Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 18 Aug 1927, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

._________.__._ --Wa1lpaper in latest deslgns, all prices. Exclusive agency for Staun- ton s semi-trimmed. W. A. Lowe & Son, Elizabeth St. ` - *7 'AAAculUUl.'S OI will be entertamed. | L U- Announcement was made tha wee1_< s meeting will be held z Peninsular Park Hotel, Big Point, on Wednesday, Aug. 24, members of the West Toronto lwill im A-an---'~ ' Orillia Ontario . vv 0:0 nuaue ma]: IIBXIZ at the Bay sday, when Club ed. _u.mu cuu at nouge's_ Iarm. ` Atthat time Hodge was preparing to go to !bed; Earlier in the day still according to the evidence he had `been informed by a neighbor that the said neighbor had been advised by Joe McDermott to tell him (Hodge) not `to come into Beeton for the money, `as the cash would be brought. out to him that night. Hodge lit the lamp in his kitchen when he heard the car at the road end and the shouts to him. He anticipated that McDer-_ __.-,. ...... .._.....,_, The theory the provincial officers are working on is that the attempt to rob Hodge was to take place on the Thursday night, butthat owing to Hodge s absence, it had to be de- _ layed till the Friday night. It was about 8.40 Friday night when the car containing Charles Hammell, Joe McDermott, Manning McEwen and Frank Gosley, drove upto the i [read end at Hodge s_ farm. Aq.-+1.04. 4.:....,. 11.4.. -...... ..------~-'A-~ ' Ject of payi'ng'Hodge the $610.00. (Continued from Dave 1).. A Hodge, however, was not -at home that night, he having gone to visit a neighbor. The police will -be able to show that -Dan Forsythe was in the same neighborhood that night,`- that he visited a`barber`s shop in Alliston next morning, and was seen at Hol- land Landing in `company with an- other man in a Chevrolet car be- L tween two and three o'clock that afternoon, and he was back again at the Hodge farm at 8.40 the same night when the attack was launched j on Hodge. mvnonin Ilnung. l"lVlJ The Employers Liability Assurance Corporation The Best Policies in Life and Casualty Assurance. Collier a.ndi`CI'a`ppertonA SCI; PHONE 137, BARRIE. g.___E. 'IH_OMPSON ,_. _ v at! ulrtl-05` Insurance and . _ <- \. F. A. MALCOMSON _. _ -f-nu-vvur V 1 `V Stock Carried. Information I`-`u:-lniohody ind Service on Bnntford Roong under-od by . .. mm I$|...:.... nn.-.n n- - . - - TRAVEL be Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada A \Y1\ "Expected Money - -._-_ LI. - TY \ 4"" Direct Through Service t_o mm 8.45 A.M. c.'1'. 33531303 1.00 P.M. C.T. 1mg1uA 6 40 P M M T 2` D l C U `C ` 1 . gggygvroo 1 1.40 P M. M.T. EDMO _ NTON 1o.oo*A.M.M.T.V 31-dDay VANCOUVER. 3.oo P.M. pm. 4th Day C. I'.-Cntral rm: M.1'.-Mo.1;uau. Time: .P.'I'.-Pacic Time . EQUIPMENT -Ohaei-vatlon-Llbru"w BuetCar(Rudi9).Snndu'dSleepex-1- goM5oN 7 Tourlu sleepers and Coaches. l_ Steamship Agent, Phone 447W, Barrie . Ont- . M " Q uuuai luGlllo Brantford Arrvo-Locks afe re-yetardent, permanent, econ- 7 omical. Brantfo;-cl Roofin Cmlimitul 3 (I-5 --- -JYou couldn t make it `as `tough and 'strong_ as Brantford Arro-Locks. Brantford Arro- Locks are locked on.` Severest winds, storm and frost cannot budge them. - `D-.....4l. ....I A..-V_ ' - -` acy phase of the matter,are making `_an effort to trace a_number of tele- -phone calls that went through the localexchange early in the morning after Dan Forsythe was killed with a view to ascertaining who it was who was so interested inletting some one know of the bandit s unexpected uuu uy cu-cumstances. V The pollce, on the -alleged con phase matter, are ma `_an a number went mor view to asznnvtnininn .1... :4. ----- uuc guuus. ` Some one certainly made a` clean sweep of anything belonging` to Dan Forsythe from George Forsythe s home witliin a day after he was kill- ed. The goods found in the cache, too, had all been put there subse- quently to the fatal ght in the Hodge 'homestead.- This rush to hide loot wasso general over the district that Mrs. Hickland's story of instruc- tions having goneabroad from a cene tral source wfouldseem to be borne out by circumstances. ' Thu "Il\`:f|S AM J-`-- ` ` -_"--.. \IG uuuwucu um uc-am. . . '1 The\ provincial police will find` great scope`for their deductive facul- ties in attempting to elucidate this phase of the Beeton affair. Early as the police were oil the ,: scene`, on July! 25,- an earlier bird had been. at work. Mrs. I`-Iickland told her husband H1n+ +1.. .1-.. -u--- 9..-ac.-cow v wow` HOG , Instead of vthat',*-M,cDermott,- called Hodge. down-"tor the . road end and _ ,there,`;in` the `light of th_e.auto lamps, `be `counted 'out.the-money and hand- ed it over to Hodge. As Dan Forsythe was not in the house when Hodge l<:to_go` down to" the road end, the b' bandit must have been. in hiding ` in `the neighborhood atthat particu- lar time, waiting for the ongortunity to enter the house unnotice . When Hodge was half way` up the lane on this way back to he house some one 1 at the road end houted after him: Be sure and count the money again . when you get home. I ` This, it isthought, might have been a signal to the `bandit then hiding in 1` the house, that Hodge ~had received 1 the money and was now on` his way 1 "back to the house with `it. The McDer- I mott car immediately sped away from i the vicinity. Some time later,evidence .5 shows, the honk, `honk, of a motor V was heard not far distant from the S Hodge farmhouse. ` - Was that car there for the purpose f of picking up Forsythe after he had Y completed the robbery, and who was 11 p in that car; did theoccupant of that car see Hodge stagger up the road. -4 to inform his neighbor of the struggle he had had in his inky black kitchen ,1` and did that occupant, or occupants,id then go to the farmhouse andedemand 11 from Forsythe the money. they thought he `had taken off Hodge. Finding that Forsythe was beaten almost to death, did that man or men 3; give their conspirator the blow that` V5 caused or hastened his death? I 3, '.`l"l-..-n- ......-..-:..-:.`I - I p, 3;-cl Bnntfo . Out. 10! rear 1867-1927 iII\.rC! -alleged conspir- e matter. urn vvn:1n'v-n- _ A I - . . 1 Phone` your. Examiner. ' mu: uay ueulg nonorea. This concluded" the speaking` and Mr. Jamieson announced the zorize winners amongst the lodges: These -we.re:--Lady True Blues, Owen Soimd;` Beaver Lodge, L.0-.B.A., Elm- vale; O;Y.B., Creemore, and R,B.P., Allandale. ` ' uyuvlu une rrotestant ` County Master Hurst of Allandale congratulated the Collingwood bre-V? thren onthe gathering `and the bre- thren'"and sisters or; the .demonstra- \ tion of their interest and ldyalty to the day being honored. . I nnnniuirinti` `LA -`-- ` " ' ` laying emphasis on the noble act of the Apprentice Boys in closingithe gates in the face of the venemyand on the endurance and determination of the citizens in holding` against the besiegers. It was a great story, but, said the speaker, we cannot` live on tradition, -but must do a share in the daily round. We must co-operate to . bring Canada to its ideal, and must uphold the Protestant faith. Cnnnftv 'M'naI-an l'J ......a. -2 Au - - fua A rxuauuaxu. _ , ugg; The parade included thirty-three when lodges, with about twenty-ve hun- pants, dred members, fully thirty-ve min- mgkd utesbeing required for the parade t tey -pass, a given point. odge. The lodges in the procession,`were: Wte, Stayner O.Y.B. 479;'North Star, mn!384, 'R.B.P., Collingwood; Orange- thatjville 621, R.B.P.; Orangevi e Fife ' \and Drum Band; Clougher, 06, R. nd`B.P., Lisle, with bagpipes; V Grand acul- Valley 712, R.B.P.; Fife and Drum this Band; L.O.B.A. 435, R.B.P., Elm- vale;' Dundalk 1091, R.B.P.; Fife theiBan'd; Lady True Blue 565, R.B.P., bird Midland; Allandale 601, R.B.P.; Ivy ;]and Brass Band; Friends of Ulster 1151, ;fter R.B.P., Creemore; Markdale R.B.P., For. 282; Fife "and Drum Band; Vimy `and.,Ridge O.Y.B. 334, `Collingwood; . the=Manseld 9'_7_4, R.B.P.; `Midland 552, the I R.B.P.; King Hiram, Mono Mills 297, she ; R.B.P.; Creemore 1151, R.B.P.; Lera, Me- ` 436, R.B.P.; Mount Forest 971. R.B. ugly P.; Honeywood 1182,.R.B.P.; Cooks- _ ness town 109. R.B.P.; Alliston 140, R.B. L that ,P.;, Sir -Henry Wilson 118.5, Arthur; P tche. British Coat of Arms 247, New Low- ell; Beeton 758, R.B.P.; Feversham ii lean 343, R.B.P.; Creem`ore O.Y.B., 714; 0 Dan Lady True Blues 247, New Lowell; W hevs Meaford `R.B.P.; Lady Elizabeth, L. 3' kin. T'.B., 420,. Orangeville; 0-wen Sound t< ghe 419, Owen Sound: Lady Carson O.lf! Run: YB. n\lYan Qnnv-:1]: 'Dn~- -1 "1' - uuu yl.'1Vueg'eS ID D0118. ` Dr. J. J. D. Banting of. Barrie re- turned thanks for the welcome to Collingwood. He spoke enthusias- tieally of the development of the great Dominion and urged every citizen to help his fellow man. rHe `believedbroad politics should begthe interest of `every Canadian and that the heart and energy of every one . should be in the work before Cana- dians. The object g the Orange . Order was to build up anada and to accept the full responsibility placed yvith all `by, the noble heritage which "1 `I ? `I5 10- I ' - ' "WSi'r Kt.', Rev. A. B. In-`win, Alliston, placed the'Oran_ee Order as the 'hand-- maiden of the Church of Christ.` It "maintained the. principles of the Protestant religion. In northern On- tario he realizedethe value of the Order where it was steadily and continuously battling with the in- `sidious forces at work. He believed every Protestant should be a mem- ber \and join in that co-operation spoken of by the Mayor. The Order stands for freedom for tall with spe- cial privileges to .D. Barrie thanks for +1.. .....1--...- L- uue seventeenth century; g This is the year of Confederation and Canada is emerging into nation- hood, In this the greatest good, as Governor-Ge-neral Lord Willingdon recently emphasized, is to be accom- plished `by a continent wide spirit of co-operation. Only in that way can Canada steadily progress and our Dominion reach that; place of prom- inence so ardently and so earnestly As one on the outside looking in he saw the Orangemen standing for high ideals and with loyalty to their principles. . , . e ' -Sam. Hillen, tmaster of Colling- wood Preceptory Royal Black Knights added to the welcome by extending the right ha d of the local Black Knights and t e Orange Young Bri- tons. ~ f 63.. `If: 1" ` *x.Lcl, uvvcu ouuuu; uauy LJarS0n U 1 Y.B. 485, Owen Sound; Rose of Sharon, Lady True Blues 229, Owen Sound; Thornbury 759, R.B.P. Speakers and Speeches J. E. Jamieson, ex-M.L.A., presid- ed and expressed briey his pleasure at the large attendance.` He con- veyed the regrets of W. A; Boys, K.C., M.P., who was detained in Bar- rie throufh legal matters. Mayor Ar- i thur wel omed the great gathering to 4 Collingwood. His Wnrehin s.,.-.: u... I The anniversary of the Relief of I Derry was ttingly observed at Col- lingwodd on Friday, Augu t 12, when I members of the Royal lack ` Pre- : ceptory, Lady: True Blues, Lady T Orange Associations and. Orange a Young Britons from the counties of Simcoe, Duiferin and Grey gathered for the occasion. Hundreds of visi- ' tors came by special train and by f motor, it being estimated that there : were -upwards of ten thousand people 1 ,at Exhibition Park when the program 1 was at its height. V Collingwood . streets were all togged out in their ] celebration regalia and the event, ] favored by fair weather, was in every 1 way successful. On the speakers 1 list were `Dr;-J. J. D. Banting of Bar- 1 rie, and" County Master Hurst of k 'Allandale.` ,'_ ` __ 1 "IL. __ _3- ` ` . .-. aauuvuls UL. D`aI'l'le mks ad. spoke nininh DWI`. nnonnnnl -- ---- -- ._news itmg to 1 The , vvanc uu L0 tne chances here. Can-l [ to develop our wonderful resources. , for they `have shown themselves in? ;' the United States able to get `chef 1 best jobs in competition with Amer-I icans. ' . Canada is rich in resources almost: beyond comprehension--in agricul-j ture, `timber, fish, minerals, water; powers. etc. The world requires- what Canada has to supnlv and all ' is the intelligent ap-,' plication of our neople to develon these resources. To secure the full ~ expansion of our material resources . there must -be a development of cit-I iti only seemingly wake In. the United States the oppo1'Yt(1Jtr"1-I es may seem to be greater but are! so, if we would but! un to the cha ) u u . . _ , .- a i eron said_' if people I i tied their population three times int --- .......a...iuus and advantages. Turning to his subject. Mr. Cam- would but study _C_anada, its resources and potential- All were familiar with the move-1 ment towards the United States. It I is said that the Maritimes have emp- the United States. attitude of mind that looks to the United States exists, said the.speak- er, we are bringing the greatest as-i set of the countrTv---the children-- into a finished product that stands unsurpassed in the world, and sup-i plying it g`1'atis to the United States, ; In the United S+.a+.m Hm an-A--L---- ' ` i As long. as the - vauut: m. a manner 7 c4 wlth its attractlons and ~ 'Fnuu.'...... L- ` ` " .. .,....aua.a sunsnave gone. In his introductory remarks Cameron (who signed the visit book as from Barrie and Toront. said he was glad to have an op; tunity of meeting -the Kiwanians he p_urposes spending a great d `of ms time here. Though he 1 {(71111 in --~* ` " " ..._.... ....c uxuoeu mates to which many of Can'ada?s sonshave gone. In his l'hfrn(lnn4-nun -------` ` I Do. We Appreciate `Canada Our Horfe? was the subject of a stirring patriotic address to the Kiwanis Club last Friday `by R. H: Cameron of Tor- onto, in -which he stressed `the great future of the Dominion and showed that it did not suffer in comparison with the United Stats to so Can-ada?s smug I-mm; M..- jur Ch`1'idren'-`a7zd thcY3ars to Come buying habitgs-A-`-steppingrup his V spending power. It means that Dad will have to do some guring to give the boy his start. V " ww- } Jack Intends , If Dadcan nance it, Jack intends to go to college next year. He's a six teenvyeareold, A keen on sports intensely alive, interested in everyv ` thing that goes on . . . manvsize in all but years. I What plans are you for die future important that they shoul be enabled to 1 -A Guarante'e them a_ good start in life bv om: ,7 ..... .4- ` wuAuAllC'.'bl;l1'aIe `actions -advantages. :0 resources and nn+m~+~ ~` BRANCH or F. c.,: M.ARSHALL-Distu-ict c. E. onyrcnen, Agent. Elm Manager. valo. W. J. WALKE-I A. ._-..- - uuyc 10 Will commensurate and -I111nv\4--~-- ,--- troductory remarks Mr. who visitors n Toronto oppor- eeting as Sbendino 9 am.-...4. .:I--1 ,- __- .- unnaulla aa spedfng deal had 'onto far 5.: m----- --J 1NsU RANGE `COMPANY ,._.. r\.r -.-u 'e. Can-lizenship. Canada will never attain trainingiits rightful pl-ace until our children .-esources.are imbued with an intense patriot- selves iniisim. Surely our country is worthy the {of such love. If there is a free coun- h Amcr- try under the sun it is Canada. We .must demonstrate our love for our s almost icountry not only by having faith in agricul-[her but by working to realize it. 5. water!We must cease to think locally and requires-take the national view and try to !impress upon the rising generation l gent ap-)the opportunities offered `in this magnificent young country\ and en- courage themto emulate the record ` esources made by their forefathers in working i I: cit- for the development of this -great - reg _ ut " `"7" n-,izenship. Dominion. ngiits W. D. Gri es.are the d nated by W. C. Wall he r- ' demonstrate_ our love our] of inn-no.4-..-- .. - ffiths was chairman of ay. The attendance prize, do- s, was golf balls, which fell to the lot of Geo. D. Hub- `bard. `Ivan u---J- % G Big! W. F. Honnsbterger ,s`"`,,`, , Bert Fralick *8 Bavew = Barrie, Dave McClelland And look at these prices: New Special Slxes at ` $945 to $1235; new Big Sixes at $1495 to $1795; new Royal Eights at $1995 to $2195; all prices f. o. b. Factory. Come in and look at the cars, and go out for a drive. That s all we ask-for we have built these cars to sell themselves! ,--__.-- vvv uvurvv ovvvou pl wcao Immediate the response. Favorable the im- pression, Quick the demand. And each day multiplies the evidence that these new Royal Eights and new Sixes are by far the most popular motor cars Chandler ever sponsored. ' P196 is I wears evening more clothes. 1 dollar counts .. . ---v -Iuyu, IIHTTIU, UH`: WALKER, Special Represent tive . E. Culham. Agent. Sta OI`. any Barrie, Ont. l:'D e_-_ _.-{ \-rL\r% {llllo DU s. More than ever, each s`. . mustbewellspent. ... _l Simcoe County Distributor Phone 691J, Barrie St. Phone 93W Barrie, Ontario 8l'/ nnnuora Roong rendered The Balrlglaning Mill Co., Ltd. '

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy