ugust ist. an it. or money Lied for the r the several ’equested to n it be- ern fem- B care of [T mxen i which- {lay~ be. tlv dis- Lres bv lty cul- AIT O I [vs St Km :14 Ont. Mention tie-men's and all 9 on a uslomer .nd genéigi Ilel'k. LAN . Clerk. LS 'ario ore uth ed 3.50 .3 Reeve .w Io-ss .ti'afl'ic nuisancvs anyway I\EIII'III'4hll‘9 .\O‘W>‘. m.- law to allow motorists to ,lmx‘ clown to one mile an hour, It, WHUM not be long before he was 3;..ng over the crossing at two mile-s an hour. then three and ï¬nal- ly the "stop†signe would be utter- ly uselt‘rss. Any motorist. who is called be- gun. the- bench because of an in- t‘rm-tion or this bylaw, has no one but hin’isell' to blame. but, we have my bird. that. some of them would make a real man‘s sized complaint ‘huulat this happen. Aml dill you o-\I‘l‘ until-e? The. motorists who :m- making the biggest outcry leillll‘l. lllo' slim bylaw are. general- ly the fellows who defy the speed izmtl. hug the road and are more Intersections have been the cause m" Hm great. majority of the motor mm‘idents. It was With the idea of eliminating these accidents that [hr smp signs are erected, and a motnrist must come to a full stop if he is to obev the law \Vm'a _ w navy-v, VI pwn' bring his m‘otbf‘vegicle dowd “stqp†or you are liable to prosecu- rntmn and a fine. During the past month we have heard several people make the statement that Kincardine is the unly town where motorists. are rm-ced to obey the stop Signs when approaching the through streets. This statement, though possibly \wll mough intentioned does not at all coincide with reports we see in a good many of our local ex- t'ilallgth, where the stop street by- law is in effect, is enforcing the hx'luw. ‘we cannot understand why imnplot cannot fall in line with leg- hillil'lll that is intended to make {up thu good of tralfic on our high- ways. As we have stated many “mo-s previously, the “stOp’T nuns mean just what they sayâ€"4 -:.-:..p". They do not mean that Hm motorist is to think about ,fuliping, slacken speed a_ little, or OTHER PAPERS’ OPINIONS Thursday. July 19, ms #355. ()ne neWSpaper published in a town not more than half the size of Barrie has a year’s contract with this ï¬rm for two and a half pages a iweek. No merchant needs to be .told that Eaton’s are keen judges of values, shrewd buyers and thoroughly informed as to the most up-tH-clate and efficient merchand- ising methods. They don’t spend a dollar without being pretty well satisï¬ed that they are receiving value and will get. returns. The extent to which they are using the local paper where they have. stores should convince others in the retail trade that. the opportun- ity all‘urdecl by the home news- paper in putting their sales talks before regular and prospective customers in their trading terri- tory is one that. Should not be overlookecl.-â€"-Barrie Examiner. _ A striking example of the manner lll which experts regard the town weekly as an advertising medium for retail merchandising is seen in the policy of Canadian Depart- mental Stores adopted since they were purchased by the T. Eaton Co. In every town where one of its stores is located. this company has been carrying from one to two pages weekly to broadcast its store news in the town’s trading area. and is safeguarding against failure, but ï¬gures do show that the busi- ness which does not use news- paper advertising is more likely to be a failure than a success. The newspapers have an appeal to the great masses or the people which cannot be equalled by any other advertising medium, for they are gread and studied in the home and the advertising columns are as eagerly Scanned as those devoted to news. The people have been educated by long years of exper- ience to look for the announce- ments of wide-awake merchants and manufacturing concerns in their newspaper, and they readily come to the conclusion that it a product or ï¬rm is not worth ad- vertising. then it can hardly be worthy of patronage.â€"Collingwood Bulletin. the What They Think of Weeklies newspaper i_s bound .to sucpeed, ;n “ABA“-A _ For discussions, why not try the choosing of sides, one taking the work and profit in poultry raising and the other ,dairy work, or the mivantages of making “pin†money from the garden or by needle and shuttle. Dear Pauline: Have you had any demonstra- tions in making of sandwiches, icing of cakes. table setting, bed making. physical culture, home entertaining or making of scrap hooks? We have a small club for girls in our community and would like to make out a program for the year. Would . you kindly suggest some contests. subjects for discussion or rlcmonstrations that would be of interest and oblige this puzzled secretary PAULIVE Dear Ruth Raeburn: When the mail and passenger boat, “Just Brown†of the Millard Brown Boat (30., burned to the water's edge of! Murray Isle in the St.-Lawrence and sank, Mrs. Smith of Kingston, Ont., who jumped into the river, died of shock. Thirteen Come in Chat Awhile At Home â€"-Ruth Raehurn. planning to haw an annual \\ o am thinking of going in and the l). X (3. next vear.’ “Smoli this. grandma, and ï¬sco how long It, 18.†was the startlmg request. Little Betty’s grandmother used the old fashioned method for meas- uring a yard by stretching the goods at arm’s length, holding one end of it. up to her 1105?. One day Betty came up to her grandmother with a‘piece of tape._ The ladies of the Red Cross Society are holding a Verandah Tea at the home of Mrs. David Jamieson on Tuesday afternoon, July 24, from 3 to 6 o’clock. Admission 25c. Invitations were issued this week, but in case one fails to reach you, this notice is sufficient to assure you you will be made welcome. It is a hard matter to mail out these invitations and not miss some one, but it is the desire that all who care to do so should attend and help swell the funds which will be devoted entirely to hosuital re- quirements. ~ others were injured, four of them seriouslly. The boat was en route from Cayton to Alexandria Bay, when the engine exploded. Boats put out from~Murray Isle and res- cued the passengers floating in the water. The “Just Brown†is shown here. H OLDI‘N G VERANDAH TBA outing. Guelph A commercial traveller held up in Orkney by a storm, telegraphed to his ï¬rm in Aberdeen: "Marooned here by storm. Wire instructimm." It will pay you to advertise in The Chronicle. This picture is directed by Ernst, Lubitsch, who has gained a Splendid reputation with the many successful picturas he produced both here and abroad. Fred ()rhing and Hans Kraly adapted the story. 1“" â€" “‘W} cm "Stmt summczr lmlidaxs’ as from yestprday.†This woman, gifted With a mix- ture of virtues and follies is swept through a most thrilling dramatic situation, all of which is enacted in the shadows of a deep, dark, im- pending tragedy. It is said that a new invention has made possible the showing of such a large moh as 5000 people in an extremely ex- pensive setting and that this new method of production is introduced in “Passionâ€. “V 'â€"â€"V - “.V. U. a king, from the humble station of a little millineI, comes face to face with a frenzied multitude demand- ing her head. ~ Rarely does a director ask a girl ‘star of a picture to combat a cast of 5000 people all of whom in the story hate the woman in the case. And Pola Negri, the famous con- tinental star who enacts the stellar roles wih Emil Jannings in “Pas- sion†the Ernst Lubitsch Produc- tion, at the Veterans’ Star Theatre Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July 19, 20 and 21, can testify to the truth of the assertion that it is no fun to perform against such odds and furthermore, that such a crowd of actors can be as" mean as the real thing. As in the picture’s. climax the woman who rose to the zenth of_ her glory as; the ruler of STAR BATTLES 5000 '.~""'7" 4"“; var IN “PASSION" In Usâ€. Paris on a nnnstnp flight. â€"â€"Kitchonm' Record. 'J‘lw way sump fumilivs keep up a from. impusvs a great, strain on Hm slums Hwy deal with.â€"4_)shawa Times. “That's an :nwfu' nnisn you’re making." she said. Jock sat down and took off his boots, Hwn got. 111» and resumed his piping in his stockingod facts- Abordwn Post. A (sunlomporary is waiting: pa- tivnfly to lwar 0f Um ï¬rst WUmaIl In Visit. Paris on a nnnstnp flight. â€"â€"Ki(chvnm' Record. Jock was learning to play the bag-pipes. One night while he was strutting about. the room, skirting for all [in was worth, his wife at- thptcd a mild and “my belated protest. ham’s Vegetable Command. Stopping a Tenth of It PAGE 8. (it.