Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 11 Dec 1930, p. 9

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v Also the Comedy--PICK EM YOUNG" and the News sue this _o;littc1'inp;, gory.-`eoL2.\: colored picture. It's a knockout !`= Usual Prices---Shows 7 and 9 p.m. ` p res-arxferhy` JOSEPH M. SCHENCK. Whfgy Not Try The Silver Arrow Taxi Travel in Comfort in Heated Sedans Our Motto is CARE and C0>URTESY Next Door to Dreamland Theatre Day Service 25c Night Service 25c `BRUCE WILSON, Prop. with Scenes in Technicolor and 10 Lavish Song Hits L. No. 41. DLJLU I RAN THREE WEEKS AT THE TIVOLI PHONE 44 ; 4.15 V01. |[FORMER BARRlE MLANECANCER MS MT [GRANTED 3A DIWJRCEE BEGIN AS CANCER} Be1't1'am J. 'Pit.L-hf01'd Gets Sepa1'ati011 Under New _ 1 Divorce Law. | `The rst divorce case to be heard in Toronto under the new law was that of Beimram John Pitchford, a railway conductor, formerly of -Bar rie, who sued for a dissolution of hxs marriage to Eliza Amelia Harris Pitchford on the grounds of deser- tion and adultery, the co-respondent being one -Harvey Graham, a barber of Toronto. The action heard on Friday last before Mr. Justice Jer- frey, was undeiended. Am-nrrlinp~ tn the legal documents. Irey, unae1enaeu. According to the legal documents, the plainti , Pitchford and defend ant were married in Orillia on Sepi. 2nd, 1913. They lived togemher in Barrie as man and wife until 1916 when Pitchford enlisted, going over seas. `There were three children 01` the marriage, a girl now aged 15, 21 boy 14 and a girl 6. . l l'T`l'm, nlainti allesred that defend- boy 14 and 3. gm 0. 4The plaintiff alleged that ant wrongfully left home without justication and resided separate and apart from him, with Harvey Graham. T115 flnnvn-n VnTHnn c}1n1'i`f'F e U1`U'lZ1l'11. Jas. George Yolden, sheri{f s~ _ofcer, testied an affidavit of ser ivice of summons, sworn on 28th of Ocmober, served on Mrs. Pitchford, 270 Huron street, Toronto, and tha* she admitted that she was the pro- per person to receive it. He identi- ed a photograph of Mrs. Pitchford as the person upon whom the sum- mons had been served. Similar ser- `vice to the plainti` was testified Lo and witness said was acknowledged. (The nlninmiff urifnpggnd in his own and witness said was a.cKI1u\v1e.ugeu. lThe plainmiff witnessed in his own behalf. .The occupation of the co- respondent Graham, he said, was a barber. P1aintis marriage certi- ` cate was put in as evidence. he said he came to Canada from Eng- land in 1911. He at first worked on the Grand lTrunk Railway and conriinued in that railway service to the present, it now being the C.N.R. He gave the court the names and ages of his children. Note Left He said that on February 13,- 1930, he went home and found his wife had gone and had left a note fT`l1n nnfp hmrn.n. T)r-rm` Bert---VVe \y1Ie nan gone anu nau lelu a. new The note began, Dear Bert--Wc have gone as I told you I would and as you have told me to many times. l'I"ln V-v-|:|:c;11o urnnf nn fn csnr 1'11-25` times." iThe missive went on to say that the writer was willing to keep the kids and that she had given them a chance to choose wheher they would go with her. The note end- ed It will be for the best, you will hear from me in a week, Lila. \X7Hnna: coir] Ra fnllnuvnri Hi: urifn near Irom in a weex, pua." Witness said he followed his wife and children and found they had gone to an address which was the rooming house of Harvey Graham. He went I10 the City Hall and had a detective go with him to the ad- dress. He found his wife was liv- ing at No. 11 Madison avenue. With another detective he went: L0 Madison avenue. The detective went in, came out, and called wu- ness. He went in and talked nhings over, and asked her if she had not mode a mistake. But nothing re- sulted from the interview. Later he saw his wife again at 117 Sher- bourne szimeet. The apartment was unfurnished, and he told his wife she could lmve the best of the furn- iture if she \\'i. it He used to see his wife on Sundays. She gave him permis. to call on her ore those day:<.. She promi.~:.:- not to see Harvey Graham. Leh City . He learned later that she had gone to Allandale with Harvey" Graham. He had a further talk with her. and she said that she was very fond of Harvey Graham. Tlnrm lm wont :H"`. 1lh rhn Hm Sher-i u I Grant McKnight, a married farm- er with one small child, \\'z1.< found hanged in his barn near Alliston on Wednesday last. Coroner Dr. J. 1). Cunningham expressed the opinion 1 S ). I. ll 1 `who took him into the kitchen. : ...-...n:.n1 L empty. Had she notied you? counsel.-No. VVilne.~,s found his wife had bougm 21 rooming; house at 270 Huron .~'.".reet'. Later his wife told him she had taken Harvey Graham to her house as a roomer. She told plain- tiff she needed the money.. In! .~\ugust, 1930, he visited his wife,' He) noticed :1 mz\n s apparel, collar. tlr.-, shirt. He spoke to her and said It (li(ln t look right, it was a hit thick, and he accused her of a-;lultery. She said, Yes, Bert; I grtless you're right. Th_e divorce was g;ranl|e(l by Mr. Justice Jefl'rey, who found the bus- band had acted decently and honor- ably towards his wife. Custody of Children His Lordship asked R. I. Ferguson, 4`.-su nlnh-.Ho"l~` azekea H-' nnu u'rnnlirItu_ LLUI Ab n\:aucu.nl:. >..)uuu:uuII:o 1 An uu itching or burning sensation. Every- one understands the message known as toothache. :Then there is a third way :71 which some part of our body tells us that there is an abnormal spun which should be examined and pro- pcrly treated, that is an unusual li.~:charg`e. `There is also a fourth way in which the body tells us that :::oinetlm_L,-` is wrong` soinewhere. We call it loss of function `There is a. limp. We can t move some part 01` the body as easily as we could be-I fore. We (lon t see well, hear well. smell or taste well There may be. vomiting after eating, or an irregu-; larity in the movement of the; bowels. The ealiier in life this Cul- rect information is given the better. The majority of these things can be} taught to children. i 10ml 0: uarvey uranam. Then he went again mo the Sher- ,bournc street apztrtment and found `it empty. Hm! chm nniiprl vnu ? Irigms." i ll) . `Justico [counsel for plaintiff, if any applica- tion had been made for custody o1 |the children. KYA aim: 1vr.\hl:nI1 nnnnunl 'l`l\u one cnuuren. No, sir, replied counsel. The mother has the children now, but we intend to take proper steps to recover their custody. Vnnr I-Hnnf. nnnnm-A tn hp in vm'\, EHCII` CUSEOGY." Your client appears to be a very ` decenn man and I trust he will make every effort to place the children where they will not be under the care of this woman. With the gross misconduct brought out during the case, it forces me to say she is not a t or proper person to have the care and upbringing of these children. Send the friend or relative who 1 has moved away from town at Christ- ` mas box of a. years subscription to The Northern Advance. It will keep '_them in touch with home happen- Lmgs. Thursday, December 11, 1930 I j o Probably everyone has heard mi cancer and is afraid of it, is the` opening sentence in the most recent! lecture delivered by the Canadian; Social Hygiene Council s Free Radio College of Health over Station CKCL. The purpose of this lecture, the council s lecturer stated, was 11U`t| to make his hearers more afraid oi| cancer, but rather to teach them hovm they can use their fear of it fox their own protection. Public edu- cation was, he said, the greatesn need in fighting this disease to-day It differed from mnnv ni.l1m' in` neeu 1n 11gn1:1r1g Ems ulsease to-uay 1| differed from many others in` that doctors had not yet discover-.-2:3 specic means to prevent it. Ar. 1 though o11e can be vaccinated agains" smallpox, immunized against dip:1~ theria and inocculated for the pre vention of typhoid fever, one cannot be protected against cancer. This fact, said the lecturer, coupled with the universally ac cepted knowledge that cancer taken i11 early stages is often easily cured, ; should emphasize the need for watch- ing very carefully for those early ' symptoms. What: clurmlrl we Irnnw nhnnf nah- ` =r I;e`.i\3'> *<'12i1E`*`?5YxV"'?{a$'* %Y aW `? FRIDAY ls Cz11lS(.`d t-.1 ri011, T uisease 01` it g`0l'1(31`E1l COl1(llT.10n. little tumor or nodule with which we are born, or a little tumor or sore, the result of injury or chronic irri- tation. When external, this little spot can be seen or felt. It is then well known to everybody as a war:, or mole, a sore spot in the skin or in the mouth, a white patch in the mouth, a red or scaly area on the skin, a pigmented area or black . spot or an elevated piymented area 1 just as the more ._ wart or sore. that can be felt. called the pigmented mole. Any bit of skin or bit of the lining of the mucous membrane of the mouth which (lees not look like the normai skin or normal mucuous membrane should be looked upon as suspicious, definite mole U1. Then there are lumps It does not make any difference where the lump is or what the age of the individual is, new-born babe, infant, child, young or old adult, man or woman-if you feel a lump or a mass or a harden- ing or a thickening or an enlarge- ment or a waxen kernel or a tumor, or a swelling, they are all the same thing. Don t watch and wait. Go and nd out what it is. -The most dangerous lump is the lump in the breast of a woman over 25. And just as such a growth may develop on or near the skin, so it may de- velop in any part within the body. Fortunately, the human body is per- fectly wired, nothing can happen anywhere without touching the wires and sending some kind of mes- sage to the brain. We may call ll` pain or misery or discomfort, but everyonca is aware of this new mes- sage from some spot in the body, where as yet nothing can be seen or felt. You must pay attention to these messages, just as you Sh011lU do to the telephone, or the tele- graph, or the letter, or when some one calls you, or to an unusuai noise-these inessages must be read and interpreted. S`.nmr~`rimrr_< when it r'nn1n.: from -This local spot which must form before cancer can start is either at symptoms." What should we know about can~ cer in order to protect us and give us Lhe best chance of prevention or of cure '3 Everyone should know`; that cancer does not begin as can- cer. There rst develops something that is not cancer-_ nnrl Hui: nnm. develop into cancer, is :1 local spot, a local condxtion, and not a general disease or a general condition. .'l`his lnr-nl snnf. \vl1ir-l1 mnet fm-m OJ. cure mveryone Sl10u|(1 Known` that is not cancer, and this some thing that is not cancer, which may condition. and nnt :1 {rt-\nm';H and interpi-ereu. Sometimes when it comes from the region of the abdomen we can the messages, indigestion, colic, nausezi. When it is in the head we call it headache. Sometimes it is an H4 tnnihm-hn, BARLEY Roland, l\Ian., Dec. 8.-Farmc..u in this district are using their bar- ley for fuel instead of coal or wood. They consider the grain cheaper than eiv`<.`!r, although it will not retain i' all night. It is found quite sat- isfactory for daytime ring. One bushel of barley will keep in a good; re all day in a small heater. Members of the Alliston publicl school board were astounded recent- ly on being advised by W. R. Ed- gar, principal of the school, that nu! was tendering his resignation to taicc, effect at the end of the year. Mr, Edgar is accepting the principalship V of an eight-roomed public school In i Sudbury, where his duties will be whnilv znnm-vism-v. asuaoury, wnere n: wholly supervlsory. Dreamland Theatre rd by Cllronic In :- 1, says ]*I_\'g1<:110 Lectm-er. IS BURNED AS CHEAPEST FUEL n the head letimes sation. messuge mnod 1.< unusug-.1` Lly thzxrf :>1newhe1'e. \V(-` l on `There 15 3 Saturday Matinee 2.30 Wlfll Ann Harding Mary Astor Edward Everett Horton Robert Ames Hedda Hopper Thurs. Fi. Sat. Mon Tues Wed KIXVANIS CHRIT1VIAS CHEER BENEFIT THE. GREATEST` l;ICT UIE IT'S KIND EVER I;RESENTED TO THE PUBLIC! DAR! TLIDCI.` \IIIElZ`IfQ A'I" TLII.` "I'I"f\I I S ` '4: -` . .*.. R an DAVEES IR '.l`1`.ULY A BO .I.".I_`LE OF F417 FIST [T NE FOR YOUR CHILD. Richest in all A\'i1`a1nins, both 1`n<~ bwne b111.ld1n5;` mmm-:11 ones, and in tho (`R,.`v}-\.\[, Vitamins A and D, S`[1'011g_'_`('~a1' in hr-at value. Bottled in our sanita1'y dairy, Da\'ie s milk IS `the Inost 11e:11tl1i'u1 and ueonolnical food. Put 111 a dzuly call for our wagon. For better milk and cream, for better ser- vice and satisfaction, give us a trial. Davie s Wairy 'I\'fT\'f"I ;'~.;Gl\"E IT TO '.l.`HE YOUNC+ST]G].{S .~\.'.i` MEAL T];\l"ES -\I\"]) ..\.I+"J_`ER SCHOOL. Comedy-HONK YOUR HORN Rich in Vimmines Comedy-LADIES LAST WA RN E R BROS. present. Lgavni Ijj --For the Benet of the Lady Orienta.ls-- -TI-IIE DREAMLAND presents zmothr.-r Musical Comedy hit--a rival to VVHzOOPEE. L! PHONE 755w 2 Shows Nightly 7 - 9 Page Nine 1 J. .l'.l.'JlA 1J.1`UEI. iJ.\'1'LI.`1.\ ` to WHOOPEE. MON - TUES - WED FARMER FOUND HANGED 1 that the act may have been the re-i` ----- *.sult of McKnight having been over-` come by carbon monoxide fumosw w:1._< lrom Ins motor car a_:fortnight ago.l nged no other theory being advanced. edn `day last. Deceased was about forty years or -.......--an Han nnininn ,':`.

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