Barrie Examiner, 13 Jul 1922, p. 7

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rjngs the hat-- 'lfGo1-don Rix 11) all` 1;- Y I xly 11.--The Ivy baseball team lost game last Wednesday with Barrie, e 6-14. Q I Sr I to Jr. II-EIeanor Smith, Nora . Elmer Pratt, Nor_ma Wice, xuuwles. tanner Pratt, N To Jr,_ I--Goldie Rix, ordon Riv n:n:.. v_~w (names IVY SCHOOL ames in order of standing) Senior Room , -_..a ,.,, ucuc -n,rews`er xssell Shsipter (P), Sarah Bowman win Neely (F). to Sr. II-Raymond Neely (H), Mason (H), Helen Constable (H), unter (H). ' . to Sr. Pr.--Norma Jack, Lillian Constance Neely. Ronald Birnie. l Johnson. Harold Raid. -J1. 1u--Mary '1'-hompson. Linn. Lambert Lennox, Helen 'n9`.; [D\ TALL: unnul Gal; VI 3] steamship agent. -,-........,a ucczy, zconald Birnie. Johnson, Harold Reid-. MRS. F. NESS, Teacher. ___________ S. S. NO. _8, ESSA 'grnn.-. -- -~-` ' _. . u-. uyct Junior Room -rvr - ,_.-.. V-.uuvuIra 0% North Bay is i IIPPP vuuuxc zux, Ale Billje Knowles. .imn:-__DnAL Ow .uauuue nrwm (H). To_mmy Lyons, Verald 1v-i.ewis 71;-;'i'n_g,_ Willie I_II-'-`Jean Bowman, Jack TI-Edith Pratt, Campbell` Bowman. fI-Herbert Webb A (H), (H), 'Eddie~ Hunter ug (P), Irene \Brews`er er (P). Sm-gs. nu------ and` Mrs; Harold a daughter. you get a big, brigl'1't, soli3Far4dI the highest grade household soap: Speers, Principal. nnrn is visiiing her nnptf auvl Dullt, NOI'8h Norma x, Alex. Bowman. Jwlps, holiday- \ R, Teacher. . .ll'J_y Bo `I72 I h, Norah IN-.. "Instead of the old I -mechanical` hardness, real tenderness. indiv. `iduality and color. " L.l-..-__ f`L - -1. W , .1 O` 9' l.'oronto.B_'ranc V A ` I 4 V 73-75 Weington St. West (R). (R). (P), {D} Every conceivable pot and pan is made in either Pearl or Diamond Ware, the two splendid qualitf XMP Ena- meled Wares. ' Diamond Ware is a three-coated enameled `steel. sky blue and white outside, snowy white inside. Pearl Ware is enameled steel with two coats of grey and white enamel inside and out. A!` Either ware will give long service. Ask\for I F -'vvvv T77? Buy Diamond Ware or Pearl Ware kitchen uten- sils and save work. They are so clean, with a int- hard, smooth surface that: wipes clean like china. No scouring, no scraping or polishing. Just use soap and water. - - -'----v t: V ' M10! 5) ( "``$HEET METAL Pnooucrs co.'...1` 9' MONTREAL TORONTO wmmpse EDMONTON VANCOUVER CALGARY OF CANADA LIMITED A..- ctu-luv Gil? VIJIIJI o Hcctor Charleswonh V Page Seven \ ` . \ - ")?`~` xi Alway s Good Thursday, July 13, 1922 PEDALLING piAN5 AN5 '. PLAYER PIANOS THE WILLIAMS `puma co., uunnn remammg e named 7* anner in that's the f us who ing a la- and they rters up- for sup- Yet the thrill of creating music, of interpreting great v u composmons, of putting ex- l___.-... ..... nnuul nuwub sure. It is `the same in science. Every great and scientic `fact has been believed in by scientic men -long before it was proved by physical demonstration. During the Peninsular War, more than a hundred yearsago, surgeons. shocked by.the suffer- ings of rnen on whom they had to operate without anaesthetics, believed that a day would come when _means would be discover- ed to render menunconscious to pain dur- . ing operations. In that faith they sought . and searched and discovered one partial : anaesthetic after another, until Dr. J. Y. Simpson of Edinburgh in the forties of llast century learned the value of chloro- H ,._ _,...,.. uvl . xu Dual: faith he spent his. life in apparzently fruit- less and unrewarded toil, and died on his knees in Chitambo s village in Ilala. But his faith" brought victory, for through it Africa s secret was unlocked and the means found to heal Africa s sore. I It L. .LL. 7 _. -uJ 3D I hi this piano only v Transposer--changin4 roll to wit the singer i. i Colunibus had faith that there were lands` beyond the Atlantic Ocean. and Vasco da Gama. had faith that around the southern `end of Africa he .could discover a new routeeto India. In that faith they strove and labored for years until at last their faith was rewarded by discoveries of im- measurable wonder to mankind. Living- stone had faith that he cohld yet the hidden secret of Africa and make poss- ible the healing of its open sorg. In that apparently ' C-.. LL__-, faith hrnnrrlnt Innfnu-n unlock 1 The truth lies in quite another direction. ,Faith is not the opposite of reason. It is `not the enemy of science. Far from it. Faith goes before reason; -leaps out into` regions into which reason only penetrates slowly and haltingly. Faith is the fore- runner of science, seizinghold of and mak- ing use of great facts whichscience. is un- able-to verify perhaps for centuries. Faith is the'forerunne'r of all discoveries, all ad- ventures. into the unknown. 1 - an(l`picturl~.~: fhem as two rival champion: ,:enrering the lists to (lo `baffle. Because diof this rttitiitle many reasonable men and !imu1y.. men have come to look u_non religious faith as merefcrednlity. fas that ignorance or simplicity of mind iwhich leads people to acceptas true that ll which can never -be proved. Even as _acute in reasoner as Professor Huxley fell into Ithis error when he wrote: 'l`heo1og'y claims that the just shall live by faith{ science says that the just shall live by veri- fication. v w vruay ~ we wuuanu: ' WIzmgthekey of III: e singer in.muuI.. GRANT -....,, uumvcu um]: u may unconscious [n d another` nnfil n.. 1 v |I u.` Ht` ' instantly. champions Because any nen ith ' xpacnr I-Tnvlm. 42.11 1.`. - Tile Willianu: UI`l`n `An Al 5L- 12` ` "1`heol_0g'Y` -caunulg uwt, me material life of tht worl-fl is dominated by the spiritual, and those great spiritual truths `of God. the spiritual essence of life, the soul and immortality, which have been. laughed at by`eome'~"as the credulity of the simple. will be accept- - ed` as veried facts `of existence, Faith-i;_ will have lecI'to Fact; 5 uwauuu auu VIHOICBUOD. It is the same with religion. Faith is not contrary to.reason, neither is it op- nosed to scientic verication. It goes be- ' fore; It leads the way. Little by little . slowly through the yeareand centuries; the great principles of our religious faith are conrmed by reason and veried by sci- ' ence. More and more. thoughtful men are realizing that the material life of th I dominated hv u: anh-nal .....: 4.1.--- I3,%1922 ul -...t._..5th...el.;uvc1'1es enact; possible the {_ _l mg_o _e anama gnu, an in one Df smgle city of South` Amerxca. where there need to be ae much ae 3600 qeaths from Yellow fever m a year,,thereV1s now not ape] czgseflftlhe whgle Itlwelveironth. Dr. In ays an m w at e cou not prove hisrbeenthe salvatxon of untold multitudes 0 IVCS. This is t1_`ue of every phiase of life. We v}v)vzi_lkf-by falth, not by snght. We -_live by W`; 19 5: get lglvtys P1'(l3)0fSban(fl evlfdences. e are un oge er y` on t t. not by complete verication of segch roltsh- Eflfh t{UstW0!1']thiI;ie1ss a?d_II110nesty. It is an In eac 0 er eat in possib'I't' . (fiaith in tgxehfuture, ,faith in effogt ant; leer?- eavor w 1c spurs us on -to w at f V value we accomplish in life. Evervgfogt we make, every invention we produce. ev- :;:w:3;e:::;2:.i2:"'r"hm" *;';~ saw 18 orn 0 an - thi_ngs which we cannot prove by"1nater1':; evl'lI3i;`nces,~ -butt in whgzuh jve '!I:ei4:vIeS and on w 1c we ven ure. 1' ait e to ver- ication and vindication. ' i `EBA nnrnn -":41. __l:-,!. - .,;a..cu. aua round that his faii ied- Their discoveries made building of the Panama Canal, single city ' Imnri M Ln -- ----4 "" _. vuunaur: ultVt`.' been made healthful homes for men. Thirty years and more ago, Dr. Carlos Finlay of Cuba came to the conclusion that yellow fever was produced solely by the bite of the Stegomya mosquito. He could not with every means at their disposal invest- igated.`and found that his faith was just- ified- discoveries math: mmmi- 41... E form to render people insensible to `pain. It was the fair b that there wassuch a . thing which led them on to the discovery. - Fifty years ago Sir Patrick Manson, who recently died in London, then a young doctor in -Formosa. came to the conculsion . that malarial fever was caused by the an- i opheles mosquito. He could not prove it. but dealt with malaria on that hypothesis. His faith led British army doctors to in- vestigate and. test, and at last to p that his hynothesis was true. of his fai 11 some of the fairest but most deadly shots on the earth s surface have been fever LL- _L--- And because . It -um" L 15"` ,_.. ......5..n,uuc uunueuy. _To Jr. II--Edith Neelands. Olive Broley. Florence Robertson. Irene Smvth. Agnes Johnston. Aubrey Shapter. Willie New. Ted; Hewson, Stanley Fagan. Lewis Giv- ens. n o To Sr, I--Violet Donnelly. Helen.John- sbon Bert Smytl1.,Monty Shering. To Sr. Primary--Esther Donnelly. Rulby Donnelly. Lorne Guest. Isobelle Shering. Arthur Robertson. Tn Tn n..: -- ' H Elli}. I Hews ,_,,y.. ....u..,;.. uuu=.~:s--u0r1s H: Sr. III to Jr. IV--Pa.ss--Rn atom, Goldie Glv.~ns. Mabel H Lillian Broley. Keith Meredith. . menderl--Violetta Ferris. Fail: Neelands. Jr. III to Sr; II-I--Pass--Agar ` Sr. II tq Jr. AIII--Honor.=.--L rington. Pass~-Marion Webb. A; ens. Clarence Broley. Allan Hno ton Ferris. Recommended--Roy I Meafnrd Donnelly. Jr. II to Sr. II--Pass--Norma Recommenderl--Marguerite Donne Tn f,, `[1 I'7L1!.I Iv `ll. Ixlllla lrlbhle. .Tr._IV tn Sr. IV--P3s ' Lloyd Reynolds. Failet Absent through ilIness--IT Q, nr . v --- K u. an nu. III, I Entrance Class-Reta ` Smyth. Aiice Hudie, Flm Howard Bmle_v. Earl Jok gran. Znlma Tribble. Jr T\/ "Is Cl- rvr n LJIHUC IXUUETC-On. - Jr. Primar y---Buddie Vaughan. Mamie Wright son. Harvey Dickie. `\v-nu-nun-. - u_y \II\U|7II Sr. III to/Jr. IV-~Honnrs--Cla*ence I-ur-kie.' ' Marion Carr. Pass--Wallace Roherfstm. . I Jr. III to Sr. III--Pass--Ernest Arnold, I.~":bel Carr. Jean Wice. Recommended-A Marjorie Foster. - Sr. I to J1. II--.-4Honors---_I?Vilda Carr. . Willie Plaxton. Ruth Quantz. Pass-Ern- ` est, Lackie. Teddy Lunn.. VSr. Primary to Jr. I--Pass-Georg_a . Va.ughan._ Clarence `Dickie. `Lorne Dickie. ` Jr. Primary to Sr. Pr1mary--Pass-- ' T 1)_=___>__~__ n u .. -- - - z;[`)lte1 IVV Jr. IV to Sr. rly Gxeen, Sr, TIT fn ' u-uugc. UTClgnE0n> Wice. Jr. I to Sr. I---Norma1 Sturges, Raymond Easto: idge Sr. Prime-r--.-Ronald M4 Sturgess. Wesley Wonch. Jr pl';Innr__TI7illI.. us uuurgcss. w esley Wonch. - Jr. Primer---Willie McFddn. Coutts; Margaret Ayerst. s. s. NO. 6, mmsru. ston. sf. IV-0llve Munro (H), Willie .lohn- Jr. IV--Harvey Greensides. George Mun- ro, Kathleen Sharpe. Jack Wonch (Rec.). v Jr; ~III.--Flox-ence Greensides (H). ' Crawford._ Maude Sturgess, Inez Mayes. Melville Ayerst (Rem). ` dall. Sr.`I to Jr. II--Vera Nelson teridge. Creighton Wice. Sr. II-Olive Coutts (H), John Ran-T Ic U IUUUI Sr. I to3J'i-. .' 1t- `Violet Brewster ( I-I ) old Ness. Merwbod (H). . Albert Perry, Har- 'ie Nicholls. .- m~..u .150, Jr. 1V-Keuneth Robinsfm (H). Margaret Forbes and.~Jean Perry (equal). Charlie `Cross. Jean Spring. ' Sr. II to Jr. III-I:bis Guest. Henry I Forsythe. Lila Martin. Jr. TI to Sr.` II--Gladys, Forsythe, Char- . '- _w an I A....oYL 1" -' ' RURAL PROMOTION IaxAMINA'IIONs s. s. Nb. 8, INNISFIL (Nantyr) Jr. IV t_o Sr. IV-Lldyd Sawyer. Sr..II to Jr. IV-Kenneth H). Margaret Fnrhoe mm. 1...... n---- . `J1 clsuhull W Ice. I I---Norman Munro. Clifford 5, Easton, `Bertha Better- vI{E3'I;[.`.:..M. BROWN, Tea}.-her. .__.__......_.---...-. vAl\4lU was -BUCH ad 30 nosa, the l!nnnn`a3nn 3. NO. I0, INNISFIL l`l..,... 5. N0. I3, INNISFIL Q. 111 an ` ; Guest. r. AIII--Honor.=.--Leila Har- -Marion Agnes _Giv- Br0lev_ Annn I_n.,....... mi III-1-Iidivs .ila 'Ji'. .I`I'---1:IerwbodV._'I:;1t`11}`> I` 'SfPl' (I-H AIL..-` n'----V --Ronald McFadden, Gordon lev Wnm-L { - * 'Every time Lyo u'bu.ySUl_{_PRISE `Bufidie Wright. Edna right. Mabel Thomp- o 18 -uvuulvl ll- ( iV:-v-,Recommendcd`-.-'l.'ed- -Ret'a. Hoover. Elwin e, Florence Harrington. xrl Jobbitt. Clifford Fa- }-P3s-=--R nhert Black. Faile(I-eDaltnn Guest. IP--nnr;n U ---- -A . uucu-_-uau_nn _uuest. ss--Doris Hewson. V ~-Pass-R.nsi9 John- - \`| q|-ml m-:--L-- ii:`.'"EMpLE. u vvcul). l'1gneS_UlV- Hoover. Mil- ndnA_.D M. M....I A _ J - ...y.- Alnmn` vIUHH' Harrington. Recom- ne L`n`:l,...l TU 1? -Norma Tribble. Donnelly. J_ A`. v-\ uu vv an Jumb- possible the nu! 2... A-- av` THE BARRIE EXAMINER ' ullll. I`\.l:'COIT).< Fziiled--Eddie vu V (11 . LYIN- Neelands. Tacher. mmh agmg The ,band furnished the music at Camp Borden for field day on` Saturday. John Sharpe of Toronto spent the week! end -here wrth friends.` - -. -\.nA\p AACIC. `Vernon Speers of Toronto is spending a few rl:1y.~t with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. Speers. A large number of the Orangemen, mem- i ber of L.O.L. No. 450, and a few of the brethren from Thornton. attended divine service in the Presbyterian Church Sun- day morning. Rev. R. H. Somerville preached one of .the best sermons `heard in Ivy for some time. He based his re- niarks on Ephesians 6:14. 15. Rev. T. J. Dew assisted with the service. i i The the on | T.-J... cL-_.~ uuly u.--1`ne Ivy baseball the w score ' Congratulations -to Mr. andhh Arnold on the arrival of dal Mrs. Steel of Toronto v sister. Mrs. Thompson Jennett. Miss E. Ross of ing with friends here. `T- " . uamueru Lennox, Bert Carruthers,` Helen Davis (R), Lottie Wil- son (R). Jr. II to Sr. II--Margaret Watson. Ken-i neth Banting. Reta Smith (R), Beatrice Svhcil. (R), Ivene `Cleary (R). i N. McKAGUE, iTeachei'. . Vi vim ;g_e a%l5ig, bri'glTt: U uuluf Sr. II to Jr. III--M Linn. Fred Lax meda Elliogt (R) (H). Thelma Jennett, Jack { McLennon. Erma Elliott Jr, J. uUHlpSOn McLennon. (R). Al- ,` Vernon Jennett (RLM , Lorne Jack{McLennon. (R), Jen I-II to Sr. III`--4_EtheIwy1 Joan Ila A -LL---- Geil , Stanley Page enneth Elliott DRUCILLA POUCHER, -:.-_._j_:-} ), Florence McQuay (P), J "wax: nuntel` (11). Jr. Ptf. P: Johnson. Raymond ...,.....u -uuusvaole (H), (P), Madeline Spring (P), Russell Shapter (F). Irwin Jr. II II-Raym4 Gordon Mason Bessie Hunter Jr Pr M 9- 9- ' ,,---- vvvuu `II. `TF7. III to Sr. -III-H Howard Constable (H )` _ MqHnI:nn 5--3 Jr. IYTII S. S. ll, INNISFIL Jr. IV to St. IV-Wil1ie Hunter (H) Keith Constable. (H), Bruce Wallace (H), A`ll)_ez_-t Woods (P). `I... T77 A "" Send 2c postage for illustrated booklet, map` and guide to John F. Pierce, Passenger Traffic Manager_ 227 R. and 0. Building, Montreal, _or apply to local railway .or agent. '

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