Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 21 Jun 1917, p. 10

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..,.-...-- \/-. Be S.{1.I'e to ask the druggist for the double _stre ngthMothine; it i this that is sold on the money- back guarantee. HYSLOP BICYCLE u -_SEVERAL MODELS To CHOOSE - ` HOME srupv W. URRY,[ Strong Safe - . Sp%e ec1y `IT'S A PLEASURE TO RIDE .Qy5EN 5, A A U'N1v1-:Rsn*Y 2 Census and Statistics Office 1917- The is- sued today a prelim-inary 'estim_ late of the areas sown to grain icrops this spring, with a report of their condition on May 31 as compiled from the returns of crop correspondents. The reports from the prairie provinces state that the spring there is very backward and seeding is consequently late. At the end of May severe frosts out down the growing Wheat plant but rapid recovery` was anticipa- ted. Rain was needed ,for germ- ination of the later sown crops and of wheat sown on stubble. 9 Area and Condition of Wheat It is estimated from the re- ports of correspondents that the total area sown to wheat for 1917 is 63,450,250,-an compared with ,14,897,000 acres, the area sown, and with 12,900,600, acres, the area harvested in 1916. Thus, the area sown this, year, -whilst Ottawa, `June 13, nearly 10 per cent. less than `the, area sown for 1916, is about 4 per cent more thanthe area bar- vested for 1916. `In arriving at these gures revisedireturns of eluded for Manitoba; for Saskat- . chewan and Alberta, similar revi- sions have not yet been complet- 1 ed. sown for _1916, the returns this year indicate small increases un-` der wheat in each of the Atlantic provinces and in British Golum-. of 25,000 ' theCensus of 1916 have been in- I increase bia and an uaeres in Quebec; but for each of 2 the remaining provinces decreas- es are. reported to the extent of 154,000 acres in Ontario,- 254,000 acres in Manitoba, 927,000 acres As compared with the areas I J i l 1 1 Area of spring crops ` form of %rb\vn' bread, pretty nearly, is preferable to white _ bre`ad, Wnlii` ohnual cnncvnum "Inn nI..........J 7 ---- ~- 1 Don t hide your freckles under a veil; get. an ounce of othine and remove them. Even the rst few applications `should `show a wonderful improvement, some of the -lighter freckles vanishing `entirely. I `I5- ..--_..' 1.` -_'I_ AL, 1 I - A -...u-u--uu The reverend gentleman will, it is understood, leave Rome for Canada at once via Paris, and will meet his brother, Mr. Edward Kingsley, who is at present `at Aldershot Camp, England. VV IIIUU 1.11 Gaau .Fr1iit sh(;uld never be classed as a 1uxury--it lis emphatically `a necessity. ' - Dnnnrxufn -II}-.n AI'l\CI -1` ._.....'-_.... 1u1>u1 ms SLl10_leS._ - The_ many friends of Rev. Dr. Kingsley gill be delighted to hear of his brilliant record as a stu- denta_s well as of -his elevation to the priesthood, {ind will join with the Post in extending cof1gra~tu.- lations. A upxux c uuunuug l'1U6,- grease th'_ewp_anT angle the, rice will not suck; \ Au.`-... .I.`-__._7 -9 1:, I - - .,--v~._ gsulaa vu--1.1`;- Rev. Dr. Kingsley received his early education at the Barrie and Lindsay Separate Schools, and the local Collegiate Institute. He afterwards attended St. Michael's College, Torolnto. Over" four` years ago he left for Rome to pursue a This ' theological course at Urban College of the Propaganda where he was eminently success; fulin his stud_ies._ Rev. Dr, Kingsley Ordained at Rome . Lindsay Post--E. J. Kingsley I'eceived_a cable from Rome this morning conveying the -pleasing intelligence that his son, Basil, had received the degree of Doctor of Divinity and had been ordain- ed to the priesthood on Saturday in the.Eternal Qity`-. `D.-... T\.. 17.--.._.-u_-_ - _--\ ....--u uvsxyuuxuxx `J1 uuu.U1 L/LULJD The decrease {in the area sown to wheat this year is partly due to the curtailment of the seeding season by the lateness of the spring, and efforts were therefore -apparently directed towards an increase in the areas sown in other crops. For oats, the -acre- age is 11,781,900 acres as com- pared with ,11,376,34'6 acres, the area sown,/aiid 9,875,346 acres, the area harvested last year. Barley is _sown to 1,954,100 acres, as against 1,827,780. acres, the area sown, a 1,681,180 acres, the area harv` ted in 1916. Rye . has a sown area of'159,470 ac- ; res, as compared with, 147,170 t acres in 1916; peas 152,465 acres, . compared with 159,690 acres; . mixed grains 558,250 acres," as 1 compared with 410,726 acres, hay andV.clover 7,661,800 acres, against7,892,932 acres; and al- , falfa 84,900 acres, against 89,472 5 acres. The condition of these 1 crops in per cent of the standard representing a full crop is for ats 85 percent compared with [ 90 p.c. last year and 93 p.c., the ' average at the end of May for 1 `the seven years 1910-16; for bar- ' ley 87 p.c. as against 89 p.c. last `year and 92 p.c., the seven years aferage: for rye K86 p.c. against 91 p.c. last year and 89 p.c., the '4 average; for peas 88 p.c. compar- ed with 90 p.c. 1a_st'year and 91, the average; for mixed grains 89 p.c. both this year and last year and'92 p.c.. the average; for hay and clover 80 p.c. compared with 98~p.c. and 92 p'.c, the average. Conditions in Alberta Department of Agriculture dated . `June 12 states that` the general ` season is somewhat late, espec- ially between Wetaskiwin and Grosseld. The weather is` cool, but crops are doing well. No frost has been reported `s1nce;June 5; All` grain for threshing is sown, . but there-is 40 p.c. forigreen feed yet to sow. There, is plenty of moisture in all parts. ' [ `AA telegram from the "Alberta \ "\ : t=ini-,Saskatchewan and` 1.581100 ac- `res in Alberta. 70f} the total/Varea under wheat 809,250 acres were sown" last `fall, and 12,641,000 ac; res Were "sown. this, sp"r.ing4.A'In' the three prairie provinces the total are,aAsown.1to wheat is estimated at 12,497,550 acres, comprising 2,476,850 acresin Manitoba, 7,- 6,05,70,Q\ acres in `Saskatchewan and 2,4`15,000acre/s_ in Alberta. t The average condition on May _.31 in per cent of the standard representing a full crop is for all wheat for'Ganada 84 per cent as compared with 90 per centon May 31 last year and `with 91 .per cent the average condition on the corresponding date for the seven years ended 1916. In the prairie provinces the condition of.-wheat is 87 per cent. of the standard in Manitoba, 80 per cent in Saskat_ chewan. and 92 per cent in `Alber- ta. Converted into a standard of 100 "as, representing the average condition at thevend of May of the past seven years 1910-16 the condition for the whole of Cana- da of all wheat is 86, of spring wheat -1, and of all wheat 93 per cent. Thus, according to its reportedcondition on May 31", the anticipated yield per acre of wheat this year is 7 per cent. less than the , average of " the seven years 1910-16". ' _Area and condition of other crops Tho A nnnnnn .. :... 41,... ........ --_w- Before` cooking rice, greasi 1-AV nan and. Han vnn .-..:n -4 e . Of cour;e`;11e;e`;;e n;a;';;;;;; Ea-s-es that only a surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge this, but the above letters, and many others like them, amply prove that many o_perati,ons _are recommended when- medicine. in many cases 15 all that Is needed.` Don t Hide Them with a Veil; Remove Them With Othine Prescription This prescription for `the re- .moval of freckles was written by fails. a prominent physician and is usually so successful in remov- ing freckles and giving a clear, bealltiful complexion `that it-is sold by any druggist under gua'r-. antee to refund the money if it - -____..___v van: vs-n Des Moines, Iowa.--My husband says I would have been in my grave today had it not been for Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. I suf- fered froin a serious female trouble and the doctors said I_ could not live one year without an operation. My husband objected to the operation and hademe try Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. I soon commenced to get better and am now well and able to do my own housework. I can recom- mend Lydia E. Pinkham s "Vegetable Compound to any woman as a wonderful health restorer.--Mrs. BLANCHE-JEFFERSON,703 Lyon,St., Des Moines,Iowa.. Another Operation Avoided. - Richmond, Ind.-For two years I was so sick and weak from female troubles that when going up stairs I had to go very slowly with my hands on the steps, then sit down at the top to rest. The doctor said he thought I should have am operation, and my friends thought I would not live to" move into our new house. My daughter asked me to try`Lydia, E. Pinkhai_n s Vegetable Compound as she had taken it with good results. I/dld so, my weakness disappeared, I gained in strength, moved into our_ new home, `do all kinds of garden work, and raised hundreds of chickens and, ducks. I cannot say enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkhamfse Vegetable Ooinpound.-Mrs. ` M. O. JOHNSTON, Route D, Box 190, Richmond, Ind: `The Right Medicine in Mainy Cases Does Better than the tSurgeon s Knife. Tribute to Lydia E. Pink- A ham s Vegetable Compound, 906 -`/Warm `pggtivns vauauuuvl I But the biggest retlecung, telescope] in the world belongs to Canada. This} has been erectetl at "Yi(.tlOra` B.C.,' which ls only a short j(mrne,v from, Vancouver by C P R steamers. In` a reflecting telesc-ope, the light is] collected by reex.-rim: from the snr-3 face of a com-a.\:e mirror If this? surface is ground to a paraholicx shape. the rays will all come to-! gether at a single point to fo rm an; image, justas with the` refraoting` telescope; but this point will he situ- ated on the same side of` the ntirrnrl u the objecnand hence the observer 1 '1` 13 with me renecpzng Lexescope that many of the most brilliant discoveries about stars are made. =Its construction, however, is not 90 generally understood as that ofthe 1-`efracting telescope, the form of= in- strument which is so often seen in the parks or on the streets of our. cities and through which mg passer- by canget a peep at the moon.for the", triingsum oft ve'or ten cents. ` 3 "l'\I...-. In..- ... .1..- ...-...... ,_...u -3 - -_ GI IJIILIB QUIILI LII` IJVC UI LCLI Ucula. The lens at the upper end of a re-.: treating telescope is called the object `glass. It collects the rays of light and hrlngs them together at a focus to form an image. which is viewed. with a magnifying eyepiece. The; largest retracting telescope is the= well-known Yerkes instrument. It has an object glass forty inches in; diameter - i : bocfot Said Operation of Death:`-But Medicine Cured. u ugu. The -bulld-ing of the seventy-two iinch Canadian instrument may be otaken as an illustration of some of [the mechanial difficulties to be sur- lmounted. One shows thermounting. `The ends of the polar axis are sup- ,ported. on steel oastinsrs which are ` holtedto the heads of vnncrete piers. The permanent pier erected at Victoria :19 shown also. The polar axis must be iset pair-allel to the axis of rotation :0! therearth. In the latitudeof Vic- ftoria it makes an angle of, more than 5 ;48 with the horizon. To the up-` `rights of the framework of the walls ; are attached horizontal` ribs whlch tare for the pnr`[)n.'=P of sunnorting 1 lthe sheet metal walls. The who tries to mall at a star will nnd his head in his `own line of vision. In order to over ome this difficulty, a second reeqtion is made to take. nlace so as ,tovdeect the beam of; light and form the image at one side! cf the tube, where it may easily be` examined with an eyepiece. This seeend reflection is accomplished by M, means of a plane mirror or flat in- Sserted in the upper end of the tube; .'and set at an angle of 45 This at will necessarily cut off some of the Hnho IAIN-... .......... L- ....:._..x.....| _._.. -I11: AJv\-vuuulfli pun. U11 Buluc V1 (-116 light falling upon the principal mir- ror. but since it is not large and .since its supports are made as s1en-. gder as possible. there is no serious = loss. 4 Sumner-School Nmdion'ScIIool. D000-borbApI'iI I Uvl ? .|.-..- 2- ._A-.-- `.4. \,'AlI.l.Ll:Ul'3Ll Udll. payanlc L0 orderoof the Honourable the Mm- ister of Publ`ic W0` s, equal to ten er cent (10 /_.c.) of the :1- mou t of the tender, which will {be forfeited if the person teal- !dering decline to enter into 3 ;contract when called upon to -lo lsopr fail to complete the con- tract. If the tender be not ac- cepted the chequeywill be return- ed. ._ V, _ 0 { - `Persons tendering are n0tir`:..~.wl `that tenders will not be c0ns_o'- ered rmless made on the prinl`,'~w forms supplied, and signed wi.l.h their actual signatures. Each tender must be accom- lpanied `by an aecept.ed cheque rm. I a chartered bank. payable to -.'.3`l6* O1'rln.r`nf` fhn IJnn..\.......1.I- AL: H SEALED TENDERS atl(`lI`e.`~+u%-R [to the4u'ndersig'ned, and eq1(l0i'sm.i "Tender for ` Supplying Coal ;'?r the Dominion Building's," will be -received at this office until i.)0A P.M.., on Tuesday, July 3,, l9i7, for the supply of coal for `(her Public ' Buildings throughout lxi_1e~ `Dominion. Combined specication siril` form of tender can he obtaiimi. on application at. this office :-incl from the caretakers of the dif't'e-.i-- ent. Dominion Buildings. _/ .'r nn_.\__,_ . , I - - 1 sheathing is attached to both sets. forming thus a double wall, with an intermediate air space of at least six inches. This structure must be made extremely` stout in order to bear the enormous weight of the dome. One of the pictures shows the building complete. This is fur- nished with a system of shutters E which witm the double wall permit the !interior of the building to maintain `an even and moderate temperature. Electric motors are used in moving the telescope and dome. These are controlled by push buttons. An limportant part of the gearing is the clockwork, which carries the teles- cope with the rotation of the heavens, so that a star can be kept in the field oi` view as long as it is desired. This ,must be ma.de so that the telescope I moves with absolute steadiness 'IVI__ -_,-_ _I A___4_ -1 A!__ ___._1.___ ._-4.__A V1 Ulbhly \)VCl l\J|.ll |aLl\JhI$(ll.l`LI PUULIQD A'l`he reec-ting telescope is user! for direct photography. both for recording very faint objects and for getting ne details of brighter 0?- jects, such as nebulae. We can also get photographic images at very faint stars. the twentieth magni- tude having already been capturezl. .19 in nlnn nwfvsnvv-|A`v1 ....1....1.1,. 42.... luluvwu Vvlhu uunvlllbc oxvuunnnuuu The optical parts of the instrument are being m-ade byiBrashear at Alie- gheny. The large mirror is twelve inches` thick at the edges and will weigh over four thousand pounds A Tia- nnn.r.6-an I-nlnnnnnn 1'.-. nun! I.l\.l\4 hllzuvllltn (&1l\4(Jl\J`V UJCKJII \.aK4l}J|.l.IJ'.-r'xll glt is also extremely valuable for `spectroscopic work. A long exposure- is required even with the great fortv- Einch Yerkes refractor to obtain tho lspectrogramof a star of the fourth lmagnitudo. 1J111tLJ1AV ifPlcasant, Bay, CB.` MINARD S LINIMENT is .-my only LAnnnent.asked for at nty store and the only one we keep :3-1* `sale. - ~ the people use it. ' . HARLIN FULTON. `(.1-;(\r\r\I 13..-. n I`\ By order, q -uv:, R. G. DEISROCHERS, \a;;L;_4n|L.'., Secretar-y. `I7.-.-.1. - `The Mental] A- 'JV.`l`Q" in thr- ( ,\- [$111 Tm` than M WWheI`e_ fun Of &UIj_{vI` (iistim-I :2-_ The nlzmm 7.-.`m >Il1os.~' 1-.- J"r'oH'ul :- "-ne s m-1-xv l}.I1f{lg'4Illi.s'I _-anrl with \\ Ht'Tf,e1| it is di'i(-,u|t,\'. And fun habit if 0 thought, r reap ahah the let1`m`< of a tree: . the widow the _bark;' `as enduriu it is lik:-l_\ `worse 1_1nl` found tn - of a very rnarrieti _ sweet wu- t,i0'n. II:-. t3han,c:mi f not quzm-. P.verythm:_~ mg all :1!` `peoplo rm he rl]O['(' Immes. .- KINGSTON ONTARIO . ` 1..." ARTS MEDICINE EDUCATION APPLIED SCIENCE Mining. Chemical. Civil. Mechanical and Elect:-legal Etinecring. Thursday, illdicn. i.:I1[)l' v\ I \\'ho-I 10 hinusw next hrv fnod mu! nnxl, hm-; 4`v\'0['clnno- it, '3i`n|2]I| -li_2'h(`* //ill ho` '111nil_\' `On ho`: ind` hm Vent. in = 011., I-' F-asy Ill EN` Made in Canada for 28 years by HYSLOP `BROTHERS, Limited. Toidfte PRES El it hm ll Ill: To Enjoy REAL Outdqor Life... FREUKLES Ride a

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