Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 8 Nov 1923, p. 5

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`.... ..-. ...................... -u....v ...v.-.u.v I .-\ppoi11nmen~t as `professor of medi- -cal research at the University of `Toronto, July 1, 1923. T-Tnnun nf (`_nInn1nn nrnuirlau 9 HF`: bUl1l'iI.LlUll. C.hJa,1'1es Mickie Fellowship` for 1923 awarded to Dr. Banting. Starr srnld nu:-n] nwqrdn tn hr 1uxuuLu, July 1, 1:150. House of Commons provides a life annluity of $7,500, July 27, 1923. Rnnkn hnfnrn fhn aivtvh h-innnlnl uuu'uu.y UL l,DUU, Jllhy ll, 1U`Z6. Spoke before the sixth triennial Congress of the Intern-ationtal Society of Sungery, on Juny 27, 1923. Had an nnrHnn.r-n u:i.fh fhn I(.u'nu- HIGEs1'v1i61'5i A(}`0M1E!: TO DR. F. G. BA"NTING 1`h1_1rsday, November 8, 1923 Powell 8? Co. Ladies Ready-t0- Wear Dunlap St. - BARRIE Your Mother will like the real Warner Corset because it will feel so comfortable, will make her look so well, and will last and last. Your Dolly will like her little Corset because it is so pretty, as it is made out of the same pretty cloth that many big Warner Corsets are made of. When you grow up you, too, will want aWarner s . Rust-Proof Corset. Little girls who are becoming young ladies all over Canada, England, the United States, Australia, South Africa, South America-- almost all over the V\/orld- asl; for their Warner Corset. They know them, because their Mothers have found them very good for years and years and years. dl. I Ul'L5HlUlllall, 1`4ILg., July Z3. Resolutions passed by the Arcad- emy of Medicine naming Banting and Best `as as the discoverers of insulin. t\n.I....:.-. .`R.f...l...\I A.........:_u.._ And because every mother who knows how good Warner s Rust-Proof Corsets are would like to have her daughter's dolly have one too, we will give away one of these pretty little Warner Corsets with every big Warner Corset we sell on November 14th, 1891, on his ` fz-.the1"s farm, third line, Essa town- iship, Simcoe county. When war. .i broke out he went overseas wlsth! xi`Lhe rank of Captain, serving as a i doctor. He was in ..,the Cambrai pus.h, where he \vasm\'o11n(1ed in the right wrist with shrapnel. His gal-I '|l.ant1',\-' won him the ;\Iilita1'y Cross. `I TTnnn hie v-nfnrn hrnnn ha inilmn ; Frederick Grant Banting was born I r It is not .wise `to speak of an ad- vertising campaign. You can ac- comiphish anything by advertising, you can accomplish nothing by an advertising `ca.-mpaign. Either you advertise or you .don t advertise. The word camvpai_-_;n" is too limit- ed to describe this thing. .\.ui1 might as -well speak of a. breathing: campaign" or an eating L.unpuign." Donot think of `adve1'tisi1~g as some- thing to `be -done by ts and starts. DE you have any such idea take 20 deep ibreaths right now, and then try stopping until 12.111011 time. 1l'dllll'.\' WUIL Hll L111`: ;\l11lLd.l_V blush Upon his return home he joined {the staff of the Western University, London. and it was there that he conceived the idea of a cure for diabetes. He came to the Fa;cu1t_v of .Vledicine in Toronto, and Prof. J R. `MacLeod. of the Depart- ment of Physiology, who had been developing a cure for diwbetes, placed the work in his hands, and with the assistance of Charles Best and sev- eral others, the success of insulin was secured. Prof. MacLeo'd Notable, too Prof. MaclLeod, who shares in the Nobel award, is known throughout the vfnild a:s.a physiologist of at- tainment. He received his medical traiininlg at Aberdeen, London and Letipziig. He was awarded the An- derson Travelling Scholarship at Aberdeen. In 1918 he came to To- ronto and became head of the De- partmenrt of Physiology. He is now associate dean of the Faculty. I.Il LEEICIIBI`. Little Henry's hand went up like adart, an -dwhen told to answer he replied : l>lnn_=n ham-hpr it : A ganangn," Not that Kind What .is a ground hog ? asked the teacher. TO1n 1 .`l nnmu`:< hunt` Karon? un 1iL-n apnea : Please, teacher, its a sausage." nuuvvcunn III \JI\./l.Iln|AI., v--4..-. It is an atict:ion-the st.udy of two lifetimes, in which you may exhaust your salary but never -your e:ad1am*ation s. It is a. bragging con- - test, a series of uposes, calling for luck, a1i:b.is and courage to Wear_ knickerbockers. It is a test of tem- ` per, a trial of cusswords, a revea1- ` er of bow_ legis. It affords a chance to gamble and act the cave man. It means going Into bunkers, debt and bush lea-gue restaurants, getting away ifrom chwurch, sleep, and home cooking, getting close to insanity, a sweeping -away_o.f home ties, a genuine recreation from ver- 1 aicity. It is a cure for a-mibition, an antidote to work. It includes com- panionship with coin collectors and absent minded scorers, -opportunity for assault and battery to an op- poneut. It `promotes not only xphysical torture, but is erce on morals. A wheehbarrow will stand on its two legs and never move a foot` un- less you lift it up and push it along. So would xbusiness. You've -got to pick it up and `push .it along. ! It is a science, the study of a li1'etime, in which you may exhaust yourselrf. but never your subject. It is a contest, a. duel or a melee, call- ling for courage, skil-1, strategy and sell` control. It is a test of tem- per, a trial of honor. a revealer of character. .-. .. ..._q...., .r.. ._..... 7 ..,_l I. JHBUIJII. Onatario `Me-dioai Association 'na-med Banting, Best, Collip and MacLeod as discoverers of insulin. So did the Dominion Medical As- socination. (`km v-Inn T'\/fin-I-In `I'JnIIn.unn'Lu:n Dan \,uu.u-.u,;. . It affords the cirance to play the man and the gentleman. It means going into God's out-of- (100115, getting close to nature, fresh air, exercise, a s\weepi11g away of` -mental] Cobwebs, genuine recreation of the tired tissues`. It is a cure for care-an antidote to worry. .........,......:.......1..:.-. ..v:H. Lu VVlI'lA_y .It includes comxpanjonvshitp with friends, social intercounse, oppor- tunity for courtesy, kindliness and generosity to an opponent. It pro- motes not only physical health but` moral force. Edward J. Gerhm-t, U.S.A.-- _ :_u-.. 41... ..L..,:.. -9 GOLF-TWO VERSIONS} I D:\\'i(l R. l0l{L`:lll. St. Ami:-e\\"' r; 2- .. ...... -4 nL., ......,J.. The Northern Advance |i.l.UUUHl[J'1lllES l`Ulb' URUSBU U) UZ:l.UlI:'l`|El. The dry rot is caused by fungi :whti.ch enter bhe_. potatoes through tbruises or wound.s. The threads of the fungus grow in the tissues of the potato and cause the rut. The white mouldy growths on the de- cayed parts are the threads of the -fungus which have come to the sur- Lfwce and which produce minions of spores (seeds). Th-ese spores may cause rot `in sound ponatoes if they reaxzh a place where the skin is broken. Dry rot does not usually attack potatoes before digging, but -rather when they are placed in cel- lars or store houses. The dry rot lfungus may live in vegetable mat- _ ter in the soil, and tends to increase when potatoes are grown year after year. I"hn hag : mann-\ fn nrm/amt 1n _YCH.I'. The best vmeanu to prevent losses from the dry rot is to avoid bruis- ing or injurinvg potatoes in digging or in storing them. All the ru-b- lbish or old dried potatoes should 'be removed from the cellars or store houses before the new crop is stored. It would also be advisable to spray the wal-ls and other parts of the store houses with a solution of bluestone (1 lb. bluestone to 10 gwalllons out water). Pot-wtoes should not be grown in the swine eld year -after year, but other crops should `be used so that the dry rot fungus will not increase in the soil. 'l'he dry rot develops much more rapidly in wavm and moist air, so potatoes should be placed in cool and dry storage soon after digging. The cellar or store room should be kept as cool as possible without danger from `frost. Cool storage is, perhaps, the most useful means to avoid losses from dry rot. i.e., albout 3'5-40 F. 'I"hc- hnat mnnn: nf nrovpnting rlrv 1 ! The dry rot is common in stored! `potatoes. Last winter it was very -prevalen-t in cellars an-d store houses in Vvestern Canada, and` caused much loss. It is the most} I nnun nunn nnuan nf nfnnnn-n v-nbn ha IU'1u}t'\.l HlllL'U lU:. IL 15 Llltf LllUb|. com-mon cause of storage rots in. Western Canada. The dry rot goes deep into the potato. The surface of the decayed part is usually] wrinkled and white, mouldy groewths are often present. When the potato is cut open cavities are often pres- ent in the decayed part. There is usually no unpleasant odor, which aocompanies rots caused by bacieria. "'I"hn rv rnf in nznnuod In: fnnol ulsease. 2. Plant seed in elds in which potatoes have not been grown for several years. 0 TJnnRln flan nu}-nfn nrnn (warn. 1115 auu H11 . DUEL J'd5L 'Db`pU'l'lll'Ub`l'. The Canadian Club of T-0I`0I1:t0 made Banting and Best vlife mem- bers. 5b`Vt5l'cl1 _VCd.lB. 3. Handle the potato crop care- zf-uully to avoid injuries. A Pomnvn 211 rnfncn nf Inn? [[0111 U1`) I'Ul., 1.8., KJUULIL n)`i)"tU 1`. The best means of preventin~g dry rot is briey as vfollowsz 1 Qohanf onnd qnn r-nm hr-in-Hh.v TOE IS uneny Q15 'lUl1vUWS2 1. Select good seed from hea-lth-y hills or from -elds that show no disease. 0 Dlnnd good In nlile n nrhinh 4. Remove all refuse of last :l'U'lI_V LU KVUIU lH_]L1l'lC. ! year's crop from cellar or store- house. I Dlnnn Glnn nninnnc in Av-xv nnn1 `HOUSE. 5. Place the potatoes in dry, (tool storage soon after digging. Acton has two professional men. a. lawyer and an auctioneer, who got the surprise of their lives the other day when they found them- selves covered with revolvers and ranked as fban-it bandits. They drove from Acton to Orton, transact- ed certain business there and hur- ried into the branch of the Union just prior to the hour of closing. The lawyer, in his usual peremptory business tone, said to the teller, as he approached the cage, I want $550.00." Immediately the lawyer and the auctioneer were covered by the revolvers of the teller and man- ,ager, under the impression that they were the subjects of a bank bandits raid. Confused explanations were promptly made by the visitors and -proufuzse apologies offered by the bank oflicials, and the desired -busi- 'ness transacted. The men are still puzzlimg their brains .in t.he effort to discover why men of their acknowledged pronrinemce and good honest. appearance could possibly be taken for a pair of mur- derous bandits who are going about ,`-the country.-Acton Free Press. Bank there to have a cheque cashed ' professionval ~ EDRY ROT or POTATOES} Composed and wnitten by Thomas I-Ioldsworth, Burke, S. Dakota, age 80 years, January 27, 1923. We hear from al":u' the rumors ofi xvn :- And And ........_, . The award of the Nobel prize is the crowninwg honor to the many which have been showered upon Dr. Banting since insulin has been proven successhil. These include :. Grea1 I `i .-\n (1 I Tried J.llI;`U LU In-rt: lI\l|Ll `JK:`kTlILI\.'|Allll aux. deaih. { God's work will be done, while under the sun ` On accmmt, of God's ire He sent on ' I Q I `VS-`e are breathing our nwrtal brea1h.; . l I Q`r\I`n.Iv\ 0 FIT!) R And they would not repent, so God re on them sent, And they met with 21 most terrible fate: It might he that Japan it's 5::u111T.1e1;_ had ran, {' And provoked God to vemzertnce andlx` wrath, And He sent the earthqtluhe their sense to awake, I And destruction and death in their)` 1 U1] Zlllcullul Ul uuu : ur ur nxfun Ivxxi Sodium 21 re, 1 For the people's Intnsr.-1`es: were ' great: i 1 | '1 I y 1 1 path. Let other nation's awake, fair w-arming take From the misfortune that happened Japan. - ` repent of their sins `before trouble begins. . And God's vengeance escape while they can. ` and :1 And THE E;\l{THQU-;\K|'} IX JAPAX Yes," said the cynical old sea captain. `when I -was shipwrecked in South America, I came across a. tribe of wild women who hatd no tongues." (`.nnd gracious! exclaimed the tongues." Good gracious! listener, how could they talk ? Ufhnxr nnn'IrIn'f " llr fh rnmlv: listener, "DOW coum Lley l'dU\: They couldn't." was the reply; that was what made them w1." THEY \\'ERE Sl'R.PRISED n 13360 awvarueu L0 UK`. manning. Starr gold medal awarded to Dr. F. G. Banting. Pnnvn `nr-i-1n aura:-rind On hr `Dani- war. of amine that's taking great toll, the terrible quake, that the earth it did shake, Sw`a110\\'ed up many a soul. 11 cities col1:Lp.=(-d, while the: terried Japs 1 .1 4n nnn h-nm an-\-Ornr-Hnn nnd` rnneu JZIDS 1 ee from (]t -S11`u(.`.tiOI`l and L xn 1 Gossip is one of the cardinal sins. It is not a single act, like murder, which stops one life and falls back` to punish the offender; it is the breath of the Devil, sailing every, ear it touches. I-t is the most dt-ad-' ly of poisons. It blights many lives; it smites the innocent with thel guilty. ` n-_-_n_. 1 . ' f OOOQOQOOOOCOO90OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO` I . K-,......._-. Recently a m.o1,her, estranged .-from her family, ended her life be- cause gossinp-ground1ess, vicious gossip--ha1l out her off from those who were dearest in all the world to her. Those who murdered first Hue happiness of a woman, and Lhen the life, went scot free._ No punish- ment in this world, unless they have consciences, can touch them. But We believe that when the nal! judgment comes, those who spreadl the gossip which killed good numel and hnppiness---and life-v.'l1l meet the same punilshvment. as mat v'.;~:iL- ed on the sons of Cain. ` ..-- .._ .l I Dr. Howard Eager, a ]2ap1'.is1 mis- |siona1`_\;' in Ba.lIimo1`e, told this s1'):'_v, I . . . Iwhlch LS an Italian 1r:._z-n:!`. In the old days. a p<~*:1.':z:11 (um- ;fe.='s(-~d to a priest that 113 }'-ad, '_slandered an izmm.-en`. man. The! I-priest said to him 2 For your penw` iance do this mnv. Take :1 Dag of` {r:hi(-ks;-n down. Go to ave-ry yard in. Hhe mwn and drop one bi: of down: !inlr.> reach ::arde n. Do not miss onej :,\'ard. \\'hen you have x1is11e.1, rt:-, ' Y! .an.... an 1\\:'n I The sinner believed his 1n=.nis11-; men!" was liglmt. With his bag full] Io!` down he mzulre the L-i :'c=.m :;1` H191 {\'illzu;t=. and c;n'e=l`ull)' dr0_npr=.1 one incl ! :'e-znhm` into mch `.'iv..1. '1`.1.e:1 `he 1`e'p0rI0rl to the priesi, .<:-.\._\'ix1g: . 1 l I llllll 1) JIII`. I I have done my penance." No, my son. replied the old= 'abhe. Yuu will not lm~. e done. ._v0u1' penance until you Kala .'Il4`- hag. `go again on your mun .. collect` e'rer_\' feather you ha\ - clroppetl. amcl bmt it here to nm." l l 1 ! The gossip p1`o1sw:l \h :11, it. 3 . l would be impossifnle. he could um. `nd the bils of down in 21 li!'u?`i111e;` So it is with gossip. `:'r.\',)1ie:-11 1119 old priest. IL is r:~:\.='1!_v d1'oppe'_l.': But never again, no .vnat!.m* how` hard you try, can you gather tune`: the unnrn vnn HQVP 1hn:12"H.I: SlV:' nan u _\'uu u the words scattered. 1:. u. DuuI.u1z,'. Reeve prize awarded to Dr. Bant- ing and Mr. Best last -September. T`ho Canadian (`Huh nf "I"nrnn.fn nut: n.:\.au:o uuu -av-`um Beads continue to be the tad of` the hour, from jewellery to hand bags. The choker necklwce is close` tting and made of big ube-ads. Ear- rings and a. bracelet match it. Few` of the newest `necklaces have pend- ants or tassel.-3. They are simply a. string of `beads. _ { The farmer and the banker k Travel P. R. Into the heart of the Game Country HAMPTON E. JORY, Ticket Agent, Barrie H O U S A N D S of A farmers throughout 1 Canada have proved for themselves the value of a connection with The Bank of Toronto. The opening of a small deposit account has, in hun- dreds of cases, been the means of establishing friendship and condence, and the loans obtained from the Bank from time to time for farm operations have Still Beads and Beads _ `-1... LL- I 'BAN_1i?IQR0NT0 Hun_ers _ Paradise try, can you ,t',2LLuux' u'.1,L'-\ you have tho~.,1ghU.:::as1y4| And He's Only 32 This is a remarkable record for a man only thirty-two years old.` BA.R:R~I.E, GOSSIP Incorporated 1855 BRANCHES ALLANDAL53 31' I-p-V{1.UUlll UUU ,\Z`l|llB \\ |lllf Ul lllt' IJHJIYL of the \\v"hlte Clay Rivur, on the sixth m};_;h_'1ine of Evanturel. one mile east of E: 1-u11;Eng1eh:\rt, sank, blocking the river mp1t}1e full length of the break and ,1 shoving the (}m'v1'mnr>n! `witlzc-z1`.xn1tt n. 1.'\`'\ fan` F--nun Ha nluun nnzl of-mud, -` One of the 1:1rr.:est and most xpeculiar landslidos in Northern On- `ftario occ1n'x'od on Suturt1:1_\'. October ; 20, about 4 p.m., when at strip about `three-quarters of :1 mile long by ,about 500 ,v:-mls wide of the bank in? ohn \\-'hHn l"I.\u- Di:-.... nu oh.` ah-oh 5 Never Let a Cold Get la Start I 3 .l` 3 A strike of several hundred British. lphysicians on Jan. 1 next has been L` decided upon. The sirikers are i'i1mml;e1's of the P21m`-,1 Doctors` {l'nirm," which serves 15,000,000 Imzeii and womun mntril)uIrn's to the 9N:\ti0n:Ll Health Fund. The decis- ; ion to strike was taken at it Conclave .}oi the doctors in London as an act y `:95 6d annually of refusal to accept a rednciion Ix). ;i'ees. At presr-111. the doctors get for each patient registered on their respective lists. `The Minister of Health has proposed. |reducin:; the rate to 83 (id. ' ` IE Break it up overnight -nu". ___1-I_J1_- _..___.__ _ _ JHUV Ills llll` \1\|\l'lll`.l|','H\ "l1\.'-.L' R'.`.)I,lLlL `?00 fee: from its place and stand- ;ing it almost on end. a I For the first time in its history! `the Nobel Prize in medicine, the]. highest honor that can be awarded! to a medical man, comes to Can-. nda. The awardinig of tlrfvs prize of -$40,000 to Dr. F. G. Banting, M.-C.,l `and Professor J. H. R. MacLeod, .\I.B., C.H.B., D.P.H., for their dis- Acovery and development of the in-! 'sulin trea.t.meut for diabetes is one which `should make every citizen of the Dominion and Province proud. In University circles it is considered the greatest htonor which has ever -been `accorded to it `by a foreign body. mp, ___..__,x .r- L1,, 17,: . -,N been of great assist- ance in helping many a farmer towards success. Farmers business is as important to The Bank of Toronto as any other business. We welcome the Farmer at any of our Branches. vms VAs=>qRua vvvu uvv Oven /7 N/wow Jan: U550 YEARLVJ` _..- __ _I_ v.- _-_,,_- Hltquickdirecttreatmentforcold of children and grown-ups too,. is an application of Vicks over throat and chest at bedtime. Not only in- Vicks absorbed thru the skin, but its. healing vapors of camphor, menthol, eucalyptus, turpentine, etc., are breathed all night directly into the affected air passages. Relief usually comes by morning. Just as good, too. for cuts, burns, bruises. stings and itching skin troubles. EIAMVALE -UL D`UUgt.`l')', Ull Jlllly Z1, l3ZJ. Had an audience with the King at Buclcin-gham Palace, July 18. Spoke before the annual meeting -of the British Medical Association at Portsmouth, Eng.. July 25. Pnanlvufinnu naaand hv Han Aum.-L

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