Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 11 Aug 1927, p. 15

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11; .1927 N everAgajn `t`Ill` lI4AAn 4u4nn 4n--4-J. _.. 1 Phone youf news. item to `The Examiner-222 or 223. ti} Will klll many times more ies for the money than any other y killer. Each pad will kill ies all day, every day, for three w_eeks. At all Grocers,- Drug-e gxsts and General Stores- ~.` 111.. ..._.l nu- _-__ ____I__ _,, ago: all UUIIIFLGI IDlaUl.U' 10c and 25c per package.~ ` ........... .. on his Packing Co., 1 lug, Ontario. DI`... ...._.I _..- u.._-\ v -- -- -II-Q7721` tha; anxious question Will itjell t' - ; xv 'rHun,suAir. AUGUST . Limited `.153 11. .1927 In` any I||_I|l-I uw Wltllllllll I3 wingson Mcrcuryfs ankles. . suuau uav uwu Us mung a Daclleat, and the well-dressed, woman is just as tired of sitting them out. So a graceful compro- mise is reached whereby we use them less widely, but oh so well. in arresting new fashions oi trimming and finish and in front or side sectionsoi skirts. This sim-`'` ple slip-over silk crepe frock. for instance? attains unusual distinction by means of its. cleverly placed plaitings; one section a hangs at the left hipfrom the nish of the curving belt to the lower edge of thefrock; another section, triangular shaped, is at- tached between the crossed ends of the collar band, while two small bits of plait- ing y from the wristbands as 8_3_i1Y._!8` the 'winaon Mer|1rv n nnklu. px.umnu:eaouungabackV.eae,ana th woman an Inn! an 14...! Al gaged in this Work. 12,827 are women. . Women have invaded the -profess 810113, 152 belngphyslclans and sur- geons, a number have been admitted to the Bar, and are now practising law, and twoare Judges and justices. There Juuuul-.'1'H..uI1(l 2.240 ta.1l0!`6BS6S. _ | The? are over 35,000 saleswomen in Canad and over 8,000 are employed in banks. One important occupation, tel- ephone operation, `is practically mon-0 opolized by women. Out of 18.769 en - WOIIIBH havn lnvnrha flan ---"A-- empzoyea m textile factories, while 41,- 211 azga engaged in manufacturing tex- tile `goods and wearing apparel, of which 16,612 are dressmakers, 3,029 mllliners. and 2.240 tailoresses. There over 35.nnn nalnmu...-....... a.. auuczuneet. In certain industries women find em- ployment to a predominating degree. Textiles absorb .a vast amount of fe- male-labour, over 57,000 women being employed in textile factories, are engaged In mnnnfnnhnuina .4... ...~.. Wyn uuu uuu uuuuvu UVUIYIUS. '.l'6_I`9 is one woman mining engineer in the Dominion, twenty-one electrical en- gineers and six` civil engineers. So far. no woman blacksmith or veterinary surgeons are recorded. but there are women painters, boiler mak- ers, engine builders, carpenters, etc. The census shows 587 women barbers and "hairdressers. three bootbiacks. thirty-four boot-and-shoe repairers. two garage-keepersyand three chauf- feurs. !Seven_ earn their livingat log- ging and fifty-one are trappers and en- gaged in fishing. one is a cemetery- keeper and gravedigger and anotheran` auctioneer. Tn nmntnln inA....4..:..... ----..---- -- - ..v.-nu: cu` null. IdUlVl|l`lUI`_ In the days of Confederation wo- man's sphere was mainly in the -home. but now women find a place in` prac- tically all trades and professions, be-V sides taking an active part in munici- pal. provincial and federal-affairs; one woman has occupied a seat in the Do- iminion I-Iousetor the past six years. ! Sixty years a2'o-the tennhin:r..nnnfnu_ iauuuuu nuuse_IO!` the past SIX Sixty years ago-the teachlng-profes- slon was largely in the hands of men, for the most part poorly equipped for their work and sadly underpaid. Now, especlally'in the public schools, teach- ing is almost exclusively done by wo- men. there being 49,975 women teachers in Canada as against 11,042 men. I In manv `nnnn Ixrnnnnn vm....,.u.........a-.u Lu. puuuuu. as agamst 11,042 [ In many `cases women haveediscarded their aprons and donned overalls. There H8 one woman mining nnp-innm. 1.-. n... "That a girl has a right to have her ghziir s-hingied and still hold her posi-t tion has been decided by a Judge in England. The `girl was apprenticed to a dressmakerwho had arrule that crop- ped` hairwastforbidden. When ordered_ to resign the miss `sued her employer and testified that she had her haircut by order of her doctor and with the full consent of her parents. The court promptly ordered her employer to re`- instate her. ` nuu UL lull. IJBFEPUUG and the 1ate,Dl'. . A. W. MacRa.e of Fredericton. N. B. Rev. Dr. Lancley. assistant pastor of the Eaton Memorial Church, Toronto, officiated. The bride, who was given. in marriage by her brother, D. A. Nix- 'on, Port Colborne, was gowned in tucked rose georgette and carried 9. shower bouquet of yellow roses` and [lily-of-the-valley. .Mrs. E. Cecil Rob- erts played Mendelssohn s wedding march and during the signing of the register}/lrs. -C. `Franklin Legge.-sang j,M,V World. and Mr. E. Cecil Roberts ;sant-3' All Mine Alone. Mr. and Mrs. A MacRae expect to make their home at , I` Bathurst-, N.B. av! nut IrIhu'*lV I l\VI` I A very pretty wedding wt1s.solemnlz- ed on Monday. August '1, in` Toronto. when Lucie A.. daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. Arthur Nixon. Toront , was mar- ried to N11; Donald A. Greg y MacRae. son of Mrs. Gertrude `and the late Dr. - A. W . Mnnlino nf Wt-ndnnlnc-an xv 13 THE ROSE ANo_'n-IE I-'i=iIa`No_ I stepped upon a rose one day, .. Unheeding where I trod._ . And `now that rose has lost its bloom; V Lies withered in the slad. I-spoke untoa. friend one day, Unheeding what I said, a...` . And. as theprose. that friend ofemine To me is ever dead. Take care of where. you tread. my friend. Lest you may crush it rose, For one false step may fill thy hedrt With grief God only _knovs;`s. D.` , .3 . no 4-: -:%%$$&&%%$%&&$**$&$&$$% :% IN WOMAN'S: REAIZM . >1; GIRL HA-S-TR-IVGHT TO SHINGLE -VIVLAI. .. ...l_.I L Plcziting ls Pretty W7l:e fever1" 1 . Go'ea WOMAN IN THE common n fhn (Inna AP nn..a...a...-..L2-.- - "1337" MaeaA.e-Nnxogv _...\a.4.-- _-- .1 ;n_. , V l\llUWBo . ' 4-O. E. Brleni. . _- ..-..- 1-vv-J u. vcny H1511 HUIIFIIIVOI and .d1gest'lve value; at the same -time which has been so underestimated by the `Canadian public; Unfprtunately, in too many lnstanceg t_h rabbits exposed. at... ....u- -..- - Ina uy men. women are now equipped to he-the true helpmateseof men in the home, in professlons,.a.nd even in big bus1ness.,"V . cznlullulpateu, every walk of life is open to her. In all professions and trades . she competes with men. The colleges are open to women, a thing unthought of at the time of Confederation and high honours. scholarships, and` med- als, are as frequently won by Women as `by men. _Women equipped '_to be-the true helpmateslor men in n... are eleven women clergy and 199 misc-4_ sionarles. The farm has always demanded the attention of women, until recent y in a minor capacity, but Canada ow has 15,949 listed as` farmers as compared with 646,288 male tillers: nf nu. ....n UCIU `own RABBIT MEAT 4 n0 A ....-I\ 3, u - 'Ifq-_[s- BARBIE EXAMIINER } I13 KICK` I ng anin .I_- -, For` "Sale by A. E. SMITH, Furniture L WlLSON s .._.-u- vaL.|GL.l\pUD rest. Ask yotirdealer to show you why % Sta Young springs am: an," avfnnn 1` -- " . A. Young Induau-lea of Canada ` Umlud \ `_W.lndao|-. Ontario` Dealer, Dunlop St., Barrie. Page Fifteen?" vv-wvin-cg; vuvnllvo Please d ' I A 1301-` .,..g'1:2o:`s:;.92..m::. OOOIOOIOOOIOQOIOOOOIIlIOOII|'09' uuusuuwu In we Hum. ' But with Ce:-to` which is simply the natural jellgnng substance of fruit rened an. Abottled, {you do not have to boil your fruit `down. One or two minutes boiling 18 enou h to give a_ perfect, tender` set. It cannot fail to all. ' This short boil saves e color and avor 0! your fresh fruit, so that your jams and jellies look better and taste better. You get a lai- amount from `your fruit, too, cause you_ save all the juice that - usedtoboilaway. - - - - Send for this new (free) booklet. --s-us . _ No fruit by itself contains enough ;ellying substance to jellify all of its juice. That is why, by the _old- ashioued methods of `am and ielly making you have to oil your nut down until `enough of the jtnoe bus boiled away to concentrate the Jellying substance in the fruit. Rm. mu). (`-..4.. ...|.:..|. :- ..-_...I--

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