20 10.23 Ru-ber-oid Hex-a-g6n Shingles cost less than ordinary asphalt or asbestos shingles. The design ' reduces freight charges. Because they are selt-sp: cost less to lay. Rust-proof nails are supplied. The hexagon shape and the heavy shadow of t butts make a beautitul roof. Ru-ber-oid Hex-a-gon Shingles are weather-pro: have no right-angle corners to curl up. -The heavy coating of . non-fading red or gree slate affords excellent fire protection. Ru-ber-oid Hex-a-gon Shingles oer you bea manence, and fire protection, combined with ecc Clo`-la 5 .39 1 1 .90 Otton H%ar ` 23.53 18.20 22.62 18.20 29.50 IIJJIJ 6.21 61.67 E CIl\\ RUB-ER-OID BOARD-an' ` improvement over all wall- boards at any price.` Look for the Crimson (Kare. { -If you have classied advts for the, Toronto Globe, bring them to The Exam- ` iner. lltf `wunlls U: a uuvclby. 1118) may 08 painted in any design one wishes to correspond with the color scheme of one's room and they may be used in either bedroom or drawing~room. They have a distinct ad- vantage cver wickerrbaskets or any fabric- lcovered baskets in that they can be kept lclean very easily. Painted tin waste-paper baskets are some- thing of a novelty. They may be painted anv dPSiQn OTIP \1!;_9Ina fn An:-I-nannuJ ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 181 Tbronto St., Barrie Estimates furnished Good work at reasonable prices ` Phone 698 5.81 2.9 2 .50 4.82 107.25 'V 2.55 2.50 Page Six I .00 7.89 14.45 24.70 ' 162.80 12.43 31.40 10.78 8.71 65.45" Hll Uu'2V 20.90 25 .45 20.90 32.45 11.77 12.73 14.48 10.31 9.40 549 Phone 44lJ 544 s I}: N hf Pt Plan 529 .. 533 .. ,..... no\r\.au9\v ulcy alc sen-spacing IDCY Ist-proof the double Mn` rnnf BARRIE .. Z3 46 137 139 140 141 142 143 144 i 145 146 158 159 162 163 164 230 244 252' 253 254 341 342 610 '77 26 womc suons` Au: ' 108 110 111 112 115 116 177 .178 294 .24 90 211 212 213 214 215 216 11.05 9.47 9.47 10.10 10.10 10.10 10.10 10.70 9.20 '_ sq. 1 In u-an RUB-ER-OID ROLL ROOFING was the rstprepared roong. After 35 years it is still the best. 11 V!) 17.98 17.98 17.98 17.98 19.30 8.51 9.38 Qnn es beauty, per- economy. Notice of Aplication~ _ fir Divorce ..05 [.03 TOWNSHIP op TECUMSETH I1 run. A......._ AGIIl' [:35 1.50 [.50 ' [.50 1 [.50 Z [.50 I |E!\' ]AulgLic9nse ; `swan II : seltfspacihg they" .c-.12- ! Thursday August 3i, 102 Masonic Temple Building W. BELL,_Issuer Successor to J. Arnold for u.L \ 18 23 15 r-proof. They gfeen natural DANIEL QUINLAN. Treasurer County of Shnooo. 7 Owen St. I VILLAGE OF VICTORIA HARBOR INSURANCE A UVV 1061 1073 1074 1075 1089 1090 1146 1147 1148 1149 1272 1280 1281 1368 1369 1370 1524 ' 1525 1526 1527 A xU . 40 41 42 43 173 174 211 212 , 290 .873 874 '916 917 986 987 innn Head. qtlarters 0-00 7.20 7.20 2.02; .202 7.18 7.18 5.25 5.25 3.50 3.50 8.51 8.51 8.51 4.58 4.58 4.58 4.58 (`ll Costs Total 2.50 7.70 2.50 10.53 2.5.. 10.53 2.5 7.70 6.87 12.53 3.57 17.10 4.70 39.25 Total Uu7" 8.83 8.88 8.89 9.73 9.73 in OD 19.15 22.83 'l`otal 18.49 . McKESSOCK & COMPANY, ~ T Solicitors for Applicrt 25.35: A Good R"epo;rt From C')%c`hrane, 1` % About the Etg1EIAci3 Pe3e 1-`on SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES I Expert Shoe Repairs May we tell you more about this method of heating? A folder en- titled The Question of the Pipeless Furnace will go to you for the ask- ing. Write to R ' ` HARRY BARRON l_II5 A Ulillvou ans`:--_ . __-._ 4. w. WHITBY Up in Cocrane the weather gets very severe, and it is an ideal place to test out any heating apparatus. One Cochrane customer sent the fol - lowing commumcation. " ' NOTICE is hereby given that Robert Arrchibeld Logan, of Angus, in the County of Simcoe, in_the Province of Ontario, F3- quire, will apply to the Parliament of Can ads at the next session thereof for a Bill ` of Divorce from his wife, Cecilia Maud Lo- gan, formerly of Angus, but now of the City of Hamilton, in the County of Went- rworth, on the grounds of adultery andde aertion. I`n..L__I _L E` " ` " Bedspreads with designs in colored fabric I quilted on are very attractive. Sometimes a oral desi n is used,` often of. morning' glories of e and mauve on a creamyj white ground. Sometimes a gured de- sign is used-and sometimes a conventional geometric design is chosen. *--------.-----.--- \ I wanted to test the Pease Pipeless Furnace when it was 85, to 40 below zero, and _l have done so now. The tem- `perature of the house was comfortable all the time. and the furnace burns the coal down to ashes, I can heartily mocommend the Pease Pipeless Furnaee for this climate. I Hon. DuncanvL. McLeod, the new Pro--l vincial Secretary, is a son of the late John McLeod of Glen Huron.` In addition to Mr. McLeod, Nottawasaga has two other prominenzt political representatives in the West. One is A.'~M. Carmichael. M.P., of Kindersley and the other is'W. J. Van- cise, who is a member of the Provincial Legislature of the Province of, Saskatehe- j wan. unuc. we wnwu was a suver nunmng case ! and being closed through the years pro-1 bably accounts for the fact that` the works: were not destroyed.-News I I Lu vvaa uancu M) u Jeweuer and 18 HOW 1'8-5 ported to be run ing and keeping good Iv time. The watch as a silver hunting case` being nlrmed thrnnzrh I]-an vnura nnn I 9 Z131`-W 1 1-Iinivz`: C-O-NTRACTOR - Barrie, Ont. - Telephone 180 29El1zabeMtli.St. Elizabeth 5;, same xuc scores; _ Baryie - Bird, bowled Baldwin,1; Woods, caught Rothwell_.1)ow-led Johnson,4; Mayes. not out, 35; Rothwell, caught 4 Burton, bowled Leslie, 9; Curtis, bowled Baldwin, 4; Kent, caught Bogardis, bowled Baldwin, 3; Burton not out 4; extras, 10, total for 5 wickets, 70. Bowling a.nalysis-- Baldwin, overs 7, runs -20, wickets, 3; Johnston, overs 3, runs 17, wickets 1; Leslie overs 2, runs 5, wickets, 1; MacLach1an, overs 1, runs 6, wickets, 0; Milson, overs A `run: 1`) .....'l--A.- n Kl IOIUH 3 Dated at Sudbury, in the Province of On- tario, this twenty-third~day of June, AD. 1922. ' Allandale -beats Barrie at cricket in Queen s park , August 21st. It was a, friend- _ly game between two teams,-one of which was captained by TI.. MacLachlan and the other by J. Curtis. MacLachl-an s .team were eight runs up at the close of the play. The score , was -78-70. Mayes of Barrie was the -heavy hitter of the day, piling up a cool 35 for a not out. MacLadhlan of AI- landale was next with 25 not out, with Bal- dwin 20 and Milson fourth with 17. The scores; `Raw:-in __ `Dim! L-_-I_j "vs 11- - - -`- MAYES _? scom: wnmss RUNS NOT OUT --.,.. `I . .. up ,uvv,uuu. Ontario has about 1,812" miles of Pro- vincial Highways, 1,697 miles of Provincial- surburban roads, 7,621 miles of County roads and 38,745 miles of township roads. --_--------.:.j._ HIUIC Ontario last fear owned 206,515 of the ` 467.496 motor cars carrying Canadian markers. In Prince Edward Island. Can-I ada's smallest province, where they wouldn t allow automobiles until the year 1913, 1,757 were owned last year. - There were 26 in 1913. Yukon "has about 90 or 100 this year. Chauffeur licenses in Ontario co t 32 as compared with $6.50 in P. E. I. Sther provinces are all_ higher than Ontario. It is interesting to note that last year the total revenue all over the Dominion out of the sale of auto m-arkers and other licenses totalled over $7,500,000. l'\._4-__ , I ' - ` ' " ` ,__...,. ............7 uull quuut. u,aUU ()1 H1888. Contrary to popular opinion, the war i didn t aect adversely theuying of motor M ours in Canada. ihad `been bettered -by 198.739. When the big struggle was at its height in Europe more cars were purchased` in Canada in 1917 than have ever`been bought in any one year since. Official guresishow this. -In 1916. 120,- -318 motor cars were `running up and down the streets and"highways. In 1917. this n increase of 78,421. Then the year later ,000 more earls appeared with\Canadian markers. The last year of the European struggle, saw the number of new permits drop 8. bit to . 63.160. toiclimb -again in 1920 to 70,042 r\_;__:. I A ` ' -`~" :, Luna, 14, wxcxets U. " Al1andale--Wilson, 'caugh Cur`tis, bowled 5 jump.` It represents something of the in- From 2100 to 500.000 is a good sizetlf crease in Canadian motor car licenses since d the days when the rst -few noisy autombiles l_ made their appearance on the streets of _f Canadian towns and cities to startle placid y a `dquines out of -their lives and their buggy ; e shafts. Gasonline buggies were wonder- _ ful things in those days. Few men knewl how to run them. Now, in 1921. few men, 3 1 or women, for that matter, don't know how ` t to run automobiles, Fifteen years makes 0 _ a lot of dierence. _ I Dominion automobiie records show that ['i.. l907---the rst year when autos were ,`licensed`--onIy 2130 cars were owned in 7 Canada. Since then the number has climb- s .,ed to 532,000. At least this isvthe estimat- -_ ed number for 1922, -and it is based on the gures for 1921 of 467,496 plus an [increase since 1921 of 65,000, taking the `Iincrease of 1921 over 1920 of 64,567. as a basis. ` So that there will be easily over half a million cars and trucks using the highways of the Dominion this year. Simcoe '] county Eitizens own about 3.200 of these. (`AI-.d>-.....: L- .....-| ' .' CANADA*EA_1f_1N 1907' BELOW SIMCOI-_Z S Now ._.- -....-.,..... nu w nu nuuuuuy l1lbl2:|.lHlClllS.l ~ . . The building was erected b VContractor `W. Rusk, while the cement bocks for the front were supplied by Thos. Tooke. The sashes, doors, and the stairway to the rest- room were furnished by the Ball Planing Mill. UGBCIIIUIIIU. - W I One of_the most striking features of this new car hostelry, is the large area of floor `space, and the ;airy, well lighted condition within. The bulletin at the front which puts such pearls of wisdom as, Many a twenty horse-power engine has only four plugs," in the public eye. is sure "proof that Canadian oils -and gasoline are on sale within, as the. Canadian Oil News furnishes the material for it in monthly instalments.l rm". i.'..:1.i:..- -_-~r - - A 7 ' ||:|:-|&-||--||;np|:||:||:||: O: WC: The basement is the full size of the build: ing, and it is Mr. Garvin s intention to build ten or a dozen stalls on one side for private cars; and to have an individual lock on each one so that owners may bring ` their cars in via the Mary Street entrance. at any hour. without the necessity of hay. ing an attendant in charge. There will"al~sp, be- an oxy-acetylene welding plant in the! basement.` and this will be operated by_`Mr.l Parsons, late of" the C.P.R. Car Shops. Car washing will also be carried on in the` basement. " l (\__ _`t `I, , . . -u n . A - - i steeligirders. 15 inches high, stretch from side to side for the support of the roof, whilef an equal number, 60- feet long and 10 inches high. are beneathi the main oor. The main oor`w'here the repairing and vulcanizing is done, will be oored with hard-wood, and is well lighted. there being provision for two 4x8 sky- lights in the roof, in addition to the win- dows. ' ,-`__ L_V _. .1. g.. . - nuauuulc. Seven huge steel girders. from ; the main nnr The m-n rm uu nu: UlllCl.' mue. _ There is a large space above the show- room, part of which will be used has a ladies rest-room, while the remainder will be rented as oice space. The lighting is excellent, as there are four windows lqok- ing on to Elizabeth St., two on each sidesi and a row the width of the building at the back looking out over the roof toward Allqandale. ` . '- L ____ _L7V' 0 | -- 0 J. A. Garvin's garage _on Elizabeth St.,l which is rapidly nearing conipfetion. is a decided acquisition to the town, in that it is one of the best garages nort-h of Toronto. The building is 60x100. and is cement, the front of blocks, and is situated in an admirable location, Esthe main `oor is not much above the `level of the] street, while there is an entrance to, the] basement from Mary St. There is a show- room at the front, which is used for the display, of the Hupmobile car, for which Mr. Garvin is agent, and accessories, and an] A entrance to the main floor on either side. Drivers are thus enabled to `drive in on one side for their oil or free air, and go out on the other side. ' Ir-1.-.... :- - 1---- - nu-`.91 Room! FEATURE or GARAGE] Jos. A.` Ga r;i-11- Completing Up-to-Date Hostelry" for | Motor-Cars. ` ., ....u..; u, Luna 1:, wxcxeus 1; Lesno 12, wickets 0. 4 ..l.., um--- ---...,v- r- -' ' ' ' me BARRIE EXAMINER Pian Plan Plan l1l__ CLE_ANlNG-PRESSlNG - REPTAlR.lNG-_--DYEVING We do all kinds of remodelipg ' SUITS MADE TO MEASURE,` 23 DOLLARS `UP. Give.Us a Trial -+ Phone 441W V N E qt .. Plan `589 . Plan 589 . Plan 589 . Plan 589, 1: navv av yuan uus, uuauuuc street, pt .. Plan 609 .. . . . . .. Clare Isld. plan 644, and broken 9 and 10' . . . . . . .. Plan 572 vvvunLnA \II N 30 W hf Iaezcribd reg. deed 10573 .. . . . . . . . .. 117 L! All broken lots except pt sold under reg. deed 8708 `Lot 13, plan 551, Charlotte ah-An} nl- .. . . - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 0`! Pt E Melancthon lot 7, des- cribed reg. deed 12689. plan 92, Singhampton pt 18 12 E. Hurontario lot. 8, 'W.- Erie lot 9, Duntroon ' IUV Description Lot 44, plan 560, pt. Plan 587,lots 66, 95 |Plan 587,.'lots 67, 68 Plan 596, pt. . . . . .. Plan 607 . . . . Plan 607 -` TOWNSHIP OF NOTTAWASAGA ` E pt. W hf ,as secondly described in reg.` deed 7293 for Nottawa- l saga, except the village lots and lots 3 to V7 and 'pts 8,9 10 E Warrington road and lots 1 to 5 and pts 6, 7, 8 W Douglas street, reg. plan 384, Lot Con. Acres Arrears Costs Total part .. .......... 23 1, 17 15.67 2.63 13.30 .. 34 2 80 11.19 2.51 13.70 Pt E Melannflmn Int 7 due- - ' I \I\I`JlVl I \a The annual Sale of Lands in I of Simcoe will be held in the C ALL KINDS OF HATS CLEANED BLOCKED. TREASURER S .KLi OF `LANDS IN zglggggglgs g1-`on TAXES H s . f Woods, 20; Baldwin, caught Bird, bowled 1 Mayes. 17; Johnston run out, 1; MacLach- r Ian, not out 25; Leslie, caug-h-t -an'd bowled Bird, 1; extras, 14, total for 4 wickets, 78. Bowling an'alysis--Bird, overs 8, runs 31.. wickets, 1; `Mayes,' overs 6, runs 14, wickets 1; Curtis," overs 2; runs l4.,wickets 0; Tooth. overs 2, Juns 3, wickets 0; Woods, I. Lovers 1, runs 2, wi.ckets 0. I I ._--__..-.. -.B\..vu anuvul uvu Simpletom" Son1et-u:1es they won't stand either. _.-_.--:._:_.__--_. Wiseman: Figures never lie." 5' C<:._._.I_.,,,, Mn _ vuu 547 uaq 532 `IVE, 514 ERIE is ' MONDAY, 'ocTOEi ,7 1" TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH ORILLIA ............ .. 28 ` _ 6.90 'rowNsH115 01-` 09.0. ._ ....... ..39 2 25 23.53 ., ' 91 10 Oh WE TURN OVERCOATS and Make Them Like New. Bring in your old coats and have themturned. v. ., .. . ...--V t}oon , 11.93 TOWNSHIP OF NORTH ORILLIA 189, 190', 203 TOWNSHIP OF SUNNIDALE ..... ........'15 @ _.g CID C.9P!!`*T.9.7>I-` 5IMC0E unuua nu uucurs lUl' taxes in tneuounty 1` COURT HOUSE, BARRIE, on N . ...-.__-.___ W 46 27 5'5 We Have a F w UNCALLED-FORNSUITS F OR SALE --Suits that have -been left to be remodeled and cleaned --just as good as new`.,Comein_and see them; a real buy._ E? '12 21 22 23 13 14 14 18 5 FOR 'l`Axl:.b, ` ` )F SIMCOE arrears for taxes in fhe'County COURT I-IOUQIE RADDIF` l\l'I 30 21.92 100 156.63 50 5.93 so 28:43 31 8.28 18 102.43 $1`; 9.27 . 1.27~ HAIR Rs'roR1s:R'