Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 13 Apr 1922, p. 15

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is&%s%s*%%%&&$%%esas*w%%% ' DAFFODILSA _ , . COCKROAGHES, ANTS, ETC, When I went out at peer of dawn ockroaches, which. attack. bindings of And crossed the degv) hill. _ b ks, leather goods and food stuffs. polutev The sun arose and tossed to me ` r-at er than destroy. They hide by day, A golden daffodil. \ _ by night frequenting kitchen or pantry. ' e - ' They prefer warmth and moisture. There And at the M81198` Pitch Of 0000. . are several Varieties, the American cock- As I passed o'er the plain. `roah being the largest. They` destroy The sun was thereto give to me hum.-' km .fn kn ....... ..... ........n.. ......n....- >14. X03 .1. In WOMQA/N Sf RE AL:M *&%%*%%%%i$w%%&*%$%$$&$%% And are I drifted off that night Down -placid slumber streams. The round moon rose and ung to me A daffodil for dreams. And as I paused beside ,the gate. Happy at toil's reprieve, I saw between the quiet trees A daffodilian eve. `there'to give A daffodil again. 7 ' Xlways D/eliciouis" ~ Thursday, April'13,,1922 la knowini what can an hnnlnlet tall: man. ' T ;.;v Elia LIELI \All\|AEhl ALIB` (`I-III EDEN Undefvwear I] Uruup o_,lIl(II\tlv' IICINIILEOBVI ' MKERS OF HOSIERY AND UNDERW AF FOR MEN. WOMEN ANDCHI|.DRN V":-`Clinton Scollard. 142 Of eas there are two specieseethose on human bei1`~gs,.a'nd those on dogs, cats or .ch5ckens; *To clean avdog bathe him in 3 per cent. creolin, 4 teaspoons to a quart of water. .This is erfectly harmless. It may be rubbed on with a rag or the animal may be washed. ' For_a. cat the creolin should be |but'2 per cent-. Rugs on which the dog or at lie should be beaten and shaken at least once a week; The nQ_t_s {may also be washed with benzineeor gaso- i)ine or napthalene. A l_ Beetles arevmost hermftnl before they lform the pupa, tbeadults being likely to crawl to the window and thence to the outside. The black carpet beetle is fo_nd `of feathers, carpets (nding better h'e.1 bor- eing place in tacked down carpets), cereals, letc. Garments or carpets should be dust- zuuuu ucmg cue largest. Iney destroy bugs, but, to be sure, are equally unpleas- ant themselves. The remedy for cock- roaches is solium uoride, pure or` with equal parts of flour. sprinkled over shelves, table and woodwork." Plain__bora:; is very effective, or sweet chocolate powder may be mixed with the borax to attract`. Phos phorus paste (rat poison) -is another good thing. as igx the fumes, or rather vapor. from burning and evil smelling carbon di- sulphide_--2 lbs. to 1,000 cubic feet. Still nnnfknn AAA their. :1: L..l....L ...L:-L L..-.. nu|puIuu_`-a ma. DU .l,UUU CU`Ul(.`a ICED. DUI! another good thing is bulach, which, how- e=er, getsrstale readily. It is now grown |iu'California. so that we may get it in {better condition than formerly. \ H 'l.Ul.ll`UUl' o ' That church `has been there forty years," said the circus man, and most `everybody in town belongs: AND .YET RING THE. BELL EVERY SUN- DAY MORNING." .11 ... I3- ..I-_J. I)_:_A..._ umea uruunu wuo won I? see your 80." ``There s. not one of em don't know me already," replied the merchant, and. what's more, they all trade `here. Why` should I advertise? I don't need it. The circus man," reected. He looked across the street and felt stumped. He looked up the street and decided that he was stumped. Then he looked down the street, -as far as the church. Then he turned to the storekeeper. ` N64-n" IJ-Inn-AH` (`A-Inn .1-has-A " 1-us anhl IIUW LUBE DB3 V1185 Deer! FDCTBQ Forty years, I gues," said the mar- chant. Most everybody around here is 9. member." ` Hrm...4. -1_.._-1. .1.-- 1.--- n_3___ :__.__ 5118 {Jill tlllill III I 115519 POWD- Brot er, he said, when the show; gets in town we'll have -the usual parade.- And I want to rent you advertising space yrfng the parade." - Whereabouts?" the storekeeper asked. 'Ou the elephant. He's the greatest thing in the procession. `I'll paint your name on each side of -the elephant, and there won t be -a man, woman or child for miles around who won t see your ad. `""hnI-A : ant nnn nf nm rlnn"l- brunt ..... uuucu vw pun oureneeper. -Nice" church down -there," he said. How long has that been there?" Fortv vents. I mm." said\the mar- A agent, travelling ahead of `a cir- cus, called on the owner o a general store, _the onlgc; merchant in a little town. Hn....s .. `H L- ....:.| u_1.__ L _ This, is the season when woman begins to massage with mop and brush. She charges the microbes and transports them to a warmerclime; carpets are lifted, bugs it and y; clothes-line and porch are pop- ulated with bed-clothes, sofas and chairs; rugs etrew the lawn; crocks and pans are massed in the kitchen. And there is an `odor. The husband, returning` scents the odorsees the jumble, Also" he sees the wife in the centre, a, towel around her head, arms zbared aand bespattered, her clothes reeking in dust. This is the creat- ure he wooed and called darling? Verily, if` she weren t just the" darling she would never have had the courage to start on that spring cleaning campaign at` which woman alone excels; Rumor has it that the labor unrest and general dissatisfaction in India, the largest tea producing country in the world, have -made production so expensive and hazard- ous that a general rise in prices may be expected in the near future. The estim-` ated consumption this year will be much larger than _the crop available. pri1`134, 1922 - Ants do not like coal oil. Coal oil may be poured into the cracks through which they come. A sponge soaked with sweeten- ed water or something of the sort attracts them and when lled with the ants the sponge may be dropped into boiling water. Syrup of sugar and riborax is another re- medy and still another is a piece of tape treated with corrosive sublimate dissolved in water and dried, then tied to the table leg or xed to the edge of the shelves. Cheese mites. which are nottrue insects, 4 since they have eight legs instead of six. are sometimm found in sugar, our, ham. dried fruits, also in seeds, bulbs,. feathers. etc. They can exist `without food for months at a time, it is stated. To get rid of them fumigate the pantry with sulphur, or spray thelwalls and floors with coal oil or gasoline. Hydro-cyanic acid is `good, but should only be used by an expert. Cheese maggots or skippers, again, which are about the size of the house-y, can only be gotten rid of by burning the food- which they have infested. A 3.511411 ed. beaten and sprayed with gasoline and h'1n9; in the sunshine. Floors should be washed and crack stuffed and they may be sprayed with benzine. Sulphur fumes may also be used. uuuxnx The silver sh, slicker or sh moth f though really not a.moth) slips into crev- ices and into the backs of -books. A cure is cardboard covered with a paste made from one pint` flour and half an ounce of arsenic`. Pyrethrum {also is used. xxluxxn IIIIUHD U! H grunt IUFCUD, - Pom: little fool!" 'wrote the German sergeant in his diary; he could have saved his life by telling. He got `what be de- served .for his stubbornnes. ' 5|II___ ILLI_ l'-_I I5` Q- _.-___L_ LL- I"-.. HUTEUHLIII pwncu U]? U IJUR7 HUI U1 lJlIIIlIlUo They asked the -boy where.he was `taking the food. He refused to tell them. They told him that` they knew that he was car- rying it to `French soldiers, and demanded to. know where they were. He would not tell. gThey told him that.if he did not guide them to the Frenchmen's hiding- place they would `shoot him- Again he re- fused. They tied the little fellow to a tree and the ring party fell in before. him. Once more he was_ given the chance to be? tray his fellow-countrymen or be shot. The tears sprang to the boy s eyes. as he faced death there alone with his country s foes. but even at the cost of his life he would not be false to France. 'He determinedly refused to betray her soldiers. A gruff command in German; a dozen ries spoke as one; another guttural command and the"party of invaders marched on. leaving 21 little body hanging limp and bleeding in the ropes which -bound it to the tree in the midst of a. great forest, ` Poor POOR LITTLE FOOL! J ` In the first rush of the,Germa.ns across Belgium `and F rancelin the summer of 1914 they missed and passed isolated groups of French _soleliers, ' generally in rough "or wooded` country. `When the gaps in the German, armies closed behind these, the French 'outposts were cut off completely from their own country. But the gallant little hands of Frenchmen had no thought `of givingin. They hid themselves inthe vast forests about Valenciennes and along the Belgium and Luxemburg borders and, carried on. With "no rations but what they could .capture from the Germglns, they in- stituted a guerilla warfare6f their own. in which little mercy was shown on either side. `The Germans knew to their cost- that the Frenchman `were there in the woods, .'but they rarely could nd any of `them. n__ .l..-. .. ......1.-. -1` l <.......-....,. ......L........l CHI . One day a party of Germans captured a Frepch` boy of about twelve years of age who was carrying some food. At once they suspected .that he was taking it to some of the hidden French soldiers. The story of it was found,in the diary of a German sergeant picked up on the eld of battle. n 'I'knu- uabnr` 141:: Jnnu uyhun-A Inn uInu'f.n`!ina _THE_'. ANNUAL VERNAL ERUPTION fl`VU\l 'IUI' [I15 HDlIUUUl'IIIlt5o Poor little foo!!". So wrote the Ger- SHOULD I ADVERTISE? TEA PRICES RISING` J :-_-New Englandx Printer. I THE BARRIE EXAMINER unnlau uuu uAcu\.u_y Aunvc nucauy ylUVUU |Ill'-I1` the German was wrong and the French were right. `It Wm the spirit which was in the little lad, the spirit of freedom, of faithfulness, of eelfsacrice even to death, . which saved France, saved `the allies, saved the world from the -domination of brute force. Multitudes at the time did not un- derstand it, many yet do` not understand it. The peace-at-any-price," the save-our skins~but-lose~our-souls -` babblers will never undenstand it. They have not the spirit- ual perception to know `its meaning. -The world will some time recognize that it is by such self-sacrice as that little lad's that the world must be saved. It is only when we are ready to lose our lives that we save them. Once almost nineteen hundred years ago a young man in far Judaea. Agaye His life in what appeared to be a vain attempt to benefit His fellowmen. It looked like a useless sacrice. The champions of brute force triumphed over the lone champion - of a spiritual ideal. They nailed Him to a'cro.. '1-`hey laughed Him to scorn. He would be a king, they said. Where now is his kingdom. Poor fool! He saved oth- ers. Himself he cannot save. Poor fool! Poor fool! . ' ' So said the rulers of Jerusalem nineteen centuries ago. And. they thought that they were done with Him. History has exactly reversed` their judgment. What they thoughtwas His failure has been His suc- cess. What they thought was His defeat has been His victory. What they thought was His death has given life to untold \myriads of merr. Himgwhom they called a fool, Him whom they gavea crow .in- stead (if a throne, the world of today is ever more and more acknowledging as the wisest of men and crowning more -and more King of all the ages. Hn_,,_,,, LL, A-,,I! ,,_, IV I - .----.. ..... ......c `I. ....- -..y up-avvu Because -the -foolishness of God is wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men." By the foolishness of the Cross men are made wise unto sal- vation; and by the weakness of the Cross own 6'}-gnu .-min cl-u-nnn I-A l\IyAIInI\vv\n AA:-u6L~ I vauuu, culu U uuc vvcanucan Ul. uuc UIUECI are they made strong to overcome deathL.i lesaly away. - But time reveas. the truth. History is the true arbiter of values. And although less than eight years have passed since then time and history have already proved that wrong sgtirit ..:4.Lt..l_-__ _ _-I , , _ man. Stupid, brutal, ever misunderstand- ing the deeper spiritual meaning of actions, ever imagining that nothing cou' ed in this world but personal prot or brute force! `Deluded into the idea that frightfulnas would frighten other people into submis- sion, and terror would terrorize them into unresisting slavery: He is _incap}ble of understanding the Ispirit which actuated that little French lad. I3... 1-.\._-___ ___J___L___r- v .u -u . IILIDII IIIIIIIC HICIIUII Ia`-In But France understood.` In_ the lT1l(l.~l . of the honor roll of the greatest heroes of the war, alongside of the names of soldiers 'and sailors -and -ainen, of generals and marshals of France is the name of a little chap of twelve years old, who died alone with his face to the foe in one. of the great ' forests of northern. France. At the moment it seemed as if the`G man sergeant s was the true one._, G many. was winning all along the li France seem d doomed and that little appeared to ?be but another life ung u `R-.1 Hnxa nnunnn `Ins bunt`. YIIALA-nu _ He gave his lifegfor his fellow-country- men. He gave his life for France. Poor little fool! A hero of France! _ 1 Which estimate right? . - the\Ger- one. Ger- rnnnv tuna '17::-\I\:v\lo all n`I\r\a- LL- II..- Then, pour into tub~-of c 101' luke- warm" water. Mix well. eep adding the solution until you get a rich, last- ing, soapy suds, even after the clothes . IF YOU USE A WASHING M,o.cHxNE Follow the regular `directions given here. Soak the `clothes. Then, before operating the machine, add fresh Rinso solution using the same amount of Rinso as you used for soaking. No other product isneeded when Rinso is used. Find out for yourself why hundreds of thousands of -women say that they could not face another wash day without it. The two easy steps below will save you hours of back breaking rubbing. ' First: For each tub of clothes dis; ' solve as half a package of Rinso in_to~ a little cool water until it is like thick cream, then stir in two quarts `of boiling water. ..If the water is hard, or the clothes extra dirty, use more Rinso. Try Doing Next Week s L { Washing` with Rinso I .At.' All Grocers `V 'VzIb TIN 85 More beans and doughnuts are being con- sumed in the United States daily. Ffann hnilaon -nnnmln Incl fknhu Hum: There is _a_ re on the average of one a K 30:31 of" 2144 negroes were living in ._minute 'in the United States. Oregon when the last census was taken. 11-..- L ____ ___: J_____`____L__ ___ L_2,,,, 17:51. :.. 41... ..... .......... 3'...) .: znnnnnnn ILI nus: Au uuc uuucu ouzsuw RBI; year There were 4590 Indians living in'Ore- gon when the last census was taken- auulcu. lu IILIU UUIDGL DI/3|/I3 Ullyo Fifteen thousand people lost their lives in res in the United States last year. Thorn nun-A A50 Inrnnna living *:I\ (Inn, You can use sweet milk, sour milk, biittermilk or water T with |c'?o5`cE6A| ..Anu.lIAC`l'URln _; ";NUFAC`l'URSD jy \ . . * 45.1 5.1." _ ~=`s`f.:*; -' mg weer aka`. - _ --1C I There s no rubbiI;g_---no boiling. Rinso is not a washing powder, but a scientic combination of pure cleansing materials that loosen and dissolvethe dirt from even the heav- iest pieces. It soaks clothes clean in a few hours without injury to a single fabric. V Soak the clothes for one hour, two hours, overnight, or as long as con- venient. Then rinse to remove the loosened dirt, until the water runs clear. Hang them out to,dry.. .. haiv'e,been put in. Do not pour the Rinso direct from the package into the tub. EGG-4 FRY S 'THE BEST FOOD AT THE LOWEST COST pcupu: us qruipuu. The new Hotel Commonwealth in `New York -has 2500 rooms. vu:5uu wucu uuc lula census was mucen. Fish is the primary food of 67,000,000 people in `Japan. Tho nnruv `In!-A` J\vv\v\nl\vuvIr1\A-L-`I 3-. `If: Minar'd s Liniment for sale evefywhem FRY S- packed in a paper bag topreservethe exquisite FRY avor. Made by . the makers of LUX ' Page Fifteen w R106 Game abounds in the veileys bf Norway'.| ' The birth-rate in the United States is on the decline. .

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