Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 18 May 1922, p. 7

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\/\I\rQU.J. V- -..4.-.r-v-. ..v-.\,._. Take notice that the sitting of the Court of Revision for the Township of Essa will be held in the Village of 'I`horn`ton on Saturday, May 27th, 1922, at 12 a.:m., to near and deter- mine complaints ..of appellants, and you are advised to govern yourself accordingly. W. M. Dinwoody, Clenk of Essa. Twp. Dated Cookstown May 15th, 1922. J. B. Gray, who for several days posed as a collector for the Salva- tion Army Se1f-Deni`a.1 Fund, was ar- rested in Barrie on Saturday by Provincial Constalble Rich. f`haP Inna rnnnivnd n dmanrintinn l I`OVlDC18.l uonsuuoxe rucu. Chief King received a description of the man from the Sudxbury police as he was wanted there on the same charge. The Chief informed Con- stable Rich, who arrested the man Saturday morning. He was taken to Sudbury on Monday. Flrzav cm-var] n vpar durinsz the to SIICID-11I`y Monuay. Gray served a. year during the war for posing as a collector 01 Red Cross funds. The Women's Institute of South Simcoe District :have arranged for :1 series of summer meetings: (9.) at Churchill on May 26th, at 2.30 p.m. The meeting will be addressed by Miss Ethel M. Chapman of the g\V().\lEN`S INSTITUTE LECTIIRES For Violins, Mandolins, Banjos, Guita'rs,Ukuleles, Band Instruments of all kinds, Bell Pianos and Wright Pianos, and J. G. Keenan Music Has Everything in Music Opposite Post Office. .;v-- uguplp u. ---nun.- I Take notice that a. Court for the Revision of the Assessment Roll for the Township of Innisl for the year 1922 will be held at 10 a.m. on the following days and places: Strm1d-.\londny, May 29, 1922 '['Iiomton--'l`uesd:Iy. May 30, 1922 All parties interested govern themselves Z1,CCOTd.iI1`gt1'}'. T! \I' \ln(`nnln=\v (`Inn-Ir Entrance through Cross1a.nd s Drug Store. Charmg Institute Branch Department of Agriculture, Toronto; (-b) At Stroud on May 29th, at 2.30 p.m. Meeting to be addressed Iby Miss Powell, of Whitiby. These meetings will be in- teresting and instructive, and a large `attendance is looked for. It is learned with regret that Corenzio at` the Brookdmle Staibles will not be able to run in the King's Plate owing to inamation in one of his ankles. Corenzio was looked on as a sure winner this year. Paddle and Resarf, of the Brok`kda.1e Staibles, however, are shaping up well and they will be hard to beat. They have gone the plate distance In 1.09 2-5, the fastest move of any starters this season. CORENZIO IS OUT OF PLATE RACE, T1 )? READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS! Phone 243. In an interesting article on the use of the -wireless telephone, pub- lished in a recent issue of Forbes Magazine, Wm. E. Easton has this to say about radio-telephony: Some of the economic aspects of this new enterprise are very inter- esting. It has, in the rst place, created what is practically a new in- dustry. Whereas the business of radio apparatus has been heretofore very limited, it is now running into millions of dollars annually. "It in nllzn hnnnnincr rhn nsatinn muuons or uouars annuauzy. It is also benefltting the nation by providing the farmer with a. means of getting instantly news, ma.rket reports, weather forecasts, and other useful data, and also by making his farm a much more at- tractive place :for his family than it has been heretof-ore; That this will have sum einuence in improv- ing agricultural conditions, can hardly lbe doulbted. "For this average dweller in a IUBIIISGIVGS Zl.CCOT(LlI1`g1l'_Y. R. M. .\IcConkey, Clerk. Stroud, May 12th, 1922. naraly Ioe aoulotea. "For the average dweller town or city, it has great education- al possibilities, as it -brings to him music and ideas 0|! a. kind that he would never otherwise get. -Nor should its special ability to bring the services of the church into the home be overlooked; there is a power for good in this that can hardly be over-estimated. ~What the future will -bring `forth is `difficult to detemnine with certainty, but that this system will have `far-reaching social and economic results is Ibe- yond question. Quite an imnnrfant to the com- use UL LL18 z V of `Ln. v-|r\II-V .-.` I RADIO-TELEPHONY , IN FIELD or rrs OWN yona question. Quite as important to the mercial world is the realization of some of the things that radio will not do. In spite of many prophecies to the contrary, it -will not injure the business -of the wire telephone com- panies. The value of the wire tele- phone lies in the fact that one can talk back over it without the slight- est difficulty. "mm: main fpla-nhnnn. nn thel est mmculty. 5 "The radio telephone, on the other hand, is simple enough as far as its receiving, or hearing, end is concerned, `but its transmitting mechanism is complicated and ex- pensive, and requires expert oper- ation. There are circumstances where the radio telephone can be put to practical use for intercom- munication, as from airplanes or ships at sea; but for land use, a few dozen radio conversations would block the air, even if a simple trans- mitter could Ibe devised. n that nthar hand than 1-ain: nutter COul(l Ice ueviseu. On the other hand, the radio telephone will depend largely upon the wire telephone `for much of its material. In -broadcasting an opera or a church service, for example, the telephone wire is the medium that conveys the sounds from the -hllilding to the transmitting station. Co-nsequently, the oft-repeated as- sertion that radio Will put wire tele- phony out of business is nonsense. `F`.rnmHv f'nl`|nr-inn: is thn idna I)IlDI1 _V Out 01 DUBIHBSS 1:5 uuuseuse. Equally fallacious is the idea that the radio telephone will injure the newspapers. It 5 true that an item of news can the radioed to lis- tening millions almost instantly. But such messages are necessarily ephenueral; they reach only those actually listening in at the time, and they `must `be stripped of practically all detail. The only result, from a newspaper standpoint, of radio-tele- phoning an importance piece of news is the selling of more newspapers the next morning. "\lm- will that rnrlin lelenhone Flos Council met -at Elmvale on May 13th, pursuant to adjournment. ;\Iinutes of last meeting were read and conrmed. The following accounts were pass- ed for payment: Isaac -Miller, for sheep killed by dogs, $12.00; Duncan iMcAuley, for sheep killed by dogs, $12.00; F. Downey, lumlber supplied to Mrs. Hall, indigent, $10.25; Lorne Draper, sheep killed by dogs, $6.00; Jno. Thompson, sheep killed 'by dogs, $24.00; C. S. Burton, no pay Councillors, meeting May 13111, $20.00. Th-v:rinlcs_T3nn r=nn_'I`hnr `lnnvp Ullle auu pzusseu. -Scott Martin---That tihe .Engin- eer's awzud under the Municipal Drainage Act for draining Tiny marsh be laid "over `for consideration. (`nun-\ni'I nzlinnw-nor] on )\1nnf no me next. morning. "Nor will the radio telephone cause a decrease in the sales of phonograph records or concert and opera tickets. It is in actuality, a natio1.1-wide sampling medium for music, and, as all merchandisers know, sampling is one -of the most effective ways of increasing sales. T-Tnnrtn tho rndin tplpnhnrm in the COURT OF REVISION NOTICE ettecuve OI increasing sales. Hence. the radio telephone is the direct competitor of no existing en- terprise. In an entirely novel way it is adding to the happiness and comfort of hundreds of thousands, and it muzi therefore, be regarded as :1 real addition to our civiliza- tion." -) . . Drysda1e-Pearson-Th:1t leave be granted to introduce tb_v-1aw `No. 889 to provide for expenditure on roads in the Township df .I<`1os dur- ing the year 1922 and that tby-law be read a, first. 'By-law read a. rst, second and third time and passed. Qt-nH.__T)rvI:dn'lcx-.'I`hnf It-`anvn hp SEC/UIl(l 3lI1(.l llllI`(1 UIIIB lLIl(1'})i.l.S':`.(1. Scott---Drysda.1e--That leave be granted to introduce `by-law No. 890 to appoint David Andrew Road Overseer `for the Township of F105, and that vby-1aw be read a -first time. By-law read a. ~rst, second and .third time and passed. Sr-nH._.\TnrHn--'l`hnf rfhn .'FnL'in- 'IIliLl'SIl. U8 HUU UVt:l' `IUI UUL151ut5l'2LLlU1l. `Council adjourned to meet at Phel-pston `on June 10th at the hour of ten o'clock sun. I` Q `Dun-inn r`]n1~].v SWIMMING SEASON OPENED ON SUNDAY The placid waters of Kempenfeldt Bay proved too great a. temptation for tnvo lncal youths, Horace Cole.-3 and Pete Donaldson on Sunnday, so they decided to take a dip near 1<`isherman's Point. Two duckings beneath the water's surface was sumcient to cool their desire -for a. swim, but the boys said they had Ifelt colder water. READ TH-E ADVERTISEMENTS. IS l.ll`Cil.L 1'05! Competitor ` In ADVANCE F LOS COUNCIL COURT OF . .11 i `an 7n'| 1:` We H.111. C. S. Burton, Clerk. ,icle phone, ; . n- - and commmeu. Accounts as follows were passed and ordered paid :> `rnmnt T-rnn (`.n nivnng and bne 8.110 ordered paid :> Invgot Iron Co., pipes and bne drag, $88.89; Dan. Shaw, drafting plan for Jennett s bridge for use of Dept. of Public Highways, $16.60: Elwood Bone, dragging 15 sideroad, 11 Con., 1921-242, $31.50; D. Jen- nebt, gravelling 10th Con., lot 18, $9.00; W. Ayerst, fencing Twp plot, reforestation, $171.47; Chas. Hyde, supp-lying anchor posts for same, $14.00; Pedlar People. pipes, $40.17; Ormiston Turnlbull. grading 1r5th sideroad, $4.50; Thos. Miller, repairs to bridge and removing driftwood, 5th Con., $12.00; Jas. Loundes, repairs to hill 10th side- rnn--1 nn am (`.n'n $200: Jnn. Essa Council met `in Thornton on Tuesday, May 9th, with all meumbers present. `Minutes: nf last meetinz were read present. Minutes of last meeting were and conrmed. Annnn-hi-4: an Pnlh-um: morn nngcpd LOUDGGS, TGDEIYS LU 11111 .I.Ul.H b1u<-:-- road and 5th Con., $2.00; Jno.I Waglkvo-m, half day hauling stone to`, bride, 15th sideroad, $2.25; R. C.i Mooney, grading from lots 1 to 5,` arm R 311 25- Vvnfmd 'I`hnn'mson.3 MOOHBY, gracing II'U'IIl IULB 1. ll) 0,4 Can. 8, $11.25; Wilfred Thompson, repairs to cullvert lot 6, Con. 7, $174.50; Trueman Flatt. grading 8th Con., lots 1 to 5, $48.00; Wm.` S. Smith, 40 rods wire `fence, E 5 lot 10, Con. 10, 1921, $10.00; Wm. Pearce, lling washout 30 sideroad, $9.00; Mark McMaster, grading road N. Div., $18.00; Jas. Gurfin, lling washout 8th Con., $5.20; Harvey dllillliliiililllllll!II!!lH|llilli!!iliIlfllllil[EM Township of Innisfi] n.-.H`nn H-um r1 (V.-..n.o 4 ESSA doUNc1L v u If you are a Salesman or a Buyer, why gamble valu- able time and the cost of railroad fares that the party you wish to see will be in when you call on him? The high cost of personal interviews is materially re- duced and many more calls can be made per day if you make a definite appointment by Long Distance. Avoiding disappointments by making appointments over Long Distance is one of the most profitable uses- Salesmen can make of it. ALI\IY S, a leading Montreal Department store, tell us their buyers always call up manufacturers before leaving town to call on them, to make sure their trip will not be in vain. Station-to-Station rates reduce the cost of telephoningyw and if youcan telephone after 8.30 P.M.--to a man's- home, perhaps -- the evening rates are only about- one-half the cost of day-time messages. N0 Diswpuimments ill ~Ap;p0`~i11t11_1ents Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station If You`U`se Long Distance IIIIEIHIBIIIIIIIIIIlliiilifi IOTCSTHIIUH. DIUL, '!.UU. A by-law was passed making pro- vision for the empenditvure of money on roads and bridges in order that the Township might. share in the Government grant. nmmnil arlinnrnnd to meet at Government grant. Council adjourned to meet Thornton on `Saturday, May 27th, at 10 a..n1. in Court of Revision. wn `M , mnwoodv. Clerk. A. MOFFATT GETS STAYNER CONTRACT The Stayner School Board has awarded the contracts for the new school to be erected in that town. The contracts total $67,164.00. The contract for the general W01`-k goes- to McCarty. Thompson and Pickerv ing, of Toronto, for the heating to A. Watson, Stayner, and for the `plumbing to A. Moffatt, o-f Barrie, For wrecking the old school J. H, Hughes gets the contract for $850, The general oonwtraot-ors will allow $25.00 per 1000 for the old `brick amd $30.00 per 1000 feet for usable lnrnfhnr REVISION Cripps, lling washout 25th side-r road, $9.75; W. I. Edgar, on 9.0- count for assessing, $100.00; Chas, Hyde, assisting during staking re- forestation plot, $4.00. A hv_'ln\xr um: nnqgmi mn.1:i'n17 mm- |a)nu aau. `l lun1'ber. K./`IIIEIJ U1` LIIILAV l\n`J Mrs. Edward Walton and family wish to `thank their many friends or the kindness and sympathy` extended during their bereavement.- iiiliiiillllllillillilliiiiilllkllii|!ii5!3illElll!I}llllllllliilillilllllllilllillliiiilililillilllllll I CARD OF THANKS" rv7_I4__ .....I Court or rtevlsmn. W. M. Dinwoody, RADIO S HIGH-WATER MARK ARRED FOR FRAUD

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