Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 18 Oct 1928, p. 8

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(Continued from page one) of his own Christian Union accept the obligation to abstain from strong drink and to serve in the active warfare against the traffic. That obligation had not been ac- cepted on a tide of emotion, but after careful study of the ndings of modern science regarding the effect of alcohol. Drink Caused Inefficiency Mr. Carter, who served on the Central Liquor Control Board in England from 19'1`6 to 1921, said that when the seriousness of the war situation was grasped, the people were determined to sacri- ce anything which stood in the way of its successful prosecution. After careful examination of na- 78 1 auto` Eva contestant who qualies BE GIVEN samples of out merchandise valued from 506. to 81 .00. Put light I" Find Handsome : Twin 581.000 Cash In Prizes Nothing to sen Q.-- r~....|. vrm am 1 nnavmnmvv nu-mu an IDQAL _G.'_EN Toronto 29 011N101; IQQIPI - I I Z - - Q Q nah - _ _ _ __. .8500 Cash .5150 .5 75 .3 25 .8 5o .8 50 .$I5o yaaaasa UV naval I YOU WILL POSITIVELY N01` 33 ASKED [ TO SELL ANYTHING FOR US in order to = win any or the Big Cash Prizes oaered shove. I When we receive our entry. we will advise V you of the numier ol points vyou have` gained and sslr you to nuke I smell KI!`-| chase from our cs oau . YO DO NOT OBLIGATE 0 LP 0 DO A11`?-I THING Pgk US BY SENDING IN AN growth 0 `nus puzzu. I Rules of Contest ' 1. Use sharp lend encil. Write the` name of the as you think is! Hu1dsome s twin in the ptoper|' lace on the coupon. I 3. rite your name and address in lead pencil on the coupon. say` if Mr., Mrs. or Miss. I 3. Cut advertisement out on dotted: line end send it to us. ` 4. Be neat; remember, in case of s tie, neatness will be considered! in awarding prizes. . 1 5. Emfloyess of Atlsntie Mine and, the r. relatives are barred from thil Contest. ' 6. only one entry will be ecceptedl from s household. | 7. Address entries to The Puzzle. Man Atlantic Mine, 14 .Wellin(- ton W., Tofonw 3. BL I ......v.-.: on: Ia aysvnnuau HUuLC3o The new officers are: Honorary President. -Re`v. W. T. Gunn, D.D.`, M.A.; past president, Melville White, Toronto; president, C. B. Hopkins, Midland; 1st vice-presi- dent, C. A. Waite, Owen Sound; 2nd vice-president, A. Newman, Toronto; secretary, Miss Emma Foster, Elmvale; treasurer, C. C. Mertins, Toronto; committees: Christian Fellowship, Frank Dob- son. Allandale; Missions, Miss B. Morris; -Citizenship, W. Sander- son, Brampton; Literary, Mr. Crockford, Toronto; Recreation, Geo. Mc Beat`h, Toronto; Leader- ship Training, Rev. H. Eaton, Markham; Y. P. Bible Classes, Rev. C. M. Wright, `Bloor St. % TEMPERANCE IS NowA_1g>EAL1Na U V a Li: J11. VV 1'} Elhurch, Toronto. nu v aux J 'uuuIuuucE- In ve years the `Control-Board succeeded in bringing sobriety as the rule of England. At the_close of the war it spread until it be- came practically general, Appeal for rSane Thinking Rev. C. A. Myers was in charge of the Sunday morning service af- '. ter Rev. J. J. Black had dispensed ._ communion. Rev. .Mr. Myers spoke of the tendency of the {resent day to go to extremes in t inking and appealed for the develo ment of a sane, even balance. ltra lib- eralism in thought and speech, he said, tended toward Bolshevism and ultra-conservatism towards re- action and srtagnat-ion. Both were wrong and harmful if carried too far, in religion as well as politics. There must be hard, sane thinking if the problems of the church were to be successfully worked out. All that was worth while in the past must be conserved and all worth while which the future reveals ` must be taken full advantage of. Nothing was not good because it I was new and` nothing was entirely bad because it was old, he warned 1 his hearers in a splendid address. rm... ........ -m.--_-.- ----. 1-7--. A ` pL.-a3s knculiuon tional weaknesses, it was fou_nd that the great cause of national :11- efficiency was the drink habit, a_nd that war work in the munition 1n- dustry and shigbuilding yards" was being held up y the intemperance of a man here and there. The public demanded Government ac- tion, and the Government` set up the Liquor `Control Board." 11.. r1__-L_,, ;-r1.1 _n ,_,,-I -Mr. `Carter told of the regula- tions to restrict drinking and of the services rendered to the board by eight outstanding British scien- tists, as a Medical `Research and Advsory Committee. '11 `lrn vvnnnn `Ln x"AO|JvuA1 .DAa-nu.) ll/rltofa-P|lKl'l`8 POlJl.'l' BOOK-FREE Pratt Food cbmpuy oI'anada.l.ImIkd J28 Canlonln. fbmura 01!. yam-IIlon:yBacklfot.S`atlaad I 41 _ unacinnnuno Province n gbln A: II- i 145 Wellington St. W uvuuy -nu years U1. uuccessrul use In the rivate practice of Dr. H`. C. Sout WO!'thig And now any good drugglst wu supply them on a. guarantee of satisfaction or money back. Try UIRATABS today. 13 ---., -----..-.., --... V. `Ivy, uuaun-3 Lu Wihile new to the general public, the wondrous value df URATABS has been thoroughly proven _by nearly 40 years of successful use in than In-lvnfa nrnnnn n! n. `I'_'I" urn r..- --uuawn vulva. Amazing testimony of Physicians and users gives convincing pxjoof of the power` of `URA*'1`AIB S to restore Health and `Strength to a. weaken- ed. inamed or irritated Bladder and Urinary Tract. A multitude of wlarming symptoms seem to quickly disa.ppea.r-and you see and feel a truly genuine improvement often within two or three days. No more Backaches, no more pain, no more euubarassment or getting-up-nights. ` I now sleep soundly, and get up in the morning full of `pep, thanks to j `I'D !-ul`ln -1.... 4.. `L. -....._.._I _--l-!- No longer need men near or past the prime of life put up with those. painful and often embarrassing con- ` ditlons brought on `by overworked. sluggish `Kidneys, Bladder Weak- ness and Prostrate Gland `Trouble with their distressing symptoms of Lameness, Pains in `back and down through grains, scanty but `frequent and burning urination, Getting-up- Nights. Nerrvous tlrritability and lack of force-lbecause a ten day test of Dr. Southworth s U'RA'T.AlBS i will convince the most skeptical of 6 the value or this special treatment ` for their particular case. A_.-_l__. A-- `j Every Main` Past 40; Should Make This Test. 'there were two dead per-I sons in that barn and there was a - weapon there with which they could be murdered. ll`, _ __ }F'or /Amazing and Lasting Reliefl From Middle-Age Ailments That E Cause Daily Annoyance and Sap,Vital Force -_..-.. ~... nnAI-l4\J\a&\7\Iu ' You must apply the facfs an;-3 : nd why and how they lost thelrli '1 son) get from` the box on which: lllfa The fact that the lantern which 0`Nei1 said started the re was found intact was another telling argument against prisoner. The Judge's `Charge How did the old man (`Robert- I O'Neil says he placed him, to the` place where his body was found. is one of the many details on which you must satisfy yourselves in this case? said His Lordship in re- viewing the story of prisoner lead- ing up to the alleged accident with I the cow. The crank of the turnip | pulper is an apt weapon with which ! to crack anybody s skull. `There has been some fault found that no I blood was found on this crank and I that it was not produced in court. It is for you to determine the sig- nicance of this. Ccontinued from page 1) tive for the crimes. This/was later agreed: to by Crown counse-l and trial judge. 0 Nei1 s Conicting Stories Mr. McFa-dden stressed the var- ious conicting `stories told to neighbors by O =Neil following the re and the nding of the bodies as to his actions and what really happened. `He pointed to the mat- g ter of time-the twenty minutesi unaccounted for by O'Neil be-3 tween the time he first went to the house to report the alleged acci- dent to the aged Robertson an-d itihe time he was first seen at the` re. , NIL- .c_-J. L1-_L 1.1-- 1_-_;_,,, , 1,- 1 UTm!I000llllOlllllllICIIIIIOOOIOIIIOIIOV IDIIIIIIIOIII mm name and add:-cu pmnlytnlud pencil. amt whether. Mr. Mu. otlliu. 8 N`m.thvi'Nwsp prcolllillllllllllloooaaoaoololooonu I ' `- GEORGE O NElL 1 FOUND GUILTY; ---..-. av-ayyaals DU IAID WGIULX If the evidence satises you that there was nobody else in that barn` "but the prisoner," Azor Rob- ertson and Ruby Martin, as it must, and that the bodies of the two latter were found. after the re, the bodies -must have been On the other hand. if O Neil s shirts were burning so that it was necessary to tear them off it is reasonable to expect there would be burns on his arms. It may have been that tO Neil had something else on his shirt he didn t want seen. What was the reason for this man stripping to his waist? MT! LL - ---_' J - , _.-_- -......u uu uzc U11 1115 return. `To~ entice th-ese two people in- to a `building, doing away with them and then burning the barn to cover up his crime a man would need to be no fool. You saw the prisoner in the box, how he hand- led himself. Evidence of a motive is lack-` ing. The `Crown has not put for- ward any serious explanation of what the motive, if there was one, may have been. Furthermore, if the re started in the stable while O'Neil was giv- ling the alarm, it was all over and done by the time he got back, a matter of a very few -moments, for 1 O'Neil found no re on his return. `aTn nnJ~u'n- 1.1. -.. A uua puuu. The jury were 1sked' if they \ believed prisoner's story of how he got burned , how a ame. or pil- lar of rre, shot up from under the manger. A 'Crown witness had sworn `O'Neil said he received his burns when he opened a door and ames shot out. There was here an apparent discrepancy in a-ccused s story. Trnd-'l.\.......-.._ so .1 A I u uuc y11bUUt':1' UH [He Stairs. Up -on his own story O tNe11 had no business being` halfway` up the stairs. 0 INeil says: I wasn t up i the stairs; wasn t on the stairs. ;Ruth says he `was. Her evidence |is very important. If she impress- [es YOU. as 3. +.1`11i"}`I`F1`l` 1Iy~H-nnap. -nu... I-.. ~v-_, .---yqzuanlbo '1; DUB 1mp1`eSS- ` [es you as a truthful witness you 3 {are entitled to lay much stress on 1 `this point. | MD ':I'IIi'U OOIA--4 :" ` `A -. Was the lantern which O Neil` says he left at the head of the lblack cow when the alleged acci- idtent occurred still burning when the witness; Thompkins entered the barn. as testified by him? Did the licker of` light which he saw still [come from this lantern after the re \vasi_n progress upstairs? Coming to the question of what Ruth Martin is stated to have said to the prisoner on the stairs. Up- {On OWD stnrv n |Nnil lnnrl n [__,c,,.......-.. -uJ \/LUVVLJ WJLIICBDUS. __ __--.. ----only -.1111 wchu Il1JVVGL\.lDo "Was it true that the litter down- i stairs may have all been burned up by the time ~O"Neil returned after giving the alarm, and that,.it had .spread upstairs? If they could not {satisfy themselves on this point lthey must set themselves the task of determining whether or not. and how the re started above as suggested by Crown witnesses. nu- mu L A--- ~ iThemmeoHmdwme ntwmu..... l ' . I U N0namoooaoaoooooaua Mynme:toootaaovoloatoononn-on I _-__ -v.._ v-. LIJA .n~vu\,L uovllo There was nothing 'in the evi-N dence to show how that re got up- stairs. There was no connecting ~materia1 mentioned by which the ames might spread upwards. TIT..- :4. 4....-- .LL_L -`L I `I lives. It is the duty of the Crown to show there was no other rea- ,sonable way a man could conclude these two people could come to their deaths except by the contri- Vance of the accused. If you nd there were other reasonable ways it is your duty to acquit; if you nd there was no other reasonable way you must convict. ..-.__, v-.. ..-..,.. .. avavvu `Speaking of the story of _O Nei1 of the origin of the Ire and that it may have started in the chaff and straw downstairs and spread to the loft, His Lordship called at- tention to prisoner s own account zthat he went groping about with ihis hands; he couldn t see any `thing, the smoke was so dense, in his search for Robertson. VIII TH! IIIIII IXAIIIEI where the re was hottest. There was nothing burnt in the turnip bin. `The body of Ruby Martin must have fallen from somewhere, probably from above, for there was the burnt timber with the iece of skull which fell from a- ove. `~Signicant, too, was Botham`s evidence that he heard hurried footsteps and muffled cries above the turnip bin, His `Lordship said. Are you going to believe Botham? It is a very serious conclusion you must come to. Botham was look- Greatest Improvement in riding eomtbrt `since balloon tires STUDEBAKER S exclusive Ball Bearing F Spring Shackles The smart nevtr DICTATOR has them G. B. McLEAN, Dealer 16 Bdyfield St., BARRIE Phone 1231 Made in Canada by val. uuuncu. LU]. Luau yurpube. O Neil s denial of `Mrs. Robert- I son's story that she saw O Nei1 at the nor.thwest corner of the barn, stripped to the waist, is important. That was the story of an anxious woman who had lived 44 years with her husband whom she was seeking. Is it likely that she would lie about an important matter of this kind? (Kf\l\Y-1 _ J____'LL , 1 1 - A | How to Win `Two of the dogs ictured above are Icxsctly alike. NDSOME is one got them. The puzzle is-to nd his `twin-the do marked exactly the `lame to Hon somo.. Six of the dogs have different markings; one of `them, Handsome (the big dog in lthe middle) and One Other Do are gmaxked exactly the same. Loo for markln I oil? on Ears, Eyes, Crown `of lies , T and Front Legs. I t/LAID xuuu S O'Neil admitted he went for Ruby and `returning to the barn, ing for Robertson. He says he stopped and hstened. Iie had-his ear cocked for that purpose. n Nni] c r`n*raT n-F 'Mva T)nkn~n+ A full account of the evidence: appears on pages 11 and 14 of this issue. . he didn t look to see if she was coming; he never tried to ascer- tain if she did come, according to his story. He did not call out for` ter, Ruth, had sworn that shortly after her mother left she saw O -f INei1 coming down the stairs from` above the turnip bin Where Mrs.- Martin s body was found. 'T`1nn nn a A . . nun; +,. H... .....-. -4. lher, but the dead Woman's daugh- u;.aLLuLa Uuuy wan .LUu1l(.l. The case went to the jury at 2.16. A 1-11 . -.1 .- Thursday, October 18,.192$ o - I I I I o . 1 1 I 5 Prize! $10 each. '10 Prizes 3 5 each. .75 Prizes 8 2 each. The Ideal lflilk ;/rP*='!-'! l1_1o%<`_>*gJaiii'i;.'i;; i" doubly-rich` anJ Qdgannnum

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