Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 28 Mar 1929, p. 11

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11 St. : BARRIE : Phone 1440 H. A. HENRY, Resident Manager Exterior metalware chrome plated over nickel Biiur centralized chassis lubrication Electric clocks Short turning radius 59 Elizabeth St. Phone 730, Barrie COMPANY OF CANADA Longer wbeelbases /\ r\ o \Jl.lC`}llCB`r QC-I\JlI fenders Clear vision from pillar posts Nash Special Design front and rear bumpers One-piece Salon c....A-.._. ""1&2a`i3'i"iI3'rJ"s}3veYa' surplus m 1928 of $3,230.07. The commission is now doing its own collecting. Fhn On:-u-unvu;un& AG 4-Ian 'A`|'p.-LInn-ca (9433) (V'1;i1(;sHtV<'3i'1;g;3;1;eVciZc>Zf `14; :;{:;};;t1on- at Fibre Co., Midland plant, was des- troyed by re on Monday of last week. " Phi; $}e;i:lu';;:'Ei1;'M;a River in the Oreemore section caused more ` Fred Almond, farmer near Meaford, has 1,200 maple trees tapped. `Ilsa n`nr\ Ila Awkvuv n lnofnlili will: U vaauu Auwu Wbhfbo Or1l 1 la schools will in 1929 require $3.800 more than last year. The total levy aslged for is $80,500. Qnwvnluunt Jun-vn -I-Inn Qnnvnnn Tfnvudv Can, `lhurulay. March 28, 1929 PRESTON, ONT. DISTRICT NEWS F. M. TYRRELL, Superintendent Ross BLOCK, DUNLOP STREET, mama, om. V Toronto snus ULL VV uuslvnuuy, dlybll Us Milton Tiny Abbott, former Mea- ford boy, is making quite a. name for himself as a heavyweight boxer in California, winning-every `bout by the knockout route. He is 23 years of age and wears a size 16E shoe. He is known as the Human Giant." yum vnnuuuuu Capt. John McNab, for many years one of the best known mariners on the great lakes, died Tuesday `at his home in Sarnia at the age of 86. He was well known at Georgian Bay ports. I".n1'Hr\v1Ivt\ru-I `Vain vudnn `Had! kn: Hnnn "VIA nuuvvll no \.JGUL5lu1l any yusuu. Collingwood Fair prize list has been revised. The cattle list has been me.- terlally increased in value of prizes while the ne arts and school depart- ments were revised from end to end. 11-___I_ 9 _- 1u1-1_.-_- _-.__.....I-L_.. -1 LL- Mark Lee, Chinese proprietor of the New York Cafe, Alliston, entertained 200 friends to a turkey dinner on the occasion of the reopening of his res- taurant following extensive alterations. WA nunnnan nvnl-nwnvnulua avvalrnnn CAI- VENIAL IJIIJU LVLAUVVJLIB LIIVUAADIVU GIIVVLGHIIIVIIHO The proposed waterworks system for Bradford will cost $45,000 for both re and drinking purposes. Engineers feel there will be no dilculty in get- ting a supply in the lower section of the town, west of the station. Rev. R. J. Kirkland of Carluke has accepted a call from the Jubilee Pres- byterian Church, Stayner} and Zion Church, Sunnidale Corners. Arrange- ments have been completed whereby the induction will take place in Stay- ner on Wednesday, April 3. `R416-nu fhinu Aklauud-L -Unuvnnu 'nn_ J nun 0 and MALI. JALALLADVL J c ' Hon. Wm. Finlayson, says the Dept. of Northern Development will spend $100,000 in Bracebridge this season, but details are not yet ready. A Aun\1u-n +111-\Ivr\r\Qn unnnka Alalrnn wuv uvvulnw any alvla Jvv Awuugs A jewelry traveller reached Alllston on Monday of lasg week to nd his trunk had been robbed of one hundred watches at Parry Sound, the last town he visited. xv,` _ n 2,. . ,4 g,,,_,, ,c,_.,,_;_ anv V Auauuuu National Sanitorium at Gravenhurst used a tractor this winter for snow- plowing and other heavy work requir- ed about the institution. one has been purchased. I'1nv\l- `1\`-no-1 `IIAXYAL J-.. u-Qnnuu --A-un- MORE THAN A HINT (Stayner Sun) Colin McLean left for his bachelor home in Saskatchewan last Saturday. This was entirely a matter of choice with him, as we feel sure there are some of his acquaintances among Bun- nidale fair sex who would not have been averse to a life partnership. havoc this spring than for several IYQO ICC g van: A ery cross was burned last week on a hill overlooking Creemore. It is thought to have been the work of a practical joker. `Brno I \-.sI.-.1 `I1-An_-_ -1 `Y--onnnul-AG `IL ovu UAVGA JVBGL n Rev. Daniel Prosser of Newmarket last week celebrated his 83rd birth- day at Newmarket. He has been 60 years in the ministry. V ILTAM Tffvn ininuonn noun 6|-an Tinv-If Buy Advertised Things. YOUNG LADY RESCUED AFTER ICY PLUNGE IIVVV uvlub am: UVVAJ \J|.lAJU\.4|aAll5o The tournament of the Northern Volunteer Firemen s Association will be held this year at Parry Sound. NEW LOWELL MAN FINED `FOR UNUSUAL OF F ENCE (collingwood Messenger) ' Potato shippers and growers should acquaint themselves with the Root and Vegetable Act if they wish to keep out of trouble. On Thursday of last week Walter Switzer of New Lowell, on complaint of the Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, was charged with omitting to mark in a clear manner his invoice or bill of lading of a car load of potatoes, as required by Sec. C. 5 of the Root` and Vegetables Act. A fine of $10 and costs was imposed which is the mini- mum penalty. (orillia Packet & Times) A despatch from Ottawa states that Major F. S. McPherson, M.C., has been promoted to the rank 01 Lieutenant-Colonel and to command the 2nd Signal Battalion of C.G. of S. with regimental headquarters at Tor- onto. Col. McPherson was the son of John A. McPherson who was an old Oro boy born at lot 1, con. 10, Oro. His father died the day before war was declared, and immediately after the funeral he left for Toronto to en- list, but was turned down. He then went to Quebec where he enlisted and was among the first who went over- seas. In February, 1915, he was in France, where he stayed till June, 1919. Since then he has resided in Toronto. Mrs. W. T. Y. _Lee, Barrie Road, is an aunt. BRADFORD STEPPING OUT (Bradford Witness) Bradford can no longer be said to be doing the Rip Van Winkle stunt of forever sleeping. Having bettered in fire fighting apparatus, renovating the `town hall, boosting the market, and last and best of all talking of a reasonably priced waterworks system, it looks as if Bradford were going to move forward and be an up-to-date lnmn KVUII-H15 WUUU IHLJUCLHL {DC} The new elevator site was almost the scene. of another tragedy last Sun- day afternoon. when Miss Helen Gam- ble sllpped through the ice and only by the prompt action of Bill Currie was a. fatality avoided. `Khan f".nI-val-n Inna nynibinn nh-nan Plan "T 2 2U$6I|IJ QV\-II`-L\r\Ia Miss Gamble was walking along the inlet, leading out to the elevator site, when her foot slipped. She clutched for the dock, but missed, and the next instant plunged beneath the icy wat- ers of the Georgian Bay. `"1 f`_I1IvI0`n nykn Inna nnnwkn Tnolv an 9 UL V115 \lCUL EJGII JJG 0 B11] Currie, who was nearby lost no time in rushing to her assistance, and in a. twinkling the young lady was on the dock, none the worse for the ex- perience, except cold, oh! so cold! FORMER ORO BOY IS GAZETTED LIEUT.-COLONEL Send your news items to The Exam lner. Phone 222 or 223. (comngwood Enterpi-ise) 1 main AIAIIAC-Aw 1-{n Iivna :- uni l;UU uuwyac uxcco uuyyvu. Miss Helen McArthur, a Meaford girl, is singing regularly over CKGW, Toronto. I\...... o- 1..I......+..... 13+...-..m. hntvn lII\1l" Pnorssr MATERIAL `USED ON COUNTY ROAD A resolution passed by Orillia town- ship council at its last meeting, ex- pressed a `protest to the County Road Commissioners against `the material being used on the Barrie and Cold- water roads. It was the opinion of the Council and the ratepayers that only 50 per cent. of the value of the money expended was being received. gmmwwexxmweswwg OBHTMRY m m awmmawamsmwwmam REV. E. I. HART, D.D. Rev. E. I. Hart, D.D., who was pas- tor of the Elizabeth St Methodist church (now Central United) over thirty years ago and married a. sister of the late Mrs. Donald Ross, Barrie, died in Montreal on March 21. A de- spatch from that city to the daily I papers gives the following particulars: 'l\nn+'h nnvnn curl:-lnv\'I1y 4-nu-In-:11 in Ban UVLA UL Uldtiuu Dr. Hart was in a drug store on St. Catherine Street when he suffered a heart attack to- which he succumbed in a few minutes. Though suffering from some symptoms of that trouble of late, he had been attending to his organizing duties as Secretary of the Quebec League Against Alcohol, the prohibition organization for this Pro- vince, and only a week ago he had is- sued a manifesto from that organiza- tion strongly indicting the operation of Quebec's liquor control system. At various times he had come in conflict with Government and public officials for the strength of some of his at- tacks, both from the pulpit and plat- form and in the press, but he always came back with figures. He was equally opposed to the use of tobacco. in all forms, and frequently denounc-I ed the growing use of the cigaret by youth of both sexes. T\v `I _`l n4- uvnn 4-`kn (nun rd? nun Anon:-xvi: yuyva 0 51 V Ln) luau AUAJU VI 1115 you; UL\.a 541011 0 - Death came suddenly today to Rev. Evanston 1. Hart, D.D., well known in Ontario and Quebec Provinces as a minister of the United Church and formerly in the Methodist Church, and perhaps still more widely known by his uncompromising hostility to the liquor traffic, whether open or Government controlled. , _,_ nu; Jvwnunb UL wvuam upnuu. Dr. Hart was the son of an Ameri- can Methodist Episcopal missionary, who was loaned to the Canadian Methodist ChL1`."h in the days when the latter church was just embarkingl on its own missionary enterprise, and it was at Foochow, China, that Evan- ston Hart was born. He reached Tor- onto at 14 years of age, and was edu- cated there; both in the schools and` University of Toronto, graduating in 1890. He studied theology at Victoria College, and was ordained in the Can- adian Methodist /Church in 1892. Thereafter he held pastorates at Bar- rie and Sault Ste. Marie, and 20 years ago came to Montreal to Dominion Square Church, now transferred to Westmount. He served as city mis- sionary here for six years; also minis- tered to Sherbrooke Street Church for some years, and at Ste. Anne de Bellevue, where the first experiment in a local Union church was made in (233) Large cargoes of wheat are be- ing shipped to Japan and the Orient through Vancouver these days. It seems like sending coals to Newcastle to send flour to The Flowery Kingdom. Fur-farming is developing many branches. one of the most recent being the organization in Manito- ba or the Manitoba Muskrat Breed- ers Association. The body plans 6;; aubqaoluu u-aqua`,-nu` `sun-u.o.:`3oua-o An1I|A`_ w1`);`;;U Johnston, Stayner, have sold their coal business to the Farmers Co- operative. nmn-val nos-`node A? TXTncfawv-u `ans;-on V13 DDGUUIGLIUIL Luv uvug ylaasa to study musk!-a breeding condi- tions and to investigate all phases -I L1. A I-. Jungi- 111 8. IBCBLII. EILRSULZLI ill. J:u'uuucuu.r, Ontario, E. W. Beatty, chairman and president of the Canadian Pacific painted out that the aver- age rredsght rate per ten per mile In Canada. is about 5% per cent lower than in the 11.8., and that the average of Canadian grain rates is 40 per cent lower. The o'l`ra.ns-Canada will cross the continent in an hour and a halt less time eastbolmd, and an hour less westbound than it did last year. This does not mean that Canada has got any smaller, but that the Canadian Pacific Railway is running the famous yer on an improved schedule. Some foundation for the old nickname woolly west is found in the report that Ahbertals wool output for 1928 amounted to 3.033.- 181 pounds. Altogether the Domin- ion produced over eighteen and a half million pounds. Steel is replacing wood in freight service on the Canadian Pacic Railway as 7.500 box cars now on order for the company will be of steel construction. They will have a capacity of about 2,000 bushels of grain and a load of 120,000. pounds. I 2, I T-III |v\I IIJVW gfutie industry. Penny postage, inaugurated at Christmas, is working well .and bringing about a notable increase in letter mails from Canada to the British Isles. according to federal postal officials. It is estimated that the increase in the course of a year would be such as to _;n__;. .u_- onnnnnn ....A.:.....L...l .... offset the duction in rate. In Manitoba, there is one tractor` for every 4.6 farms; in Saskatche- wan, one for every 4.7 farms; and In Alberta, one for every 7.5 farms. It all the tractors were hitched together, how long could it take a garage mechanic to reach the moon. For the sixth successive year Dean. Sinclair Laird of Macdonald College, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, will conduct - an all ex- pense tour across Canada and back, starting from Toronto on July 22. and lasting for 21 days. The party travels in a special train wztthabaggage carlledupasa 1 sixty-toot dressing-room. vgnu utvov w. . Several carloads of Western horses have been sold in Creemore during the past few weeks. fl `IL! 7Ul'Hr-Incl] `A/l'1 .A -In n nnnnno In a recent speech at Kitchener, | \-.J-_.I.. 17! 1* `l)auu6-Ova Aivunl-u-nnnvu I [ere andT}1ere '2\( )`6:(\)l00Wes;:,;te1T re: revenue by the penny this province. His forte was in organ- lzation, and he threw himself into that in the temperance struggle. Also as a city missionary he studied the under- world here, and assailed the city auth- orities for allowing disorderly houses to exist, and criticized the Provincial Government over the Protestant Wo- men's Jail. Dr. Hart is survived by his widow, formerly Miss Laura Harper of Barrie; a. son, Harry, 3. medical man'in New York, and a daughter, Grace Hart, in the Department of External Affairs, Ottawa. Funeral service will be held here Saturday afternoon at Dominion Douglas Church, Westmount, and in- terment will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto. There are now transatlantic liners so large that Babe Ruth's longest hit 1moM NINTH T0 FOURTII Twin-Ignition motor 12 Aircraft-type spark plugs. High compression Houdaille and Loveioy shock absorbers (eschsive Nab mounting) Salon Bodies yuuv own Iv J. H. M1?5{'11, M.L.A., is a patient in Alliston hospital, suffering from an attack of erysipelas. Ilflbln ikn nan f\` A .....Au-n1...-u &I..n IMPORT.NT 400" FEATURES-JVO OTHER CJR HJS TIIEJI ./ILL NALLY, a system of centralized chassis lubrication has been per- fected which operates easily . .` . im- mediately . . . and invariably. Nash now offers it on every Advanced and Special model of the new 400 series . ; ; Nash-Bijur . . . the nest de- vice ever produced to supply chassis bearings with necessary lubrication. You simply press a convenient pedal (a child can do it), and twenty-nine chassis points ; ; . spring shackles, steering knuckles, clutch bearing and the like . . . are bathed in fresh, clean, wear-resisting oil. Nash-Bijur centralized lubrication does away with all the bother and expense of old-fashioned chassis greas- ing. Press the pedal once a day, lubri- cation follows. Chassis squeaks are avoided, chassis wear is prevented . . ; when the car you drive is the new and ner Nash 400. "`NewNA_H4.Q0" fected Does the Stock Market Shut Anyone Out? Nash-Bijur Centralized Chassis Llibrictation :rHE BELL TELEPHONE 7orld s Hnwt Lulnicaing System H. R. PALMER Anyone can buy shares of the Bell Telephone Company because they are listed on the stock exchange. uuvnvn UL \4LJh1Al-IVI(lDo With the use of a snowplow the road from Meaford to Owen Sound was opened last week. f\II{ln lVt\`v\:\t\`:u -u-II1 `ca 1nnn ugnuqlun Anyone thus can become a shareholder and exercise whatever rights share- holders may have in purchasing new issues of stock. I Bell Telephone stock - old and new - has always been available to anyone who wants it. And it is available to the public now on the open market. Aluminum alloy pistons (Invar Struts) New double drop frame Torsional vibration 1 U1 DIULIIII. Vluldllllll damper WorId s easiest steering 7-bearing crankshaft (bellow crank pins) The Bell Telephone Company is owned by 15,500 shareholders and no individual has as much as ons quarter of one per cent of the total shares. ball would fall far short of the length of the vessel. L;a;s tI-a; W`orld in Jlotor (tar Value ` TORONTO, ST. THOMAS, WINDSOR, LONDON LINDSAY, KITCHENER, ORILLIA, PETERBORO -------- Local Office: ------z 12 Owen . F. G. OKE & CO. MINING STOCK BROKERS lint] Ill-1l`.I\a\ &\.IL 10 IyUV,U\lUo Sawdust from the Seaman-Kent fac- tory. Meaford. is being shipped in large quantities to the west. `Inn :-un kuvdvn cdnnvvvn:-I n nun;-Jinn In

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