Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 2 Jan 1919, p. 3

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| LT.CM. m4 SSONS. ion is given to prepared for no und vodal; oronto Couser: 'ty exams. hone 424 St. Andrew's Piano, Organ ured for any 1 theoretical. ce and Studio, 1, 34-yrly VAN in & Brown ing probate of ristrution, and iveyuncer, ete. 8 Dunlop st SON Public, Coa- { of interest. premises far- of Toronto! Ont C. Murchison TON RS, ETC. ding rion Plaxton LB. R. ETC. , Burnie \ ELL. urt_ of Judi- otaries, Con- Barrie. 0 L of Toronto jte Elizabeth ne 167 London. St, Barrie, C.M. 'OLOGY Barrio, RT ty, Torolita, LsKoWw omach MPBELL ts St., Toronto 1, Barrie) mpbell, CAL neer Department, ] \ppraiser red to com Satisfaction Phone 191, nson's offiee --=-- ORKS rop. R. G, and Marble best mater a employed. always right ---- Model "Organola" ire point. change. $310 Hear Them There's a new list of selec- tions each month. They are played with a sapph- No needles to Beautiful, clear, "Phonola" records that are practically indestructible. The Phonola Co. of Canada, Limited , Kitchener, Canada The Only One With Organ Pipes In all the wide world, there is only one make of phonograph that He s\taken advantage of the principle of the pipe organ and installed inside of its case a set of tone control pipes which in- clude every néte in the scale. Tiffy phono- graph is the --_ Y.1 1 wen mm tir. Ke And the tone control pipes are used in our magnificent "Organola" model--the utmost that has so fer been achieved in phonograph con- struction. Records played on this "Organola'? Model are given a really wonderful reproduction. Flay a "'sextette" record on the "Organola"' Model, and you will have a real idea of the value of the tone control pipes. There is none of that confused blurring as when played on ordinary makes of phonograph, the tone control pipes of the "'Organola"' Model separating the different voices and notes, giving a pure, clear, lifelike rendition. Try a record of a violin, a piano, a soprano, or any- thing else you know the ordinary phonograph does not quite reproduce faithfully, and you will find that the "Organola" Model renders the selection perfectly and with a surprising volume. If you are going to invest upwartis of $250 in a phono- graph, you will, of course, want to procure the finest that is built. So, if you cannot sce and hear the "Organola" Mode of the "Phonola"" at a dealer's in your locality, write direct to us. Other "Phonolas" from $25 up. records can be played. DEALERS + The "'Phonola" line comprises 10 + models--a 'Phonola' for every requirement. The "Phonola" agency is the most valuable asset you tan add to your business today. Write for particulars. All makes of disc on to assert thut the prosperity wibir in many quarters of Canydy today ws [largely dup to the money found by the ie B C. I VICTORY BOND ESSAYS | Yous doans in this country oh. de Fhe present loan is required for muck. tle _ | sate purpose Canada has put forth a i gira' muibtary war atid behing th effort has been the Haunend effort, in Announcement war recently 1 necessary, but they should also know mpre visible, cetucular, but absolutely ne BCL. students who were suce about the bonds and the moral effect that sary, te the nalitary effor Ww competition for the best essays on the Vie. |will be produced byw successful Ioan, Cau te coened on without funds Our tory Loan. Copies of some of these will) adiuns have aly succeeded in any project, Of whom we are justly proud, inv be published in ner This which they understood prpperly ¥ equa (fed Their deiwudeuts must werk we give the fit prize eway an the! Quip Viewry Loan af hast year amounted |b aud these whe return must be Upper Sehool, to four bundred nalhon dollars. Half of red fer ther disuiulities and given an Victory Bonds -- Why Canadians Should that sum was advanced to finance our wy at | ay ty rake good! as cituzess uf Buy Them pvereas our supplies of | Ue ani ier which they fumsbt (By David McMaster, Upper School, BCT cheese Without the re i ro surplus susie ol The Victory Loan of 1918, like our pre- dite raised by it in Canada, the Brinsh ) tuts as urgently require in Buroy vious Victory Loun, will be supported gby 1 eould not have purchased the! the natations manufactured Bere sare nee + all classes of the citizens of Cunuda, no | atpphes of war mauteriul available here y carey on the war an Flan The matter of what educational or financial | besides this, the Loan helped to provide fur British Goverument cannot at present tea standing, pohticul affiliation, creed, or us-|our own war expenditure in Canada and !4" teuterils, S Our farmers, 110K tiouality, On this account it overseas. Thus, in addition to supporting Terry, datrymen and niunition worker that all Canadians should understand, as | our brave defenders, it gave an impet 1 wut They must be pa y the {ar us possible not only why the money is] business all over the Dominion, and exch ae prvidion|, Ul we lend bay Gin ernment the money, these individual nro 1eere can be paid and the food-stutfs Joumnons may move forward, and w { nis heeome due, the Government | wall have the money to repay us. There tay We uh inelinution in certain quarte.s to Any Way You Turn you will find WRIGLEY'S. Everybody thinks of WRIGLEY'S when chewing gum is mentioned. This is the result of years of effort to give mankind the benefits and enjoyment of this low-cost sweetmeat. WRIGLEY'S helps appetite and digestion--allays thirst--renews vigour. MaDe IN CANADA think that the imnunence of peace it less need of financial support for the Gov ermment, It is a fulse behef. The ae for financing the buying of munitions dd other war materials will be eliminated ay toon as the fighting ceases, but the demand. for foodstuffs will still be insistent, and qr Government will urgently need large suns to finunce the difficult period of reconstruc tion und to build up a greater trade for our products which will result in continued prosperity for our Dominion In order that the Victory Bonds will he suituble to the various buyers, three kin'ls huve been issued. A bond payable to the bearer +hould be kept in a safe pluce, be- cause uny person who might find or steal it cun secure the interest and principal, When the interest is due the holder of such a bond clips off the interest coupon nd cashes it at any bank The second kind of bond has the principal registered at Ottawa, while the bond is provided with interest coupons which ure payable to the bearer_and which can be cushed at any bank. But the principal in this case cannot be collected without the signature of the registered owner. The zhird Kind of bond is fully registered, and the owner receives his interest every six monthe by cheque from Ottawa, and neither the interest nor the principal can be collected except by the registered owner. -- These three kinds of bond may be had in denom- inations of fifty dollars and upwards und muy run for five or fifteen years There is no better investment in Canada than a Vietory Bond. Any chartered bank will pay three per cent. interest on deposite whereas the purchaser of a Victory Bond recrives five-and-a-half per cent, ive and a half per cent, is good interest. If or two hundred dollars, the Government will repay you two hundred dollars in fifteen years' time and will pay you eleven dollars interest each year in the meantime. Thus, in fifteen years your two hundred increases to three hundred and sixty-five dollars, even if you do not invest the interest as you receive it. A Victory Bond is a safe investment be- cause Canada is both willing and able to pay her debte. Every acre of land, every stick of timber, every factory, and every other form. of property in Canada's part of your security. These would be taxed to the limit before Canada would break her promise to pay. Our Government has been paying about one-third of our military expenditure from the revenues which it has béen collecting. This revenue has been greatly increased by the épecial taxes which have been imposed. The Government might raise the extra amount it needs by taxes later. But the Germans will not wait. The Government wants your money until such times 98 it can raise these sums. It will then repay you every cent. The only risk you run is this: If the Allies are defeated in this war, you may lose your in- vestment. But that if not going to lap- pen. Not only is the country solid in sup- port of the prosecution of the war'to a de- you buy a fifteen-year Victory Bond for) \cisive victory, but.that victory is well nigh in sight. Your money is absolutely safe in , Victory Bonds. H The loan cannot be finenced out of capi- | tal. The person who sells what existing holdings he has in order to buy a Victory Bond merely effects a redistribution of a- | vailuble purchasing power. In the ultiniete the loan must come from income currently received which otherwise would be devoted to the purchase of consumable goods or the furthering of enterprises which are not eb- solutely necessary for the national life. Von- sequently, the Government has encouraged the small investor and has given him svery | privilege which is enjoyed by the larger in- vestor. Every fifty dollars invested brings | the loan so much nearer the objective. Surely the people of Canada have come to realize thar giving their surplus is not 'enough--there must be special saving und | auerifice. Every effort possible should be put forward to continue in the prosecution of this war which we are waging, not nly for our own security and for the defence of the Empire, but, we believe for the cause of civihzation itself, Our men at the front are fighting heroically, Tt is for the people at homie to 'stand by' them. -- Besides vir, it i a good thing for most people if sbi hive tw pay for w bond. , They will wat only resist the temptation to buy luxuries, which helps greatly in itself, but they will he lending their money to help pay for carrying on the war. The purchase of jan unnecessary article is not putriotic, it weakens the support we ure giving our men, When the Government launched the cam: paign, it asked for s minimum of three hundred million, but it set the objective at five hundred million. The Canadians fighting for us in France do not just carry our their orders to the letter, they go fur ther, und both officers and men have built up 4 great reputation for imtiative, re sourcefulness, and staying power. -- How will these men feel if we only obtain cur objective? A well subscribed loan will en- courage our men; it will give heart to the Allies: it will discourage and weaken our enemies: it will help greatly ina moral way to win the wir An Allied victory will make thie world a better place in which to five, Will we do our utmost in thix greut national, patriotic undertaking? A Victory Bond & a bond of good faith plus good business Tt helps to "hale high the toreb received frow falling hands the hands of our unreturning brave. BRADFORD Dec 24 -Eldon Waldruit hus been dis charge from the urmy and is now manng drug store in Hamilton. JW. Simpkins spent an hour on Sun- morning watehing an unusual sight Two partrulges were feusting on frozen up ples an bis o:chord far that Iength of ti Itas not often tha: partridges yre set town Geo. Geddes, lucal blacksmuth, received a kick fvorir a horse an his shor on Thursday Both feet Tunded agu:nst his chest, but he war ele to the horse tii not get tne full fares wot lay him up, though it has prevented hia from dome much work Corl Fred Stevensan's return on Satur Hay r nati only a few days bef iorning was unexpected its did Hot receive we wah oa Western Halen when the Uoneker cot Only were taken and the ret, including Fred, were discharged. He cane howe then and enlisted again in ihe sprig ef 1915) going overseas in the aut hun Corph Stevenson was gassed ne: and Just summer he took sick and has be sin France and England since. 1K. D. Machean, of the R. ALF. has been operated on for appendicitis, He mm a eritient co 7 Chris Long met with an accident v nieh wight have proved very serious While | working with a «uwemill he had his arm | rol George Webb had the misfortune of | breaking his collur-bone when he fell ous of an oat bin. We have been told of a most extraordin: ury accident which befell Thos. Dufin while motoring from Bradford last Savur- day morning with W. Stone to Bond Hexd Everything went smoothly along until neat Bond Head, when a dog came upon the acene. A bot race ensued, which ended only when the car and its occupants landed in the ditch, When it wax thought that Mra, J, H. Nesbitt was making good progress towards recovery, and having passed a@ satisfactory night and her friends were hopeful, she 'took 'a sudden turn about ten o'clock on Sutur- day morning and pasted out like @ flash. She had conversed with the nurse, and had xaid what she would like for breakfast, but 'hile the same was being prepared her spirit took its flight. 'Thus the sorrowing husband and four sons were called upon to suffer the long departure of two from the family, Eerl having passed to the Great Beyond but ten days before his mother from the same cause--pneumonia, -- She was in her 36th year, Mrs, Nesbitt leaves besides her husband, four young sons, two brothers and two sisters--Charles Bowles of West. Gwillimbury, Milton Bowles and Mrs. Thos, Fennell' in Toronto, and Miss Frances Bowles at home, her parents, Mr. 'and Mrs. Geo. Bowles, also residing in | town, Bradford Witness. COOKSTOWN Newmarket Express-Herald--Corp. Row- land M'Gonigle, son of Capt. M'Gonigle, returned home from overseas on Thursday 'afternoon, Dec. 19th, Rowland joined the, 127th Battalion and held the rank of sergeant. When he reached Eng- lund he reverted to the xanks and went to Franee with the Canadian Construction battalion, The reader will recall the heroic stand that the battalion took in stemming the great German drive last spring and it was then that Rowland was severely wound- ed. He wes invalided to England and af- ter spending months in English "hospitals has returned home.. The A.Y.P.A. of St. Paul's Chureb gave a reception in'the school room on Thursday night in honor of the return bome of Corp. M'Génigle and made him a presentation of gold cuff-links. Died Far From Home Orillia Times--On Thursday afternoon the local branch of the Great War Veterans, conducted the funeral of the late Miss Wall, who passed' away on Wednesday evening, December 18, at the General Hospital. A- bout a week ago the Secretary of the Vet- erans heard there was a soldier's depend- ant at the ~ :neral Hospital, without a friend in the country, and-st once got in touch with the Wives' and Mothers' Club, who taok up the case of the- deceased. Mins 'Wall was brought from Cookstown to the Orillin General Hospital, and she knew no one, Miss Wall came from a very.patriotic © Rev. T. G.| This Real--. Gasoline Auto forBoys end Girls $1 52 offer Prizes Zz SOLVE THIS } PUZZLE 1¢ Horse Power Auto indy Folding Cem: Mngnificeat Gold V and Chain, or Girl's Wrist Watch eee What does ¢®--Lovely 36-inch Doll, hand- ow it 2 and beautiful N you work this out? Do pay ( fol want to know how {t was decided long th fore peace came when the war would be eters Say DAcsuLe Of Bost crete sme anengr nchotsined within the 48 gen_Guil-cite Poateall = © tid valuable prises await pou wer? Solvelt 7th eo lOch--Solf-Filler Fountain Pe HOW TO SOLVE IT 'Also 1b Extra Prizes The above squares hold the answer. It ie in Sth--Electric Projectoscope. 'Better than a magic lantern. Girls, each $1.25, fone sentence of nine words, containing forty Total Value of Prizes letters. Each letter is represented by a number, and that number is the position of the.letters in the alphabet. Fdf Instance, Ais represcnted by the igure 1, az {eis first in the alphabet, garmer lecor and ¢o on. Now, to help you get started, we (2,ri#¥t hand corner of the, 'will elt you that the first letter In the puzzle Recpatate asta ct paper "ut your nisin fs "W."" because W fo the 23rd letter{a the Jour anawar is recelved, and tell you |fyour solution elphabet. Get to work and figure out the !s correct, and also send you @ completo worda in the sentence, and try to find the [stot the grand prises that you can win. answer to the great question, " When will the war beover?" It is not easy, but it le worth while trying for. She! Edmonton 4 'Bie, You willbe the Eary of all your Friends with this Car THE AUTO-MAN, EVERYWOMAN'S WORLD, Dept. 90 Lillian Gish and Master Ben Alexander in D. W. Griffith's ° coming to the Grand Opera House, Fri, and Sat,, Jun. 10-11. Scotch family, und was 23 ye: Four brothers and one sister have been cn uctive xervice. Two brothers were killed in action, and her sister, who was a nurse in France, was killed when the Germans bombed the hospital, 'The two remaining brothers are Pte, Fred. Wall, Sth Cana: | dian Field Ambulance, und Musician Joseph , Wall, of LMS. Dreadnought, The Secre- , tary 'of the Veterans has written to these brothers to show them that every care was , taken of their sister, and thut she was bur- ied decently. The funeral wax conducted Pees weer guee rere by the Rev, Mr. Muckersie, from Mundell's | gf than one bottle of Biccantia to Parlors. Four veterans in uniform acted See naan cRecsively a» pallbearers, and nurées from the hospital fed doce sor atin he ano and representatives of the Wives' and Mo- igure, it is wold on @ pos thers' Club paid their last tribute to the eSeteoney) back." Reed what deceased. A bouquet of flowers was sunt 'one grateful woman writes from the Wives and Mothers and one ulso "Your medic from the nurses, It will be a consolation | to the two brothers to know that their completly 'fat tere lorgivand wns caus sister was buried by vome of their wn comrades, rs of age. One Bottle Cured Her fing me agreat deal of ansicty, Et Pom glad to su» that one bottle cured mie. Jan very gratchul for the benett have Period. (Name furmshed (on application.) $5.00 per Bottle If vour dr asst bss nolo supply of Sein ats hes name ond oe ll see tnt you are supplied. The Marvel Drug Co., Limited 2834 Dundas Street West, Toronto --S---- | The Next Year. | No backward glances shall hinder or anpal ; me, . | A new life is begun, And better hopes and better motives. call | me i Than thdse the past has won. rd's Liniment Cures Dandruff. { Clear the Skin A beautiful complexion is the outward mark of good blood and a healthy body. When the stomach, liver and blood are in good order, the skin is clear and lovely. Unsightly blotches, pimples, eruptions and sallowness show the need of Beecham's Pills to stimulate and regulate the vital organs aid improve the circula- tion. Good healthand better looks soon follow the use of BEECHAM'S PILLS 'are worth a guinea a box 'Sold everywhere in Canada and U.S. America. in beans, 25 cents, English Doll Carringo - 10.00 What Others Have Done, You Can Do Hero ara the names of only a few of tho boysand tla to whom wo havo recently awarded big Drisex= ind Pony and Cart, Helen Smith. Shetland Pony, Deatrice Haghes, Haren Cash. Lyle Renson, Hamilton, Ont. $22 cush Helen epoch Tuning Alt (00Gaah,Floreniee Nectitt Araptior Ont 'We will send you names of many others TORONTO, ONT. Matinee both days, | a

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