Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 10 Jun 1926, p. 11

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' because most' in_tirn_ate. In an hour or_less, he can pass through unequalled scenes of farmland, lake and strearn-can mount hills which open out a wide and colourful 'panorama-can descend into valleys where nature is most exguisite OOD roads, in Ontario haye made each motorist the 'Mona1"ch ` of an Empire of natural charm and" beauty`. This Empire is his to know and to enjoy, with convenience and ease. . r ' Supreme in the Empire > of Ontario's Beauty _ A nut; 13 good tea TEA R ED sweowmng ,,_ goad.7Vwz:rgou11gwmaa.m? ' Ask u about :l'r`avel1er's % Checks the next time you plan leaving town. MBANIGFTOROHIO When Travelling --4 At Home or Abroad - ` They provide you with ready funds wherever you` may `be and yet they also protect and safeguard your money. > s The modern way to carry money is in the form of Travel- ler's. Checks. Originally intend- ed only for. European . trips, -they are now used extensively in Canada and` the, United States, especially while motor- R055 EEDOL Ecpnomu _OtI.$.@and `Greases How 35000 Exacting Tests Each Month Safeguard The` Veedol film of pt-otection r - um IJDDI UUUU DIIUIS -f'-L4-%<: /5e9w4'=`~"9e I } CROWN OIL COMPANY; _I_.iMITED TORONTO. " HA'?II_.TON L,` * LON F"-|u"`ve lnvictun Agent` II I\ I! _ I II ...... was uuayg I W8`Y stitched with silk that doe: not rot or fray--ever'y Invictus can be depended upon to retain its smart appearance months longer than the ordinary shoe. ` Vast resourees, innite oare! That is the stofy of Veedol. That is why the lm of`protetion" never fails, but is:-J `everlastingly on the job safeguarding .your. motor and cohserving power. 3 Most men detest` buying new shoes ,,_because they dqead the breaking-1n_ period. The Invictus 551; 4'}... 2.. -A-- A A` `~ ,.~..vuo Aux: uxvwcus .Shoc eliminates this stage /entirely, _ It ts the normal foot perfectly as soon at it is drawn on and holds that t threughout it} service.` And the In'v`ictuu is durable! Made of the best leathers "only; etrdngly ltltched mm. .m. .1... .a..... V. Bearcl;a r 'v'.Iu"'Ve IVllllI {Gill 11 And thgt is the reason that hundreds of thdhsands of car owners trust-`Veedol as few other` products are 4-aunt-`A 3 Any . d_ealer displaying the orange and" black Ve_edol sign will gladly supply youwith-the correct Vedol oil for your car. Ask for Veedql by name. And right in the heart of `that plant is the chemical laboratory for testing lubricating oils. There. a staff of trained technologists analyze and `check the quality and uniformity of Veedol.- Over "3,000 teal: are made each. month to safeguard the Veedol `_`film of protection, and make it worthy of your faith. '7 Yet the Veedol lm of protection doesn t just happen, It is\ the supreme result of the/labor and skill and innite care of a great organization. Covering r more than 175 acres, the TideW'ater Oil Renery, `at `Bayonne, N.J., is like a city. There are thousands of trained` workmen; _ milesof railroad tracks and pipe -- lines; condensers,' crude-stills, lter houses, storage tanks`; ships, lighters, ` Aimamimoth plantl _ You don t think of these things, because you take them for granted. You have learned" to trust Veedol iinplicitly. - -. As your car breezes along the open road, how often do you give a thought` to the Veedol that lubricates your motor? Perhaps you don't. even remember that Veedol forms a lm of protection, thin as tissue, smooth as silk, tough as `steel. ; And that it is this lm alone which safeguards the `vital parts i of your motor from deadly heat and friction. L l`l"'lE BEST G00? SHOE bidrlbutors for TIDE: TER OIL COMPANY lucuvuu uuu uuuiuuxil; insurance D0110) : - M s Babe `Mosley, Mrs, A. Ferguson, 1 M s.` Minnikin, Miss Cora Brown-. Miss Helen Blackstock, Miss Kathleen Mur- ' phy, Mrs. Goodwin, Miss Dorothy Hen- , son, Mrs. H. D`. Jarvis, Mis_ Vera Walt. Miss Edyth' Wolfenden, Miss Bessie Smith, Mrs. H. M. Bray. Mrs. A. Miller. . Miss Vera Knapp, Miss. Zeta Beelby, Mrs. Chas. Bowyer, Miss Connie Coles. , Miss Gladys-`Graham, Miss Laura Hall. Miss Margaret Scott, Miss Eileen Arm- strong, Miss Helen Luck. Miss Mar- : garet Creswicke, AMis`s Peggy Sims, Miss J. Edwards, Mrs; F. Peacock, Miss Gladys Johnson, Miss Verna Bailey, |Miss Hilda Emms, Mrs. H. Lennox, Miss Ilda .McCle11and. Miss Verna Smyth, Miss Jean Hadden._ Miss Mar-' -garet Wallace. Mrs. G. G. Moore. Mrs. S. 'Br`oley, Miss Josephine Wiggins, - Miss Edyth Pratt, .Miss Grace Lan . Miss.Dulcia Simmons, Miss _Ruby Man son, Miss Alice Robinson. Mrs. Gos- ` ney, Miss Dorothy Brown, Miss Luella. Wilson, Mrs. H. Irving, Miss Dorris .Barron, Miss Thelma Herreil. Mrs. J Welchi Mrs. Ryan, Miss Vera Baldwin. `Miss, Doris Hewson, Mrs. Tru'mbiey, Miss Kathleen Mccuaig, Miss Irene ismith, Mrs. H.` Balliston, Mrs. `H. J. ` `Iyath, Miss Beth Drury, Mrs. G. Bee- `.11 Nfw Alina 'l"nn`lz T\/Hue Flnnnnhn .u. *au.'u, H1155 DULU urury, J.V.lI'S.' U. bee- . m, Mrs. Alice Tuck. Miss Florence `B~.e1~.._ Miss Dorothy Craig, Mrs. H. `Meredith. Mrs. Harvey Beeton,. Miss Lyme. Burtch, Mrs. F. Burton. Miss Katie Sinclair, Miss I-Ielen Newman. Miss` -Beth Slesser, Miss Mabel Robert- .~son,sMrs. Wallace, Miss Elsie Anderson. I Miss Lovina Johnson, Mrs. C. Brown. Miss Grace Ken da,ll.i in uuu, LVLIBB , Duuy AVUHQB, -0011 D01! dish; Mis Agnes -Horan. glass cream and singer; Mrs. H. 'I`om_lin;vsilver salt and pepper; Miss Bessie Spearn,- bon bon dish with squirrelon side`: Miss 'Dorothy White, book: ends: Miss A. McCullough, silver berry spoon; Miss ' Mary McDonald, egg stand; Mrs. Mun- roe." spoon rack: Mrs. I-Iaxry White. silver gravy ladle; Miss Lillian Cro- gan. silver" plate cheese knife; Mrs. A. LeGear, sliver plate `cold meat fork: Mis_ Laura Looker. gilt jewel case; Mrs. J. R. Bell, china. cake plate, with silver handle. -The following each re- iceived one accident insuranceipnlicyz` | Mi Rahn M'nn1nv MFR A Wnraixunn rum`; ' . - Miss Kathleen Kennedy. wrist watch: Mrs. Jno. Robinson; round casserole; Miss Mabel Hook.-Irountain peh; ` Mrs. D. H. . Coleman, candle stigks; Mrs, Gordon Brunton; 1,5 doz. dessert knives: Mrs. Fred Love, pie plate; Miss Bessie Gibson, -7-piece .glass `water set:. Miss Reta Spearn, onyx clock: Mrs. John [Cook. electric lamp; Miss L. McFad- gen. alarm clock; Mrs. Sidney Thomas. I silver pie .kr_;ife; Mrs.'Wice, `silver vase; Mrs. A. Lainsorr, desk clock on swivel: Miss Irene Gracey. silver cream and sugar: Miss J. . Bogardis, . ilver fern pot; Miss`Viol'a Marling, flat silver butter dish and knife: AMiss Reta -Jac - obs. glass salad dish with fork and llsroon; Miss Betty Nelles, -bon bon I ah: Minn Aannn-I-Tnrhn alnnn nvvnnvn . es ,were .4 _ s.-theatre. There was ebnsiderabie inter- au:uu.u:.aI. strluuy ulsul. wueu use IE? istributed at Dream and est. in the race, competition.- for the first three prizes being particularly keen. Mrs. R. W. toneham.'Allandale. was the winner of the first prize. a Chevrolet touring car. with 1,496,400 "votes. The twotrips to Florida were won by Miss Mabel Simon with 1.363 - 600 votes and Miss Agnes Lyail with 1,218,100 votes. Mrs. Thos. Aikens with 977,700 votes. Mrs. Norris Webb with 853,500 and Miss Thelma ,Yot`mg with 469,400 votes, won the three radio sets. Tirere, were 111 prizes in all and the winners in addition to those above mentioned finished in the following order: ' ` M 1\.n.... 1'1..n..1.-..-.... tr-..-......:-. .....a...a.-.....:._1.. I n----Q-sq Anhduncemet 61 th: r!nners- ht` fh "Barrie Shoppers Club. cbnteat w made last Friday night when the nrlz as ,were distributed at Dreamland Hanna-.. NHL--- ....... .'s......|.1-_..:_I- .|_'4.-_ ,Crific: ,MyV dar ello , 'it` - lutely worthless. 1 W S abso . Artist; Yes. yer; I k 7 th t`,. I shotgldlike tohear it jlrllgtw the 2. heal`? . -131"-ockville Recorder .a.nd Times _ ' ` \ . u.Au- upuuun. ,Critic: `MyV 1g;1dw,'1t`s I AI`f+Bf' Van T 1-.-_--_ AI v v-I:&rI I I9!` Art.'istV: - Well, old man,` what am you'th1nk of that latest picture of mine? I~sho1'11d like t ha.ve\you;- can- did opinion. . ` (Vania. umr..' .a....._ ._u_,, ..n asuluul. nun. You may be the m\dst. car_etu1 ax-`we; in the'world and still have an accident. Keep your head in th 1t1' . c tement and ` P will-gg ve:1`lJfor;E.;u w 11 have the facts in black and white The wise driver Eetsla.mAn A: .-..u` mu nave uu-5 Lucts m oxapk and_white. The getsingmes of wit- nesses and facts when he has an acci- dent. ' M A mg we trutn as tar as they are able. - The jyiry _is often, moved by pi-eju. dice or sympathy. "It is " just as easy for a. pretty woman to get-a verdict from a susceptible male Jury, as it 13 difcult for an unprepossessfng per- son\t'o a.void*ha.v1ng jmigment rendered- against him. Von wuau ha; `I... -...`....a. --___-p . _'. um. cuuucl. uue cent. OI aamages. ' Often each party will think the oth ei3` -to blame. Sometimes a claim is made `when the manlmaking it knows it to" be untrue. but on the other hand, I have seen. parties of colliding cars get up in open court and give testis mony directly cont:-any to that given by\the1r opponents, and still is no ,doubt~in the mind of the judge or the jury that all parties-concerned are tell- ing the truth as far they able. Illirlf is often moved hv n....a.`._ 3-v.--.-4 , > mgnu a vyvn I. an alillllculdabuly. Of course it is not _ t these things/in._. the eexa ail} t_endan__t upon an automobile accident but if you don't it will be 9. tento one `bet that you will lose your case and not ollect one cent of damages. -. .- Often each nartv will +m`nb H... ..n.-`...'3~ uappeueu. _ V ' Don't trust to your memory; -make penciled `notes of the whole affair, especially `a; sketch of the place where the accident happened. In this Way you will have a complete diagram for your auto c1ub'slegal department to work with. You. the driver, are not the only one who should do this. Have your passengers get into the crowd. take names of witnesses,_ etc. Possibly you will be the guilty person but don __t tell the other driver that it was your fault. Keep your mouth shut. ` If your car is insured, report the ac- cident to the place specified in your policy, and report it immediately. Of nhnwan if in nnf ma... 4.. .s- -u Ir-"AN. ACCIDENT oocuns By Erwin Greer The first thing to do when an acci- dent occurs is to stop. The second is to investigate. If the other car is drive en by. an intoxicated person or by someone under xdriving age, make a. note of'the fact. Note the license num- ber of the other car and whether the skid tracks on the pavement showed defective brakes.` The tracks usually @111 show just where the brakestwere applied _and exactly how the crash happened. i 'lWn`n f fr-nuf fn uni. .~..-.'-....-.._... _..I_. auul. xur uu: purpose OI mvesugauon. R. J. Peacock of Rosemont has a `small flock of Barred Rock hens that have actually beaten the laying record of the pens that haye been entered in the laying. contests at the Ottawa ex- perimental, farm. There `are fourteen hens in Mr. Peacock s flock: He de- cided to see just what they "could do in the way of production for thirty days. After five days one of the hens developed broody characteristics and had to be taken "gout of the flock. The remaining thirteenkept up the egg production faithfully and. at the end of the thirty days.ha.d laid 334 eggs. This _tfig_ures out at a higher average than was attained by the champion layers at Ottawa. d . uLt:L,y auu Lue Jesuit uruer. The appeal of the Meaford Shoe Co. against the judgment of Mr. Justice Logie, dismissing ~_their action against the tqwn `of Meaford for return of $16,000 insurance money. hasbeen dis- .missed by the court of appeal. Pheasants: art: hnnnvnincr nun-nnv-nun ..uuauu uy Lue cUuI`I_; OI appeau. Pheasants are becoming numerous around Bradford and are regarded as valuable inse_ct'destroyers. Wire worms grasshoppers eggs and other insect pests filled the crops of some that were shot for the purpose of investigation. R. J. Pear-.nr-k nf Pnsnmnnf I-ma n U13 l'l5ll_L 2`ll'11l. , \ Gerald St. Onge. who is believed to hr1.ve'been responsible -for the epidemic of robberies which have startled Or- __iilfa for the past two months, was con- viaited and sentenced to,, three years in-Kingston Penitentiary. _ Tho hour shrine of n1'R `EM-u-+ QM: [D8 I`0O1'.S. - Mr. and Mrs.tW. Rrahn, R. Dobie and H_. McDonagh were all seriously injured and their auto was damaged when the car went into a ditch at a culvert on the town line between Sunnidale and Nottawasaga. ' "K7'hi`In vvnnoh~In'a- o `I-Clnur nine: of flan Ill nausa LUH 1' cu; u:nud.1'y. The new shrine. at old Fort Ste. Marie. near Midland will be onenedon June 13..A demonstration will be held in the form of a greatprocession under thveauspices of the Holy Name So- ciety and the Jesuit Order. Tho annual nf lrlnn lknnvnud G1.-4.- fin _u-:u.uuc1'a. , ; \ , Nearly 1000 motor cars were owned in Orlia. in 1925. The"tot9.l number` of cars owned in the cbunty was 8094, of which 8454 were passenger caxfs `and. 540 for comrercial uses. A Ix`v|!\,4-t\v\ I-unS1ou.. 4-.4-nn.lIn.-. nu. nlphla U'8U LUV UUlHll1Ul'Ul.1 USES. . A nine-ton boiler standing on skids waiting to be installed in a tug at Meaford. toppled `into the `bay. The boiler was fastened tb several` stout cedar trees which were pulled out by the roots. ' ` `Kn nnni Ifnn `(X7 13n'I..o. `D `l\.sI..-2.. and IV ULLH wusuga. While repairing a blow pipe at the Sisman shoe factory in Aurora, Jas; Shave. a .tinsmit31, fell 25 feet to the ground and sustained two fractures of the right leg and broke two bones of` his right arm. rlm--;1,1' Q+ nnrm Irvhn x- 1....1:m.-.: on 01.111388. The Orlllia fire brigade answered :49 calls in the months of March, April and May. `This `is the largest number that has ever been sentvin in a similar period. ('1!-nan-nay-n ah!-unnl Hnnv r1nnil1nnlz\Ar1 . _ b _Creemere school board deadlock\ed on a proposal to reduce the salary of the principal by $100 and make no in- creases in the sakuios of the other _teachers. \ 1\Y......1.. 1nnn ....`....._ ...._.. .......- ...........: ZIJUIIIU. John Gllpin of Blackbank. aged 64. was found dead in a vacant` house near hisghome. There was no evidence of foul play, death beihg due _to natural causes. fl... I'\..III-In J.l..'- `I.._.l....J_ _._..--...-.\.` In euung WIIHI sne -IIIOUSTIC were lIlUI`UlBo The.6000-ton freighter A. D. McBeth or the Ford-city Steamship co., bound for.` Port McNicoll with a cargo of grain}; ran on the rocks near Giant's om . ` Tnlun I'iIInl-u AO `DInnIpl.n-.1, nnn RA. 01 H. IIlI'C8.Il('8 place OI DUSIIIBBS. Following the birth of a child a. week previously, Mrs. C. "W. Conley of Mea- rord died of fungus poisoning after eating what she -thought were morels. Tho R_fnn fnblohfnr A- T3 M7-`Roth xengtnways. M- \ . , The body of Stanley Haswell, the lToronto youth who was drowned in the Severn River on Ma;. 20,pWas rcover- eq on May 31. *. V Two Midland girls aged about tif- teen, instead of goin to school hiked` to Orillia. where the; '.vex`e found look- ing for Wonk. `Paw I` ,T ' `lfnnnon o-v-annfn nf St; lug IO!` WOIIK. ' ' ' Rev. C; J. Keenan, graduate of St; Au usttne s Seminary, Toronto. cele-o bra ed his first -Mass in St. James Church, Co-lgan, on - May -30.` , : Allinfnn will nvnnf 9 fan nf 10 for unurcn, uo-xgan, may 4311. ; Alllston will exact a. fee of $10 f0!` he first and `$15 for the second gaso- line filling station installed in front of a merchant's place of business. Wnllnwina H-an hh-H1 nf a (slant? 9 week mearora. was, celebrated on may 40- A Midland hen recently presented its" owner with an egg measurirfg 6%; inches in circumference and 8 inches lengthways. ' -` The hndv nf. ark.-.191; `I -Tnnvvell- the The fittleth` anniver ry of the layln of the\corner stone Christ church. Meatord. wadcelebrated on May 23- A Mmlgna` hnn "rat-Anv nresented -A-vmrawvnwun ww w'LIw"A"9"A'= ' - Twomeachers of the oz-na co11eg i'atg;' have resigned; A - - A J. A. Caslake, well known 1111813939 t c 111 d, di d J`une.V2-. "} .1\.`3. n?....`..".`?`3.`1 nn%...3`ma care -,1 DI'8.l'.e(l 1118 1.001511 Dl!`I .n(1EY 0 ' `` " ' A school fair will be held `in New- market` in conjunction `with the fall, fair-,. . - ms. or Colungwood, died on .mr_1e_Mz. ,_ `L Jo n TWeldon".otT Col1ingW00dT 0919`! bx-sited his 100th birthday on June 7; anhnnl fnhu urn] `ho halt` `in N8W -xa '7="r'"- _VAl-.`UA"Zl:lON raw. 1! -nuvun nan- Caddie, I've` discovered what" I v been doing wrong. I ve been standing too near the ball as I, strike it. i 711---- __.1,, N; , --- --......- . . . V u W u an 1., cunuxc LL. Two `minutes later the caddie saidzl I don t think that's what's wrong. sir. You're too near the ball after you've struck it.-Tit-Bits. K Ole Oleson had been working as an engine wiper and his boss, a. thrifty man. had been coaching him for pro- motion to- fireman~with such advice as: Now Ole, don't waste a. drop of oi1--that costs money. And don't waste the wnsma nifhnv-_.1-'lnn+ a ....++;...... ....-v ycuaxvu, E00." When Ole went up to be questioned on his eligibility for an engineman, he was asked: Suppose you are on your, engine on a_ single. track. You go round a curve, and you see gushing toward you an express.-What Would you do ? ' I`n nyl-.:n'1n I\I.. ......1:...-I 1- ..___<|_ .1 -- To wzhich Ole 1:ep1ied, Igrab the oil can: I grab the waste--and I yump. - --Utility News. V ' _._--...... ..u.auc; unuu, JJUIIZIJU. D1'UUK. , . Three-legged race--Jack Percy and Maurice MacLaren, Amos Miller and Melville Rnhnrfunn . muunce Macnaren, Melville Robertson. uu~-LI1'cl.E costs And don't waste waste, either--that s getting ex-" pensive, 'too. . Whnh (\1n urn-n4 1... 4... 1.... .__--._4..e-_-.u ._Lu.UlV1i1l'(lIl and D. Winterbottom. " Three-legged, 13 and under-Crissle Scott and Mary Thompson, Katherine Brown and Ruth McMartin. V ' Boys-- ' 6 years and under--Geo. Scott, `Quen- tin Hardy, Jim Stevens. ` . `_ years and under--Bob Denault. Vlctor Legear, Q. oHardy. `I . 8 years and - under--Geo. Legear, Harry Lennox, Bob Denault. ~ 9_ years and imder--Cecll Robertson`, Erlc Hardy, Gordon Luck. 10 years and under-Donald Brock. Bob Orok, Ray Livingston. -. =` l2 years and under-D.' Brock. John Mllne, G. Luck. 3 years and under-R. Livingston, D. Brock, J. B Milne. 14 years and under`--`-Jack Percy, Melville Robertson, Donald Brock. 'I"lnn.-..\ 1........-.1 A- ` `,`1E;1` *"1N,laPt1I1. D.. Winterbottom. Pee-legged-race, 11 and under- ylc/Ie Dunbar and Hilda Huxtable, R. . C artin and D. .ThI`ee-Ie2'gnd 1!! nun nnnu, n..a....a- `bu ttom. Charlotte Scott, Janet Russell. Ruth McMartin, D.. Winterbottom 10 Years and under-Ruth Scott, Hil- da1 Huxtable, Joyce Dunbar. ' gum uunbar, Vera; McLeod. 3 years and under--Doris Winter-' 13 years_ and under-Crissie Scott; Three-`(2905 . 1-nnn 11 and ----1.-- 2 i': n';The first of the` Sundaychool pic-` (38 1'0!` the season of '1926 was-.held in f3.t.'Vincent.'s Parkglat Thursday after- ` ,noon by . _ St. Andrew's. It being the `_K18`s birthday the youngsters had ; '9' 1101153? and were but ih goodly num- i bets. though the forbidding aspect of the weather in the morning and the ~000l.ish atmosphere deterred some from tending. The usual program of ball and other games and-races made the afternoon pass quickly and"enjoyably 1 the Young folk who afterwards de- Voted themselves -with great gusto to the eats" which were-. bountitully Spread on the tables` set out on the west side of the park. Caretaker Carson saw that the Wants of the picnickers in the matter of hot water. seats. etc.. urn-A --_ Th R . T I GmS__ e aces 3 years and under--Margery' `Hux- table. Mary Shortt. 7 Years and under-Audre3'r McDon- Old. Betty Burkhead` Elsie Travers. 58 years and under--Minnie VanAtter, on. Fraser, Agnes Travers. . * years and nnnn_..LT:IAn 1.1-..-c-I-n ,53`$ }`fiagfffgriiggshuxtabx Nora Dunbar. Vera; McLeod. " Years and IInRn`D-u&|. 6..-`; `run --- vanv uaulca act. out on U18 side Carson saw `that the in matter water. seats. etc.. were well looked after. Eng//y_M0i0rist a TACTFUL _-'_ uuguva - `The Races "Vl'._l-I RI FT Monaitn

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