Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 15 Mar 1923, p. 14

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If food does not digest is turns into poi- which form gas. This often presses .--u heart and other organs causing a ner- -Inm. restless feeling. Simple buckthorn `V%k, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, jilturnn Can` !`AnnIr:I|1u `Ann. -mutt-.. ...... TaN7EHr- _n- ; -u uvv ;'Bomr Than For Llvor Illa" L Rub thefchest and throat with 5uuuc . uuve uouung more to say." , V His face was drawn and,hagga;d. beads of perspiration stood upon his unshaven skull. and terror was in his eyes. you ueslreu. . ' Lord." gasped the. man on the bed, `*1 have told you,everyth`xhg,A by my Father`: `grace I have nothing to gay." was drawn and 1m....'.....a L......:~ IIIIUFCUIH First_." he said, you shal tell me why you came here, who sent you,A,and what you desired. I M1-,,_,; n _______1 .u -- - - '- : AVII. LJUU. W5! SUUUTBU. , V `With extraordm-ary modesty_ he d1sap- peared as soon as thevlntervxew was con- |clude`d, and has since not been in this of- fice ' = - I o IIYLSI . .I - -' "` ` " sun um, uuscreanc. 1: may be said that] the interpreter whp__accompanied our repre- sentative was one of these. It was through [his instrumenta!it_v that the interview with, Mr. Soo. was secured. | n `nun. ....4..--.-.I:-,-~-r - ' '- " v-uIn, slyucuuc, cub, ll! uluwu Ill AQICIIKB, amoves foul, decaying food-matter you -.aver thought" was in your system which manned gas and pressure on heart. -Adler- -iih expels poisons and [gas from BOTH up- and lower bowel. EXCELLENT to ' guard against appendicitis. ' Wm. Crossland. druggist. Sold in Elmvale ` `by W. J. McGuire, druggist. campaign L0 suppress tne societies affected.l' wonder It may be remarked." continued the next fi enterprising journal, that such is the ab; country horrence in which the crime is held by to swin every Chinaman. that numerous offers of.thun fo help haye come to this paper from Chinese : land." citizens who desire to assist in the search` It wo for the, miscreant. It be said thatiagenien` the internrntnr whn mmm~.~........:..A ' ' ' A..- _-_.__ llug uuuseu \'VllIl IBIS Ivnory. E `That I do not believe." -he said, the- people who killed His Excellency probably] travelled all the way from China, and are` now possiby on their way back again. ,They had no other object but his destruc- tion. and if they stole documents, they were: documents associated with the .Princ,3's; campaign to suppress the societies affectedfi It mnv hp rnrnnrlrntl " ......c........J AL- mg tue nmoassaaor. . I It has` been suggested, said our repre- sntatlveci that-robbery was the object of; t e mur er and that -a bureau h d b `rifled and v aIua.ble documents extraactedsen 6 `MI gnn 1l1nn Inn-u urn-\L..4:- 1... J:_..____L `Hutu uuu vzuuume aocuments extracted. -' "Mr. Soo was very emphatic in dissociat- ing himself with this theory. "Phat I An m.+ k..I:...... *1 - -..:.I A- 1 -3... - an; Am: (An Luumvclu puull UL VlCW- `Do you explain the murder as having been committed by the emissary of a so- ciety? -asked our representative. Mr. Soo nodded. 6` i , `I believe there is an association,` he| said, which had aspecial reason for remov-j ing the Ambassador. i w m 1...- 1.....- -..___-.-e- v -- lU BUUUIC M1811" l1U0llUOH.' ' `But surely, our representative pointed out, `the abolition of secret societies is `not a reactionary movement. Mr. Soo shook his head. ' `You are now speaking, he said with! a smile, `from the point of view of the; European. In Ghina we.regard anybody.` as a reactionary who attempts to alter the? position of affairs so that it corresponds` with any period of time in the past. - _ l For instance, there was a time when` there were no secret societies; to abolish them would be regarded therefore as a reactionary measure since it would produce conditions which had once existed. That again I say is an Eastern point of view. 1' 5- on, _____ '___.I_:,, .1 uaulca. ` ` "` `The Prince, as you know, was an` antiquarian of great note, but he was also a man of strong political opinions. which, `I fear, have not always commended them- selves to the majority of my fellow country- I men. ' - H ('11, I HIUH , L 5 `He was by repute a reactionary, he went on. `and earned animosity of a. number of secret societies `in China by his efforts to secure their abolition. H 513"` ,_____y__ 9 _.__ _ . .- - - - necessary. - , " `I cannot tell you,` said Mr. S00, `how grieved I am at-the. death of the noble Prince who so ably and. worthily representedf the Dowager Empress at the (Court. of St.i James. ~ , Lrni. 'I\ ' nuiuzaauuuur 8 assassination. ' \_ We are able," said the journal in large. n leaded type. to supply a number of cur- L, ious and significant facts concerning. thel in tragedy which have hitherto been un-l `1 recorded elsewhere. Our representative '- had the pleasure of a long conversation with - _Mr. A'1"se Soo, a wealthy, young`Chinese` 1 gentleman, who has been domiciled in Eng- land for a numbe_r of years. Mr. _ T se` 3 S00 is the son of the governor of Chug lung, a large and populous district of China and is engaged in this Cl!-y in studying? constitutional law.` Mr. Soo. a fine.hand- 1 some looking young man of commanding l appearance, received the representative of ` `The'Evening Megaphone' in Piccadily. For-l tunately Mr. Soo had a perfect command` 4 ofpEnglish_. and the interpreter whom" our" 1 representative brought with him was un-'1. necessary. `T nnnn ...-.4 4-1! ...... ` ....:.I \n_. a,, H m . -T can 5 -% --nrstiavia vu s-nu u-any us van: Luunucx. There was not a district apparently which ]could not furnish a clue." _ The Evening Megaphone," .Lo1id;on's most enterprising journal; secured some- thing of a beat, for it was the only paper which was able. ~to.throw a light, upon the , inside mystery of a a vendetta- which had apparently culminated in th Ambassador's assassination. I17- ...... ..LI_ `'3 __:_u LL, - _ I ~ 1 1 I/llC__ u usuuy. A . '1'-here was scarcely a 'pdlice statidn in [London that was not at that moment in- gterrogating some stray Chinaman who had been brought in to account for his ivhre abouts on the night of the murder. v|'I|.,._._ ___.__ ___; _ _I:_._:.; , ` I - - gthe great Empire which aphealed to the T. imagination, and the series of `hypotheses E which appeared in the columns of the press gassisted to a remarkable degree in foster: ` ing the sense of mystery which surrounded 3 the tragedy- . , , . . Av-A Ilium nnnpnuulu .. ....I.-- ..L..L--._ .- ' L . ` at n:**************%a****;;;;; ;%A n|`I_u%n:n or MEI 3 >14 (Continued from Page 10) Arch` would be more logical by early encour- that agement to retain on the land the boys and pre- girls who. unconsciously, have already ugh reached a high stage of technical training vith,in farming `than to see them drift Into cites where they frequently waste that zap-[knowledge intrying. often enough late in :on-. of-~'ter fitted to undertake. The child is father to the man"--in nothing more so than in the love of farm ion. animals. In too many cases that gifiis dor left without intelligent fostering and without self the sympathetic direction that it needs. T00 en- i often a boy s pig at slaughter time becomes atiquite his father's hog and a girl s chickens aw-`are wholly lost. in her mother s egg and in poultry account. `What wonder, therefore.` vas that a sense of discouragement and a feel- ots . ing of unfairness kills the early enthusiasm. -a I Many a farmer has the solution of his farm tall problems right in his own household. )edi ']'l1e or-pat v-an-ul ;no.........a... ....- L ren- life. to learn what others may be far bet- - vuncu nu` uuuuuum gculture. Those most closely connected with ` the meat industry are most convinced that only by -the application of greater intelligence and extended knowledge in both production mm bu. 21 goon Klna or me on the farm." One of the most hopeful features in to- day's [rural conditions is the spread of the momvement for livestock clubs for boys iand girls. Such. clubs are notably making ' progress, in the province of Quebec and in `some parts of the West. It is a healthful I token for Canadian agriculture. Thnnn mnaf ninnnlur nnnn an-I----I ---'4'- ' ipu`:`uu:u1a` ngm: In mstown household. `_ `The great rural Interests are human Interests. the late Theodore Roosevelt once said, and good crops are of little value to the farmer unlessjthey open the door to. a good kind of life the farm." One nf the mnaf I~........c..I 4-......-_-- Bladder weakness --can be remedied `u...,- u_y an uuciuent. ` ' The impulse to note and watch and study the little` whims and oddities of farm ani- mals, is inborn in boys and girls `brought up in the country. But it is strange that where among the stock on `the farm the: principle is recognized that as the twig is bent so does the tree grow" it is so littleapplied to the human product. There l`may be many reasons why boys and girls ' leave the farm but perhaps the commonest lie the failure to promote and foster this inborn love of farm animals. An improve- ` lment has taken place in rural school teach- -iing in the last few years by the inclusion of `a little agriculture but even that too often ;lends at the school house door. Do not llsocial ambitions in many rural places run directly away from the farm? A lad o` pairts" is. generally encouraged to look forward to, if he is not from early youth `set aside for, a city job. It has become -almost a fashion of late in Canadian cities Ifor someone to compile a list of `country- 'bred boys who have made good" in the city. Yet, with almost half our population in urban districts and with competition gin the large cities nearly as fierce as it is gin the denser centres of Europe. one may ll if the real opportunities for the fifty years will not be found in the icountry. Already the pendulum has begun swing backwards and one hears oftener `than formerly a longing to be `-`back on the- I K I n gland." l ` -..-.... ..-vu um-u_y uzuuxue are LIICFB OI un- swerving patience and of dogged following. fnrst a strain. than 2 lbw ....,I nu... rrwcnvulg puuence and or dogged following, strain, then a line and then `a type" until finally 9. new breed is evol- ived fixed enough to be classed apart? All jthese successes had their begfnnings in an ;inherent. love of livestock, often fostered ionly by an accident. | TR- ion-u.L... 4.. .-_A- -~ ` ` ` A love of farm animals for themselves, untouched by any thought beyond is the first cause and beginning of success with livestock. In this characteristic livestock, production does not differ from anything else. No man has ever succeeded in life who disliked his job, who did not find in it the s:ir of enthusiasm. the challenge to in- telligence and -the- prick to ceaseless better- ment..v How many recordsare there of un- nwervina n9f.innnn anal ..c ,i.........: :-n--..:,, LovE or LIVESTOCK } SHOULD BE FOSTERED[ _, The man hesitated, and his interrogator ?glanced significantly at the screw in which the captive s hand sfi rested. It was enough for the man on the bed. _ He mentioned the name. : Soo recognised it as the keeper `of 3} 1 Chinese lodging house in the East. End of` I` London. a man who was known to him to` be the ngent of th, Bannermen. = i (To be tinued.) E aulp mu m nms matter." { f To whom were you to report?" asked ;So_o. ` ` '. rm, - -- ~ - --' ` tendant with, the gag put a cup to the- cucu me screw on the others fingers. Give him water," said S00, and the at- `o her's lips. He drank greedily. I Lord, I was sent byvmy society -which 'as your Excellency knows is the society of [the `Banner Bearers of Heaven. " I Soo nodded. ' ` _ I They desired to discover -how your Lord- ,ship felt in this matter." I Tn IIv`|t\\\1 ......... -..-.- I . nu - -i uuu_ your uusmess. ` I ;Lord;" whispered the man, I will, {tell `you all I know. l S00 nodded to the torturer and he loos- ened the screw the other s fingers. him water " mid gnn 0...: 4|... .. ncauy ~_w .u1rusE a gag mto ms mouth. I You shall tell me, said Soo monoton= ously, why you came, who sent you here. and your business." ,T_n...l" ...L:._-..-_I .1 Liv ..- Break the Grip 4 of that Cold !` _ _` ..---...--.... .. nun. u.v vuc V.`-Iplal\Cb' UBU. [The man" leant over and made a haif turn of the screw upon a weird shaped con- ltrivancewhich enclosed the prisoner's fing- ers. CID- . The man suppressed a shriek with reason for over him leant a second Chinaman ready _tb thrust a gag into his mouth. ' Vnn aha" fa" m..` ....:.x Q)... ..--_-4-.. I , I You shall tell mp," rpeated the otherl calmly. `who sent you, why you came, and what -you wertold to do." He nodded to Ehe man who sat nonchal- antly' smoking a nine by the captive-'s bed. Tkg .m...... l....-A. -_._._ - 9 ` THE liluuua xAMIm;_n :- l (Toronto Saturday Night) l Here is something '0 think of. Some-' l- thing for our Parliamentary and civic spenders to tarry over before they advocate the spending of a million dollars here and` a million. dollars there of public m_oneys., I The British Prime Minister addressing the] 1 Glasgow unemployed the other day pointed` I out` that the burden placed upon the produc- _tion of one ton of steel by rates and taxes. Hexclusive of the income tax) before the Iiwur was :1-half crown; to-day it is a llguinea. That is to say. about thirty-seven H lcents in pre-war (lays as compared with; `five dollars now. was the taxable proportion! levied upon a ton of steel. Broaden this` lapplication and we receive considerable en-1 llightenment. as to what is the matter wilhi _ `our own affairs, High taxation is strangling; "business. At every -turn manufacure,= ltrade and commerce is met with a tux.l [And all these taxes must eventually be paid] by the consumer. Is it any wonder the} farmer complains that everything he has` to. sell is cheap and everything he wants ,to buy is clear? Is it any wonder that the manufacturer's costs have gone out of sight, I and the retailers expenses have'reache(l a peak heretofore unknown`? The farmer finds no market for his products because of an im- poverished world. and the manufacturer s output is curtailed for the same reason. And |e and in all that goes after production can a permanent improvement in that industry I and in allied agriculture be loo_ked_for. Our 1 livestock industry, based as it `is directly and unmistakably upon the sales of meatfoods lg after preparation by the most modern I technical iiiezhods; must meet highly trained and highly organized competition from ' other countries. It can only be successful `when it can count upon the same qualities ' of intelligence and knowledge as other > industries have. i A casual survey of the enormous demand - for meats all over the -.world will show that i so far we have but reached the gate and; ' threshold of undreamt-of opportunities. We| cannot take more complete possessionthanl by setting the younger farm folk to starts where their fathers left off.-" Outstanding! wealth may not come to alleven in thef livestock industry any more than to those! lin a city s industries but the probabilities `are that those on farms will have the far, more healthful life and proud sense of inde- i pendence that almostinevitably go with; `country life. And at the last, for those: ;whom nature has endowed with the magic{ love of livestock, there will be. the inwardf contentment of which R. L. Stevenson wrote: If a man love the labor of his, .hand. apart from any question of success? or failure, the gods have called him."-Ex. I 1. TAXATION OUR CHIEF CURSE . - Canada's Best-8&9 - THE E_cqNoMY PACKAGE GAS FROM FOOD A { masses on HEART; T R C 9 Made to "Ge_t" Rheumatism 0 o o .5 Most other pains are easy. c.-. u' n.. All n..... e....... ._ n_.__:_ __`_ - vuuvn llunuuu Inns \ S`o ld' By All D-rfl-1;.Stores In Barrie Canada`: Standard Remedy for Fall Try; 21:2?-g::c;i:: t::x:gf I;`e1refo : E ` 5 - . ' _ T 5014; % 25c--4o pills :',e,U( ,: xee:e 1 50c--9v0 pills "G ' Your Food J will \ Feed Y0`? more j Apy Tguph oilndigestioi: Until your various digestive organs are in order your food,~`instead of properly nourishing you will be liable to clog and poison your system. Your .blood will be poor and impure and your nervous system thdrouglily run down. Take immediate steps to secure the healthy activity of stomach, liver, and bowels. To this end you should Though you suer with that dragging, nagging pain in the bladder, with frequent sting- ` ing urination which shows brick dust deposits, and with all the ,extreme discomfort . of. urinary weakness,-you can get quick, sure relief by using Gin Pills. Why suer 1 day longer? Gin Pills have helped thousands ,of Cana- dia: men, women and chil- dren. Justtrytheml Afew doses will prove to you how unnecessary itis to suffer. NATIONAL DRUG 8. OHEMICAL 00. OF CANADA, LIMITED, TORONTO. '/.2 lb Pmme: 15) ,, . V----- w--- -v III Illlllo I.` In Allandale: Patterson's Drug Store 0-11`: -.-nu. no llUl all cxpcrh ment. many thousands of Can- adians have proved the elfectiveuess of l`.R.C.'s. The best test you can make is to get a dollar box from your druggist, or for free sample write J. G. Templeton & Co., l`orouto. A postal card will bring it. I- AII__.l,I,, uu aululr-I. I-u.s la nuns IIICTE If 1 nothing quite so good for pains and aches as Templeton ; Rheumatic Capsules. The medi. cinai power they contain is absorbed by the blood and so carried to the seat of the pain. T. R. C. s contain no habit-iorming drugs. Their action is to remove the cause of the pain. SING 'l`.R.C. s is not an experi- Can- THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1923'. _ _,__.__-A---r that I`! the nu spirit \ la`.-.v. ..... llllily .'n ing the- linu-nu" the Inn gave h \ A : III! Tablets stop Ilok hndnchp rollovo blllouo attacks. font un -regulate tho ollmlnntlvn ornnn. - `rum: a little . Before carelos "Hit II in grmulfu: uu In` first gr; VVH-` II VQH" whose lzu} I'..v Rf! | In `Afr: ST ruuovo nmouo attacks. tone ind -ngnlato ollmlnatlvo organs. ma 0 you tool no. 113.11.. -1.... nun- nu-" an an - Tomorrow Alright I. Tnlulnin .64- -l-I. I.--.|--|.-- -

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