Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 19 Apr 1917, p. 3

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L3 GS. Y Don't _I-Ilde fom. With,` a Veil; ` Remove Them with Othlno Prescription _ This prescription for the re- moval of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful in remov- ing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that. it is soldlby any druggist under guar- antee to refund the moneyiif it fails. , . `V - ,1L I_:.I_ _-...... -"cu:-\I:1r`l\I nnnn Dou t hide your freckles `under a veil; get an ounce_ of otlyine and remove them. Ev en_the first few applications should show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. * ` 11,-. `.-...-u-. `l'\ no17.hn tl|II&(IiV*. fl` ellblyuly. . . V Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength o4thine;, it is` .this that is sold 911 the money: bfick guarantee. 'FiEI}KLES April _ i7- Freeman Campbell, Ed. Dgff ap__(_i_,-.Th0s. McKnight -motoredwo Collingwood Oni day : last week._ _ 'lGDl; WUUA. I Arthur '_Kidd3 spent `the post week with friend,s in .To`1-onto. Nlis-s ,Mar`aret Robinson is lattndig" 'Bai';r'r"o' ].311si1'1oes`s*"'C _ol:. I cleg. I Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Handy ofl `Toronto spent the wek-end with! the latter s mother,` Mrs; David Thomps-on.= - n':.-.1. ..I..'..- tiny-Mo` Puunhiahinac The representative of The Barrie Examiner and Saturday` Morning in Cookstown is George F. Thompson. News items for C_o0kstown and adjacent country may be handed or phoned to Mr. Thompson and . will be forwarded to this paper. Phone No. 39 finds him. Subscriptions, either new orrenewals, may be for- warded through Mr. Thompson. ' ;1II__1111pa-Lv1L.- '_ ~ _ High-cla's.s Gents` furnishings ;t`o be" had at` Fis-her s. 1\_-_-._ ,__.. -1` l1n..nn4n |zLU UU uau at, L`1Dul.7l` n. - Mrs. Harry Draper of Toronto visited with` Mrs. Fred. Rowe this week. ,1 np__ 11-1-- rs 'l)....un. spent Sunday at Roht. vMarling-'s. VVUUl\u l MI . and Mfs. Bates of Barrie Mrs. Jas. Jebb is visiting with! `friends in Toronto this w ek.. ` -___|_:1.. --.,....1........ :v\ ll.'lU.l1ua Ill Luxuuuu ullnu uuun-. Roht; Ross" `while working in. the bush last week had the mis- fortune to be struck by a fal'iling- tree. Mr. Ross was severely hurt and has since contracted pneu- lmonia. A N: ,_1 1\__._... -1` 7`l1,....nn`n ILIUIJIG Mrs: Stewart Dunn of Toronto is ill at the home of her mother, Mr_. Daniel Sutherland. -- m----.a.._- A..\..:I An '4.\. `SOIl_. `SUM. B1-uc'e Minns, teacher of \- the .E1mgr'ove `school, spent over Sun_day'at Harry Fisher's` an..- rn Quthnnlnnd hdc r-nhn-n_, .LV.I.l'5. IJUIIIUI. Duuupn. luxxu. I Born, on Tuesday. April 10, "to Mr-. and Mrs. Rdbt. Webber, al |Duu_ua_._y an ucu.._y .. .... \JI- .` Miss T. Sutherland has return- ed after visiting her sister, Mrs. Gibb of Collingwood. ll _ _ _ . .....L` "11-\r\rv\#\|:V!\I`\ 41*" `UIDD U1 LIUI|!u.5.WUUu. _V Miss Margaret` Thompson of. Bradford spent over Sunday at her home here. . ' ' ` -_._u ml..- h `M! "Dno;~In'1n*ri I161 HUIIH3 utsru. ` Mr`. _and Mrs. O. M.'Readmah1 of Barrie spent Sunday at" their home here. - I'l1I_ ___ 'I[..T7..u'ru\`1` -:5 17:g[> IIOIIIB IICFU. Mrs. Thos. McKnight is visit- ing with friends in Toronto this week. ' ` ' ' 1 It..- f'l1I...-... 7"|:`I\a`:t"t) WEEK. Mrfand Mrs. Thos. Whitesides `Of Bond Head spent Sunday at Ro_t3t. Marling .s. ,.;-__v.1 c `1nnf\]1y| I\.UUla. xuat U115 Sanford Su chased a new Ford car. ltafnerland has pur- r!` ___A1_ Ullauil u, llllv V. V... V Mrs. T.'R.'J.. Wray of Toronto is spending this week with her mother. Mrs. David` Thompson. _ Pt. M.arl;r-1Vgv yfoturned. this week to Toronto where he will undergo medical treatment`. vvn-p u.-- Mrs. of Brad-i en s Cornet`-s spent the week-e`nd;| News OF COOKSTOWN in Barrie with` her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Handy. .:._I......7.- 1.--... .. 1..:.... ...4.-.1. n4` ..u_.. 1.71.15. u......,. % Fisher s have a big stock of [men's plough boots on hand. Men, call in and get titt..e up for the spring work. `II ..- TA`- 'l`\A.nv..-`II (-w`\(svh` rnll |lII\1 CPL Illa VV\Jl.LLI - Mrs. Jas. DQnne_ll spehtfTues- [day with f'rie1i.ds`in Bradford. 1;w..,.,! 1\.I ,.tI..-. mt` D....A~P,\..,l kno LIIAJ Vvluxl 1.1.11/;.L*\Js.1 JLL .;an.I.u Fred. M_c.Kay of B:-ad?J{~.h'has| lpurchased H. N. Golema-n s pool }tables. ` ` -n m- ` on, ":1, 1-\:-,-_:L_.. UIJIJIV./H7 I "Mr. McGirr of South. River` has `purchased Chas. Harper s farm. ~ Thursday} Ipril The Whip l (Brantford Expositor, Apr. 14) Abounding in thrills was the great photoplay The Whip," which was witnessed by a fair- vsized audience at the Grand Opera House last evening. The photo- play is one of the most sensa- tional ever shown in Brantford, the realism at times being so vivid that the audience was al- most on its feet. The filinwas taken from the well-known mel- odrama of the same name and '. has been excellently well execu- ted. There is not a dull moment from the start to finish of this `thriller, and the lm also carries with it a most beautiful` love story. At the outset the audience is treated to a picturesqueocean voyage on a big. liner. , The ball 1 rooms of the boat were shown , The was and -were most elaborate. run-away auto scene_ a . thriller, the car is smashed and . burned and the audience, thanks to the mechanical effects, plainly hear the explosion. So real is 0 is that everyone jumps, A pic- turesque hunting scene is shown and then another thrilIer-a race between a motor car and train to save The Whip, the race , horse around ` which the plot centres. The collision between the trains `is most` vivid and real- _ tisic. Other climaxes which kept the audience` in a state-of excite- A ment were therace, the strategy of Dian_a, the owner s daughter wholrode The Whip, in place of the jockey, who had been ar- ' `rested on a charge of atte-mptjed 5 murder, the winning of the race - by Diana and` incidentally a prize ; of $60,000, and the 'arre st of i|_t.he' baron and his gathe rin': f ~ si*r_i)'_l;:bAY ; ..M.hINl_l_C.v the Grand Opera House, Monday and Tuesday, April 23 and 24._ I 1 Death came suddenly to Mrs. 3 Chesley on Sunday afternoon, April 8, `when she was seated in a chair in the dining room of the Queens Hotel, at which she had been a guest since last fall. She ate a hearty dinner and between three and four o clock chatted with Mrs. R. Booth, the wife of the proprietor of the hotel. Mrs. Booth left the dining room about four o clock, and an hour later, Mr. Booth in .pass_in_g through the room discovered that Mrs. (lhesley was dying. He imme- diately conveyed the sad news to the other persons in the house and summoned a physician,ibut when the doctor arrived the de- ceased lady had passed beyond the need ofmedieal aid. Heart failure was the immediate cause of death. At a late hour Sunday night her remains were taken to the home of her'b`rother-i.n-law, W. H. Drysdale, from whose res- idence the funeral to Hill_sda1e Methodist cemetery was held on Wednesday afternoon. Her sur.- viving brothers and sisters are: Bert Preston of Toronto, Arthur Preston in Edmonton, Monte: Preston in San Francisco'andi W. H. Drysdale in Flos. To thc- sorrowing brothers and sis- ter is extended in their sore be- reavement the sincerest sym- pathy of numerous relatives and ` friends.---Lance. On Tuesday last the school- house on S. S. No. 5, Sunnidale, was totally destroyed by fire, to- gether with the library and` seats. The children s books were nearly all saved. The re is sup- posed to have originated by a spark from the chimney which was blown through an open win- dow on to the floor. Mr. Clark, `the teacher, was holding school_ this week, as he had been away the week before. The fire start-_ ed at recess. The school house was a brick one and was insured `for about $1,000.-- Gollingwood pv- gnaw... Bulletin. Nice Lot of" cattle W. Orr sold twenty-one cattle of_ his own feeding in Toronto on Monday which brought the huge sumof $2856.55. This was one? of the finest bunches of catt_le;' that ever left this part. `The, expense of "selling the cattle 'in the city ' amounted to. $65'.3'3, Schol-House Burned ELNIVALE % leaving net proceeds of $2791.22. --F1eshert0n Advance. ' Read the Adlet Column. Let us make you acquainted with the new, luscious flavour- v t_`__m,5E:` The %3f'lg? ;I/our Lasts Sealed Tight- K eptk Right! MADE IN CANADA A -8|'n-ing Necessities - Spe- cial value, new designs, of Oil- cloth and Linoleum, at Dougall T'I.,__ \4-\Iu-n Get it wherever confections are] sold The presence cfsmut in grain `crops causes a loss-of, thousands of. dollars annually which can be very largely prevented by treat- ing the seed. The method of" `treatment is simple, inexpensive, and sheuld be employed by efvery farmer especially at this time when there is such` great need for increased production of food. __._11.` .'.u ..;....;n.". anahtdd in. Pug: `rm-go . the grain` out thinly to dry, shov- .lUl' .l1lU1`U'cl.Dl3u pluuu x / u n u . ; u . . V V ....l The method usually adopted is i` asvfollows:--4 "Mix one pint of formalin with 40`gallons of Water or two tabl'esp"oon`sful to 1 pail-t of water. Place the gr'ain_,to_ he treated in a heap on clean can- vas or floor. Sprinkle the form- . alin solution over the grain, then shovel. Repeat this `until every grain is moistened by the solu- tion; then cover the pile E with sacking and leave 3 or 4 hours, "At the end" of this time spread" elling it over three or four times will hasten the drying. Forty` gallons of theformalin solution is sufficient to sprinkle about forty bushels of grain,- smaller amounts in proportion. I --..--_.... Ll..- t`vw1l\`:I"\ 1'11 4) I190- HJUUUIILB Ill lJ|UpUllv1U1Io . Immersfng the grain in a bag. is sometimes practised and is equally effective. rnn...-U... unnninncr fur-{her infnt`- `Sir Wm. H. Heaii, ---.. -- V V .. Minister of Agriculture, ` Toronto, Ontario, - equally Uucuuvc. . Those requiring further infor- mation apply` to, A J. LIIIGHLAND, District Repre-sentative, - Gollingwood, Ont. 4\nl `yr 11- 1.1'_____1

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