Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 16 Nov 1922, p. 7

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923 . 5 T I ` 25c-40 pills everywhere . in boxes 50-`-,90 Pl"! Apy Tglygh oflndigestionf vvunvua oucy vvu1_ UR: uuame L0 can 011 me IOIIOWIDE week, and these . are called by Long Distance from the Branch Office. At each Branch we have one man who does nothing but sell `over the telephone. - min A1 -.... _L-. 3 II . n q - -- - - vvnbwnl u.uv\;ucLo you]: 111 L116) IBKVC 2: mers they will_` be unable to call on; nuns`; and J.L...... ..--_ -AII-5| Some quotations from recent reports: ~ We have increased our use of Long Distance 33-- .1/3% for the first six months of 1922. When travellers come in they leave a list of cus- fnmnn-u 4-haw un"llvln.. ......L.1.. - --n _.. LL, Ant" 2 H. ELSTON . Your Food will Feed you % more Take How Tire and Rubber sales are irgcreased by Long Distance They are the 'b'e-st money can `buy, ' Fully gua`ra-n-`teed. 10 to 60-watt `Tungsten. N 75 to 300-watt 'Nitrogen.- We have taken over a building next to our main plant for the above work; Advise us the make and style of your car and what repairs, etc., you have in mind and we will give you an estimate for doing the work. `CARRIAGE FACTORIES LIMITED Give Us a Trial --; l:o7ne 441W GEO. E. BRUCE, '-um 1,_15:Av1-: 11` T0 us j Until your various digestive organs are in order your food, instead of A _ properly nourishing you will be liable to clog and poison your system. Your blood will be` poor and impure and your nervous system thoroughly run down. Take immediate steps to secure the healthy activity of stomach, liver, and bowels. To this end you should uA . - ONTARIO Please mention paper. Rep;ir Department` M'a`nager Phone 1'43 ADDRESS: A - , 38 Elizabeth Street,` Burrio Next Door to ' Singer Sewing "Machine Co.- ` 291. Elizabeth St. 11vJ ll VJ. van` the following` n;a`nmnn `H-4..- Page Seven LET Juus diva {Y<{)Tu'51!T'W11-*Z1'.{ %A' '15Ei\71O1$"i'EAT1oN " THE BARRIE %GAS C0., Limited: arrtc RESIDENTIAL SCI-II Scholarship Matriohlation, Solo Singing, emphasized. Outdoor 3 II I.I, , ' , I Health record excellent. I One of our Radiant Gas Heaters in your living-room during the chilly Autumn will postpone for a period the lighting of your./furnace with all the attendant dust and ashes, not to mention the saving of coal, which is evi- dently going to be a luxury this coming \/`. inter. - ' Office and Showroom: Wells B1ock,_ Owcn Sf, Telephone No. 78 J.W. McCutcheon, Manager umnai> sum: REPAIRS V'j<' __.. .._ .~ 1.. ..:..:..T., .:u---u-:u--u--vu--in---ru-2w {sxvmaag emu. ` l}EAl.: WITH HEAT With up-to. the-minute machinery, the best of materials and our workman- ship and experience, why,go elsewhere-? ' EDISON MAZDA L A M P S ve"9.9!1nSP.9_!.!e9%9% 36 Hayfield sc. RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL ran` ems T;1tarto For Prospoctus 4 double room, Ivuuv. EIIIUIE Glllllll. puny `WI tvulu Igpcu till midnight. '83:; 9 room, wtth bath, $2.60 -\ ; h nth, $4.00. Breakfnlt." 50. to 75. Luncheon, 66. Dinner, $1.00. . *1` F100 hxi urvlu from train: and bouu. Take Black Ball White Taxi; Writ; for booklet Centrally'Iituiaito;iV. and thentru.` Fireproof. Home comfort Ind hotel conven- ` ionco. Finest cuisine. Cosy to: room open mg room, with nnhln Ilnnln oi-In RA nn RI-nnhfnnt" The Only Hotel of its Kind in Cumin 840 JARVVISV 3;I'|iET . F?sFsf:`5*`n vunuyuuuw. wucu uu: uuust: Ia IBIIIOVBU. The J. B. L. Cascade is shown and ex- plained at Wm. Crossland`s Drugstore. Ask for the free `booklet. The What. The Why. The Way of Internal Bathing," or write direct to Tyrrell's Hygienic Insti- tute, l63A College Street, Toronto, Ont. UIVUHQIIIE UURIIIHU lrulll QIIIICBT. I Don't tenxporize with pills and medicines. The natural-way to ; rid the system and keep it free from impurities, is by` Bathing Internally with J. B. L. Cascade. which keeps the intestines sweet and clean nu-J turally. You cannot have Constipation, Piles, Biliousness,. Headachesp Stomach! trouble . Kidney, Liver. and other kinadl complaints. when the cause is removed. 1'}... I D I t`...-......'.I.. :. ..u......_ ___u -__ s_ I Because ninety-five per cent. of all .hu-`l man ailments are attributed to the accu-i mulated waste` in the lower intestine whiclil poisons the.,system. This is due to the} sedentary life we live. Witness the in-I crasing deaths from cancer.- I An {Innings-Jinn nv:6L ad- .......I ..._...I2-!.'.-_ l\llIlIl'I7lI llllllllu Nothing that comes hut of medicine bot"- tles or pill boxesris going to put the bloofn of health into your cheeks. the merry tin- gle into your laughter. or that glorious old zip back into your system which makes you spring from bed in the morning, eager for work and with a good appetite. Phy- sicians are agreed since the dawn of his- tory that the first step in bringing. the! body back to sound health is to make it Iclean inside `as well as out; A l . ,/ _, . Internal Bathing is the only quick re-l lief and natural remedy for -constipation,l piles. headaches. biliousness, sfomachl trouble, kidney and li er conxplnints, and kindied ailments. Z ` " "_A'_=___ AL_L . 9 I` I I `A STRAIGHT TALK E TO EVERYONE usmc g \ mgucs Ayn PILLS; .. 1J._A.L!.__ __ I. .4 _ . . Within the`lust few days. 250 tons ofi money. about $50,000,000, were moved through the streets of Chicago to the new 37,500,000 home of the Chicago Federal. ' Reserve Bank. I ;, Music, Art, Conversational French gamesv and sports. V I` 0. I I Young Price, who is a pupil in the Col-i legiate Institute, jumped into the water` on June 19`, 1919. to rescue from drowning Wesley W. Davis, a 10-year-old boy who] had fallen from Park dock while fishing.` Price succeeded in getting hold of Davis 'and brought. him to the surface, but wasi exhausted with the effort. When bothi boys were about to sink. Park Constablel George Whittqn arrived on the scene and] succeeded in getting them out of the wat-I I `For his bravery, young Prindwas given! a gold watch by the citizens and Town Council. I Your friends come in without lnock~ mg; your enenues knock w1_thout- coming I I! r apply to Principals UlIl&&l'1'lI&lIU II IVFIIIIII-U Edgar L. Price, son of _. M.:Price. plant! Superintendent Bell Telephone Co.. 0rillia,[ received a letterslast week from the Carn-I egie-Hero Fund Commission, Pittsburg.| Pa.. advising him pf the recognition of i the Commission of his bravery in saving' a companion [from drowning, The facts in the, case were..b1'ought to attention` ofl the Commission by D. C. Anderson, who was mayor at the time. but the very gen-i erousrecognition of the Carnegie Commis- sion in setting aside $1,600 for the lad's' education was quite unexpected_.. I 17-....- n__:,_ _,I__ 3 _ ,,,,3I C .u A n i ORILLIA [HERO Rf .v. L. vmtcaq 99 Dunlop St. `I TgoN1o..oN1. .- Limited numbers. vAnoEo' --`-q. auluuI_Iv MI 0130. ' W. G. Roberts has mke over the under- taking and furnitum business oi Thoy Dyer, ~ Stayner. . , 9 iv;;WSi;1"`:o`:3 |:1bralwc:;1.1steos will .h6f+ a conference in Orillia. Nov. 18. klklcliiston paid a bill of $17 for `sheep ' e :by dogs, the first a oo"t` f-th' iki d it; ten s_vle$s. Dog taxis gun thg tow: a `gun ts . -|.__;_ L__ .,i./ .. i -Meaford's population is 2.6535 i Midland got in 3,000 tons of furnace `coal by boat last week. - T Mrs. John Blair, one of Uhthoff s' earli- est residents, died recently at the age of 95. Bracebridge sent 31.000 and a car of sup- plies for Fire` Relief. . ' 1 J. J`. Mbl:l`lEOn addressed the Orillia .Canadian Club last week. ' East Simcoe rural trustees he I Al|:_L-_ _-2_I , I,'II 1 an. n . u l nun Iuc uuua LIIUFUUI. ' Let us, not ling down the curtain of .oblivion on the drama. of sweet recollection o cr those halcyon days till we have chal- lenged some rising Longfellow who will with his chronicler's pen in hand, gaze rever- ently on Simcoe's now sile_n't silvery ex-y lpanses gnd. tell us A l r This iathe place---stand still (give heed) Let us review the scene _ And summon from the shadowy past. The forms that once have been!" u.---p.-.__ _._____,. V uuu um.-u auuweu (-0 embrace me propeller`! i "Them were the days"! We can no longer. afford to take a trip from Barrie to Orilliaor vice-versa which would con- |sume three hours in the going. We must lenlist Henriford and gallop thither by land in forty minutes or -thirty-nine. Verily there hath arisen in new generation" which knows neither leisure nor solitude lnofthe fruits thereof. 7' ` 1-; .... __-r .J__ 4,, .1 . - - unum 01' any `UIHBT (cry -Issue There were fires a-plent_v.in the History of Navigation on Lake Simone. True._ no .Jim Bludso" has arisen out ofl {the aehes. _We have had no Poet-Colonel Hay! Ito ralse hIm'up. `But-suxrel_!' some literary `aspirant from the vicinity of Simcoe s ehores could be found (ho might. outof _h;les offtl] storm)! Se: Ralnt us] 'ahpe}x11-` pxclure: o e mry ays m wnc e would wreathe the nimbus of local im-l mortality! around the llrieads of Bell, May.' McDon`ne 1. Fraser. Mac ay, Muir, Campbell. Mclnnis. Robson, Adams, or Burton---and Lochie Johnston! What about that night -the second mate" of one of the later lst.'e`amers spent in relays, some three or `four hours` in the water. at Big Bay" l-wharf disentangling`the {stern line that I had been (allowed to embrace the propeller? "Them warn Hm rluuu"l W. nun .. uuql-Iulr run ()1 lllurtllt-_V. ; _ - There were times of peril and excite- ment. which,`hap_nilv, were not darkened 'by any tragedy; Who among. the presentl generation will ever forvet. if they were] aboard the Geneva on that thrilling night.[ the return voyage from Kirkfield on the` third day of August 1910? Where is! the Orillian, if he or she weregnlong. who does not smile yet as they recall the night} 'the Islay tr ed conclusions wi'h the CPR. lswing bridge `at. the Narrows! `Great was lthe commotion though the danger was nil. lProbabl_v the excitement arose when the` {passengers discovered that it was the C. P. R. that. was behind time. The rehownetl Enterprise that made her last long bonl |voyage" in 1903 would furnish many a |legend for record. g All that was (marinely- spealdngi 5`mortal" of her found a last `resting . place at Jackson's Point. The. 1 l eternal Jackson s Point! How its` mention conjures up memories of great iannual picnic, of tea and sandwiches". inf onmi-buses whose drivers called this wav to Sn`to_p-l of Mel" 'l`ndhope`s hu- mor and Hehekia-h Edwards` eloquence! and of -fervid orators who berated all and sundry of the enemy" from Sir Wilfrid down` to the local wharfinger. `and who {warned the faithful against the Newmarket Canal or any -other dry"-issue. I i Than: uuu-A `iv-inn I)_r\'nI\`II :-\ 6|... "`LI'1..s....-. |nu cu_um' IIUI exalt` H) ()8 E010 H`0m greerte` But the day of the steamboat had ar-l rived". And what volumes might` be filled with subsequent tales of our Lake. Some of them no` w'thout a touchbf sadnem. for when the sea shall give up its dead. Simcot-.'s. quiet. boeom must restore -its onetime toll` of mortality. ' Tlmm: warn finlna A` now" u...) ....-..:4...l "nu Inc mun Ul cnranum vwnenr . i If I remember rightly, tradition has it _M thai the. first steanier on Lake Sirncoe was built at Bradford. Its maiden voyage from that town to Orillia. is reputed to have consumed nearly a week. Rumour has it that ye.f_very licker flowed righte plent- ieouslie whereof ye Vlandlubher zit everie pox-the and ye sailor betimes partooke with an ardor not easie in be told from greede". 4 Bllf th (`RV nf fhn nfnunuknn kn.-I nun sur\'1\'poa lost bottle. 4 _ I What tales of/ioneer hardship. as these` are reflected in the crude travel of decades ngone. could Simcoe tell,- had its waters a voice! Of the Orig'nal Settler" who with his canoe or mugwva1np". crossed` [from a northern or \\"estern.po7nt on the lake to the mouth of `he Holland. thence up that "stream with a grist" -for Toronto or later. Bradford. Those were the days before our `-`modern" times. when we sell wheat` for a dollar a bushel and pay any- where from tern to fourteen dollars for the same weight of grain if we buy it `back! lid the form of Shredded Wheat". TC 1 .-nn..\...L.... ..:-La.I_. ;..__1:.:_ I. -.l "(Lest we forget", Mr. Editor. `might I throw out the suggwtion that some ' scri-be take up the work of compiling a ``History of Navigation" on Lake ,,Simcoe? i Legend and romance, historical` facts and` E lsentiment abound in material for such a ichronicle. Across Simcoe's placid waters iin those far-off days _-now Magnified `by the purple mist The dust of centuries and of song". sailed Champlain, visions of commercial: and spiritual empire beckoning him on, as Ihislndian confederutes with the rhythmic !beat of their paddles, made ominous` music gin the midst 0f'*Quhanta,ron's calm (I be- licve._0uhantaron was Lake Simcoe s orig- inal namel. Its waters ran red with the blood bf battles which threw epoch-making echoes o'er the seas to England and Old France. They caught the jiery embers from, [the hideous` holocausts lit by Algonquin` `and Iroquois. in.t.urn. to consume in ex- quisite and fastidiously arranced agonies- ithose vict`ms unfortunate enough to have I survived a lost battle. TX7L.:L L..|.... -1` 25-], , I I u - .1 3 W. URRY To the Editor of The "Exami'ner:-- - _. .__............ v `Mr. Ijditox-.--Notiing the article is raising `of the Steamerilslay in The Examiner on .October 26, one is moved to recast cer- ! t-ain line of Tennyson's, so that these would run as follows: _ * mean. .. __ . Tears from the depths of some divine lhunmr ] , : ` - . o f Tears. idle telf, [know not what. they ! `Correspondent Sugges.ts_ Thatl ' Someone Write. Story of E ` Navigation. - il,ll:1C`()Ll.I-ZC lTl6liST)f-`H 5`M_C_E WATS, -_...- ---...:. :..v nuvvullr u-nu suuuwl IU ulc eyes.` _ h 1 _n ` (In reading of the Steamer Islay s fate), And thinking of the days that are no more". scrub uulu UR: uepcns OI UIVIHP de~spau'. Rise froxipfiue hea`rt' and gather to the even. * -ElvE-(-}v}`iE`I.1wIv A.1:IU(li-I.0USE I me BAR-RIHE EXAMINER ~ Owing to the Provincil Highway cuvttinglh lncmae its `course. the Orillia Golf Clubl will be comnellcd to make changes-that will cost from 33.000} to $4.000 in addi-, ;tion to the allowance made by the High- ` `ways Dept. V * ' aw i 'l`l.ll.` riplluncb nu: "l"l .ll.` Fisher Floulc Mills PEOPLE who are V suffering from eye weariness and imperfect vision should know that they can receive relief at the hands of a. spec- ialist--one who -thoroughly understands the scznce of optometry, You will be pleased to pay the price we charge for `a comfortable. [perfectly adjusted pair of eye glasses. - 0. R; 1;__usK, omw. I `'~------*- . V 1 Bradford Council made Thanksgiving 'Day the occasion of unveiling_the- gun which lwas given to the town as a war trophy. lA cement base was built at the south east` icorner of the town hall where the gun was I mounted. I'\__,I__ A, L`__ 'I1,,_,,!,,,!lI Y"',,I, ,,, "From Pain to Eaoe with T.R.C. s. THOUSANDS of Canadians have Q i tried ,T.R.C. s and found they do drive out rheumatism, land all [similar pains. T.R. C. s re ach the seat of pain, for theirmedieinal pow- der is carried in the blood.,$1.00-at your druggist s. Free sample Temple- ton Co.; Toronbo. ' canada s Standard Remedy for Pain. Ala. Llcvlllu. The .motto for the coming year; ;was adopted from Miss Elsie Amb-.| l_ler's address when she used as a ouotation these words, The man who! `twins is the man who thinks he can. This he changed to The school" who wins is the school who thinks it can. This will be the motto which the. scholars and teachers will follow for I the next year. A ___I_ I, II` T\ 7.10:" I van u .1\4IOIQ I A solo by Miss Effie Dobson was lencored, and a chorus by a group of young ladiesswas greatly appreciated by those present. "l"l.... .:- L]... ..,.,........l ........- .:.L..:.. 4.1.. l.I.y UIIUDC `ll CUCIIIH This `is the second year` that the have held a banquet of -.this ki'nd' and lit will in future be an annual affair._ Central Methodist S. S. Executive` FISHER" 1-`Loni MILLS, LIMITED \./_c uv1;u L). U. ' ' l Mr. Kelcey,' Asst. Bible `Class I l teacher, - spoke of the influence! .brought to bear on the scholars by! the Sunday School. In many homesl !where the Word of God is not taught! in family worship the children would! b`e ignorant concerning the right, }way to` live if it were not "for the .training they received at the various Sunday Schools. - rm.-.. ....... .. -1: '.._______1- __,-__a- uuanuug lJ\vll\I\lIDn `The necessity of f)ersona1' work in building up a Sunday School suc- I cessfully _was clearly `set forth by W.` R. Devins. I - -u..v..u va. scum: Au but: yuaaluluu . "The discouragements met 1th by Sunday School teachers were taken up by Mrs. Noble, [while the funda- mentals in S. S. ,work` were discussed by Peter Glennie. f 1\;;,_,_ 1), _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -,L 1- , The financial prolems of the Sun- day School were most ably dealt with ; by Percy Corbett, Secretary of thel Central S. S. fr 1 A . wan` . _.. ,-an. uualuaj L)\.llUUl wab uuul, G I A lamp for ~e.very "purpose v~- * ~~~~~ -~~-v-'---. ; R. J. `Finley, Supt. of the Sunday! School, voiced his appreciation of the able staff who had so nobly and 1%-! ally helped him in his work. e' spoke briefly of the great work car- ried on in the Sunday School and the. good derived from such an organiza- tiOn'.' _ ` _ \\ The pator, Rev. T. Dougla\s\; spoke on the place of the Executive in the Sunday School and the work t\hat they were intended to do. _. R. Hpughton, President of the Adult Bible Class, emphasized the need for modern ideas in the Sundhyu `School. K 1'! 1'! rs. \ I -- I :1`, A \4U\rl \l-ICIIllICo ,1 Miss Bowers, who for many years has been in charge of the Primary Department, stated that her work was ! the foundation on which the rest of] [the Sunday School was built. '1'... .L':...-....:-1 _____.la,_., 4- . rs 1 uvuvvno i C. G. Strange briefly outlined the need of faith in [the possibiliti , t';cnnI1non\nn-nnvul-... -.....L `. .LL L-- u.\,nu V15 4:|u1uay,cvcllIl1g, LVUV\:1. `I Many -suggestions and plans` for the coming year were made and last year's work reviewed._ CENTRE `s. 5.. i3XNEiTE}7 % mgvzs BIG` succass About forty officers and teachers` were pxesent at the banquet of the Ce'ritral~ Methodist S. Executive held on Thurlsdayeevening, NoV}\9. Menu en:-uaunotin-us .....l ..J.._*_1.l.'.'__. Wheat and oats yvanted. A Ask your Qrocer"'for Fisher s Flours. lf he has not it in stock, our retaill delivery will have it to youqldoor in a few min- ytes tlme; Phone 453, . THE GRINDERVOF THE ; GOLD MEDAL FLOUR has an army of satised customers. Never a com-' plaint-always happy be- cause the bread is so white and aky. Always the same. Over 300bags of our a day, You do not have to go out of town for the best of Flour for `Bread and Pastry. Sold by` Wm. Crossl'and. In Allgndalq. by A. E. Patterson. BARIRIE, om. ml: to " 6bt"`RhIImusn Most other pain: an easy. lllllllllllllll WMMm lmMIlilllllllllllilllllilllllllllllllilllllilllllllliiiliillil*i!1tllillia'II113:fin:`*axl!lliIuMWlllIUw \ . .. wanna vvavyltvllvn V (he '0": our staff is allotted to take Long Distance orders at his. home after business hours, so as to secure the reduced rate for night service." * '/fWe often call up customers by Lorig Distance be- tween saJesmen s visits. _We can tell you how to aoply Long `Distance to almost any business SUITS E MADE TO YOUR MEASURE ` WE TURN OVERCOATS V_ ALL KINDS OF HATS CLEANED A-ND BLOCKED. CLEANING;--PRESSING - REPAlRING-DYElNG' We do all kinds of remodeling " THOSE GLOVES that are so difficult to keep in order -send them to us. We ll return them promptly, fresh and ,soft as new. The charge is reasonable and `it s a pleasure to haVe your thingsalways in. condition.You- ll be delighted with our prompt and efficient cleaning service. AUTOMOBILES ' % REPAINTED Thursday, Novemnef 16, .192\2i

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