Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 12 Dec 1929, p. 5

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Young Lainb:-_. 38 Fresh, Loin. Pork lb. soc Fresh Shoulder Pork lb. 1813 Fresh Butt. Pork lb. 24 Freshly Chopped Suet lb. 1 7:: Beck` Bologna lb. 2.2:: Smoked Picnics lb. 204: FINNAN I-lADDlE` MC!!91!9'!..G!`9F9PY Chuck Roast Bee Wing Roast Beef Ports:-house Roast Saliman 222:: mace White Fish '1'hu_rsda.y. December 12. 1929 Delivery to Any f A Complete Service _ - f Part of Town PHONE 215 Beef 33 Corner Elizabethjnd Mary Sts., Barrie From Quarter BONED AND ROLLED Finest Quality !held at Guelph, Monday, was Elmer '?Hussey, Simcoe County, who stood giifth, South Simcoe stood 13th out of 1 ".22 counties entered in respect to points .5 s;:c)1'Cd. Stewart Page, District Agri- uultural Representative, gave an ad- r .".2'es3 Tuesday on the Barrie Junior lb. 21 lb. 31: 133. 33c Among the high ranking individual contestants at the inter-county live stock judging competition in connec- tion with the Provincial Winter Fair 22 HOME-MADE MINCEMEAT . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 lbs. 25c $`ii`Zifa.a u--1 7 syn--.5`.--v _.w. I At the regular meeting of Cralgvale `L.O.L. 605 on Decamber._4, the elec- tion of officers resulted as fol1ows:-- W.M.,, Rex Guest: D.M., Wm. Reyn- olds; Chap., Michael Kennington; Rec. Sec'y.. Lyall Guest; Fin. Sec`y., Fred Webb; Trea_.s.. M. G. Mccuish; Marsh., Fred Elliott; 1st Lect., Gecrge Martin; 2nd Lect., Wilbert Black; Comm1tteemen-Haro1d Webb, W. L. Black, Wm. Reid. John Johnston, Robt. Sproule; Fiowar Committee, J. Leonard, Robt. Vaughan, Albert Leon- ard. I\0DI....-n `D Q4-an-J I f\' `I113 nomu ucnz. : ' Visitors during the week included ;Mr. and Mrs. Rex Baker and children, I ,Miss Beard, Dee Barclay of Toronto. `Miss Lee. and Miss Watson. at Thos. I Scythes . . - (`.1-nhrvnln I. 01., The annual meeting of Stroud L.O. L. No. 234 was held Dec. 5. 1929. Of- ficers elected for 1930 are as follows: -I-nap ~r'r........ 1';........`IA.-. 1111;! `I'_I'.\u-_ some of our professional reformers might take a. gentle hint from 9. schoolboy s essay on Socrates. _The boy wrote: Socrates was a. `great man. He was a. sort of tramp. He went around telling people what to do, and they poisoned h_1m. Fair. He found that a considerable number of fairs had included some form of junior fair work in their pro- grams recently. Mrs. Cameron of Toronto is the guest of her sister,` Mrs. Ben. Webb. Miss Hazel Jacks left last week on a trip to Bermuda. Bon voyage, Hazel. Wm. Metcaife of Meaford is visiting his brother, John Metcalfe, here. I" I ...u_...... u..u+k.n nrhn in tnlrinc '4 `ms Drouner, uuuu Lvzcuuauc, nus. Aubrey Scythes, who is taking a course in the Aircraft Mechanical School, Toronto, spent over Sunday at = his home here. I 111-14.--- .:u..d.\..- +1-ma nmnlr {nn'ln:-10:4 SIIMCOE BOY STANDS FIFTH IN COMPETITION` ...__.__ | LAUUI3 CLCUBCU JUL Avuv Gnu no ..u;.uwa. I.P.M., Harry Reynolds; W.M., Har- ry Kelcey; D;M., Cliffqrd Lockharn; Chaplain, Lambert Wice; Rec. Sec y, Earl Jobbltt; Fin. Sec'y, Wm. B1ack;l Treas., '1`. A. Reynolds; Marshal, Geo. Givens; 1st Lecturer, John Reynolds, find `I nnfnv-an `Eh-n `Dnunn1r1a' UHVUHB, Lav ucuuulca, uvuu uac_yuJAua, Jr.; 2nd Lecturer. Fred Reynolds; Committeemen, Eldon Wice, W. H. Martin, Wm. Hunter, John Reynolds, Sr., Wm. Smythe; Tyler, Wilt. Hop- kins; Lodge Auditors, J. C. Neelands, Fred"Reyno1ds; Trustees, John Reyn- olds, Sr., Eldon Wise, Sylvester Reyn- olds. County Master Harvey conduct- ed the installation 0? officers. e&&&&ma&&&m a ammo * %$m&wmm&&wy Officers of Stroud L.O.L. 6 lbs. 19c 3 for 231: 2 Reads 1512 :9 D02. 49 Cralgvale L.0.L. __ _p An urgent appeal for workers in the Chinese mission eld was put forward 'in Collier Street United Church, Mon- {day night, by Dr. Howard Taylor, of the China Inland Mission, and by Rev. Graham Anderson, principal of the Bible Institute at Shansl. The meet- ing was a representative one and was |well attended. _, t While they were away from their work i and faced with the possibility of at T least temporary failure they seemed to 2 have got a broader vision of the work I W cu U. L UCLLUCU. Dr. Taylor is a son of Dr. Hudson Taylor, the famous founder of inland missions in China. He gave an inter- esting talk upon the situation in the Chinese`eld at present andtouched briefly on his father's work there. He had with him samples of a number of books dealing with the question of Chinese missions several of which were written by his father and one by him- self and his wife. 1 Need of More Workers Mr. Graham Anderson dealt with the need of more workers in the Chinese mission eld if the Gospel work is to hold _its- own there. He told of the serious Iset-back the missionaries had received in 1925 when the forces of darkness" took advantage of civil strife in China to banish the Christian work- lers. After the long battle they had waged and the .terrible hardships they endured they were herded off to the coast and their mission stations clos- ed. It was indeed a dark period in the lives of these men and `women who had sacriced so much and `whose work seemed to have been brought to naught by sudden upheaval and chaos. Got Broader Vision In the end, Mr. Anderson thought, this reverse suffered by the mission- aries had not been an unalloyed evil. that was still before them and with it came an assurance that all would yet be well. This hope proved well found- ed because in 1927 they were on their way back to their stations strengthen- ed as a result of what they had pass- -..) ;v....A....I.. Missionaries Make Appeal; Tell of Conditions There. |mLAnn GIIIIA means wonms _ m UITS and v:aE1'Anu-ts g No.` 1 GRADE COOKING ONIONS i - `i 1 1 TEXAS SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT - 23 ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE - - cnozcz NAVEL ommcnsw Large size 5: WIRNOl.D S Au.-CANADIAN Manxzrs-an 1 4, WE DELIVER FREE TO ANY PART 01% TOWN V- .-.. .. ..a--. A Gigantic Task Making use of a map to illustrate iwhat he was saying the speaker des- cribed the outlying parts of the Chin- ese eld that demanded the attention .of Christian missionaries. Manchuria `itself had 30,000,000 and Thibet would soon be thrown open to the teachers of Christ. It was hard, he said, for those who had not actual experience with the problem in China to realize what `a gigantic task lay ahead of the Gos- zpel messengers. There was a popula- ,;i.1:1 of 399,000,000 to be reached and 0 with all that had been done up to date `there were only upwards of one mil- [lion Christians divided between Pro- 'testant and Catholic churches. 1 Ce. L\......... .-.-.. .. A. than I` nnuanf far- u no a. A-you ed through. LUDLELLID uuu L/auuuuu uluuuuca. ! So there was a. call for a great for- Ilward movement at this time. The lhour was at hand and the vast country was ready for it. It had been estimat- :ed that there was an immediate need lfor 200 missionaries to occupy the new aeld. He hoped many would hear the ca11--many who were ready to give up ease, a. home of their own and who were willing to endure hardship in order that countless millions should hear l the Gospel. Apathy to Appeal Illustrating the apathy with which . this appeal for mission workers was lsometimes heard Mr. Anderson told an `incident in the life of Dr. Hudson Tay- O1-.. rru... ......... ....:...~-inns.-u tuna O-v-n1yn'|- uncluent iii uu: nu`: UL ui. xauuauu ;.u:_y1* 1101'. The great missionary was trave - .ling down a river in China on board a steamer when he became acquainted with a Chinese who was much inter- Tested in Christian teachings. The two iconversed often and Dr, Taylor was shocked one day to hear cries from the deck indicating that his -Chinese friend had fallen overboard. He rush- ed to the rail and plunged into the riv- er after the man, who had gone down by this time. Swimming to the spot where the victim had disappeared Dr. Taylor shouted for several natives who were in a small boat shing with a net to come and assist him. They replied that they were too busy. He urged them and they said they couldn t- 0`.- liord to. Finally they asked him what |money he would give them lg tifly came and he said all that he ha . e shermen got the man in their net bllllt lit was too late to revive him. So 6 gperished because his compatriots 1:Vl"3 `too mercenary to leave their wor or lthe few minutes necessary to save him. I -n.r....l.. ......- Cu-onh-hrzu-I `luv u nhnir ran- - L116 Lew luuluuca .ucuI:aoa.Ly uu nan; nu... Music was fumishled by a choir rep- resentative of several Barrie +churc-.135. |Rev. J. J. Black. pastor of the church. lpresided. Rev. N. Campbell led in` | prayer. / Llldl I\\.I I Thomas Atkinson has been conned to the house for the past two weeks _on account of illness. `I-Iis condition is inow much improved and he will soon lbe around again. 1:! 1 `Dn1c-nn ic H1'I man: 111 with yuan lull CC vvcuna `Mrs. T. F. Swindle, Mrs. W. C. In- `gram and daughter Kathleen are vis- itors. in Toronto this week. Lefroy Has Community Hall | At a meeting held in Grange Hall .on Thursday last the Grangers hand- ed over to the community their hall to be converted into a suitable com- munity hall as a gift to the commun-. ity. The following officers were ap- pointed to take charge of the neces- sary work; Trustees, F. ii. Tebo, Frank Beatty and William Reid, with Nor- man King, Milton Reid, Ivan Grose and Harry Stewart forming a business '| committee along with the trustees. 'D8 aruuuu ag'd.u1. ` W. J. Ralston is still very 111 with very little change since last week. 1 "r'|1na +`n1`|nmina- man: \m=:>lr-nnr'l vis- gvery uuuu: Uuaugc auxuc anon wccn. i The following were week-end vis- `litors from Toronto: Miss Eleanofand Ewart Ralston, Miss Maude Atkinson and Mr. Cliff. 11:..- 1_-r..1..... \Tn1l~r\|-\ has -and-uwngpl in AARNOI-D"'S T Snecial Bacon 235:: =- 31 uuu LVLL. uuxx. Miss Helen Nelson has returned to Toronto after spending some time with her parents here. mil .-o `III A Tnkn In annnrnrr a four VVJIJLL LLCL IJGLCIJUD JIULC. Mrs. F. A. Tebo is spending at few days in Hamilton. "l'\1nn umui-ham r-nnH~nnnc nnhl n1'H'.'h uU4_yD L11 LIIILILJJIJULJ. The weather continues cold with -both motoring and sleighing for the past three weeks. Jul -nu '1` `El .Qn1ihr11n TM :-c I I ! Tn- Local or district news on every page 'l'!ll.BkiiiiXlliI gwawzwawavawwaawwzmvwaawazaa@3@@@wa@@@@@a&% I@@Q?@@@`@@@&@@2'&@@E'@@3`@@@`@@@'@@@@'@@'@@@@@@ I Uul [Jul vllucv nnwnv a-nun. -aw _..-_-....---- envy mun SUV Hmuuy Hum or we bottom. solid heel, reinforced 3-211:1:-._.-W:=.. . `uyfm edge, every pair warranted to 15-1n. helght, Speczal $0 give satisfaction. Pair .. .. . , ` G. MOORE S SHOE STORE Rib Roast ` `About 10-in. height, 7-eyelets lace, heavy rubber, double sole, `solid heel, snug-tting top, 6 to 12--Specia.1 ` 3 This 5-eyeIet style ts snug and close in ankle. `Black gum rub- ber, heavy double sole, solid heel, reinforced edge, sizes 6 to 12. Special - Pair Built to stand hard service- lace style, close ankle-tting, solid heel, extra heavy soles. :::::;:: 5:11? %%%%%% $1.25 :::::e:::: %%%%%%% $1.65 11111111 % $1.85 Bottom of extra good quality. Every pair warranted to give satisfaction. sizes 1 to 5. 1e-gA-'-Specia.1 2 . 12-1n."i'eg--SpeVr.:i,1 pm ll ............ ._ $2.95 Don t Miss This Special Offering Leather-Top Rubbers for Men Boys Heavy Rubbers Boys Lace Leather- Top Rubbers -._-..- -..v--vJ vv vnnn V Rubbers QUALITY. THAT WILL GIVE REAL SERVICE Arnold s Markets offer you from week to week outstand- ing values in finest-qilality foods `and an increasing num- ber of discriminating custom- era are more and more taking advantage of the complete service offered. Here Is Wonderful Bargain x.n;% - CHIPPAWA z.9" #M`00Ri Shoe Store % Page Fivo Kettle A Rand Earai % ARI~EOI.F.D S 3-lb. Pail 4%

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