Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 16 Apr 1936, p. 3

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\\\`ll-1 Whu I rruln 1 (In I..\ .. uu, n. .1 `am , . u been out her(_- just about slhs now, and I have danced` we. I loft Engl:1n(l~ -on New night. At home I used to in ii. but here there is 10 nily at all zmrl I miss it. All now is Ii.-:t(-n 1.0 clzmcc music "nclin. zmrl wait until I get` min. The Arab music is ab- pnin|'ul. Wm-rls just can- -.-.'m. H n i<.- all hull` Innnci and manly ulhern. I FRI-II-".3 Just send coupon! rrslvd Rnylly .\`pu|u:c Recipe: [qr the hrclnll omv to ynu with l :7-. veviul nir-(ight " his assures ab- louvmim: pu\\'N`. \'c`:1.<\ Cakes the or nmnths later Rurm n~sull.~.=! No `unudiun women ck! nn Rnvull B()()I\'I.ET I"Rl:Il:`.' .-......- x-uunun \nvI-V l:.nn|.x ll The importance of early seeding cannot be stressed too strongly. An ` experiment carried on for 10 years at the Central Experimental Farm. ` ,shows that wheat. oats. barley and 1 [peas seeded as soon as the land is-! 5ready to work give higher yields ithan when sown at later dates. The ;average increase of grain sown early ` ,over that sown two weeks later wa~; `14 bushels for barley. 18 bushels: for wheat and 4 bushels for oats. id ln KIH1". Bvthlohcm and Nazareth I well. and I have been in tho 1 slopes of the Mmmtains of I The country is quits.` small. nlntn nnev In \'i\`IInH?n 1\lnu\.- Lu nuvr lll'l(l IHL` water an` Sllll ll1(`l`l`. I . . I wonder`.`) 2000 years IS a deuce of a long time. nnthlnhnm -ma M-.7...-.-.n. I L........ xnv \u\uIu_\ Ia quilt` SHILHI. H IS` quxtc easy to \'isualize Muses being` shown the whole of the "Promisedi Laud" from the top of one hxll. It is about 200 miles long and 100 wide, l but ns it is very hilly the communi- cations are inex-itabl_v a long way round. The roads are good. Modern macadam and well-kept. but once get off the main roads and it is a. nightmare. Loose sand. hard rock.` just anything but a metalled sur-` face. ` Royal Yvast Cakes and Royal Sponge Recipes assure light. tasty broads . . . Royal Yua (`:1lu\~; mum` to wit the proton-xinn of :1 :'-poriul u1r~ti;:} \\`rxll`l`\`| for n:nl.r ('x ,3.e.' This al 8\\1l1Il`{r|`Shl\t`S5` I" lv:1\"x\~nim.: pmw .. P.` .L \'nn 4-~n\ nun I\`.n I |. In LU UL` SUCH Ill HIUSZIIK` ill \ iIp(,`l`l'-" ` "mm by thu Sva of Galilcv. Evvn in H1? fin` lU(I\ (`.\' and two fislivs. Thi` Cziiia of Galileo. whore tho walvr was (`hanged intu wine. is now :1 lit- tle Arab Village.` (`allvd Nafro Cannu. but the house where the iniravlo Hunk plan! is still shown with pride. md the pitchers whirh are suppusod , in have held the water are still tlioro. I it nuxnno-"\ unnn ...m.... :. .. 4....-- ,.:l xswept hills. > seen side by side with t.he ,,,-.-.... ........, K . . ~ . ..._, Even though I have been here iless than a year, I think I know this place from the sea to the Jordan River, and from Beer Sheba and Gaza in the south to Beyrouth in Syria. Better in fact than I know parts of England. The scenery is unique in its way. and very fascin- ating. The country changes in a few miles from fertile plains and valleys to arid desert and bare wind- The buildings range from ancient Byzantine and Roman to mediaeval Turkish and ultra- modcrn European. It is a country of incomparable contrasts. The camels and donkeys, the same as they were 2,000 years ago. are to be latest model straight-eight sedan, and it is astonishing. It is not hard to realize that this Palestine is the virtual home of three of the great- est religions in the world. The Jew- ish. the Christian and the Moham- medan all had their root here. Pre- vious ideas and theories get a jolt at times. but it is not at all hard to '\v'isuali7.e the happenings which were written of in the Bible. It is easy to picture the stricken cities of Sod- om and Gomorrah by the Dead Sea. It is literally a death valley. No vegetation at all. Just barren rocks and desolate salt flats. Jericho can be seen from the Dead Sea. and it is a lovely looking place until you get near: then it is like the rest of the old cities here. People talk of the inherent seenl of the East. Don't you believe it. It is merely a nasty smell of dirty hu- inanity in a squalid setting. When Glamour Disappears The tzlamour of the East disap- pears when one gets to close quart- "rs. it is a myth. Of course the modern towns and Jewish cities are lquite up to European standards. and [very clean. but the old cities are in- habited by Arabs. and the majority It simply stinks. ` are not. by any strench of fancy. I ' clean. .L'll(`SS they can please themselves. TL- _...I.'.. X- I.....u_1_-._- _._. .n,- , . Still. it is their countr_v so I ' ' could he wished. ` cold, and the heat is always bear- Climate Ideal The climate is ideal -- all that It is never really able. In the summer the thermo- ` meter goes up to perhaps 125 degrees .in the shade-and sometimes more ` down by the Sea of Ga1ilee---but I always enjoy it. Here by the Medit- erranean it is really wonderful. The bay between here and Acre is com- parable to the Bay of Naples and it is undoubtedly beautiful, especially by moonlight. In the summer we get tennis, cricket and all the rest ,of it. whenever we have time. We "work hard here. and the section of twelve Morris 30-cwt. trucks I am in charge of usually averages around eighty to a hundred miles a day. That includes Sundays. So you can guess there is plenty to do. AL._....|_ 1- 1,_-., c,_, _ 11...... I... Read the advertgements. It pays. SI-ZED GR.-\l.\' CROPS EARLY Th.` 4 _: ,_ ,9, I know ~ lnwvr Moab. N ... ! l`ru1m- Rupert is no longer .1 one {horse town In fact this is :1 no lhnrso town" since Lottie dm`sn't live 't.l1L`x`c any nmro. Lottie was the last icquino loft in Prince Rupert. She was a familiar figure for years on local streets as she trudged along `with \':ilonlin's milk delivery. How- iover. the years have been crecpin: ,up on good old Lottie. so she was `placed aboard a Canadian National train and shipped to Woodcock where she will spend her declininz days doing odd jobs on W. C. Little's ; farm. Johnny Walker. Prince Rup- ert's only horseshoer. says he is go- ` will have to apply himself to the more up-to-date forms of black- .llnI! out of that kind of business and I ;.smithlng. l`Zl(1l0 oroaucastmg SIS-IUOH. Finding a recently-dead basking ; shark 28 feet long on a beach near Prince Rupert. British Cdlumbla. appears to solve a sea serpent" ` mystery in that region. Dll'illlll|`)'. I\. l\. J II I I ' H. Fallis. V':\sv_\' 7 6 I A total nf 5.380 hugs were sold (m the dro& basis in Canada durim: tho wvek. Thvsv were distributed ms fnllmvs: Alberta. 6-H: Saskatch- yowan. 9: Omarin 2.992; Quebec 1- 064; Maritin1os. 671. l The Fiji Islands are to have a radio broadcasting station. Finding a roonnvulpmi hneblnu (l[I[l|H Llllllly Ill illl illlll 1 lHL\S `L. (`H I cam `on the rmlin. back mznin. solutely not f,|f':4(.'I'H)(' it. It, is: all half tunes and in minnr keys and it certainly doesn't (-unI'm'm in the ()c<.-idcntnl ideas of h;u'mrmy. ' , I BACON noes (nun:-:1) DRESSED ` `l1\uI 1'-,)rn1nru' Inls` fnr wmvk mud- |l$:\(`-UN nuua uluuu-.u unrm | Best farn1or:<' lots for week [in;:, April 2, 1936. Name Address Tnt.}{0gR A C. Grvonwnnd, I\1.unm,nluu 15 1n K . L:I`(`('nwnun. Nowmarkot 'S. G. Worry. Hampltm .. Thomas Gr(`onsidns, _ KL-ttlcby ....... _. |I`ur\'is 'I`homps0n. I El` Nlnrvc [L H. \_.iuHl'lIIn Ailsa Craig Allan Snyder. Brosluu (`mnrgo 1.. Dndj Stralhrny. R. V':1sv_v A Ono-ml H!` R ! I c 0 :Prince Ripert. B.C. ! Loses Only Horse; lVll`. wunams an DU cunts pt! nuul. Barker-Pottage, that Nelson Arm- strong be rnnd overseer at the Beach at $2.00 per day at such time as work cnrnmences for 1936. M.'msbrid;:e-P0ttage. that A. Grainp.ex' be appointed to patrol the whole of the Beach from April 6 to May 15. at $1.75 per day: Clerlg to notify him to that effect. also N. Armstrong. Walter H. Devins to be S.'mit.ary Inspector at Wasagn Beach. nnsbridge-McCnrt. that payment of relief be suspended in all em- pln_v.'1hle men after April 10. Rm-km--Pntt:mc. that the Reeve pl()_\'Dl(` TUCX1 EIIICI` I\])l'll Ill. Barker-Portage. that s(`<`1n'e 2000 ft. of bridge plank if prices are suitable. The appointing or :1 uzzlrbzuze col- locmr was left over umil May ses- -IAM - `sum. Cmmcil ndjournvd to meet in New `Lowell. May 7. at 1 nm. l'\ll'\'l.\ I H\Illl|l.\UlI. St. Marys .. .. 1 `Fred Kooch. Pictm sspnrling Crninn Kars ....1 A. Cochrzmv. Cnlborne E. Mnssborger. | Baxnborg In R (`:nv\nrnn gamst [I10 prupuny uuncnuwu. Mansbridge-Pot1.agc_ that license fees for pcdlars and transient trad- ers remain the same as in 1935. Mansbridge-McCnrL that Walter Johnson be Fire Ranger at Wasapn Beach from May 15 to Oct. 15. sal- ary $45.00 per month. Rnrknr.'MnncYarida(`,. that tho work Lunn... .1.-nru, \.lIx I have on ten months 2: (met: Sim,-c Year's night. delight npporlunily ; T Duh (In nnln iu Ii--I $`ID.UU DUI` I`l1()YHJl. Barker-Mans`:;ridge. that the of drawing gravel at Beach be given Charles Arn1strong`at $1.00 per load and the removing of sand given to Mr. Williams at 80 cents per hour. nn-l.rnr_`DnHnm: Hunt N:-Icnn Arna- I30 I01` })EyITlL'I`|L. A bylaw appointing pathmastcrs for 1936 was passed. Resolutions Adopted Mansbridge-McCort. that the Clerk forward Tossorontio a statement of Townlino work done by Sunnidale and adjust the difference in ac- counts. if any. 1\/fang-}u~ir-lr1n_T\II'r~{nrO Hun! H111 nncf (.`()lll]lS. ll any. Mansbridge-McCort. that the cost of garbage collection and Beach pat- ml at Wnsaga Beach be charged a- gainst the property benetted. 1\Il nn=l-n-it-hrn-DnH::rvn {hm linnnsc 11. uuvula, applying, 101` l.I'l(:' IJDSIHDI1 of sanitary inspector at Wasaga Beach: Thos. McDonough. applying ` for position of Fire Ranger at Was- aga Beach, (other applications were also received orally); Department of Health, stating the annual re-ap- pointment of Medical Officer of Health was not in keeping with the statutes and also that the Medical Officer of Health shall be paid a reasonable salary for his services; Thomas Waller and Clarence Teh- bey asking payment of their ac- counts for opening roads at Wasaga Beach; Wm. Coyle. asking that ditch on his property lot 4, Con. 7. be re- paired. W A T Rnhincnn nf Drnvirminl pmruu. W. A. '1`. Robinson. of Provincial Police. addressed Council in regard to the necessity of appointing extra local police at Wasaga Beach during weekends and holidays when thous- ands of tourists and others were present. He also spoke of the ex- cellent assistance given the force by R. Cook. Twp. Constable, at all hours. night or day. "l`hn "l`rr-ncnrnr rr-nnrtr-:1 that hr- I HUUYS. lllj. ,H|, UL uuy. The Treasurer reported that he had received from the Provincial Treasurer the sum of $1,750.00. be- im: Colonization Road grant for 1935. A u-nn~\kn.- Al nor-nnnln Iiynv-n nr-mu- 1300. A number of accounts were pass- ed for payment. A hvlnw nnnninn nnfhmncinrs uuu AVIGIIDUFILIEU. Communications The following communications were presented: A. G. Ardagh, Twp. Engineer. re plans for Louise Ave., etc.; George Boothby, requesting that George Powers be appointed one of the constables at Wasaga Beach; Russell Knox, asking that road to their property be improved as traf- fic was heavy on said road; Walter H. Dcvins, applying for the position sanitarv insnevtnr at Wncnnn At the meeting of Sunnidale Council held at Sunnidale Corners on April 2, with all members pre- sent, Donald Duff was appointed Township Treasurer at a salary of $120. on motion of Messrs. Barker and Mansbridge. (`nnwrnnnir-nfinnc H Appointed at Salary, $120; Beach Patrol and Garbage Collection Charged Owners `u, an '/(III, uu . vvuu Apnrt from H-ceivim: and answer-' ing letters lif hero is pretty rlull. There is no sot.-iznl lift: lwro whatever`. and zupzlrl. {mm lhn British Police, and the Emzllsh omplnyees of lhe Iraq l"(vlrnl('um Cnmpzmy lhcre is none with whom we can mix. The` Arabs are not uur type at all. andi the Jews: who have emigmterl here from the West think we are beneath their dignity, 50 we just have to be sell`-conlzninorl. The l:m;.{u:u{c is really no hnmlit-up as the Arabs nearly all spc-ak l'2m.:lisl1 and the Jcws .<:r)(-nl< German. and as I knnwf that W('Il ermmzh tn nmku myself lln(lCI`Slrmd, il.'s (rnsy. 7 I... .. 17.: u. ,...l I. .... .. :....l P\`I\I`\II` DONALD DUFF IS TREASURER or sy_N_N1nALE COUNCIL MEETING . . DndL'l". r\\' n n H) n`FI I`: II and- Ll l!7|'C Were severe dro sland, 6,000,000 sheep are estimated to have died, accord- ` ing to a master of one of the freigh- ters of the Canadian National Steamships in the Canada-Australim ` New Zealand service. Australia. with New Zealand, is the great wool market of the world. It is a far cry from the present estimate of 114,510,000 sheep to the first sheep census in Australia which 15 dated May 1, 1788, and recorded 29 sheep in the whole common- ` wealth. In seven years the number had grown to 863 and three years ` later 10.057. The Australian wool in- dustry began in earnest, in 1820, af- ter the coastal ranges had been crossed, when there were 156,000 sheep. By 1860. this mber had grown to 23,000,000 d, in 1891, there were 1 , 1,9 . A series of camera A.-n. L4- 4.... u.:.. .:..L..' Sheep in Australia Once Numbered 29 Now Many Millions A classified ad. often makes glad. THE BAR!!! EXAMINER, BARBIE. 0N'I ., CANADA Some interesting information on present-(lay cmiclitinns in Palestine is contained in :1 letter received by 1 Mrs. James Muir, Cookslown, from her cousin, Cpl. Eric C. Barnes. who ` is serving with British rc1.{ulars in . that country. The letter, written! from lvlznifn, Pnle.x`l.inc. Jun. 20, 1936, , is, in part, as follows: '1 .. I ..... .1 .........n.. I I THE TREASU-`RY DEPARTMENT 0!` THE PROVINCE 0!` 0N'l"ARl0 ONTARIO INCOMITRX RETURNS are DUE APRIL 3011: required. This arrangement greatly simplies your returns and your payments. In making this combined return of Ontario and Dominion Income Taxes, attach a certified cheque or money order, payable to the Receiver General of Canada. for at least one quarter of the total tax payable. Because the Ontario and Dominion Incomd Taxes are combined. there is only one form-on1y one cheque or money order _____j___________________________. On or before April 30th. you must file two copies of this form Tl-1935, (or form TIA-1935, if you are a farmer or rancher) at the nearest office of The Inspector of Dominion Income Tax. The third copy should be retained for your own reference. You are required to fill out ONE FORM ONLY- Tl-1935. This form combines both your Ontario and Dominion Income Tax Returns. If you are subject to the Dominion Income T you are also subject to the Ontario Income Tax. SUPPORT 0N'l'1lRl0 S NEW POLICY Places and Conditions in the Holy Land Described by Resi- dent in Haifa in Letter to Cousin in Cookstown-Ideal Climate, but Smells of Orient Don't Appeal to Writer-- Country of Incomparable Contrasts--Spots in Bible [lis- tory as Seen Today, May 28 has been announced as the convention date of the Ontario Liberal-Conservative Association when a leader will be chosen by vote of the delegates. Tho nnnnnnr-nrnnnt ulna rn-1.1.-. kn VULB U1 U13 GEIEEHICS. The announcement was made by W. H. Ireland. chairman of the con- vention committee. following an all- day conference of the association ex- ecutive in the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, April 6. Thirty inmnbors of the executive were present. The meeting was held in camera. v-run- ..u-_4:,,., 4,. p n u 1 FOR TORIES PICK LEADER 0N _M_AY 23 Annual Meeting of Ontario` Conservatives on Pre- vious Day ...... .. nu... ...u .u -.uuu,nu. The election date of the leader SEVERXC" NAMES 3. Any Province of Ontario Savings Office. "IPIIY AS YOU GO 1. Any office of The Inspector of Dominion Income Tax". These offices are located at Ottawa. Belleville, Kingston. Toronto, Hamilton. London and Fort William. 2. Any Post Office. GLAMOUR 01- EAST FADES7 ON COMING IN CLOSE TOUCH SAYS SOLDIER IN PALESTINE You should obtain three copies of this form from one ol the following sources: IMPORTANT. \VCl`E ElppI'UVt`Cl. Attending from Simcoe County were J. E. Jamieson. Collingwood. and W. A. Finlayson, Midland. The names of Hon. W. Earl Rowe, M.P., W. J. Stewart, present Leader George S. Henry. A. Hollis Acres. M.P.I .. and others were heard in informal discussions outside the ex- ecutive meeting as probable candi- dates for the Ontario leadership. will be preceded by the annual meet- ing of the association when. on May 27, the executive will be chosen. The statement issued after the meeting was as follows: in... - - -- UI. \.IllLilllU. The executive of the association decided to hold the association's an- nual meeting and election of officers on May 27, the day preceding the election of the leader. Convention procedure arrangements, up to the present time carried on by the Com servative Association of Ontario, were approved. AHr-ruiinnr frnm Simr-no (`nnnhr The executive of the provincial convention committee met at the Royal York Hotel and included rep- resentatives from all parts of the province. May 28 was chosen as the convention date to select a lead- er for the Conservative Association of Ontario. 'I`Inn nunnulluvn Al` OLA nnnn nlnlin... The main purpose of the Ontario Income Tax is to enable your Government to adopt a Pay-as-you-go" policy. By helping the Province. you help yourself. Your taxable income is also the same. with all income received from Dominion of Form Tl-1935 is self-explanatory. The Thursday, April 16, 1936 Dominion Income Tax. two exceptions: (1)jyou deduct the amount of your Dominion Income Tax. (2) You add Canada Bonds. exemptions and deductions are the same for the Ontario Income Tax as for the EXEMPTIONS AND DEDUCTIONS PURPOSE 0!` ONTARIO INCOME TAX Why not sed a -Copy of__.VthiA>;`\VxVre-Alas Examiner to a friend? _: Page ` nu m- sum m um;-Irm I'\'.\`luIS1 F` ndvr 4 out of S (`:mudiun women 3 use dry yeast xnsxst. on Royal!

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