Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 31 May 1928, p. 11

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Whzr?` NOEIMAN M. MARSHALL, ALLANDALE THE perfected Whippet is the most valuable car ever offered for so little money. It has a drilled crankshaft for full force- feed lubrication- and_ a silent timing chain as used on the nest custom cars. It has a power plant that actually doubles its rated horse-power. Everywhere owners report their complete satisfaction with its ultra-smart ap- pearance, its spirited per: formance, its remarkable economy, its comfort and its easy handling. Thewhippet Coach isnow $ 725 . ` n '1 ':lIlq!\O`Al fauna au- Lewhippet isnow 72 f.o.b fadory, taxes extra Page Eleven Send for hand- x anon; `nan luau-.1: There are two kinds of operating costs in connection with a care-the cost of giratixig ityourself and the cost of . operated `upon by the repair man. 5% of these repair "operations" that cost motorists hundreds of thou- sands of dollars each year, are usually due to one cause: neglected or faulty lubrication---the failure of some oil to do its duty. lugcait1iction, a thin film of ` oil 8 ards your motor from dea ructive _ And that oil itself has to endure con- tlnuous and terrific puxushnient. If it fails to stand up--if at hrealts or burns '---at once the hot, . whirling, sliding. surfaces of your motor begin tochafe against each other." Friction does its destructive work and repairs follow. To produce an oil that would have eat ' and friction.- . engine heat, Tide_Water technologists experimented` for years with many different oils and oil films. _' Every kind of crude oil was tried; every known refining method. Finally, in Veedol they `perfected an oil_ that` gives the film of protection---l/u'n a.r linrue, ' .rmool/z an ail/c, tough at Jteel. The correct` oil for the new type otors-5--the best_- for any moto_r-.is t e new improved super heat-resisting Veedol. It has been reformulated and adapted to high-compression motors and abrds the extra protection your motor re uires. Heavier, tougher, lo jlive Have your crankcase` lled with the new Veedol and let this heat resisting give_your n'1otor_ the extra protection the greatest possible .nesistance to \_ it`~r`e'q,u1res.: - ' Szrldlwlzcreaer l;tcfau'l'ario`ran_q'e andblac/c Veda! _ than `ever, Veedol is, the- ig tingest",oil that ever tamed heat. ~ V 35228 operating cost? wit ear-t a 0 operating ifyourself luv l` upon "operations that cost or faulty some oxlto _ 11} action, 0? lm lubcati oil`: your ructwe and terric ` \a\p-Icon` .g-- Lk---_.-.`.` `.-__A Write 101' Free The Ball Planing Mill Co. Ltd. - Barrie, Ont. Co., Ltd. \ - Barrie, Ont. The Ball '1i{iHE'iai11 C3.-,'~Ltd..,' Thursday. May 81, _-Z------.------- Stock Corrloci: Information Furnished and So:-vlco on Brontford Roong rendered by - Q THOMA? Spgaking dfm(;')7iJ}erfz:1i'h'76/Qri `' Economy Oils and G:aosc`N-o_ Crosfin Oil Company, L`i_I'nitVed-_-Ho.miltoia, Toronto, 3` _ foDi.'I1{ri5I_Itorn for`.T.9 Waist`? ~01! common:-. ' .. 7 Ci`~-57!-1. "-.m=~--..um:':' `~ m.:zr'u!'.:;21"I1:-~-v9xM*";:3mum OOEIH Fire-protection is all important in modern building. Help protect your borne from the menace of re by using Brantford Roong. All Brantforrl Roong products are re-re- tardent and usually reduce insurance rates by 10 to 20 per cent. Specify Brantiorg -for permanent roong satisfaction. w Buntfox-1 Roong Co. Linitojl BI-sntfouvl. Outulq For Sale B .loIl Ii II . Advertise in The Examiner, the paper with the circulation. How MILITIA CAMP AT coumcwoon It is definitely settled that the Twenty-second Enfantry -Brigade` will .go into camp in V Exhi1bi-tion Park, wcollingwood, on July 3rd and remain until July '14-th. {The camp will -be composed of -the'Greys. the Simcoe Foresters, Northern Pion- eers from Parry isound and the A1- gonquin Rifles from Temiskamins and Cochrane. In is expected that the strength will be five hundred. Lt.-Icoi. G. `E. iMcLean `win Ibe bri- oun An nnuuxvunnpinu Lllu"LJU-1. LI. 114- l$V.lL4. gade commander. Barrie 07 TOTAL ABSTINENCE A % IN MODERN nusmass Follaw1ng`1s the first prize es- uay"ln the W.'C.'I`.U. contest, written by Erica Murphy of the B. C. _I. urn"... I-n-4.-1 A1....n.......... 0...-.w. AL` ll; nanovw avouayug vu uaov -an an . VV~hy Total` Abstinence from '11- cohonc Liquors is Especially Neces- sary in Modern Business and Trans- portation. _ .nm- warm ha: ham-1 nnmmetelv portuuun. ' Our world has been completely modernized in the last fifty years and intensively so in the last ten. Discoveries of science, the inven- tion of machinery and the applica- tion of power have revolutionized the industrial world. Speed and competition are the two outstand- ing urges of our day. And to meet those we must possess capable hands. . steady nerves and` clear brains. Alcohol -has been proved by the highest modern and scientific medicalauthorities to be a narcotic nerve depressant and. even if taken in very small doses, has the effect of reducing the efficiency of either man-ual or brain work. Takea few of our outstanding modern indus- tries and occupa.ti'ons as manufac- turing. mining, lumbering and sal- esmanship.- . _ Alnnhnl fimaf nffnr-L-u Han himhnr 93IIlJlBIUp.' Alcohol first attacks the higher functions of the brain, self-control, judgment and social obligation. Then when the greate-r quantities are taken it depresses and weakens the nerves. British Admiralty. tests showed that thirty perconst. of their efficiency was lost by t-he gunners after taking alcohol though they themselves imagined` they were shooting with greater accuracy. So the rum `ration has at last been entirely out off. Medical science has proved that all parts of the system are deadened when alcohol is par- taken of. Sohow can a deranged brain and panalyzed hand control power, locormptive-s, engines, elec- trical machines in factories or in- ._t~ricate mining equipment such as is used today. `Thu-incr 1-he Ufnvl `Xi'an nv\nnHnn`|1v but: uuuxuus U1. sugy--scrapers. A person under the influence of liquor becomes dangerous, for even taken in minute quanut-ities, it causes the loss of the fine co-ordin- ation of movements. A dazed brain cannot send aclcuraite commands and a depressed nerve cannot re- spond. So even as a motor car with damaged brakes, so a person with impaired faculties, i-sva pu-blic men- ace. In past times oxen and horses `at four and six miles `per hour were the transport-power. Now electrical -power and gasoline transpontation is everywhere used and forty miles an hour through more crowded communities will brook,no' alcoholic inefficiency and incompetency. The horse that used to feel -his oat-s" was considered a menace, what about a driver who feels his rye? `Great transp-ontatioln companies will not h`lre drinkers. They are liable to step on the gas" when their intention is to apply the brak- es. and it is daily becoming less possible for -one to` do a wrong with.- out interfering with the harmony ofothers. .`So when we consider the immense trucks `of commerce, motor LB uacu Luuay. `During the World War practically all nations placed a_ ban `on alcohol. They recognized the tremendous handicap `the liquor trade constitut- es, and if in war why not in peace? Our own government recommended prohibition to still-further pro- mote thrift. conserve resources and increase national efficiency. In the past when hand lalbor was almost exclusively used, a` liquor-addled bralintmight muddle through the day's work, but today with vast electrical equipments used, a clear head and steady hand is an abso- lute necessity. Freighters used to unload. at lake ports, at the rate of one hundred` tons a day. Nowa- days with electric unloaders they work at the rate of t-hree thousand tons ah hour. Could -an `unsteady hand or narcotized brain handle such machines? Tllnn uonnhl ....L.... .. J.....l._ 1.--; _.. BUUII IIIEIUQIIIIFH a `ho would enter a train, boat, or car if the engineer, captain or chaf- feur was known to be drunk. and what company or `individual would wish to employ a drinker? And so with the other workers whether`. with saws or threshing machines or the building of slky--scrapers. A nnrnnn nnnv Who infhxnnnn AP | --- _ __ Buy Agivertised Things a 3. .-- llU1'llR1l U1` UVVGFL, 15 U118 IUUUJ lUV_V edging plan-t. Alternated lath the deep blue `Lobe-Ila in clump . which is a1so.a small p1ant..Aa. very ef- fective .. border is` produced. Ill lh.I.U J\U' LISL uuu cauy cDt`}JLlll'Ub'1'. Four -O'clock plants require six inches each way, makes a good. tan edging plan-t fox-_'wa1aks or for garden "divisions. A-lyssum. either normal or` dwarf, is the ideal low aolna v\'Invi.l- A'l:u-nnfnal vivid-In \A' .--v. 1 up`- If the birds are eating `the let: 'tuce, cover with a light lattice or. strip of chicken wire. This will scare -them away. (`nearing nlnnfn nlnnnr +1: F;-nnnna HUHJVV 'LlLUlll (I W G._Y n Cosmos planted along -the fences. wl.ll.ma\ke`a god screen_and pro- vide an abundance of cut flowers in late August and early September. `ll`nIn- I n1nn'lz inlqnta v-annim: ahr at I.Il'|-Ul'Vfll5 UL El middle of `July. ' T:-an` String -beans, never so delicious `as when taken from -the garden right at the door, may be produced all `summer. `The first crop sh-ould be Well under way now, but with its h-arvestin-g there is no reason why -thi vegetable should be given up. Getting the beans into the ground at stated intervals guar- antees stendy produc-tion. Anyone can grow them. and for -the amount of space occupied, they are one of the most economical vegetables we have. They like the warm weather, plenty of water, and fairly light 'soil._'One can -get -them in dwarf or climbing, and, while -the latter sort are a lit-tie more difficult .`to handle. pole and strings being necessary. t-hey will give a `bigger crop for -the space occupied. They come, too, in two colours. green and yellow, the last named being known as 'the wax type. The -green sort seem -t'o Ibe getting more po'pular,`and some in- sis-t -that they have a finer flavor, but `there is little to choose. It `is not advisable to plant them in hills, ex- cept `possibly in low da-mp ground. where they are liable to be kept too wet. Plant about an inch deep`, and thin to five or six inches apart. A row of 2'5 feet will `keep the av- erage ramily going for about -two weeks. One can `continue plantings at intervals of la fortnight up -to the vwhild nf LTn.`|v . . -.-.. -.-vv- - was ---an `The sweet pea-s must get their` growth now before the hot -weather really sets in. `They need deep cul- tivation and fairly heavy fer-tilizin-g. If grown in antrench, as they should be, grzlduwlly draw in the soilva- round them. so th:1t,deep roots may develop. 'In this c:ase,- they will came through a siege -of ho-t weather more easily `than if a shallow root growth, which `does not penetrate into -the cooler soil, only has {been grown. Just `before the bud-s !begin `to -swell: a little fertilizer sprrinkled along the rows and well watered in, will help the plants a great deal, and will add to '-the depth of colour of the flow- ers. ~ DI......a. M--- a......- The C1arks`onA Hotel has been granted permission to erect an elec- trical sign and also to install gas pumps on the hotel property. , . (!nnld-T.:ag1ia' T.Tmifa in napkin: pulups UH uu: uuuu pl.Up_1`I.yo Gould-Leslie` Limited is seeking permission to erect a sign. 50 feet !ong-on the east side of Bayfield St. on the property of Mrs. C. E. V9.11`. . I lnnb `Dunn I-unvvn Mann nrnnv-n.A5R Is ')6urRogfT?re~sresistant ? Vuxr. `Scott Bros. have been granted permission to place. a. sign on the building on the sou.heast corner, of Dunlop and Bayfleld Sts. direct- ing customers down Bayfield and along Slsmcoe St. to the new loca- tlon of the brewery warehouse in. the Post Office Isquare. Permis`sionV has also been grantedto place a. sign at the corner of Bayfield and Slmco'e Streets. Dncdn-14-n A0 \A n`I \nnn1A Gt;-lat ` ( i 1 EIIILMUU QC-L cuts. ' Residents of McDonald Street, from Owe to `C1a=pperton, are ask-` lng that the road be gravel-led and the` water tables and catch,.basins* cleaned out.LTh-e petition 1:`. signed by 3.4 ratehp yers. A T Av-I-ancrnnnnnf nyifk Torvunal Roses require fairly deep cultiva- tion and heavy fertilizing up until the first of July in order to push growth and produce `flowers. After this, however, it is advisable to slow down, so that the plants may get hardened before the cold weather H. 'Tom1inson, O.A.C.. Guelph, ni- trate of soda is one of the `best fer- tilizers -to use for promoting growth. A scant tablespoonful of this dug in lightly around the plant, but not touching it, is advised. One or two applica-tions a fortnight apart will be sufficient. `After July slower act- inugfertilizers, such as liquid man- ure, or bone meal. should `be given, and only shallow cultivations advis- ed. A few low growing plants, such as -pansies, calendulas, .or dw'.1rf nasturtiums, will brighten up the bed, and will prove of an advantage to the roses. D..-L Q.....-1. 5... AI... sets in. Just now, according to A! uy as 1'a.;cpu.yv:L'a. . | The `.arrangement with James Thomson, architect in charge or the- Town Hall alterations, is that he 'be paid 8 per cent. of the cost, or ap- proximately $1600. Tho Tnwnathin nf voam-.3 in nab- yl.'UJ\Llll'LLU1_y @LUUUo ' The Township of Vespra is ask-; ing `that Barrie cooperate in repair! ing the boundary road, near the- Unlon Cemetery at a cost of $400, on a fifty-fifty basis. Qarnnm (1H.'| mac qnnnh-MAR a Panm_-J Midland Free Press-The follow- ing figures show how the residents of the four largest towns in the County of Simcoe p`atron'ize the Public Libraries in the places nam- ed. Figures are for the year 1927. and show the number of books ex- changed, and also the number of members. They are:- Town Members. Books `l.`--..1-.1... ......l uu a J.u.a._y-J.'u.L_y unsls. ` Samuel Gil-1 was appointed a. fence : viewer, replacing the late R. H.'. Wetbb. G. R. Warnica and E. T. Tyrer are the other appointees. Barrie l`1.-.11!-.nn l3t1.`1'1'1t' . a . . - . Collingwood Oz`-illia . . . . . . XMIAI.-.v..l ` 'MEMoRIAL UNVEILED A('Collir'1gwood Enterprise) Before a congregaution that filled the spacious auditorium in the Pres- byterian church, the brass tablet, erected `by the congregation to the memory "of the lame Thomas Bassett was unveiled Sunday morning, May 20. The tablet, which is a replica of that erected some years ago to the late Rev. Mr. Urquhatrt, is plac- "ed on the west wall near to the Bassett pew. Behind the e-w sat the officials of the church in a `body. In the front centre seats were the Black Knights in full regalia. Aboutl thirty of the immediate family were present. ` PGIIU IUF unnu- nome. free book. Walls .1` ha. 1: E-_-I. fl -- A Kllillllr Midland boats and aeroplanes we should be indeed blind not` to see why total abstinence is absolutely necessary. councu. Jo'rnNcs% 1;!-IEBARRIE EXAMINER LIBRARY STATISTICS e roses. V ` Push Sweet Peas Along .. ...--....a. ......... __-.._;. .__; GARDEN TALKS Flint More Beans nu-1_y. ' Timely Tnps |_.;... _.._ -_41._ Care of` Roses r:rniu'v-n In!-.1 Ann VV IHI . in HE C Reect G o o d u d 3 m e n 1:." t given valuable information -on Gyprocandinte- _ rlor decoration. Canada Gyplum and Alalmlino, Llmltad pll (1.-.-J-` .. 3690 7?60 3609 4783 Exchan-ged 43.968 18,726 48,263 71,283 A "The, story of the rst locomo- tive which appeared in a recent is- sue of the Toronto Globe. recalls] an early railroading tragedy which `occurred when the Northern Ry. was being extended from Allan- dale to `Barrie. It is related in_ a let- ter written by one Hugh Jackson and now in possesion of Hugh R. MacLean, 64 Sussex Avenue, Tor- onto. ' '- I rm_- 1-.. . u `- .- ow LETTER RECALLS ; EARLY~TRAGl:`.DY HERE Q The letter tells of the `work be- uu nu. ' l ing done at that time on a] switch between Barrie Station and the ,Town of `Barrie, which has been `promised! for over ten years. vThe line at that time ran from Toronto to ' Allandale and then `branched off to Collingwoo . and at the time he met his deat Mr. `Jackson was employed by the com- lpany as timekeeper -of the workers `and trainmen laying a switch in- Ito the Town of Barrie. `Dad! .... -..J._' . u . _ . . H I` ` uv yuc J.u_wu UL .Dau'1e. I Rail connections were few and .far between in those days. and an uncle of Mr. MacLean had to ride horseback to Beaverton, catch a boat to Holland Landi_ng.`and then ;take the cars to Toronto to re- lturn by the same route `w .~th h : abrother s body for b111'r1l in the l Presbyterian cemetery near Lorne- :ville. Probably the little old 10-; lcomotive that started its first run in 1853 was still toiling along the old single track. But. though slow. records show that it was re- liable, and any one boarding the train at Hollan-d Landing would eventually reach Toronto. Advertise in The Examiner, the paper with the circulation. ` ` . ORE important even than the ability of C your new Century Six or Eight to out- perform other cars of comparable or higher price, is its faculty of holding that first W ne performance over a long period. `Jupmobe has built into these cars the ce'ntury s foremost contributions to `power, speed, safety and strength. ff. Coupled with these are long life and dependability so typical of Hupmo- bile engineering and manufacture. 234 However you measure 1 performance, . I .-3 ` _ . V -.x' ' 2,.`- '. .';:' M? ` ; `..: I! . 3' T .' u .~ .,. .44. 2, you be delighted with your first LE1,` trial of the new Century models. Arrange now for a demonstration. POI'[.`~|ll||lEI:n.d..`e Fir - . - = ,4 A5. ' l A 0\i\ gr wins fnldmgs With A exquisite Balance of performance qualities `E RY'?"`` %sIx 5. EIGHT 24 body and equipment (combinations, standard and custom, on each line. Six of the Century, $1815 to $2215. Century Eight, $2495 to $2895. All prices '_ f. 0. 1). Windsor. The Century 125 Eight has all the advanced engineering features, the refine- ments and luxury of the new Century Eight. HAROLD HILL BARRIEDEALER' 43 Elizabeth St. Phone. 278 Mis`s Jane Jennings, a well-known actress has played 197 different mother roles during her stage I career. ` \Vhen Edward Glenn of Chicago was arrested for anmoying .-Miss Alice Soong, age 18. he told the court that her beauty dazzled me and I had to kiss her." HIIPMOBILE 0' :i.':"c':""I'"Ic '0 Q on L . % O 3 *&fE3:%E5:`;?azE~%*E% 2

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy