Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 13 Jul 1922, p. 10

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--- uunvv Lvullc II cl. Bottles. 81.50 . . . . . .. 20c quart .. 50c sn1a basket . . . . .i..,. 15c box . . . . . . .. 50c quart . . . . . . .. 10c quvrt . . . . . . . .5 15c each . . . . . .. 15c quarr . . . . . . .. 5c bunch . . . . . . .. 5c bunch . . . . . .. 5c bunch ... .;.. .. 5c bur ch . . . . . . . ..5c bunch . . . . . . . .. 10c each 2 bunch=s for 25 . 10c tn 15c each . . . . . . .. 5c bunch 34c to 36c lb. 300 dozen . 30c lb. 35c lb. mguu r.. ULAXTON, L.T.C.M. Teacher of Piano and Vocal . Pupils prepared for Toronto Conservnto of Music examinations leading up to and including the A.T.C.M. degree. gtIlIl;l'\.:w:nn Dlmd. 31- ~ -- U1 nu. nuurew B rre Gold medalist of of Music and of the II3 Worsley St. snytenan Church. T Umverslty of Toronto ,., ...- ..- . "way I , Inn). Dac., r.l.U.H. Teacher of Piano, Organ, Vocal, and Musical Theory. Organist and Choirmastol of St. Andrew s Presbyterian Churc Gold medalist nf 'l`n-Anon l"----- - EDMUND HARDY, I. I I\IbJo l\\J\lIinl\oJ PIIom:- Office l63, Residence 353 - Barrister, Solicitor for obtaining probate cl wiHs,_guardianshi_p and administration, ind General Solicitor, Notary, Conveyancer, etc. Oice-Hinds Block, No. 8 Duniop St. Money to loan __.____.__. uonveyancers, Etc. Money to loan at lowest rates ( OEice-l3 Owen St., in Mason Building, Barrie. Branchoice W. A. Boys, K.C.,M.P. D. C. _ -. vuiul uvlv, IIl-D- PHY-S-ICIAN AND SURGEON Oice and Residence-Collier St., cor: I Clapperton St., Barrie. Phone 27 Phone 710 _un. run!) A. HOSS .(Formerly' of Drs. Ross & Ross. Barri/' Late Surgeon Specialist with the Imperial Army. 4% years. General Surgery and Obstetrics especially. Oice--l5 Owen St., Barrie. . P. 0. Box 1075. `ans. LVITTLE a. LITTLE Physicians and Surgeons, Barrio, Ont. Office and Residence-47 Maple Ave. A Office hours:- 1 to 3 p.m., 7 to 9 p.m., ot by appointment. Phone 213 A. T. Little, M.D. W. C. Little, M.B. __ on. MORTIMER LYON 122 Bloor St. West, Toronto, will be It 91 Owen St., Barrie, every Saturday. Diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Consultation hour's-11 21.111. to 5 p.m. Barrie phone 2. Toronto, North 3326. Us ` Phone 61. ,( R. F. BRUCE, M.D., C.M., L._M.C.C,- Oice and Residence-60 Ross St. Third door east of Royal Victoria Hospital. Tefenhone 256. 30tfI .-r_v u_-J Ila |IlUUl'I|3U Barristers, Solicitors, Notar; Conveyancers, Ionev to loan at I.-mu... ..n`-~ RADENHURST & HAMMOND BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, Masonic Temple Building, Barrie - Money to Loan 5] Are Well Supplied at---`- . ' DR. H. T. ARNALL Associate Coroner County of Simego Oice pnd Residence--Corner Toronto and Elizabeth Sts., opp. Central Church. Telephone 167. ~ ` 'j CAPT. J. l-;. lit/JET, L.D.S. - DENTIST Office: No. 1 Dunlop St., Barrie (over J. F. C_-raig s store) Phones: Office 450,, Res. 436. 1. oas. W. AND w. R. RICHARDSON Graduates and members of Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. ,0 ice: T Over Bank of Toronto, Barrio. Entrance on Owen St. Phones: Oice 241, Res. 314. P.0.Box 133 W". Richardson, L.D.S., D.D.S. 7%: D TI. W Randall l2:..1......A...... `[11 Q . zsuvlvjl I'l.J'\I\IUN BARR'I'I"ERS, SOLICITORS, E'I`C. Offices: 707-8 Kent Building Tor_onto, Ont. W. Plaxtnn 0 "-~`* "' ~ mubs. CLAXTON, L.T.C.M. Tanning: A` D2--- __..n In - --.__ ...-.. : 1- -- _-.__- .:_` Published every Thursday afternoon at/the Post Oice Square, Barrie. Subscription Price--Canada and Great Britain $2.00.por year in advance (in arrears $27.50); United States, $2.50-per year in advance. Both old and new` addresses should be given when change of address is requested. CANCEL- LATl0NS-We nd that most ofour sub- scribers prefer not to have their subscrip- tions interrupted-in case they fail to remit before expiration. While subscriptions will not be carried in arrears over an extended period, yet, unless we are notied to cancel, we assume the subscriber wishes the service continued. Remittances should be made by registered letter, money order, or cheque payable at par in Barrie. UUNALD ROSS, LL.B. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Masonic Temple Building, Barrio Money to loan. _-..-.... .. uvuuuunlu. I5. . Successor to C1`-eswicke & Bell BARRISTER, SOLIOITOR, ETC. MONEY TO LOAN Ross Block, Barrie * l8yrly rrIr.I..raIUN, ONT. Oice hours-12 to 2 and 7 to 9 p.1p. T PHONE C. BROWN -T...E. BARB`E.EX{*M`N5R_ f DUNCAN F. McCUAlG. B.A. SI]!-nnacnr On (`----~3' . uwuurusuu, 14.l.'l.D., U.U.D. `I W. Randall Richardson, L.D.S., D.D% 'W. A. LEWIS, M.D., c.M. SURGERY AND GYNECOLOGY --and- C. S. DICKSON, B.A., M.B. e 61_ `S6 (`.nHCnp 04 D.- Thursday, July 13`, 1922 DR. J. A. KEARNS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON PHELPSTON, ONT. ice hnnr-a._1`) ha 0 mu! '1 A... n _ ; PLAXTO N , &. PLAXTO N Dtammnc any ....-...-._ - _____________ DONALD ROSS, DIQVFIHD nnv wt`---A-- ALEXANDER COWAN Q-I:-:L-_ - DR. E: G. TURNBULL ` ,_: |;-n:n 71 - - [Simone Marble Works] BOYS & MU RCHISON nun L. J. SIMPSON, M.B. Vain! A \*r A un 1-"... ._ _DR. FZYRED A. ROSS urn` hm DA-~ L T` MUSIC MEDICAL DENTAL , v _--._.v.- 3nce--Collier corner 0! ;., 275. : .u "van 1 xncerest. Masonic Templa D ice--Elmvalo. ('1 M....-L1--- y auu!:`l'5, LEG. lowest of interest. St in Nfnnnnh. 'l`----`- SHAW-'3 V -.i.--:;-.1|dacLaren, Editot. W. C. "Walls, Manager. UIICI G. Gordon Plaxton `S: `Notary Public, ters. Em, :1 II , Hana, NI. D. `56 Collier St., Barrio. -1:--1--:jjj-.j. Ian, `LJZII 113. Conservatory dim: Inn in ucl'Ju.ll V81 - 3. Murchison w5ltfo The Shaw Schools in Toronto never clone in Summer. They are open all July and August. Don ! waste the holiday sealon - start now tolearn type- wrilin , nhorthnnd and bookkeepinz. lndivigualinatruction in evety course. (Vi `by 10 reach Catarr 'tionu1g 'Ml:*n1 Catzir uonzuj MEDI Catarr named the E inflam impart ly clos the in hearin `L! A I T nearm HALL Qhrnno nnm. throng races flamm tlons, (`lvnu KlllIl'l ' 'I`hoy~q I Wh ' at the not . - iroubl Jill OPEN DAY AND NIGHT ru yu _ form-.~. `alry i I ls` KI Vashi tmuhl the fv 91 C A which M` h'I'( Cir: r 1 Large and well assorted stock to choose froni. We are now getting good shipments of imported `granites at greatly `reduc- ed prices. mat HIISINESS i smmut nus summsn mun E READING NEEDS P. Mclntonh. Chief Principal MONTREALT W V TORONTO DETROIT and CHICA_GO_ __ __1 I\_-,, - Page Ten iisunc us with vour building Z--4. -_____- scows BOOKSTORE _.T"Q.: _ Esubliihodf /mi ` ysusmtssscilools TORONTO > uuuu: IU uc 111 wins place We IOVB SO much. Before you were .born,~Boy. I lived in the States; ranched it in Arizona. And there was a man down there who as much as stole everythin I had in the world. It was because of -a woman that he lived to enjoy it all for a time. ` That woman was Fuil information} fz-om: any Grand trunk Ticket Agent or C. E. Horn- Ing, District Passenger Ag't., Toronto. u vv v vv uu uuu IIIUIIUJ 0 Well. us Bushwhackers are goin to hang together. said Boy. -We own over `two thousand acres of the best timber in Ontario. We can keep it by.ghtin', _If.e _we don t fight-- [come to be in -this place we love much. He turned and walked toward the door. Boy." warned the elder man. .don t you do anythin' you ll be sorry for. Just I forget all about` Watson and Hallibut for a time, `cause I want to tell how we all lznfnrn Irnn nun-n kn-nu /`D-.. `I I2-.-) _uuuga away. Hallibuti sawmill `is runnin nights." said the father thoughtfully. He made` French Joe an offer for his timber through Watsonthe ot.her_da_v, :but I guess it wasn t much. Joe owed him money." nr..n ..,. u.._L._.L_ .L-,,, - 9 _things away. ovvvul gun. uuuc. auu pray luurc. I didn't mean to swear. dad. I've 2 swore more today than I have for years. 1 I can t stand to think that them men will ( steal this beautiful spotsrthat is ours now. and cu't and `cripple it and drive its wild] : Hn..n:I...n: .........:n ~: . _ _ _ _ _=_s n it I wuuu uuu perspmng. | Boy." `chided the father sternly. you[ mustn't swear. .Watson nor Hallibut nor! any other man is that `bad. You ve let the woods get into you until you're fanci-I ful; Read your Bible. and pray more." T .J3A... L .......... L ---- -- ,I I V! Eon uaa The lad was trembling and his face was white and perspiring. ' Rnv " hluirlnrl dun Cad-..... ........!.. ....... | uuu nu` an instant. ~ You see, dad. we -re poor: That is. we have no ready money. though we have ev- erythin we need for comfort. Then we're lackin" in that somethin called sharpness among businessmen. We've neverlearnedl it.` We are _like the lother wild things that creep farther back into the woods before what they can t understa.nd.~ We don't A know their ways. I tell you, Hallirbut would s`eal this b_ushland from us. and he's goin' to try. It s valuable. There's enough] walnut and oak and the highest class of timber on this place to make us rich-rich. d ye know that. dad? And ain t Hallibut and his agents tryin to get every otherjf Bushwhacker under their thumbs same as they re tryin'. to get us? `But. dad. list-en l --'they won't get _u. by --; they won't,l` get us." '1'}... Lu! ....... 4..._...LI!_._ ___J L!, 9 V in mi uuvc U3: v JBig McTavish stood up straight. . Some- thing of the boy's spirit had entered into him for an instant. bsvn_` "_,___ _3___` ____9__ _____, nu, . - LU LUKE 16 we ll Hush. Boy; there's no reason to take on that way. What makes you` think he ll trv tn rh-hm nu? uu vual. Way. VVHK1 try to drive us? V Din ll..'IV....:..L ..L. Watson and Smythe want to get hold! of our property for `some reason. said thei father. and I reckon it's pretty easy to guess who they re trying to get itfor. It's that big landowner. Colonel Hallibut, who has his mill on Lee Creek. I hear that Colonel Hallibut swears he'll own every stick of timber in Bushwhackers Place." That s what troublesfme." returned Boy quickly. `You know what them rich Englishmen are like, dad. Theyhave al- ways got holdyof eve:-ythin' they` wanted. and now this one is goin to try and get our place. But we ain7.t goin'. to let him." he cried. springing up. We ll fight him, dad; -we'll Aght him off. and if he tries to take it we ll " HLr....L 13---. .L_,,-9 J. 1:. `BILLIZNGSLEY, . Depot Agent Phone 6b Barrio -) ...e uuawaucu uuu women at mg Mc1`av:'sh. The man laughed. - ' T Why, bless your heart," he cried, you couldn't. drag the. girl away ' from this -bush. ,She loves it-loves every_ nook and corner of it." Boy sighed. She sure does, he -agreed. She sure does." The father `brought a pine board from the wood-box and began to whittle off the shavings -for the imorning re-making. This done, he gathered them together with a stockinged foot, glancing now and then - at the boy, who had resumed his old at-_ tit-ude. H117 . I r`- 1171' . ` `There' (Continued from Last Week) II7_;__,,1n n I .c' _j y:-- do All 107 Bay St., Toronto I. Phone Adelai de 237 War Loan and -Victory Bonds, all denominations and . maturities bought and sold. Listed and unlisted stocks on Toronto,'Montreal and New_ York Exch`ng'es, bought and sold. ' Correspondence solicited. Out of townvinvew - ` "ton mnrcornmunicnte with us by telephone (Adelaide 287) or telegraph at our expe. se. W. HAROLD _` `Member 4-, % 'roRoNTo"s`i*(3'ci<~i~1 a)` toSk__ Brokers ' 'Membr LIMIT!-5Dt uul 5111 IN us. , Boy did not speak and the father quietly [left the -room. At the door he "turned and looked back. The boy was sitting with his chin in his hands. Outside. the` moon was trailing lbw above. the tree-tops. and the `owl's hoot sounded far~o' -and muffled. .-..- urn 0.-a\vrl\.l\I Uuexcelled Dining `Car Service weeping cars on Night Trains and Pastor `Cars on principal Day Traina. nuuvv ,vvu_v um 1.u_;uu moan seems so near to -us all. He was the man who brought our girl to us.I nnv I-"J v\I\` ......J. ..__i LL. t .1 - -1 uuul ms pipe. _ ` V Now you know how we all comewto be |here. Boy. he said gently. and. you "know whv old In'un'Noah seems I . J tn `HR 9" no tau #1:. aka ---Ln L-----LL rf ..c. urau uuu ueeu muen in a quarrel with! a Mexican. but nobody seemed to knowl e where she and her baby had gone. I hunt- I [led high and low for them. but at last half s`to give .it up.` I thought maybe she had' 1 l gone back to the home of her people.f cause , til learned that her husband had left somel '_money behind him. When I got back here I found two babies where I'd left but one. You had a. little girl companion sleepin' llin your hammock beside you. Boy. Your . mapicked her up and put her in my arms ;land she "cried a good deal. your m-a did. and `by and by she showed me a little gold locket that she had" found tied about the ` baby's neck. I opened one of the doors 1 and a tiny picture lay there. Then I l Iknowed at once whose `baby it was that u God ;had sent to us. and I knowed. too. 1 `that `the baby s mother would never come ` now. An old Injun was there. and he i told me how a man in Sandwich had given '1 him money to tote the baby "down to us. \ He couldn t tell us much about the man. I We called the youngster Gloss. 'cause that 0 was the namethe old Injun gave her. v -McTavish `arose and. knocked the ashes i from his `pipe. ' rl nu: IVAII lynx... 'L...'.. _`.-` -l` -~ I ' '- uralr ucuxule 081118.: I : l We wrote tothe poor'little woman out' Wes; and told her the latch-string was out` for her whenever she could come. You] see I'd built this house -by then. and.we: all felt tolerably happy and well-to-do. We' never got an answer to our letter. and the` foIlowin' spring I left you and_ your ma and Granny with the -neighbors `and struck; [the back'trail for'A-rizona. I found that` I her man had been killed in quarrel with Mexican. hill. nnrhnrlv cnnnxnrl on L...-.-u CHAPTER IV _ Bushwhackers Place- On that txjiangular forestland of extreme and Boy asked: .. t uvc vutu man man no longer." I The big manpaused to `light his pipe. Did she come?" No. We came direct .here to Ontario. and settled in this` hardwood. me an your' me. and Granny McTavish. All we had in the world was the clothes we wore and three hundred dollars in money. I took; up as much land as the money would buyl from the Canadian Government and start-` ed in to cut out a home. You was born, soon after we'd settled here. Peeler came . and he settled alongside us and soon after` that Declute came. ' `XTn ..._..L.. L- LL`- _.__,,'1-..n ! 5 uweaics uiutm_3I'. . V Boy looked up quickly, then dropped his` head again. ` f That woman was -a lotto me and your ` mother. She was a lady. every inch of _ her, and `educated, too. She taught your ma to be the scholar she is, and she was I the kindest-hearted, sweetest woman that . could be found in the world. Seems as 1 she run off from a ne home and rich peo- ple to marry that man. He was a bad `un, her man;~bad in every way a-m-anycan be . Iliad. I,guess. He drank and he abused V 81%;`- .Big McTavish caught his breath,_ hard. Course." he went on. we might have i killed him---lots of us there would have done more n that for his wife. But you .- .see that woman stuck to him in spite ofall 1 he did to make her life hell; so we let 1 `him alone. You ma worshiped her. or as 4 near it as mortal can worship mortal. and` }they were a lot together. Women -are not it plentiful on the plains. Boy. When I `lost 1 everythin' to her husband, through his `i cheatin me on a deal, and made up my|] mind'to quit ranchin and strike for some `I new country, she promised us that afterii her baby was born she'd` come to us. no If matter where we might be. You see it had come to such a pm that she simply could-i n t live with that man no longer. is his! man nmmnrl fn liako H. at- I. his wife, your ma.'s more n `friend, Glossxe s mothetu". `IL... l..-I....I .',_ ,, - I I -- - VLEIGH M. Mc(`.`ARTI-IY THE BARRIE EXAMINER Uunnmkzns little_ ! (Too Late for Last Week) July 4.--Miss Reta Wingrove returned to Toronto on`Monday night after spending the holiday at her home here. was (`mu-n TI uuuuu .....-I ......._L LL- __ .1- I` " I |lllll\ ll! lI\IllIC\`lrU(IllCo Ye} One. Bill Paisley. drifted in. from no- V97 10 body knew where. and started clearin Iainear to Deculte's place. ;He was a tall. 31?: angular young man. with `blue eyes which at I laughed all the time, -and a rm ja_w with Eh muscles that had been toughened by to- W lbacco-chewing. His hair was long and in- t-lclined to curl, and altogether he was a tdghearty. fresh. big piece of manhood. He -d `could swing an axe with any man on Bush- ie ,whackers Place. and cut a turkey s comb Le lclean at eighty yards with his smooth-bore. '8 He needed no `other recommendations. 3; The neighbors had a bee" and helped I Pa.isley up `with his house. The Bush- 1l' whackers -loved bees and changin 6 works. for it "brought them together. And although on account of much talking. one man could have accomplished more alone than three could at a bee. there was no hurrygand. as Peeler said, a good visit beat work all hollow anyway. Whiskey was plentiful and a jug of `it could always . be seen adorning a stump when a bee or 3 raisin was in progress. But because ilit was good. cheap, and as welcome as the I owers of the woodland. nobody drank - very much of it. Maybe it would be a . horn all way round ' after work was done 3 or a night-cap" after the evening dance was over; for. `be it known. no bee or rais- i ing was considered complete. without a dance in the evening. Every Bushwhacker s home had a jugiof whiskey in it--us`ually under the bed-a dog on the doorstep. and sheep. pigs and cattle in the barnyard. These barnyards had tall rail-fences around them. In the winter months the wolves sometimes tried to scale the fences and bears tried to digbeneath them. Then the dog would bark and the man would come out with his long brown rifle, and besides bear-steakfor breakfast next morning there would be a pelt for the Bushwhacker. II!` n ' .L)'\." I . ! That's the one I picked on." grinned 'Declute.v an it's a good one. I- So the baby was called Boy. 1 Others came to Bushw_hackers Place and I | took up homesteads. nnn Dill D..2nl.\.. .J..1t'L...I 2.. 1`..,.... _. I/IIC ICIJUI lac . The bullet `bored `through the letter O, B-0-Y. I `-`rI'\L,4`, .I,, -r GU. ' ' I ll tell you how we'll decide. s9-.id An- lder Declute, after a debate had lasted some three hours. We all of us have a different name we want to hitch to the youngster. |I move that we let Mac here write out them names on a piece of paper and we ll pi-1 it to a tree and let the little chap decide [for himself. How?" asked the others. i Well. after we \'e tacked up the paper somebody'll hold a rie and we'll let the baby pull the trigger. The name the ball comes neerest to we ll choose. .What do you say ?A . Everybody thought it a capital plan. The names were written on the sheet of paper and it was pinned to a `tree. The baby s mother held the light rie and pressed the 1baby s nger on the trigger; The little iBushwhacker did not so much as blink at `the report. T T1... L..ll..o 1...--.) ...... -: LL- _-_.-. v said. up nuu xuu uuu U11. Mrs. Declute wanted to call the boy after some Biblelhero. Moses. she thought. would be 21 good name. ' He looked just like Moses must; have looked at his age. she H7911 . n 1 -_.-_-- -...- v\l uuaw uuuuv uuc uauy. Naming a. baby in those old days was just as hard as it is in these. Each person had a particular name to fasten upon the new arrival. Peeler wanted to name him Wolfe. after a famous general he had heard of, but his wife protested on the grounds that -the Government was offering a bounty for wolves and somebody might get mixed up and kill him off." ll... T\....l..4.. .......4.....I I... --n LL. L- An nuuuly. wuuu unu comrortaole. Nineteen years ago. Daniel M'cTavish. or Big McTavish. as he was commonly, called on account of his great size. had settled in this spot with the determination of mak- ing it a home for himself and wife. The shadowy bushland appealed to him. He set to work with an axe and built a home. -Shortly after it was nished a. little Mc- '1`-avish was ushered into the world. Mean- while. two ,other families had taken up claims nearby. These were Jim Peeler and Ander Declute. and theywith their wives came over to help name the baby. K1...-__.. .. L..L_. :_ ._I_-` , II 1 vvuuu. . ` All buildings in Bushwhackers' Place were constructed of logs mortised at the ends. The beams, rafters and oors of the homes were split or hewn from the finest grained timber procurable. When the walls were raised to a sufficient height. doors and windows were cut in them. the rafters of the roof were laid. and the wide slabs, split from straight-grained ash blocks were plac- bed on the _roof. overlapping one another so as to shed the rain. Blue clay was dug from the earth to ll in the chinks between the logs. The Bushwhacker's home was roomy. warm and comfortable. ` Nlinnl-nan .......... ...... 'n-_:_u 1:. us - v V -- - - - v 2 -vv-'-`--Uta CIZC-I A ..Cornor Sophia and Mary Stmu ' Uantitprers of Bush, Doors, Frames, llooring Ceiling. Moulding, Water Trough! I'uka,vetc. _ We carry in stock 3 large assortment of Boux and Dressed Lumber, B. C; Shingles Ind Prqpared Roofing`. . Wood Turning and E11: Drying n momntlv. `V Sbeoialty. Dressing ' done SIXTH ':`1S'3:Y*3.51?RA southwestern Ontario. there was a block of hardwood timber, consisting of something over two thousand acres. .. This wasknown as Bushwhackers' Place. On its left lay A a beautiful `body of water called Rond Eau,` and so close to this natural harbor grew y the walnut trees that when the `night was` old the moon cast` their shadows far out . across the tranquil waters. `From the edge of the bay northward -and westward the forest swept in valleys and ridges until the lower lands were reached. Then the hard timber gave way to the rugged softwoods of the swales. where the giant basswood. elms and ash trees gripped the damp earth with tenacious ngers that ran` far under- ground. forming a network of ber, which to this day wears down the plow-points of the tillers of the soil. ' _ Why this upland was called Bushwhac- kers' Place,.or why the people who held possession there were called Bushwhackers. has never been explained. In fact, those simple people were not bushwhackers. but hunters. trappers and shermen. True. each landowner had cleared a little land. quite sufficient to raise the vegetables ne- cessary for his table a-nd fodder for his sheep. oxen and pigs during the winter months; but the common tendency among the Bushwhackers seemed to be to let the timber stand until it was required for re- wood. ' UIIIIIJUI wood. LIII Fr}; l_>;a_(3Vc->-r;ti-1;1`1.tel(-i.)"` m u . v:nnnv-` "l`l... Hui`: one of 1 and the the names I name was so WEAK cuuul HAHDLY DUJNYTHING G.8._$1I_1_im& oi "nu nuc IIUIIUWIIIK Ul)lllllll'lf`?(:! OI manage- ment:--Chas. Sullivan. Clifford Devitt, Fred McClung. Dr. E. R. Tyrer.`G. R. Chapman. Ernest Scott and J. C. Rumble. Mndonte is establishing a community athletic eld of ten acres at- lot 55. con. 1. with the following committee of manage- ment:-Chas_ Sullivan nm=r,...,i n....:u Strawberries .. Raspberries Thimbleberries Gooseberries '... Cherries . . . . . . .. f`-urrants. . . . . . . . Rhubarb . . . . . .. Green apples . . .. New potatow .. Green peas, shell Green peas. unsh: Cauliower Beans . . . . . . . .. Head Lettuce . . Asnaragus . . . . . . -"-ucuin|)er:< . . . . .. I Garden lilies . . . . SATU RDAY T MARKET Small fruits were abundant at Satur- d-ay s market, which was brisk. and were accompanied by their larger brother. the apple. in the green stage. Garden vege- tables are increasing in size every week and the supply is good. New potatoes are here to stay and are no longer rare. 'l"l~... ....}.'....... HI I % T - H-ililililellllills Egalelllil an Iualmlsnlug ' Read The Examiner Adlet Columzi. HORSE A11,M_ia:N1fs arxuuma AND BRUISES. The best all around Liniment for the stable `as wellas for household use. KEEP IT HANDY. At all Dealers and D1-uyggists. Manufactured only by `DOUGLAS & 'C0.. NAPANEE. Ont. ue Double hack Route between STOPS `BLEEDING INSTANTLY. PREVENTS BLOOD POISONING. CURES THRUSH. FISTULA. SPRAINS AND BRUISE3. The best all around Tjnimnnf for H"; cranes new enex-zy-new lit`:-new vor It in a tonic, restorative, blood- mkc and nerve food. THE Best remedy for exhaus- __ tion and lassitude is .....-a may rcmeuy I01 exnaus- tlon is Winenruis. A short course of Wincarnin creates new life- now via: tonic. rnnftnrnfivd I-I--L III-lutou: conmwa co. Lam-d. Norwich, Eng. udhn Othoe: 67 Portland St. Toronto. Frank 8. Ball. Resident Director. 5` of many kinds quicklyvremedied with nu-: MARKETS 15oUcL'As' 250 FOR THE BEST IN BAKERS BREAD ' HOME-M-ADE BREAD BROWN BREAD SANDWICH BREAD I and a fuIl_line of PIES, CAKES and PASTRY Bakery and Saleshop Cor. Elizabeth and Small` Sta.

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