Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 6 Jan 1927, p. 11

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UAR? 6. 1927. , _--v _--uu Una. 1.1U3' uttves desires grate- edge the following ved in"Barr1e by the the Natiqnal Sani- -vuvrI.I IVIID !Muskoka Hos- ! dnnhvnu or-on 6- $79.00 ] _ and cook until tender. Drain them and; place on a serving plate in overlapping: pieces; have ready a dressing made by! mincing one small onion. adding four lTlIe new Ecohonjical % Sqap lakq, 17754 o-z{. Easter Seeded 15 % Tlhnpun Sudlcu ' Tl: npu Scull 2`|I._s'. 27'}; alsms ST. - GEOR Evaporated GE S MILK, 3 TINS 23 :. `an.-n Dlsi. 1i3LK TEA J 3 lb.Jar Pure Raspberry, Strawberry, or Black Currant Rear. Price. 550.. got those who_like a real avory--Tea we recommend . end of the Fmest Teas mm Southern India. Ceylon I delighted with this m....a menu of the Finest delighted with this blend. G ngantlc Tlzga Sale DOMINO Blend TEA Reg. 69: 1:. lb. lA_IL 9) '3 A very econmlcal blend of Ceylon and Indian Tea: Tea Gardens. EFCHMELLO TEA _FLEXO /__- - _..-.....-- \I& 1 \Jl.\l. U1` of obtaining your favorite blend of Dominion Stores 2 Team at a very remarkable saving during our 3 A ` ANOTHER OEPORTUNITY nbtaining I-iigh Qua] II saving during All! `Full of F lavoint C Info DCI I III C nub`) Reg. Price, 55. 2lbs.21c 27c lb. NDIED Choice 5111!? CA , . emon and Cogknfg L0ran 5195 PEEL Lauxcspuun each? the ned together until; as tl salt and Denver ing. _..._.._.._._._...____ Pocket Size Safety V `I . 1` a T California State _1'in | I9i'aii{"'2 1"` Lvorywrea our Richmello Blend; which is a 1 and Noxthern India. You will be While i; 11:33 Buy the large zipples in preference to g small ones for cooking purposes 1 there is less loss in neelimz and am ::2T ; five minutes after adding the flour and fat: remove from the fire and beat into . the yolks of two eggs. nu; remove from f; eggs. r ' ---~ : he sm all nhnu xx: :m1a.u ones : I 2'. ; _uv 3 India. You -vi" 5- No. Delmonte Crushed Pineapple 2 Tin 27C wr cooxmtr ; peeling and cor. 2 I Santi Clara Prunes '_75c lb. iigh Q_uality Page E00111 C-I59 < i Ildll Bh3 with Cuti- curu Soup and hot water, dry gen- tly and anoint with Cuticun hit- tnent.` Dally use of Cuticurn Soap. named by the Olnuncnt when to- , keeps the _ active gnd ' akin clegr and ealthy. j Innmln l..I. I... In Inn nu... a|_'__.n.L ing uunvua n.um1ll3OIl 1.2.53 p.m No. 62, leaves Allandale 3.24 p.m., arrives Hamilton 8.50 pm. ' uruvuu nuanuale 6.350 a.m. No. 62, leaves Meaford 2,49 p.m., arrive Allandale 5.10 p.m. I ,_ V Hamilton Sub-Division .. Northbouhd 7 No. 61, leaves Hamilton 6.50 a.m., arrives Allandale 10.20 a.m. No. 62, leaves Hamiltori 3.35,-p.x_n_., an-rives,Allandale 7.23 pm. ' Southbound 8/ e No. 60, leaves Allandale .56 a.`n., arrives Hamilton 1.2.33 p.m. N0. 62. IRRVQH .A"nnrln'In K 01 -u -A -v-JQIVVD ua.cn;uL'u .l.U.J.D P-HI. Southbound No. 60, leaves Meaford 6.30 ::.m., arrives Alland ale 8.35 NA, R9 `An!1nn 'I'-.......I fl lh -- -~- lI'se"Cutici.1'r:a` `` To Hgal Slight R.[._gg_ D4-5-... L..- I.'--_...- _ From the roaster direct to vacuum sealed containers. This is f the secret of full-avored THVt'iRS_DAY.. JANUARY 1 6, Qt -..~.o-4--~.a{-an E"1"T'Y'. Y TO Wedding stationery, choice in quality and correct in style, at the Bazjrie Examiner printery. 2_0tf uuuauu. V `.`Your name too iong. I call you Charlie.".-Wall_ Street Journal. =uv\vIvII-Ivvbll 9713 A ewoinan who was visiting `in a Pacific `oast City hired a Chinese boy. She said: `What's your name?" Fu You Tsin Mei," said he. Your name is too long. I'll call you I Tsin." , _ h What's your name, please?" said . e ' "'M19s. Elmer Edward St. John Mac- donald." ` ` . ' ICVA u u u u on... A... 1-..- v - -- 3, 927. 71 {L LUULIL II on a plate. mg rpou-app1e, celery, lett ce,.vetc. Make the dentist's office service station, not a. -repair shop. Don't` eat with your `eyes." It is cheaper to prevent decay than to check `it. The best way to cure a. disease is to prevent it. ' . A brush in the mouthis worth two on the shelf." . I would rather put a dirty fork into my mouth three times a day than have thirty-two dirty teethin it all the ` time. I A 6 nu , LCUEH. An unhealthy mouthrneglected nev- er gets better. ' Keep well teeth well. ` ' Apples are called "Nature's tooth-' brush." ' End each meal with a selt-cleans- ing fpod-appl_e, celei'y',. le'ttv.X(l:e,.etc. dentist`: nffim: not-ulna pust.e'~ 18- e1DOW grease. Be selfish about your toothbrush. `It is yours only. See your mouth as others see it. Chew your food; your stomach has no_teeth. An on-uIaA4.ILI..-. ...--.LI_ --:A,I- I - nent. The food ger than when b_owl. ` uu nurse" to` you There are thirty-two reasons why every member of every family should 11-txgl a toothbrush; every reason is a. 00 . ` ` Fill your candy` basket with fruit. Whose teeth will-you be wearing when you are 40? _ Many people are digging their grav-_ es with their teeth. The best tooth dowder or `tooth paste is. elbow grease. Rn nnlflnh nhnno Ivnlun '.-..-.n..|......... yuul` LUUU well. Be true to your teeth or they will be false- to you. ` Thorn are I-11!:-I>u_{rnn-\ manna..- ...I.-. u. LUUURLCIIB. . , Be both choosey" and "chewsy a.- bout `your eating. . Eat means masticate. T i ' The material for building your teeth is provided by the food you eat. Choose your food wisely and'chew your food well. `Rn fans: on urn. LAALL ._ 51.... ._.HI F 4 Iguubves usnue. and rested ms sole hopei on these words: Him that cometh -`unto. me, I will in no wise cast out.- .Lor`d Tennyson dying `whispered to a. ifelong friend: -There is One who guides our steps, and our individuality! urvives the grave. In `this let us live` and die. A plain man facing. eternity, ahumble minister of the zosnel who -had served his church and his God in, humble places, was recently asked ifi thedifferences of creeds and forms and names interested him now. He shook his head and spoke with difficulty`: Nothin9:. nothing but the love,o.f 7 God in Jesus Christ." If we could Just get that simple conception of re- , iieion while we live. if we would just work at -it. how much would it be the l ygre est gift we could bestow upon the 4 we d. and how much the best! Thou 1 shalt love the Lord thy God, and thy .: Ineighbor as thyself." , BITING FACTS Take Care of Your Teeth DENTAL SLOGANS - A clean, healthy mouth is ,good life insurance. A toothbrush is a. better friend than a toothache. ' `DA I-unk MAL nnnn -.n .._.1 ia_L-_._.._.u u nunu. _ , Sometimes when men draw near to the gates ofthe grave and see things!` in the light of eternity. there ~ comes to them a. vision of the simplicity of truth. Bishop Butler, the great apolo-.'N gist and contraversialist. dying. threw}- ali church claims and eniscopal prero- `. gatives aside. and rested his sole hope words: "Him mm nnmnfh . sue. mun seen Ule`l8.th6l'." Thatlis just where we have failed. We have not understood religion be-i cause we have not understood Jesus.. He set Himself to free religion from - the encrustations and encumbrances = of ages. anclestablish it upon the eter-,-t nal basis of being good and doing.` good. I-Iestrlppedit of the dogmas; and traditions of the Jews. the super- : stitions and eeremonials _of the heath- . en. the incantations and initiations of}. the mystery religions. the prides andll hatneds and cruelties which senarated;, man from man. and faithfrom faith.! , scarcely had He left earth and re- turned to the Father` who sent Him. than His own followers started ailing up the old mountains of falsity and credulity and cruety, to bury once , more His eternal with out of sight. We have borro ed dogmas and tra- ditions from Judaism. We _have bor- rowed rituals and vestments and cere- monialsvfrom the heathen. We have borrowed initiations and sacraments and ordinances from the mystery res ligions. We have borrowed intolerance V and bigotry, hatreds ahd crueltles from! 1! thede_vll. And we `have called these. religion. Christianity. the religion of Jesus. who went about doing good. The tragedy of it! A great preacher u has said that our law courts recognize 8` only one ground for the divorce of w husband and wife: but the church has`, found 140 `grounds for divorcingw Christ's followers from one anothe-.'.I m None of these grounds were in the teachings of Jesus. They are all the ct accretions which ave been added to 0, religion by those who have misunder- C. stood the thought of religion Jesus had M in mind. ` 1 Qnnnnblivunn co-I...-. ...-.. _1..-__ ..-- A 1) lo. V ..... nu -.v uc sunny in me DRUGS Of an` aboutlt. He embodied it. He lived it. Austrian, one Bernard ', Scheinberg. He` held close communion with God.l who. at the age` of 76. is the father of He Went` about doinar 8006 to men. .eight-eight children. eightyitour or Thatwas religion. That was God. "If. whom are liv ` _ ing. ye had known M'e.. ye Should havew Scheinberg has married twice. He! know MY Father. "He that hath seen had seventy children by his rstwife., Me. hath seen thnlo`nthm~" I-_-.__ ... - . .. K11 I Me. I "Bk mg reugion. living it. ' . . ` There is a story from the Greek or a Spartan who was spending one day; in Athens. He\ sought anaudience of Phidias. the matchless Athenian sculp- : tor. and asked" him to tell the secret- of. his, art. Phidias replied that one /dav was too short to give an idea of sculpture as a system; but it was long._ enough to look upon a statue which `demonstrated his thought of the beau- tiful. Then he drew aside a curtain and revealed to the eye of the wonder- "struck Spartan the entrancing statue -of Athena. one of the most ,ma,1estic. works of art `ever created. There was beauty embodiedin visible form. Thin hm: .`l'nnnu am-m man. ..-u.-an- uuuu-.y emnocneu in visible form. This has Jesus done. with religion. Th He did notrdefine it. He didnot lecture .seem: aboutoit. He Aust: God.lwho, .eig`ht~ when ya had lznmxm Mn Ina an-..-m~1.: 1.-.... . -- - 0 Are the ad_ditienso-vv-he have made to the: .teachings of Jesus christian at all? ' . How did Jesusidescrlbe essential re-9 ligion? Thou shalt love the Lord thy no abstract terms- He _ernnlo.ved' no metaphysical definitions. He _fa-` shioned no philosophy of faith. He drew up no cast"-iron systems of dog-` ma. In terms so simple that a child could understand He spoke of God as l our Father, of us as His children, off (20% and thy neighbor as thyself." He u e `whom not one was so unimportant as . to beforgotten. Then in His own life_ He demonstrated thlsthought of re-.r ligion. He did not define. it. He Iived_ ` -. He lived love to God and love to` , men. That is the true way` of defin-g ' ing religion. living I There `in 9 nfnufv frnm nu. n......u- -1 - - I Jesus. FINAL ,A_u1'-uoauw, _. ,' _ . on RELIGION: --u. 1-41: vxoxc-xoxoxoxoxg g Everyday Religig 3: 2 . * BY DI . Thurlow Fraser. 5: ?Ll:lOMEN(GLA`l'U,RE F as: > v. ur. 1'nur1(_)w Fraser )1; swwi&ww&a&$&&&& _ _ - - .v_ _ --- -- nu-49 vans. .in the mouthls wort` ten e_ . VQ Dr. Thurlow Fraisex-' 11 ui mmmmmmmmumm it i's lnade of satin crepe," soft satin or taffeta. It. bakes a perfectly delightful to match` a Sum- ejlsemble mer frock. __ __ v.v..J vuvvodl - vn \nlIIIDll 1119 in printed silk e<-_--u-bnglg `wage 229 Tm: rst capes of the Spring were cut on circular lines and were swung from a. neat and titted shoulder. `But as the sea3on atlvances, the French dgessmakers have. admitted the straight `cape to the mode. It is shirred to a tie collar and its lower edge is"stra.ight, so that it can be `n_1_ade from bordered wide fabrics. It'is often`7 unlined,` and for the country it is gay and__ `charming made in owered English prints,` in cllintz or in terry cloth. For urban life A h` :'... ...__I- -1 VA-' ,5uuu as spolled. . You should know your oven and iwatch the baking in cooking any Tcookie, and remember how nearly` spoiled they arg lfv half charred or perhaps. actually burned. You can get better flavors with the near hot oven. rather than a medium. but you may learn to manage a. medium so well as to get the best effects _th it and with- out wasting any part 0 your batch. A thermometer helps greatly. but does .not_ always tell the whole truth. Th\ Shirrgd Cap: Show the son site % of a New Fashion T `:1. om-uegree oven. - . ' These cookies will stand more fire than many of the doughs we can make. `but a. fcoo brown sugar cookie is as , good `as spoiled. 1 You nhnnl bniuu. -.-.--A --- " ghths cup butter, l one-fourth cup sugar. flavor to suit. Combine the egg yolks. flour, butter 1 and sugar and work the whole as a pie crust iswlworked or mixed. then when the whole can be massed into a. dough of uniform consistency, knead > .\ ishining and tretchy. Put away under ; a. cover in are | thenroll it out in a thin andaeveri sheet [on a board into which flour has been 'rubbed to smoothness. then cut in a pleasing variety of shapes `and garn- 'ish variously or ice after the cookies 'have been baked for about twenty `minutes; out as `thin as a wafer. in ;a. 375-degree I l"hA.un nnnblaa nun! ...4.-...s ---r -- for fifteen minutes. or until it is rather \ 01 place for half an` hour, ' e hadllittle luck ous cook recom- ouwuus U118 rec1pe:-- ~ ' Two egg yolks, one and one-fourth cups flour, three-eighths gne-fourth cup sugar. flavor in mm ---------------- SUGAR COOKIES Many people now decline ` tid--bits offered guests, and surfeit of goodies, a plain c welcomed. \ . I flu. +1.... ---I.- -I----- - -`--- __-.v-vuw vvuvl DAI-AU U \ . Combine one and a half cups of thing cranberry pulp, sweetened with half a.- cup of sugar, wlth a tablespoon of gel- atin, dissolved in four tablespoons of ` water. [When the mixture begins to; harden around the edges of the bowl- add 21 cup of shredded cabbage and a.` quarter of a. cup of chopped nut meats. Turn into a mould and when cold serve] with mayonnaise. either alone or on I lettuce. I "\ DELICIOUS WINTER SALA nnrhhinn I\l\l\ A...) _ |.-1p , - -- asgnable. ..v . -7..-- vvvIvlEIV'O llVl I`I U I I ; _ The regular monthly meeting of the Women's Institute. will be held at the! home of Mrs. Robert Hail] on Jan. 13. ;' -Miss Laura Hall will favour us with: a. "reading and` Mrs.-`Ronald Gilchrist with a paper.`Roll call, A New Year's Resolution." ` . 1 1.0 wnar 1s 1oveliest-` . That's_ why 1' My thought comes back to Y . My heart is like a butterfly v `On happy mission hand- J. ,..v_`.-.- or -II\hnr\IIUl'|-" FLY My thought is like` a butterfly. I It wanders everywhere, `But seeks beneath the summer sky ; . The xhing that is most fair: -And, butterflylike, by and by. Beturns berieath the blue To what is loveliest- Th8f' V 1x7hu~ u ' -U'rH,'RIE `WOMEN'S INSTITUTE Thn vna-ulna ....`..._4.1.I__ _., i"-Mv THOUGHT Is LIKE A 3'u1-ran-" E'l\l I I I I ************%%**%*%*w%%** 2 IN W0MA~N'sR::Am IE1 m***x***g****a***a*%**** `MY THOUGI-l1" Is VI Inn: A 'lI1"l'l-`QR- . V u zaua, unu Ellie!` 8. cookie .13 \ ye luck mus anal: rannm- nu: BAARRl AEXAIlblNEl`t.-. the rich I` nffnvu o ` YOU. [1011 after -nnlrh: In . .uuuvu'o vvl-ll ! FISH ?An excellent wa'y to serve t rnips -with fish is to peel them, and s1 ce a- bout a quarter of an inch thick: then drop them into boiling; unsalted water ~ Snndvv nnnt-ll....a..l. W. J._ Harris Sundry cont:-it3t'11':i'o"r;s' . U 2' uge Vance ~~. . . . . W. Woolworth yson Bros. . . . . \ '1`. Devlin . . . . V tton Hardware 1|)! Se Vance~~......'. T, Yxfnnh-n.\...n. '. -.....u-u r1vol'llAL DONA' g The Treasurer of the Muskoka ;pital for Consumptlves fully to acknowledge foli contributions received ,Field Secretary of - tarium Association. . !R. H. Undm-`hln . Wm. a.uu unauy he was able to set up an establishment of_h1s own. where people came first from curiosity, then to buy. Ah. M. Polret!'-You still have an eye to business. . . - MUSKOKA HOSPITAL DONATIONS I Treasnrnr nf H1.-. ml-....----__ -r- I-VI ..az.z'ana other alien dances. the more masculine and themore severe will the fashions for women become." Already we have been treated to wo- men in clinnersjackets andswe shall soon witness a revival of trouser- skirts in various guises, so that the transition from skirt to trousers will ftnot seem like a deliberate stea.l." He ,predicts that `trousers will not be `a mere short-uved fad: they will be `found to be more practical, more by- gienic and, as a consequence, `.`this in- novation will keep onegaining ground land lead the styles bit by bit into a rigid nun-I-n-ii--H ""`- ' ` , uuau and Empire) Who . .s not heard of Paul Poiret. - or fashions 'inParis? In all his he has never been.-so dar- . attempt in the -F'or\_1m to trace the trend of fashions for the coming thirty years. Recalling the; n10de`ofj 1896, he asks: How could the poor man` have foreseen that the` very same ladies would one day re- pudiate the whole get-up and` come stalking into his shop in skirts cut off at the knee. waists of the`>\'raguest lo- cation, `head and hats as deep as saucepans?" of it. From indulgence inthe taste s -with a minimum of hair V et we are to have Worse and more 1 ` . l m0Pe TI"lQQnav1IunA ----" _-Z- .TURNlPS WITH FISH pvt-Alla-nI~ uvn'- 4.- ~-- ' - uuy Moore nnf uuue ,..... T.:: `r vwu.-L: .'L4SKlR'l'S DISAPPEAR _,(Mall and Empire) gs Paul {in Paris? In us his Forum 2 thirty years. Rnnnllino nu. unuulgence 1n_ `the other me {he more amym...

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