ex- cept for the best grades and partly because unfavorable weather had left the farmers little time to handle this ` crop. Almost every year there is a certain amount of fruit which goes to waste. J1 the fruit thus wasted could be made available for people in the towns and cities at moderate `prices it would be a great boon` to both consumers and growers. _The question is how to do it. Out irr Bri- tish Columbia a similar waste is go- ing on and the Vernon News discuss- es the situation in -this way3- ' fI._--..`L ;.-.. -.....1_ -..-.. ._ . 1-21 -rix-u-: Bxanxa` Exijnnm % T. R. COULTER| ;ea`son. V So accustomed have some; of the people most directly concerned become `to it that they no longer thirik `about it." In some. quarters it` is accepted as inevitable. But is it? ` .15.; A False Philosophy Georgetown Herald: Can I get i away with it? appears to be the big question considered by,too many peo- r_ple before attempting to work out ; some political or nancial`trick or . plunging into any new enterprise i the people, It is evident in every walk of life. It can be observed in L the conversation"of little children on that .occurs to them. Is it ri ht? is a question that never see s to cross their minds. A false philosophy of life appears to have taken hold of r the streets. It is apparent in social; -, life, everywhere. Even the most sa-i cred religious places are not immune from pollution with this deadly doc-J trine--the belief thatit is all right. if` you can get away with it. 'As to' whether this false conception of life, of duty and of `citizenship is more prevalent now than at any time`i-n the past is a` question that we may not be able to answer..It is, however, a dan- gerousg and unhealthy condition, af- fecting the; foundations of social life. and citizenship. ` What is needed is a clearer, vision of the line of demarca- = tion between Right and Wrong;- a sterner sense. of the significance of= Righteousness and_of Sin,'and a firm- er `determination V to abhor -that ' whichis evil and cling to that which is good. No civilization or govern`-` vinent is afeiifit is depending upon. . a Can-I-get-away-with-it?. founda-. L1 .A w Other industries have found it!` necessary to eliniinate -waste. ` fl`he; great meat-packing rms found it e_s-rg sential to-stop a_l_1 lealgs. Before their ' ` busin`ess._ was placed on a protable} basis. th _ wereforced to uife every, last one :-9f_ the animal by-products.` Some these 'by-pro'ducts were not even" recognized as possible of uszi Now the packers are operating scien- tically and protably, and it is said? that all that is waste of a pig is the ! squeal. ` I 5 unn_..i. .. .......4........|. L..J.......... .u._ ...___' I -7\1vIvs~4o y I A. What a contrast between the mar? 3 keting of the 'porker sand the" market- 5 . ing of apples`: With the porker there; is no waste. The packers saw theiri prosperity necessitated the use even ;_ of the offal. They engaged experts and these found commercial uses for.` the` whole`, of the animal, elifninatiggl waste. But of our apples only the! choicest, the verynest, go on the! market. `The variable balance--al-E ways a great proportion-is a total`- loss: _ A . : 111:1`: 1 :1 . 1 This should not be, prticularly in a land where what is waste in. onei section is urgently rieeded in an- other; where more than half of they failways mileage is state owned;; where we have great universities with specially equipped laboratories, and in a country that imports thous- ands of dollars worth of fruit monthly. * urn-u.-...-_~.1 .-_ 2-.. 1--.1-.__1.:__ - _1 n._ ` Go to Church Cbllier s Weekly: The arguments , against going are many and of force. But the arguments for going are of greater number and of greater force. Within the church walls, worldly though We may be, something stirs within us, "some wee small _voice speaks, as nowhere _else. Within that church we learn much of the Sermon on the Mount, and we feel more. Of course, you recognize` Christ's `Sermon on the Mount as the best of all guides through this life of Jours--that it points the one right path. Get back of that minister or priest by " being a worker with him from inside the walls. Help him through your knowledge of the out- side world to understand this modern day and generation and its needs. The Clay Belt Oshawa Reformer: From Engle- hart to New Liskeard, travelling l south, one sees the remarkable farms of the southern clay belt. The-build-. ings-are good, but because of res some years ago-they donot compare with farm buildings in Southern On- tario. One misses, too, the large trees of `the older parts of the Prov- ince. But, allowing for these two omissions, the traveller looks about him and, seeing the crops and the live stp_t:k, asks himself whether he is not in Huron, or Simcoe, or Oxford. Bet- ter rops are not to be seen anywhere and there is the finest of farm stock. The inhabitants will tell you that the top yields of the North have been 600 bushels of potatoes, 95 bushels of oats-and three tons of hay to the` acre; also that average yields are higher in the North than in the South. Agriculture in Northern On- tario gives the visitor the surprise of his life. xuuu only o ~The-need is for leadership andithe application of scientic study to this eminently practical problem. At the present time it is nobody s job and nobody does it. Just so long as this be the` case there will continue to be waste and loss on one hand and an unlled want on the other. "How Many? Owen Sound Sun-Times: M.P. s may -nd there isn t much in it, but 4 at $4000 a session, if it lasts for 65 days, they should at least not be out of pocket. ` If the session is less than 6/5 days the pay is $25, per day. How many of them really earn it? :%w&ww&ai&m&&$% `g AMONG EXCHANGES |%wmw&mwawmwm&w$w Below are ahfew of our stock:-- i924 Superior Chevrolet Ttlring. s_;lw`are tire; this car looks and runs 11 enew. C, . _ ` Nuh'six-Cylinder. new Royal cord tires on rear; you can buy thih-- ' worth the money. C _" Overland 91 Coach, four new tires; this car is in A1 shape. Baby Grand Chevrolet Four-Pu eager Coupe; this car is in file condition. . ~ Ford Touring, -1924 model, good tires, shock absorbers, speed- ometer. , . Chevrolet Sedan; this car has had splendid care taken of it and looks the part. Chevrolet 1925 K Coupe, license; - spare tire, snubbers; you can t\tel/1 this. from a new car. . `McLaughlin 45 Master Sins; you can buy this--.-worth the money, Chevrolet 490 Touring: for `sale ..1........ , RADIOVALUE" Compare, for example, Model 52. In this neat, compact unit, Deforest 8L Crosley features the lowest- priced loud-speaker set on the Canadian market-a proved three-tube regenerative circuit that gives loud- speaker volume on a range of 1000 miles. No other set on the market approaches it in price. Simple to oper- `ate/over 5000owners in Canada testify to its eiciency in` results. PRICE $33.00 i ii We not on1y.oer all that is new and beautiful in Radio, but also present in the DeForesk& Crosley line the biggest va1ues-the' lowest prices. Phone 1010. Box 267, Bgrrie. BARRlE S LEADING RADIO STORE 13 Elizabeth Street : ' : ` MINING s*rocKs:; BOUGHT - sou) INSURANCE - BONDS ;- . Y Head "Office I.I\KY'l"I) I! A I HULV9 VV l.l.VAIq.lI who L \/'waJ._VlIA-Inqn ,IECOMMENDED (7 SOLD BY DRUGGISTS 6 OPTICIANS van`: cn cmcaoouag I luau VI I ICC MONTREAL BARRIE BRANCH" . . ; . J. E. J. ASTON, Manager v'THO.RNTON BRANCH . . . . .. M. c. WIGLE, Manager 912 ,ABRANCl-IES IN CANADA, NEWFOUNDLAND, .WES`l' INDIES, CENTRAL and scum AMERICA, . LONDON, NEW Yenx and BARCELONA. -Auxiliary: THE ROYAL BANK or CANADA (name) Capital Paid Up . . . . . . . . . Reserve Fund . . . . . . . . . . . Undjvided `Prots . . . . . . . . Notes in ` Circulation . . . . . Deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ` `Due to Other Banks . . . . . Bills Payable (acc,ptan'cea Branch) . . . . . . '\ONLY A LIMITED` NUMBER AVAILABLE 1m-: eamvaa memo ca. I\CII W C QII3 ?CIlCI IJIJIIHC and Stocks . . . .. Call Loans in Canada` . . . . Call Loans elsewhere than i I_`.ou'vn and Discounts . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . ` Liabilities to Customers under Letters ,1` IV___J!n ., ,, HIC$IIIIIC CC KUIUIlI$IC KIIUCIV EclII C I V of Credit as per contra . . . . . . Bank Premises .' . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . Real Estateother than Bank Premises. . Mortgages on Real Estate sold by Bank Deposit with the Dominion Government `for security of Note Circulation _ Q IJIIII IG 3llIC \IiIi |JIlI\pGI ll Branch) . . Letters of Credit outst'a.11d.i1.1g-`. Cash on Hand and in B;nks_. . S` . . . . . . Deposit in the Central Gold Reserves . Government and Municipal Securities. Railway and Othe: Bonds, Debentures ' ....I Go... . 1I\I\l'l'l\'l' bl.) ISY sI7N.wINn.nUsI acrfii IFPDMMEMIIED I. sou) RY mumms-rs L. OMICIANS

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