Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 29 May 1919, p. 14

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Page Fourteen Dunlop St. J . H. McCA BARRIE Our reputation for fair dealing and reliable goods, coupled with the De Laval record of service and durability, has made the De Laval Cream Separator the leader in this community. HE creameryman knows which separator skims cleanest, costs the least to keep in good working order, and lasts the longest. He has to know. The wrong separator might easily mean a loss to him of several/thousand dollars a year. They can't fool the creameryman That's why 98% of all the separators used in the world's creameries and milk plants are De Lavals. \ And it's just as important to you as it is to the creameryman that you make no mistake in your choice of a cream separator. Why not be guided by the cteameryman's experience ? Come in some day and talk it over DE LAVAL High Cost of Living AU the Just meeting of the Orill of Trade, Mayor Anderson gave an address on "The High Cost of Living' He stated that the cost of Living seemed to be going up instead of coming down, and that be did not believe it would come down until there was more food in the world, He then asked the quest: here are we go ing to get it'? Practically everything need ed in the way of food could be raised Fight sround uur own town-- wheat, meut, cereuls. butter, eggs. syrup und fruit, The Ervatest delieweies any of the leuding hotel could offer were good butter, creat, muple syrup and fresh eggs, all of which could be , produced right around home. Why, then. war equipment--all engaged in work of des: producing the necessities of life cing famine conditions wh be determinet) at this da New Zesland, there should be a surplus, he figure down after the coming harvest He thei pointed out that there were two |fighting units, while another forty million fice than Cain" Bonrd had been engaged in the manufacture of faith in God and what G THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON JUNE 1: FAITH: WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT DOES. 2. (Read Heb. 1 TIME.--Uncertain. PLACE.--Uncertain. EXPOSITION --I, What Faith Is. 1, In verse 1 we Wave a very explicit and | suggestive definition of faith; in the ver- ses that immediately follow many illustra. tions of fuith; und in the closing verses of the chapter a description of the triumphs Jof faith. As to what faith is, itis. "the assurance of things hoped for. the convie- | tion of things not seen (AR.V.\. The | ground of this assurance and conviction | | (ae we cleurly see in the illustrations [that follow! the Word of God (ef. Rom 10. 171. Faith looke at the Word of God und that alone; sees whut God promised nd rests wssured that it will all come to pace just as He says, It puts all to the teat by acting as if it were so. Faith aske | no questions beyond what God says, be. lieves exactly what God does say will come to pase, and obeys what God commands, | '0 believe God is to rely upon or have! Unbesitating assurance of the truth of God's | | testimony, even if it is unsupported by otber evidence, and to rely upon and have un faltering assurance of the fulfilinent of His promises, even though everything seems | 'against such fulfilment (ef. 1 Juo. 5: 10, RV; Jno, 5:24, RV: Ac, 27 22.25! Rom. 4:3, 19-21, RV.; Heb. 11. 13) I, What Fuith Does, 2.10. God spoke and the worlds came into be: | ing as a perfected whole (ef. Gen. 1:3, 6.| 4.14, 20, 24, 260. We know thie hy faith, Le, because God saya so in G ie 1, and we take God at His word. God told Cain! and Able that, sin having entered the world He cPuld only be approached on the ground of sbed blood. Able believed Gud and came bringing 'an offering of shed "blood :| Cain did not believe God and "hrought of the fruit of the ground'; so Able "hy faith" | |"offered unto God a more excellent sueri (ef, Gen. 4 By simple wt told him, and thus. be. Enoch walked with God,' truction who would ordinarily have been |cume so welbpleasing to God that God The re. |took him to be constantly with Him with: sult is that a large part of the world is fa- out his pussing through the durk door of Mr. Anderson then jdeath (cf, Gen. 5 produced figures to show that with the |well-pleasing to God in any other way (v, crop in sight for 1919, ws far as could |6'° the one thir . in Canada, the of men is that they believe Him United States, the Argerme, Australia and by simple, unquestioning faith in what God | 21-24), No one can be that God demands It was ,|told Him, that Nosh prepared his ark, and even after taking care of the whole world's |thus «aved himself and his household (ef, | needs and providing for 1920 seed! so that |Gen. 6° 1 the cost of flour must come ise: Abraham by + God made Abraham a prom edit umd did what God told hint 10 do to inherit: the prom e. He had his eye on "the city which hath the fou whawe builder and rious, ie the cost of cliving su high Beewuse kinds of farne--graw farms and tillage maket Sad." "and. some alay' he Will te bwenty mulhon men in the warkl were en farm A tillage farin of 100 acres, proper. maker, * Gort," and some day" be sill Ruged for so long a time in the vurious IY worked, will produce enough food for ' , 65 people, while a gruss will onl people Wh wailuble for farm work many people te 'ployment in the your possession, you can Jef these articles In the good old days taints and odors. tave isan are light, fe shipping charges, ducable that they used over and over again, An Eddy Tub will keep your butter 'out of bad company.and will have its cout many tmes over. 'The E. B. EDDY CO. Limited HULL, Canade rs of the Famous Edy Matcher ' rm help und cons the high cost of furm products The solution of the whole problem of he high cost of living is to increase und intensify food production by inducing more men to remain on the farms and to get {hack to the land those who have left farme to tuke up other lines of work sly in Read the advertisements. Buy advertised goods, - Every Wage Earner An Investor Every wage earner can be an investor in gilt-edged securities bearing a high rate of interest without sacrifice or worry, The plan fs so simple and secure that it commends itself to everybody. All of us spend a portion of our earnings thoughtlessly. It is human ature. Yet most of us would be glad if somcone would take the moncy we fritter away and save it for us, because we find it difficult to save it ourselves. Make your employer do it by m-ans of War Savings Stamps. Say to him: "I want you to take five per cent. of the moncy in my Pay envelope each week and buy me Thrift In May W-SS. rm of 100 ucres| III tuce food enough to feed 13 are there not more tillage The Beewuse there is not enough labor 'uf heroes of fuith to stir up behevere «till There are ton Li ing the farms and seeking of verse 1 is not that the towns and cities, and gone before into the ete "THEREFORE Let Us ako," Heb 2; 1.2. Holy Spirit mentions this long list their full duty The thought who have world are ra tintil euch time ax there is a movement 'luoking at us today (there is no place in "buck to the farms'* there is bound to be the Bible that te: es us that This in 4 scarcity of such food stuffs as butter, terpretatinn comes fron w tmisutelerstaty eggs und ather items of duily necessities of thé Bible usage of the word 'wit for the tuble, and just se. long will the |A witness in the Bibie dors not Price of these articles remain at a high looker on, but one who testifies figure Witness Hume not consist in looking tutus J oMe. And pied out another fea ut in their testifying to God wnd the truth S long as your butter is in ture that is contnit to the high cost af His Word. But en the ground af the stimeny of thes great clout uf te Kir dbinbrd Wit tsg ea yourene: || 'ition rege aol at Tor a dete ant bargin plum 11) Lay aside every | trot" Te tmay mect mtr atl surts of pat 16e & pound, farmers workgd like slaves lweight."" No runners ever curry ny extra | contamination on the ro {to reach the maximum produel and the burten, There are things which we may EDDY'S INDURATED FIBREWARE [women und girls did a large part of the not he able to prove sre sin bat which | 4 Harm work, Now a large percentage of riainly "weights" in the Christian | BUTTER TUBS girls ure leaving the farms and tr: ry osuch thing should be Juidl affortyiudtee: Insurance for. sour [for nurses, eubnographers and ather ack, inerte The sin which doth so enaily tnter fen at asta teat Bey fy than which wns reflected in the beset, we! avily eset" sibune sande | tself uround us as un ith fitting garment winds itself arund and trips up the run. | ver, That is exuctly what sins do unless | we lay them aside. 10 Run with pa jtence the race that ix set before us." "Pu jtience" means steudfast endurance, never giving up but pegging through to the end, (4) "Looking unto Jesus." We our eyes upon Him, as the und Perfecter of our fuith stead of the joy that wus set before Hin ithe joy of equ und fellowship with God! "endured the cross' (ef, Phil nd we must choose the crose in: the joy, if we would win in the rs despise the shame that fies in the path of absolute ity to God. Ax a result [He is now "set down at the right hand of the throne of God" and if we run with endurance, we shall sit down with Him (ef [Rev, 3: 21), This iv the of wn easy: going Christianity, a Christianity of songs and and jollity and "having 9 good | | times fake it we and pleasant as possible for the young convert" is our twentieth century slogan. Don't ask them | }to give up any more than ix absolutel ae the Holv Spirit, | y weight."" That cov: | Jers the dunce question, and the theatre qwestion. and the card-plagjne question nd | 8 host of other questions." "Let them en- |ilure the cross, as Jesus did," the Holy Spirit continues, How "the modern Chris tian" shuns the cross. Look at Jesus, He | is our pattern (cf. Mat. 16:24). He "en- dured the cross"; so must we. But He received abundant reward. So shull we As the result of the croks He is now in |the place of "all power" (ef. Mat. 28:18) Nature's Invitation These Bright Spring Days If ever Nature holds forth invitation to man, it is now, in these early spring days, when budding trees and shrub, the grassy Takes Less for the Job-and wears Longest on the Job A Paint, to be 100% efficient, must be 100% pure. Only an absolutely pure Paint can cover completely, spread easily and protect the surface of wood and metal against the destructive action of wear and weather for years, MARTIN-SENOUR "100% PURE" PAINT costs less than any other on your house, because it covers most, spreads easiest and lasts longest. Guarantee WE GUARANTEE THE MARTIN-SENOUR 100% PURE PAINT (except ite and a few dark shades that cannot be prepared from lead and inc), to be made from pure while lead, pure oxide of riac, with coloring matter in Proportionate quantities wary to make th pective shades and tints, with pure linseed oil and turpentine dryer, and to be entirely FREE + benzine, g and other adul- tions, and SOLD SUBJECT TO CHEMI. CAL ANALYSIS, Tre Martin-Senour co LirEeD a | JOHNSON & WARREN, BARRIE. . It\s true economy to keep your house well' painted; it saves repairs and deterioration, It is the truest economy to use "100% Pure" Ask for copies of our books -- "Town and Country Homes" and "Harmony in Neu-Tone". Free on request. 144 A Wonderful Fishing Region 41E rivers and lakes tn the vicin- | ity of Cranbrook, British Colum- bia, on the Crow's Nest Me of the Canadian Pacific Railway, are happy and prolific haunts for lovers of fishing. All these waters are well stocked with mountain or cut throat trout, rainbow trout, Dolly Varden trout, bull trout, landlocked salmon or Kamloops trqut. Exceli=nt catches are made in the fishing season. Fore Most amongst the fishing w this region are: St. Mary's Li a river, Kootenay River, Moyle La and river, Gold Creek, (h Perry Creek Lake, Doyle's Premier Lake. Perhaps the fav rit rendezvous is Premier Lake, Thi- lake {gs situated about thirty-eig! miles from Cranbrook. It is three and a half mites long and one mile wide. Mountains surround it on every side, and it is very deep. There is no visible outlet for the waters. Springs that rise adjacent to the lake and streams from the mountain sides gush to rest in Its placid bed. On August 12th, 1915, the Game Conservation Roard of the Rastern District of British Columbia furnis! ed Premier Lake, along the Kootenay Central Raflway, a branch of the C. P. OR, with 10,000 Kamloops trout fry, each one then being bout three-quarters of an Inch fong. A prophecy was made that the fry | within four years would develop into fish weighing between twelve and thirty pounds. The accompanying |. 'Ilugtration shows some of the fish ca:ght when three years old. Realizing the sporting posstbilities if 0 Tease eee eee come at the Landlocked salmon caught in Premier Lake, British vember 7th, 1917, and formed the Columbia, on May 15th, 1918. Cranbrook District Rod and Gun! when they begin to multiply in the; Distances from Cranbrook to the Club A hatchery was started in| natural way ft {s certain that Cran. different fishing waters vary, but none Cranbrook: 200,000 eggs were brought| brook will be one of the finest fishing|of the lakes wa rivers 1s difficult of in and incubated. The enterpries Was| districts In the world, Cost $4.08 wet from last night's rain, the soft breeze. Stamps. 'Then with each $4.00 worth of -- |the whutl of the lark, the buoyant lilt In June 'Thrift Stamps buy me a War Savings Stamp, of the robin"s melody, and every aspect of Wee. When you have bought each War Savings --_|theagreat outdoor i'an inspiratjon and 9 Stamp, put it in my envelope. Go on doing PI Across the sky flost 'the great Cost $4.05 that for a year." clouds, argosies of rain, sent up from the War Savings Stampe ean be bought wher wer this sign is displayed. That fs all. Your mind is free. You will not miss that 75 cents or that dollar which you have hitherto Squandered on trifies. But at the end of the year you will have a Uttle package of War Savings Stamps, each bearing the $5.00 mark, byt which have cost you but a few cents over $4.00 each. 'These Canada will redeem in 1924, Make Your Savings Serve You and Serve Your Country--Invest Them in War Savings Stamps. ' soutbland to refresh the northern' fields. Between shines a sky of such blue as paint. er never put on canvas, and the warm sun wakes to life the things that have slumbered all the weary mgnths of winter through. Rivulets trickle "along the little gullies after every shower to join the creeks, and everything gives evidence of the great crea- tive forees sprung into vital action again, starting a new round of the cycle of exis. tence, birth, growth, decay and death, A walk out to the cemeter street, or better still, a try, will give the weary city man the re- lief he can not find in hin office. Nature asks you out of doorf" these promising May days. She is donning her new garb, and would like to have you watch as she & huge sucoess, and fry were distri- buted: 75.000 In St 12.000 In Rock Lake. 25.000 In P1 mier the utmost pretense of man, It is sprin, und the world is full of the impulse of life. Let its influence enfold you, and you will be a cheery optimist, no matter how you feel before you start outdoors,--St, Mary's "| Journal. We Want The News Yes, all the news that is fit to print-- real estate transfers, business changes, ac- decks herself in finery that soon will shame cidents, births, marriages, deaths, wedding Mary's Lake, Its i St, Mary's, Moyie and Pre miler lakes, Ete anniversurios, church and society news, i fact, any event of gencral interest hus al ways a news value, and it will be appreci- ated by the publisher of The Examiner as well us the readers, Even if you are not a regulur correspondent but are in touch with a phone, just call us up, and we will arrange the particulars you give us, Or write them down and send to us at the earliest possi- ble moment. Remember that news is news only so long as it is new. Every corres- gecess. Good automobile roads radi- te in all directions, The scenery of the Cranbrook fish- ing district 1s beautiful, and in addi. tion to a creel laden with splendid trout, the fisherman will bring home with him memories of a landscape as fair as the eye can anywhere behold pondent should sign communications, not for publication, but as 6 guarantee of good faith. If you have anything of interest let us know now. Our phone number is 104. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Ie | Few in who have bog, and tise their dent. In in killing destroyer 8 woodct means for cidentally Woodet tender cl They ba plum tree elevated / fron: enen of food is hog goes curled up During th is more d of semi-u cout in th all appear Most of i and its br of two or before the Woke Up, - cand falls this long be put ot woulchuck in poor c spring. H benefit to travelling quently gr Most of nocturnal wooxiehuek hardly like they are : eater par ust take ! are more ¢ than the g constuntly 'out of bis | the entranc hind legs if nothing + hog wander feeding. upright to if eutisfied « yards farth he travels the dainty woodehuck, green, If how rapidly trents to th ing keen easy. matter One. curious that he doe ter. Their | never They are | while thus es their ears to ebuck seems alongside a 'once comme to make hi burrow wi is a mystery of dirt at the of the exew son the sid Let no one cile litte ani Thurd press agility of a ix a dog this the woordchuc strong and it from a hole hol. Most people horror at the are very of food while try will eat arr exceeding while other « petizing dish personal ¢ During mos remain with on they | when they dis bernate for th swoodehuck is Carolina and + Advertising 5 the. purchaser. ---- & MAI SEALED TI Postmaster Gen: tawa, until noot 1919, for the © 'Mails, on a p years, six time Hawkestone RE 1919 next Printed notice mation as to o tract may be | 'Tender may be ¢ -of Hawkestone, Post Office Insp Anspector's Offic 90-210

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