, {lat l.S1JIIIIIAu uv-u -.1------.. --7- . 7 . l wood blocks. was known and ractised mu_ch earlier. perhaps as any as t.he eighth century, in him. Movable tyvpes`of porcelain. wood . nd metal were used in China from 04] onwards, but knowledge of\ _eir use does not seem to have `, prend beyond the Orient. The Chi- ' ese. ton. discovered how to make taper in the second century-and `; nowledge of this process was car- ied eastward at intervals through 5 he cr-nturics. till it reached West- " rn Europe about a thousand years " ater. Hy the fifteenth century the -Juropczius. too, were printing from nodmi blacks, large blocks on .'hich :1 picture with a legend. or . ezhaps the words of a much-used >6 tauuscript were cut in high relief. _heu inked and an-impression taken y n in sheet of-vellum or paper. A r umber of these sheets printed on` Inc or both sides and fastened to-[ ether. xvus called at block book.| lock books were just coming into; - lie, when suddenly (for 3 deCadc' ' Inn! 'lI1 inctnnt nf time in the` 1 Once the Press loses its voice, the people are blinded 1.0 the truth, gagged, silenced. Once the Press is dictated to, the 1)cop1o are put. in cha1ns-and4fascism plants its barbarism upon :1 nation. Wherever dictatorship has come into power, the first shadow of its coming has been cast upon the pages of the Press . . . If in Canada. the Pres is ever denied its right to differ, argue, opinionate; if it be deprived of its inalienable heritage to cry out against inju:~:t,ice. to challenge corrupt.ion--then the Bill of Rights would be dead. Consider the Press abroad---silcncc(l. inert, docndt-nt,; told what to write, when to`wr1t.c. how to write! Consider the people :1|)r0u(l- crushed, blinded, gagged; told what to do. when to an it, how to (10 it! Fascism annihllates the liberties of all by first, crushing the Press. With a free Press dead, the people are easier Victims . . . this is the picture under? Fasclsnr! \j' 1'|uSc|\oo| tering community em0l`p"c. and `friendliness. the weekly ne\vspupc-rs. independent in thought and expres- sion. comprise one of our most im- portant. guarantees of dcmncracy. n :- 4.. 1.... .-:..,...A...I. knnnri in VUI L(Illl- 5|.luAuu\.\.g \I| pup`.---.....,_, V It is to be sincerely hoped, in` these days when the tendency 15 so` much toward mnnnpolistic\?vr cen- Jralvized control. that the time will The Bank Hurrlr Brunch H H N!-3'l"l`l.E'l`ON. Manager ailiing, t|LI.% Mother of Progress, M Ce|br_____g_t 500th An -___.._ ._:_?_____.. O "The Bank ot Toronto loaned me money to ln:y seed and to buy livestock. Several times I have been able to hold my crops and stock for more favourable prices through my bank : help. Yes -I would say that The Bank at Toronto has helped me to make tanning protable." You are cordially invited to dinner your loan problems with the local manager ot `BANIMOROIIIO `nnua T lneovporalccd 1855 I The Town Hall never come whvn the valve and in? flucncc of weekly n('wsp.'I|)('l`S throughout Czmudn are no more. `.....n an, _ ||II\vubII\vu|. \.--uuuu .u\. ..u ......\_ May our excellent Barrio Ex;un- incr find its best days are still ylhend, _./5... ..-....___. ._.-'o, .. .. .. .__. The Examiner sells at $2.00 and IS worth more. 1`liu`iut.y.' Odmbu` 9. >1s4o_ Allamdznlo Branch F. STEVENSON. `.V1:Inag(~r --___._-_.__.:_... '|}'t` .\|H'\'l\'\'(l In nu` pu-.~v;xu unu-. \_';0X`d.\ lhv c-nd of Ihxs experi- .\ -NQI pvrmd Gutenberg cast a "V _`._;;1v m-w {nm of typo. But as Q). `\~' rurnvd In mechanical ra- 1 finuncml aachiovemcnl. he Egs uh z;:(`d in pledge his posses- ons rm` .1 loan u! cash 10 Johann ust. :1 man of capital in Mainl. `h|Iht`l` Gutenberg returned about `-!B. \V;'.h Fust was ussociahed a ` um: t.cchnic'mn named Peter chxvcfhr. who later beczmw his I1-1n-!:nv and partner. Fust and ` Ihoeer w-.-rs- comm-zrcially mind- i .., and with the benefit 0! Gulen- I "-'-*`~;;`4= mventwe genius they pro- ' sad the first great monument to "nvegxtixnn of typography. I Bi- lhe "Gutmnberg" or (Z- M%.be," was printed on 12821 v invention of printing from 10 metal, types is associated. ing to the best available evi- / Am the name of Johann} 'U I Hliilh HI7U!'L`>32UH.'i IFUHI _blI._cks. Nnw Gutenberg fur- -dnp:-sd H in pr`n1ing from X.' met:-I types` Probably as- vd wnh Guicnborsz in some, v.-5 vne. Andre-w Drnzchn. in` )3 u v m . irznsbourxz the press "-:`.1d .nd the 10015 and equip-' km! That 1110 invennon was. [Cd :95 potentially of great "xrr.-I value is shnwn by the` urn 1hr.` urn:-cusses were guard-` '('full_V. and by the (unher fact; m the dmth v`! Drnzohn. his' -H. In 1339. brought sun In :J_qh1.~ m Gulenbc-rx's outm-~ ul succmzs. IL is one of the H nrmxrs of hislory that thc_ L M this trial "inundation" . m thn odifacc n! fame ervctedt kn .. _t I*.............'.. ....4;......l lIll'l'H-lH|\.'dl lllVL'Xl||UlIh. EIHUI I-136 onward he was preoccu-I`: snh their application to print H-~ vxgwrunentcd with metals: ~r-vt kmrls for making typtnjg ' m-.-1.-I pnnorns of type bodies: -Vdxvzdurul letter fares on the," I'V`?\1 1hr` pntvrns ho strucki c -a.~A n.\nu|-..n0nA o. nan--IA` 1: 1 `I \l('T"1iHl_\' 5 iidlllil HQ": nutd have been dest'r0yt-di >` l`rLI::.~nans Lnuk Strasbourg. HHH` EH10 I 'Ulll l|HIl' IU Ulllrg mu 1440's. producvd a (cw urcrs. 1'lwsx- were a Latin ` cummuul_\- called DODIIIILI wm and 2: calendar for lhci t Only rrugments. the odd tluuxc early productions. 'v|\'x~d tn the present time. I... and nf chi: nxnsIri- cnmr cumlnuod improving (nu-, and f"nm time 10 time n... :.a.4n~.. ...-.\.I..n...a .. lnnrl each, and with 42 lines to tho col- umn. lt bore no printer's name nor date. but the work was completed some time before August.. 1456, and` by that time Fusi & Schocffm` hudv eased Gutenberg out nf the enter-I prismkeeping his equipment. which i i had secured the lnan. ' f!..o.~.nJ`n.-n mu-nnrl hie n:n'1in1`l `large folio pages of two columns "' Laurens Janszoon-Caster, ox nar- "m. in the Netherlands. but for hich :he evidence seems, most part. spurious. Block printing, at is printing from symbols carved L1... in the - I JOHANN GUTENBERG The inventor of printing from moveablc metal- types. I E I had secured me man. Gutenberg retained his curlicl` types and from those about 1460. was printed another Bible. 36 lines to the page. Fusi & Sclmuffer in `the meantime had prep:ii':-cl sin edi- tion of the Psulter. the nmsi beauti- lful work. it is said. over p`i'inled--- I large pages of te_xt in black and red. `N l-with decorative capitals of lllll'l(`..`lI(." design. in three glowing colors and perfect impression. This bunk hnre i the date 145'7..\vilh the priniers_ I n;'ime'and trade-mark. Their niark ,|of crossed shields has been perpetu- atc-d as the symbnllif ilie ln1er1~.u- r tional Association of lrin1,ing House Craft,sfnen.. I` "Gaul-\ .. .. .....-... ......y.... ..-.n.mmnH Ito ilarge -with intricate 1457. .\vith printers` nimeand lof . . Gutenber-g`s name l'iL`Vt.`l"'tlD})(`lll`t?(l upon any book printed from his types and he died an ::`o.~`Cn:`e figure in 1468. But, the brilliant achiev<*-' ments of typography in subsrquent years ha-ve been the most grat.if_vin;:` eulogium an inventor would desire And. now five hundred years later. almost every country in the world _lacclaims him as one of the :.:rcate.:'. _ modern benefactors of mankind. It. has been stated that of all the .|world's inventors. two stand out pre-eminently in the :id\'anCemenI . of literature and cducation--Ts'ai . Lun. the inventor of paper tChina. . AD. 105), and Gutenberg. the orig- ; inator of movable types (1440). i From Mainz. printing spre;2d.-_int.o -lIta1y. France and`-the -Ne.tl1\:rlands 1 in 1474-76. wi1ita,;iv"t`:r;:<.'imi: mi E_n_.",- y lish merchant. resident in` the `Luv- 5 flCountries. learned how to l7l'll il :indjm1' `In me l`n(`,:lntlrn(: tviuiitiuui nuu gu- its first printer, Fleury Mesplet who arrived. also from Philadcphia.' in 1776. and twelve years later launched t.he`Montreal Gazette. The first printing done in Upper Ctihada was at Newark, now Nia- _1ara-on-the-lake. where in 1793 iLicutcnant-Colonel John Graves `Simeoo. the Lieutenant Governor.. set. up a French Canadian. Louis Roy. whom he had brought with him from Quebec. 'I`wo pamphlets.'. one entitled The Speech of His Ex-" ccllcncy John Graves Simcoe. and` the other The Acts of the Legisla- ,turc of Upper Canada. were printed. by Roy early in the year. The firstl new::paper was the Upper Canada `Gazette which appeared on April `in t.he modern sense of the word. lthat is. an organization which as- Lsumes the risk of publishing maim- seripts. and sets up a sales organi- Vzation to distribute them. was pro- lbably the R_\'erson Press. which de- lveloped from the printing office ;which Egcrton Ryerson founded to `,print. that famous old Methodist pa- '`per. the Christian Guardian. ; The first. press west of Ontario `was constructed at Norway House. iin` Mani`.rl)a. about one hundred '\4un:-uu. nu .u-.u \II.\\.a|, uh-.u_.a uy-.-.. ;ablet. 2.273 ,3 .r.tEn;.'. ;,ubl`.sl1ing and book Ibinding plants. ru=prcsentin;.: an investment of $118.2-43,293. em- ployed 37.459 men and women. on a pay roll of $5(l.5ti4.Sl38. with a gross value of production. totalling @117,- 592.784. :8 _, Soldier Sentenced . To Three-Month Term Assault on Civilian This was a particularly Vicious and unprovoked assault" comment- ed Mugist1`ale Compton Jeils Satur- day morning as he sentenced Pie. Cyril Davies. 25. Camp Borden. to three months in gaol on a charge of il8. 1793. The first publishing house.l assaulting Ernest Cook. 30. South River. civilian wol`k(`r at Camp Borden. occasioning actual bodily harm, in the beverage room at `he lClit'ton Hotel. about 10.30 p.n1.,' Sep- tember 18. Cook testified in the box that, ac- `,e'used had demanded that he buy `him a beer. and that Davies had `struck him with both fists and feet. requiring six Stitches in the cheek and live under the right eye. Dav- ies. who was not represented by vcounsel. denied the use of his feet and main`nine(i that he and Cook .'_vea'rs a;zo---one of the most ingen- iious ever made. ....tr:o on fun-H-\nv hi: PM. James Evans. :1` to the Indians. wantedl had just been tighting and that he lhad used his lists -only. Medical at- .tention was given at Dr. G. C. Sey- ..M`:.... i l unuucnu ux.uLLu\.LuLa u; -u.-nu-nu. `world's of` : `Rrnm Nlnin-7 nrintinrr .intu |lYlkit0l' U1 lIlU\/';-tt_JH.: typvs lA'1'1U). i ---~ .-~--- I From. spread..jnt..~;was at V` tltaly, and-.-me..N.t}15;x-land: Lin` , I_l11474-73.Wi1ilZlr11`|;C;}$iK3li:.*tli_Etlg'i'3'0"'i'5 the 1 resident Tljov" md ~" it Countries. ivrint at1dimiSi0|titl`3' W `Villlmd ,' produced in his o\\n Eitglislt trans-`R Pl`imin! 0111-51 1 further his W` '1 ' lation_ the first bank (I\ ()1` pi~imec:ili;ziotis and educational work. He - in English: Recuyell of the Ilystoryes ;C0u1dn't import one. for the Hudson t of Troye. a popular classic tale ot`;Brty Co.. which controlled the area. 5 the fall of Troy_ soon ~aftgn;vard=;declin.ed to undertake its transpor- [ he rettt,rnec_l'to plngtand with print- tation._ 'So'h_e. t nade_ what he requir-t ing types and set up shop netnmed: type. of lead from tea boxes. . Westminster Abbey. So the storytcast. in wooden moulds which he` . of printing in the Ertglish-snealtimi cut for the purpose: ink. from ehim-t - world `begins with Caxton 1',;'I`h; _ ney soot; for paper. birch-bark. Hist _ year after Caxton died. Cotttn'ib~ts t nrdss was the old fur press used in Jdiscovered a new_eo,n't_ii'tent_ art`-t}s,~s'it:lie.' `Company's tradini-`. t >0St- Hi-`~ .|the Atlantic Ocean. and the fiist it\'pC is very interesting. for the face _ governor there. the ViL'et`o_v of Non `shows not letters of our alphabet. t Spain.~had a printinzx press bl`0t:{itt `but Cree syllabics which Evans to Mexico City about 1535. the first ihimself invented. symbols by which in America. he represented the sounds of the The next one came from England Cree dialect. and in which he print- to New England in 1638. to be so` ,ed spelling and hymn books for the` I I s : up by Stephen Days and his t\.\'-'llIt`.dlHl1S. t s I - A Isons at Cambridze. l\/lassaehuset:.<.; Local printing appeared on the" iunder direction of Harvard College West Coast in 1858 when the rush just then opening its doors. Dayeis for gold was on. Four newspapers ftfirst. substantial work appeared in`were started in Victoria within six H1640. It was a hook certziin of sale I months. of which one. The (Yolonist. _ among the Puritan settlers in thtystill appears. _iColony of t\1assachii<-.~`.ts 85!) . The The invention of modern printin siwhole Booke of Psalnu-s. oz` as it is maehiner_\' is a story in itself \VhlCl:| .t'1:`ncr:ilt)' known. "'Int~ it--v I".<.wltn cannot be told here. One rather! <"Book." D-t.\.'e Dr`-ntt'd 1709 Wtit`-< astonishing {net is that no substan- gtot this book and not more than -- tial changes in the original mechan-i . 'ttozen are known today. 1, is cattt-ri ical operations were made during! .tne mos: valuable inwk r\"*" D`.'ttti;"l `the first four hundred years attei "-'t D4 1707- D -*.\ l">' '~`-"-` "-" |i:s invention. The manufactuie oft Samuel Gl`(`('h and Svmt:~t's e:';tnd- lnrint.n,r: m:-chinor_\' is eomparati-.'(:-t son. B7lf'ihUi!"l n('\\'. t>rott::ht H }H'Cs l`t(`Ctlt in its histor_v. It has nowt to Halifax in l7.3l ll-r'.'n-t'.~.in.v\\.~limit.-h-`d the stone of n larpze-sealt-. associate. John nllshtfil. Cilll`lt'(i or indus'.r_v and printin;.', machines art- the work fl!-I\\'ttlL` H14.` t'~>rnr a" `{ntw~i t he both as precise and as it if Sudden death. and i)~.t"nnt- t".zn.ud;i'.< -~-.\mhl'ze;it-r~d as almost an) htoctez . 3 first printer and the t'ottv.d:-_r of its industrial tnat-liinery _ ttrst n<:w.~'p.'tpt-r. the Ilzulifax G:I- But. prior to lttti. printing`, was P zelte. titrgrily it hand t'r.itt. 'l`l1<~t'e wet: c.. I...` i... /i.'.-v'ln.v` t uintz vwthni` {`I`ll{lt` nnwt-r oresses for t1:: TI: STI'Il'III'..\' l).'\\'I'I PRICSS In 1838 the In-vcn-nd Jone Glow-r -migrated frum Enahillll N` 3"-"' loll with his wife and cllildrru. n Inrgr amnunl M prrsunml properly. Ind to printing 1111-55 and [um or Iypr. no (Hrd on [he voyage. but the` press was promptly at`! up un Inn is mm llnI_m|u- Street in (`ambrmgc 5) 310959" 9139- This \\s:.- (hr firut printing press used north 0! Max- Ico on this Coutlm-nl_. Thv Ilrsl ark produm-d on the prom was Thu` Freeman`: Oath. vrinlvd in H3391 on u was also print:-d. in I640. I the (list book printed in Engligsh in .-\mer|c'.t. The Bay Psalm Book. E. I tar as can be du- any certainty there was no printing 1 shop in Quebec. or Nouvelle France : us it was" called. during the French regime. On at least three occasions. however. requests were made of persons in authority for the privi~ loge of~establishing a press. Jes- Lilfmissionaries in Quebec applied lor :1 printing press in 1665: the Su!- ` `picians in Montreal made the same request 01' the Superior of their 01- der in Paris. 1683. In 1749. M. dc 13 Galissionniere asked the Minister of Marine and Colonies for the same urivilege but his request. like the others was denied, I Afinr T\Tmum1ln F`:--irmn hnmunn the lnthers denied. 1 After Nouvelle France became the !British colony of Quebec in 1763. 1 '..wo young primers employed in the '. office of William Dunlap. Benjamin Franklin's brother-in-law in Phil- adelphia, ventured into Quebec and announced the publication of 1 lweekly newspaper. The Quebec Gal Izcttc. published in English and French in parallel columns. appear- .\.-: fire! nn Jnnn `).1 1764. zmd con- 1"l'(`llCl1 Ill [)ill`IlllL`l Ctllulllllb. alppccu- l `ed first on June 21. 1764. and con-`I tinned with but two brief interrup-it (ions until 1874--:\ 1`em:u'kablc re~ cord for a pioneer publishing firm.| {Brown and Gilmore primed many tbrmks in English or French or both. tln both they printed all the l:iws_ wind government publications. One int the most. interesting of their pro-' |ductinns is :1 Czmudizm edition of the Stamp Act. dated Quebec. 1766.`; In the meantime Montreal had gall ;..< f;1c0 .u Plmn-v l\/[nu-nlnll i C, \'/HPH Slldflellly H01` 2! ueuuuu but an instant of time the uttuml histury of man) betweon 535 and 1545. some one invented mct )wi't`uctcd a process for makingl ndividua] letters of metal. These ettors could be composed" into vords. printod. then "distributed" or furthvr composition. _ r`h-{nu tn thn inunnlinn nf nl`il`H.in!1.. ~ \ S _S1lH I "<\n1 _, .1. cannot the original mechan- first hundred aftci` iits invention. nrinlinsz ly rrccnt :~~;u-h-rd 1nr;zc--scnlL- iindus`.r_v ~1\m\v~x as N rather now! ic:;i`i-ad any ilndians. ! ; the t lninmhs. ,siiH "Nan ammminn nf nrintinz wore six'- IlH|ll.\tl|lll II|l|Ll|lII\1'V. I prior to 1865, priming wus! a Thvro wmr| rnthor crude power prosses for, - -, ..._. .-__.___._______ ' newspapers. but all type had 'to be set by hand. Presses for the pro- duction of commercial work devel- oped in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. The first ro- tary press appeared in America in 1865. The linotype machine for east- mg and setting type was invented by Ottmar Mcrgenthaler in Balti- more. 1885, and put into use the fol- lowing year by the New York Tri- bune. The Monotype machine, also for type casting and setting, was invented by 'I`olbert Lanston, in Washington. 1887. From the primi- tive large thread screw press, op- erated by hand, there was made a faster screw press. Then operat- ing levers replaced the screw. and iron frames replaced the wooden. frames. Horse power was added to I man power: then mechanical pow- i or replaced the horse. Stereotyping - began as early as 1812. with David I Bruce. and iithographing. a process - discovered by young Alois Sen'efeld- -'er. about 1800. Photoengraving -111880). and modern lithographic pro- - ' cesses hdwever. are quite recent de- .|velopmenis. 1| ,l\/lnnvn nu-iniinrr rnnhinnrv inll i |VL'lU|.)lllL'Illb. Modern printing machinery tells its own story. ` V The printing and publishing 1n- dusiry has so extended its services -in the community that it. occupies `a place of primary importance in I the economic life of the country. In {Canudu. in 1.~.'.d tlotcst figures uvznl able). `book l I x l. [HFCC YIIUHIHS In gElUl UH El (III `K? (H! :ass3uiting bodily` :u:-`' `c'used {him ~;1,ruck `requiring ve Dav-I by` Cooki` `had he. at-i mour`s office. A thxvnnn `u~nnl Ilvnn. `l "" W" ' ' | -_ GUESSEI) RIGHT NUMBER EGGS-' _' The prizes nffered by Gilmords! :':Pm1`t.ry I"a'.`n1. all Barrio Fair. for` Iglxes.-sing the correct number-of cgg'< imid by 11.0.1`. Hen N0. V4-4343 ml` 5 qihcr pullct year, were won by the a following: Fivuv hv Rvrll InnnnH nf Thnrn- rH(DLll'.\ (HHCC. Crown Attorney Frank Ham- imond prosecuted the chzwgc. ll()l|U\'VlH,`_.'L l First by Byrll Jenhett of Thorn-I ltnn. who received :1 large .I:m`e.<- \ way fkmt. chicken xvalcrer; seennd prize by Don Bone. Thornton. one hundred pounds of Marmill laying? mash. Both guesssd 227 eggs. which ` was the correct number accm~din,g 10\ the official Government. records. I! -was necessary to resort in at draw to decide this tic. mm. u..:...a ...I....,. .. ...... ..1 ...m.-_~.A acczae Inns 110. For third place several guessed L223 eggs bu`. in the draw Jas. Fcltis. of Barrie wnn the prize which was a 21w ;-gallon .I;Im-sway chicken watt-rer. T\Y..o.-...y....Hn. in nu. u"\A\\vt\ nun-.1 il|l'H1l`l` (`On1DOSH|()rl. . 1 Prior to the invention of priming. 7:__Iqks had In be written by hand. ~`nr this l`bf)I`i0llS task. scribes were H -l)Z(`d hy families. business firms. Cimials nr cnurl officials. To own 1 lmnk was :1 mark of distinction. nd Ihnrv would be few families `vhu wnuld own more than nnc ..i. win... mi...-nuinn nf r-hilriro-n \\ (l|t'l'L'|. I N in the above c0n'.t-..t ` Its the fact that all prizes were won {by juniors and in checking over the, guesses one can easily see that `thnl ,young people have 21 good kn.w;-. Hodge of poultry. Their guesses \vor-3` much nearer the mark thzm mum . `older folks and shnwed that they `gave some ctmsida-ration tn the pm-~ blem bofnrc they marked their t`llTl'l.)L'rS dawn. In other words thvy use tht-tr ht-:m`.s'. | 1 In q1w.~`tim1'.t1~1,: Jus. Foitis as M1 how he cntnv tn [.:llL`S`~` 228 1-ggs he .r\\'r\`-\:I\:~rl that ho fiunrnd :1 mtnd HI qLu'>Lxuu.xr5 nun. Ll guese ~ .0xp1nin':d that he figurnd !hen should my about. 5 in G |......\|, .....: ;r hn ,+nA.munr{ 4 `nun snoum my aomu, . m u 17;; .\ .. 'wm~k :n_1d. if he deducted mm arr. `f.-r nmultmg. the numbox` should be Inn tho nL`in`.hbnl`hmd of hi.<- [, lM`S:~. iJ;nm~s hns nnly 8 hvns but fir cor- H:n.nl_V knu\\'.s' what they are doing. E IV]:-ro junn-rs likv Jmnos are ncod'."l lm nur cmmr_v tndzuy. . '1-... . |`...\A.-A -nu-I f-l`I\--:i\- nnnr.'.' CHILI . zmd .\`\l nu) Ilw Hm." yn irzfwd with I I Twu nor! 1 AVIIIlIIl`l\\WI Ill 'l`()lHI.\"l`() . . .. $1.80 ll.-\.\lll.'l'()N . .. .. . 52.80 l.0Nl)().\' .. . ` $4.65 Ill-`.I.l.I".\'|l.l.I'I $4.65 (`II:\'l'II:\M .. . . $6.30 l`|'?'l`l-IRBOIH) . . . . $3.75 S.\Il'l'll.\' I".-\l.I..\' $7.00 and nth:-1` ;n'.vnm`dlu'.v pum:.~ (Suing L31 p.m.. Oct. 4-5 4.05 a.m.. 001. 5-6 In-turn Llmil--Up to Oct. 7 C-~n~u1l A;::~nI.~ P'.`ncuI'z- I)nd:.'\`l' I\\Il `.1! RAILI3`A'R-(3-IELINS THE BARBIE EXAMINER. \-. nu. Lynn . - . . . . . .v.. Barrie Aunt Ross BM Phones 1009 and IMO ' .\"_l`lY(`,K-0 n yml undcmtnnd H .~`chrm'.~`."' 'l`h.-\v mum \~. 1- {ling 10 mg best. avauuun: cu-I ' }. wilh the name Johann [she-rg. who lived in the cities uinz and'Strasbourg, on the ,, :2. during the first half of the ! cnth century. Other claims for credit. of the invention have . an made. such as that on behalf [Laurens Janszoon-Coster, of Har- m an nan Nnthr-rlands. (`\HllHI')' H|(lI_\` I hundred and fifly-six p:`(u3'.(' lhrs (`M111-st -.s`mw from us far as Nv-wm;n'ko1.. I A. -_.__ K G. M. `I`F.\ l-INSON __._x , g ___. llrsidu-nce Plume I96 Oct. -I-5-G ` .\lll)lll'=l{S'l` tn . \\vvI~4\ ll()l'NI) 'l`l{Il' 9' '\nI-hli? J)` >1! Illlun nu urv than lhn` plxlcv. 1 Kl.'(l ill":'E1ll|l L'JHlIllL'lll' > . ; (`.h:-lrn vnnst (`nnk RD, Snuthl IAA`LV\IAV Block ...I Il _\'uu .1 ;\ mnmh. uu'.:hl_v ciisszxt :1`: vnuru" |I*'|lh' B)` ; building {axe ,1-`our . BARBIE. ONT" CANADA - }i{IWANIAl\i PRAISES NEWSPAPERS 1 4 FOR AID TO CANADIAN WAY OF LIFE `By J. T. Simpson. County Clerk) The weekly 1w\\vsp:mm' huldx` :1 vcry important plan` in tho mm-. mumty where it (,'il`Cul2Il(`.\ and S` H mad. Each issue is onszorly mv:nH`-rt: ' `and its columns are read wnh mp! ' ! ntlvntiun and is v.`nn.~vqumnl_v .1 [grout muulder of public upmmn ` Accordingly. care should be ex- `-'~ lvrcll-`Cd in publishing nvw.<" $11 that , ureaders may not get an 1n.'xccuI'u`.l.-, nr distorted vivw or any (-V1-n . | _ 0 I \ _____ 1. ' Freedom of the press has long been taken for granted in Canad.:. Events taking place in other parts of the world warn us to be on guard. There must be no black-null i-nu blitzkrieg which will deprive us` of this priceless heritage of 21 `free country. nu, : , ._. ..._n __....A:....|....I.. .. -1:5:-:1` ` `By J. D. Wisdom. President Burrxc Kiwanis Club) Inxx. \.uu.u.. This is not parlicu.lm`l_v :1 nvws- `paper problem--this (rec pr('. wo Ispmk about It is an institulimrof `vital concern to every cnm-n. Vvo `need only to stop and think what it would be like to have the press of our countries shackled tn tho will and whim of suxno (ll(`l}lt(\I` lwho would dictate their (`vvry `move. It doesn't take much think- lng to know that our clomtwralic lNEWSPAPERS' IMPORTANCE If ; COMMUNITY IS EMPHASIZEDE ____.____-, N T ! *.i1oNs CLUB CCNCRAFIEERYES i 1 WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS 1-"on SERVICE g I May I. in behalf .r mo mun `lub 4! BIl'!`lL`_ cu:x<,z:mul;m- lh 7ncw.~`pap-rs -:,l Canada. nnd mp;-r i:vll_v Ihc` ne \v('1-kly In--.v.~'pop<-r.< n the Dominion. on the cvln-bxxmun - lN=1lnunal Ncwspnpvr Wm-k. . Tho mnnlzlv mxuwnnnor nm`un': the cvh-hmnun -H. | 01 1n~sc- Iunus Ill 2: munncr Inuat o lhrn-`m-izul tn th 3542 in need. 1 The weekly newspaper nvcup-vr Wxxh particular reference la The vn high place in the mt:-1-In nf v'~ Exznmnvxg may I say that in the lenmmunity and is an ixnpsr(.`I;1' pus: this c-xcvlh.-nt community agency for the furthcruu: nr (` ! l\(`\\'.~'pupl'l' has render:-d invaluublu munity welfare and p=`HR!`t`s< :n i .~ur\'u-0 In nur urgnniznlmn. and it IS many dircctlons. I-`r.m tho .~`l:mc!- our (and hum` that such happy r.e- poiul of the service club. thv wm-k- ! lauuns may lung cununue VDU Wfllll 0WIl H1011: luau uuv. ` ltlk. The education of children ` --mi hunks was exceedingly limited. ince even the essential Latin gram- Ill` and my other texts would have 0 be writtr-n by hand. The re-| =e.:u'(:hc.< of scholars had to be copb` I E I 1 `d nnd recopied. with errnrs creep- tuz intn ovary chpy. News was con- iryrid l>_\' word of mouth or by writ- cn rm-s.<;1_t:e. and sometimes. with ::v/'-rds of travel. it. arrived garbled md l:i'.c. I)l`l`h:lDS too late. The enor- timr vnlumo of printed material vhn-h we now use in the ordinary nrl t~xti':u'-rclinnry occupations of '5',VDl`_\' day should scarcely be taken '11` ):t':Int`.`d without a thought of `WV it this eume in us. It is the :~rltu~`. ut the inventive genius and aerh'n4A-:lrn~.rv~inrlumt|-v n! l"I`\:lI1 nf H1" 1 ( PRAISE ron WEE'I{>i.IEis_"4r`ROl4`I-H MINISTERIAL AssocumoN . I '8)` Rev. VV` A. E:u`1.~1nn D-Iv. ; Chuirmum Since the first \Nl't`k in Octubcr :.~ bu-mg observed by tho (`uu.1d1.m Weekly Newspaper A.\:~`u(`iul1m1 .1.~. ".` Newspaper Wt.-ck." I hzlvv much pleasure. on behnlt u! thv rm-rnbm-~" 0! the Barrie and Dxstxict Munster-` By J. D-xrrln The Canadian Way YOU are invited and urged now to co-operate in this newspaper week. You can help! 151,- :1 S\ll)S('.l'i|)- er to The Examiner! Be a paid-up subscriber! If you. _ai reb all that, invite a friend to co-opemlo in this spo- cial event in newspaperdom by subscribing for and reading the home-town newspaper. Depends Upon the HOME TOWN NEWSPAPERS R. Cnlvmnn. Burrw Lums (T FREEDOM ;)l" Sl'I'JE()ll And These Shall Never Pass Away" Canada the People Have ':`('11ll`i IWX HIP H1VCl`H.lVC ECHIUS anu r .+:-K`im:`industr_v of man. of the ` t inor.-i1.<. timber and power derived mm mm mirth. An :icc0mplish- mt vi n i'vl;itivc1_\' short, period in! ho histmgv uf mankind. it is our in-|' ,` 1.~rit'mr':~ in ho cherished in further ' .X|1(`i`iinl`I1i'ltim1 and development. . ` md in ins-_~, to extend knowledge. thr-' )m'm-ptiu:i of beauty. and enjQ_v- . nvnt or thz- mmfurts of modern life. _ Jnh;mn Gutenburg. born about 400. \\'.is a member of a patrician zimiiy in Mainz connected with tho: _nctal-xmi-kiiig trade. A serious unfiict. with certain Craft Guilds the Tr:tdo.<` Unions of those days) '- we the family from Mainz. and in. '- 43-I nr earlier, Gutenberg was` .v-..-king in tho neiighbm-ing city of! I i li`.`I.\`bHlJl'E. Ho occupied himself bvtfh m-~-h;mic;al inventions. and .n V131} .tn......-A kn IIvv\n nv-nnnnn_| FREEDOM OF THE PRESS LIFE llH".El;()M OF WORSHIP FREEDOM 01" ASSEMBLY (Tlubi of THE BARRIE EXAMINER ily m~w.~'pnper'.< and is invaluable in` 1*.:iv1II;: \vorlhwhile publicity to its . (-tTm't!= Nut nnly ls It 0! great assis- n.< : 1.uu--.- during the ennmpniqns (or run`- he , im: welfnre funds. but it Is also of .-- , ~ub-luntiul aid in presentzng to the. ml 1 publn: rut-ts regarding expenditures -Min! those funds in n manner most thsse ct '~ l`.\-nnnn:-r nmv l suv N10` way of life would be changed bom- nlnlnlv Wily U] plctcly. VVr~ in wve H11` (2! ea vnrklm; in Hvith mm'h;: ran`: H313 nl rxrd wih ih Hun. H-~ vx; I ..l`ll\.. pletely. We in Kiwanis are indebted to great contribution they make 10. our Canadian way of life. but for their help in building our organizal mm, and for their assistance. in 1 carrying on our program of Service. \Kiwani.~ and like organizations lcould not exist without their help. (`how Inna)` (`lnh ic inrlnhffld tn our I `our newspapers, not alone for the Could not exist wunout Lnuir iiuip. Om` local Club is indebted to our Alex. MacLaren. a charter mem- ber. for his generosity in promoting the welfare activities of our club. which have been splendidly sup- ported by the newspaper of which he is imnniging editor. The Barrie Examiner has ever stood out in me from line for good judgment and timely editorials and has always` been in the front rank in competi- tinn with other weekly newspapers. :'\s an udvorti.~ing medium It rvncnvs many hmnos, and an Attrac- ...vv udvvrtisemcm brings good rc- . _ I {mlts fur the busxnoss man. l . rm... mash Ohn rm-Iin and rluilins, {Hills mr me Dusxness man. I Ev:-n with the radio and dailies. 1hm*o is :1 large place for the week- l'u-.~'. n~' thvy curry h(Im0 news. whivh IS always sought after. nu hnhnlf nr Hm r-itizr-n: M the wmvn always suugm uncr. On bvhalf of Xhc citizens of the ,(`.nnnt_v I congratulate the Barrie l`\-nnuinnr um z-Mr-hratinu National !(T:n1xI11)' I cnngrzuulme me uurrn: ,F.x:an1in(`r on celebrating Nntinnal Nl`w:p&Ipt`,r Work. ;iul :\ssucIamnI\ and the cnnslllueu-| (`ms Uu'_\' .wI`vL'. to pay tribute to our aplvndid lncul weekly. The Bur-1 rm l-`,\'.nn\n:-r 1.11` I`-XlHHHK'X'. ."\p.u`! frmn l[u~n' luyul uuntI'|l\u-I turn tn {hr unvr:-aka u! the present: Ilullulhll mu! ElI\pIl't` x-Hurt. and; apart ulso mun men` mluu us fur] $2.00 a year dud Worth More The world has learned nmny lessons since it IIll.i,-1` strode zu-.r()ss the stage destroying. corrupting. hating. It has looked 1L this imrrnr and seen an inaiterable fact,-LhuL the disease of fascism first strikes at the Press!