51351` 6, 1925; ` core.. 44i)_.ooz,`u.)&,aHu,ooo,o`:o--uvn x The previous record was held _by D. M. Stewart and Mr. Holden (the club professional), who both did the nnlivlnn `:1! . UIUU Pl. ULCDDIU course in 68. wnnn -vsuav l `D it .... --, I build the planing mill which he still`, 0 erates in Barrie. The engine andll boiler installed in the Tollendal mill 5 for use in the low water season is still doing good service in the Rogers mill. Lovers Creek ' ; Lovers Creek, on which the millll H l was built, was known in those days as Hewson s Creek, Wm. Hewson hav- V ing erected saw and grist mills onll its shores at Painswick in 1852. Be- 1 tween the Tollendal road and the railway bridge over the creek, an- other mill owned` by a man named` Cox was once. operated. Lovers l Creek, to use the more romanticlj name, has always been considered.` one of the beauty spots of the coun- try surrounding Barrie. Its windingl course, overhung with tall drooping. willows, and its grassy banks have i: for years been a favorite placefor a| canoe trip and picnic. When the wa-, ter Vvas higher than it is now it was] possible to paddle up the creek as far; as the road. And as for shing, what 4 better place than the Black Hole,; as` the mouth, of` the creek is called; could be found anywhere? Until of recent years no one who camethere to sh went home disappointed. . There once was a wharf at Tollendal, from which "the early pioneers were accustomed toembark on the boat and cross to the village of Kempen- I I feldt on the other side of-the bay. The waves and the ice continually wrought havoc with the old landing and the settlers were never nished patching it up. Finally, after the population of the` villag`e~had dwin- dled, it-was destroyed, never to be rebuilt. ' o .-|- '_ A ____1_ `Cl !-IIIUO [It is recorded that there `vas a pub- lic-house at Tollendal, conducted by John Sibbald, `andin the days of the ~ hamlet s greatest prosperity `it boast- ed two breweries. These, however, were not wet enough to `prevent their destruction by re. The . owners, Thrift Melrum and 'Robt. Simpson, then moved to the county town. The NEW BARRIE GOLF RECORD -T(Con_tinuo;d on page 12) M the county highway system at a spe- cial meeting of the County Council. yheld on Tuesday afternoon to consid- `er the revised plan agreed on at a meeting between the committee of the Council and the Department of `Highways in Toronto on July 13. The `highway system now comprises 309 `miles of road, twenty-one miles more lthan the mileage shown on the map ,submitted by the Department at the |June session of Council. The former [system had about 450 miles. The ._`.__.I._ -_I.l-.I -__ I'I'\.-_...l_-- _--_._ _ _L___A. Four pieces of road were added to` 1 Eleven Miles Added on Tuesday at Conference between the 1 Council and Deputy Minister and Chief Engineer; Sun- nidale Beating Stayner, Road Goes via Nottawasagzk I Sunnidale Townline; Minesing Road now Included; Total ..C-ounty System now `Comprises 309 Miles. elgh and family" I -I Mr. and Mrs. oo.`eouncIL Ann narnnmaur FINALLYAGREE on menwnvs SJHIICIII uau GUUUL `8UU` Illll.Co L115 roads added on Tuesday were a short` piece of road from the Penetang road | to the town of Midland, another short piece from the Midland-Coldwaterl road into Port McNi'coll, about five \ I 1 1 1 4 1' miles in Matchedash from Coldwater north on the road to Port Severn, and four or ve miles in Tecumseth, giv- _ ing that township acounty road from north to south and a shorter route to Toronto. Two changes were also made making no difference in the mileage. The route into Barrie from the west had bee n designated on Tif- n St. and this was changed to Eliza- beth St. and the road in Nottawas- aga, which has been in dispute on two previous occasions, was xed on the town line between Nottawasaga and Sunnidale instead of the second line` (of Nottawasaga into Stayner. Be- 'tween the meeting in Toronto and Tuesday s meeting the Department` had decid%d to add the Minesing road` `through espra township which had been deleted from the old highway }system. Deputy-reeve Wiley,of Me-I ldonte asked for the inclusion of what` `MIDLAND PUTS I BARRIE OUT or 1 O.B.A. RUNNING! Errors and Inability to Hitl Armstrong Responsible; I Score, Sto 2. l Midland eliminated Barrie in the first of the series of games to settle. the three-cornered tie which existed in the North Simcoe O.B.A. group; `as a resultlof Barrie s defeat of Or-| illia on Wednesday of last week. The I game was played here last Friday be- fore a large crowd and the team from the northern town Won by 5 to 2. Bill Armstrong, the long left-hander, again proved too strong for the locals and they only got ve hits off him. Two of these coming in one innings with a walk and a sacrifice y ac- counted for their two runs. I i . g__ ..__,_l LLULAILDCU LU}. vnawnn. uv-v -........ It\was Burns third game in ve idays and he was not as effective as usual, although two of Mid1and s runs `cannot be charged against him. LL _ __:_:L-_-.. 1.---.. i uannuuv lug nu...--5`... ...B..--...,- __ Three hits gave the visitors two runs in the rst innings. Moore led off with a single to left and Mairacle E `scored him with a triple to right.i (Sturgeon. followed with a drive I through second to score `Maracle. The next three men were easy outs and` Burns retired the side in order in the next two frames. In the fourth: Armstrong got a life when Caesara threw wide to rst and advanced on? Duncan s ineld out. McNab drew a walk. Ball fanned. Dobson fumbled Hewson s drive back of rst and Arm- `strong and McNab scored. Mid1and s ,last run came in the fth on Moore s' single, an ineld out and Armstrong s ,safe hit to left. i I , 1 3,, LL- ._:__1.L il..Lt: Lula bu l.CJ.|u ! i Armstrong weakened in the sixth` `and walked Emms. Dobson followed | ;with a single to centre, putting Emms Ion third, and the latter scored on E. I Jennett s sacrice y. Jennett ran: i to second base and two balls had been delivered to the next batter before: his presence there was discovered, much -to the amusement of the crowd. Jennett apparently did not know that his y had been caught and the um- l lpire had not declared him out, ,while l .the Midland players were slow to dis~ I [cover that there were too `many run- qners on bases. Lynch poked a safety I to centre, sc-oring Dobson with Bar- irie s last run. I A._.....L......... -nu. (n:I1I\'v| nnnr` I1f\V\I\`I`+ l lr1e's last run. M 5 Armstrong was given good support ` [in the pinches and two fast double i plays helped him out considerably. iplays | i He started both of them himself. Ball, at shortstop, had a big day, with el- even chances in the eld. He booted % 2 two of them, Moore, with three hits ' and two runs, led the batters and he had three put-outs in centre eld. `Armstrong helped to win his own game with two hits. Box score :- l lhjmi` ll-I than C` lV|\IJ\-u nuns:-as---1: - __-- .. -_ __ 7 I `- Marriages-in Barrie for the seven months ending July 31 out-number those for a similar period in 1924, there being 37 in the current year against 29 for the rst seven months of 1924. During the month of July 16 births, 6 marriages and 13 deaths were registered in the office of the 1 Town Clerk as compared with 17 births, 5 marriages and 5 `deaths in` July 1924. The total from Jan. 1 to July 31 is 104 births, 37 marriages and 71 deaths, and for the same per- iod in 1924, 106 births, 29 marriages" `.3 '70 Annfhla Northwbod wing acquaint- ghters of Tor- McDonald's. of Toronto` vis- rner for a few ll BIRCH IIIIUIUIIIII IIIKU .9 V7. IL `La; C` Son's, Elizabeth St. 2ot:' mu -xu Laa-3, and 72 death`s`." MORE MARRIED `mks YEAR -All siies`linoleum"fu1za at w. . nu L Qnia mnknf` 01- (MN ngv-. wvv -- - _ V__ (Contiiv1u-ew on Pag-eV` No. 33. 9)` `is known as the Moonstone road, run- ning from the Penetang road to the _;Coldwater road, and Deputy minister S. L. Squire of the Highways Depart- ment stated that traffic census would be taken on this road over a period of two weeks and if the traffic war- ranted it the road would be added to the system. . `Ran-:Ilnn +`Il\ nnn11+\1 P w. 5- poronto was the 1 d for a week. Ylnnnn nnnnh me system. Besides the Deputy Minister, R. H. Muir, chief engineer of county roads, was present and after both had ex- plained the principles underlying the revision of the county highway sys- tems, the Clerk called the roll of the |municipa1ities and the representativ- es were given an opportunity to reg- lister objections to the proposed plan. Most of the representatives were will- ing to accept the revised plan but about a dozen members asked for changes and additions. A Good Attendance Very few members of Council were absent, their attendance in the middle `(if the harvest season showing the importance of the road uestion in all parts of the county. here were nlan n Iowan nuunnknn in Int-in n-nllnil 511 plll DD UL LIIU Ulllallllayo LXICIC WULU also a 1arge,number in the gallery. including a large deputation from Stayner, headed by Mayor A. J. F. Sullivan, to try to maintain the sec- _ond line of Nottawasaga as part of the highway system. Before entering lon the business of the meeting, War- den D. A. McKinlay expressed regret lfor the death of Councillors H. A. Baycroft of Alliston and Wm. Wil- liams of Collingwood since the June session and for the bereavement sus- tained by County Treasurer Coleman in the death of his mother. Coun- cillor Baycroft s death , following closely that of his predecessor, Ex- Warden Moore, leaves the reeveship of Alliston vacant for the second time within a few months. Councillors Begg, Coombs and the Clerk were appointed a committee to draft let- lters of condolence to the bereaved families. Mayor Mitchll of Alliston ~was present and was asked to occupy the seat of the late Coun. Baycroft. _1_ A-.. 1 v-nu uvnov va. vllw nu-av \.Ivvunnu are-J v-v-v- Reeve Coombs of Bradford, chair- man of the special committee which took up the road question with repre~ -sentatives of the Department in Tor- lonto, reported that their committee Ihad gone ino the matter thoroughly with Mr. Squire and Mr. Muir, and athe townline between Innisl and W. |Gwil1imbury and the Mill Road from |E1mvale to Penetang were the only roadsithey were successful in having added. 1 1 1uI'_1'r_._'..`LL _........L._..:..-,] LL- 1..., auucu. ` J.J. McKnight emphasized the im- portance of passing the by-law in connection with the revised highway system so that the county would re- .ceive the fty per cent. subsidy in- lstead of forty per cent. The com- mittee had been advised by the De- partment officials that forty per cent. would be paid on all roads which are deleted from the system on which iwork is done this summer. n.....__ o..;; ......a 13...": ....,....\.1 +L{n~ !WUI'! ls uuue uus suuuuci. _ Couns. Scottand Boyd moved that a committee of three members be ap- { pointed to meet with the representae jtives of the Department and hear the _complaints of members against the proposed plan. Others, however, felt =that the Council as a whole should [hear the complaints and they went tinto committee of the whole and the {representatives of the various mun iicipalities were called in turn. Mr. Squire on Highway Revision Previous to this Mr. Squire outlin- ed the steps leading to the revision .of the highway systems in Ontario. He stated that the advisory board last `year visited twenty-two counties and i with one exception found-that the highway systems were not satisfac~ tory and could be improved and the mileage lessened. It had been found [that nearly every system had grown iup as a matter of compromise. rn1, _-.L_`l_ u__.-...1..L L..1..:....J 4.1.- `an, ' up no (A unuu u u L u ; V V . "1, ........ V. | The whole thought behind the re- 'vised system was to take care of the `major traffic and roads were selected [without regard to the townships ithrough which they pass so long as they serve the best interests of the county. In Simcoe county Barrie, Orillia, Midland and Collingwood and other towns are the centres towards which traffic is naturally attracted and to provide roads gravitating to- Iwards these towns it is necessary to spend more money in some townships than in others. If the basis of township assessment had been adopt- led it would be unfair and unequit- able. These townships taking care of }the accumulated traffic of townships farther on were given the most con- sideration. ' ` ll. . _ A . A -1. vlnuu u\nv:v\n:v\`nu run Jar- SIGCIEEIUH. There were four principles under- lying the adoption of the system the i . (Continued on page 5) im$ww&mmww&m&&$mm .1. M WVEKKKW WW mwmwwwa COMING EVENTS gt; m.v.mmmm`mm mmmmmmm &wm$mm&%mma&w$ -on and children week-end with ` lV.l0n(lay, Dene .EJW'd.T13 ravuluu. IILULU A dance 1s bemg held in Craighurst IHall, Aug. 21; Orillia orchestra. `Lunch served. Admission, $1.00 per couple. . 33c Keep Wednesday, Aug. 19, open and come to Union Church cold meat supper and garden party, M.idhurst,r "in church grove. _ Softball game, sup- per commencing ve o c1ock, follow- ed by -good programme. Barrie Col- legiate Band has been secured for `Flu: Avrnv-|`nnv' Dancing every - even_ir}g except Monday, Belle Ewart Pavllmn. 5 -1tfC A Joann :..~ lmnm hold in (`main-Tn1`rt ] Icgaauc uauu the evening; { sEc1ioNi ; J.\Il- 330 ausa nmm umgux with a purse Miss Clark was: rprise but made In: nffnn uyhinh ax of Toronto rhter, Mrs. E. esden preached on Sunday. Presbyterian my meeting in urch Thursday 1- presiding. It a donation of he boys school n of Vancouver Morrison as are Maggie Morri- _L Lu l'Up!'8l!8nU match. Mrs. Jas. er on "Home nest Love gave mg on a train." me made rem- At the close of holomew served meeting is to Mrs. Wm. Sin- u. IIUIJKUIB ID 5 to the sub- mustard and be too much 1m'porta.ntT to d train. clover '61- Publicity. 1, _Asr1ay1tu,r9. vii Grahu'n of Tor- ' with her bro- od- ble alled to Orillia. brother who is ital there. aughters. Gla- Wednesday at WEEDS ttectlve Methi- 8o" Ev S. HOD I-Iusbandmm. and lmnnrtnnt Barrie was home: is visiting at (3 TH L %A [E E XAMINER nEssIvEs O OIIOOSE WOODS FOII OAIIOIOATE Present MP; for Duerin Nominated for t Federal House; Dozen Other Nominees, Includ-ing;Two Women,- With- draw, Making the `Nomination Unanimous; Good attend- ance at`Convention in Alliston, Mostly from Dufferin; Sheehan Suggests a New County. T `mons for Dufferin, was the unani- R. J. Woods pf Corhetton. the pre- sent member of the Houses 01 Com- ` mous choice of the Progressives of the new constituency of Dufferin- Simcoe as their standard-bearer in the next Federal election at- a large and enthusiastic convention held last Saturday in Alliston. The occasion was historic in that it was `the rst.t` political convention held in the new 1 riding. There were about 375'meni1 and women resent and a marked de- tt gree of ant usiasm was manifested. 1 Dufferin was particularly well repre- Ii sented and there was a good number I of delegates from Tecumseth and Ad- ! gala and several from West Gwillim- , ury, Innisl and Essa. J. M. Mc-ll 'Naughton of Orangevilleg presidentlt of the'Association, occupied the chair ` in\the early part of the meeting and` Thos. 0 Flynn of Shelburne presided 1} while the nominations were being L -.... ..l.. nlnal wuuc uuc conducted. IIII. '1 EH1 DGUII $1 Vuuunvwu Thirteen apparently is not regard- ed? as an ill omen by the Progress- ives, for that was -the number` put in ` nomination. Twelve of the nominees- withdrew, leaving the eld to Mr. Woods, and on. motion of H. H. Hil- burn and E. . Evans his nomination was declare unanimous. Among. those nominated were Edgar J. Evans 3. of Bradford, who represented Southi Simcoe in the Legislature during the` Drury regime and was defeated by` Earl Rowe in 1-923, and T. K. Slack, who sat for Dufferin `at the same time. H. H. Hilburn of East Luther, an ex-Warden of Duiferin County, was also nominated and two women, Mrs. Sidney Banks of Shelburne, secre- tary of the Association, and Mrs. Jno. ,McGill of Grand Valley, were also named. `Others. nominated. were :- J. P. Wilcox, Beeton; J. F. Hambly, Bradford, reeve "of West Gwillim- bury: R. A. Sutherland, Stroud; J. M. McNaughton, Orangeville ; James; m...;..1...... f`.nlavnnI..T, All-mrt Hand andl `{.`,,"-`w,T_'.; " 4350 GOPIES sznavgu % I BAmu1e:,cANAnA,. THURSDAY, AUGUST13, 1925. ie; Chelsea and Vernon Al- oronto to spend nnrvnntn, M. McNaughton, Urangevme; aunwa; Sheehan, Cplgan;-J. Albert Hand and ' Geo. Faris. All who were nominated were allowed five minutes to speak and after Mr`. Woods hadabeen de- clared the candidate he spoke for half an hour. T. E. Ross, M.P.. for Nokth Simcoe, also spoke briefly. _ - _L _`lI LL- --L31.`-`9fI nInnI`nVVII1nI` blmcue, luau ayunv: uuw..,y. Almost all the speakers condemned the two old partiesfor their neglect of the interests of the masses . Na- ional prohibition and tariff reduction were the .questions which received the greatest attention from the- speakers. Mr.-Woods has been a.tem- perance worker for thirty years , hav- ing unsuccessfully contested Dufferin as a Prohibition candidate in 1907, 1908 and 1911. Almost all who spoke stated that the .reductions which .have been made on some lines of agricultural machinery are due largely to the efforts of the Progress- hng nvvvnnn _ ll\7LJ uu V ive group. 73--..-. nukpuuua DU & After thanking is supporters for the nomination, R. J. Woods, M.P., stated that there was no reason` to view the coming election without hope of success an ill kn hloonnv-av two old parties, he declared, are try`-, ing to drive `out the Progressives and break them up in order to monopolize the Government of the country. .``They have been playing that game for forty-ve years, he stated. at the same time making. a political football of the scal policy. s Referring to his J attitude on the rohibition question, about which he ad been asked by a man in the aud- ience, Mr. Woods stated that temper- ance was the issue on which he broke with the Conservative party and three times contested the riding as a Prohibition candidate. He referred also to the efforts of- the Progressives to abolish race-track gambling and stated thaj: all but one of `the Pro- gressive group supported the billthat was brought in. * -"------.. _...l Junlmk `mad-nu ' hall d_ pointed out that J in 1921_Dufferin overturned a 2600 ~ Conservative. majority to a Progress- ` ive majority of 800. What'Dul'Ye!:in I did can be done in South Simcoe. '1`-he_ v ing a bottle 01 alconoz m Vvawu 3 me- `-tory. The accused claimed `that he had the alcohol for use in his businss whereupon, since he had no erm`it `allowing _him to, have alcohol or in- "dustrial purposea, the. charge was a- mended to include `illegal purchase. Hearing ofthc-`caselwaa completed on July 81 when judgment was .1_'eser_v .ed`. was Utuuguu in. Railways and freight rates, he stated, form one of the biggest prob- lems the Government has to deal with and no member or government, as a government, can solve it. No one but an "expert railway man can pro- perly adjust the freight rates. l ENE or $50 AND costs IMPQSED UPON WALSH} If it is customary for doctors to issue such a prescription. as this, and for druggists to ill them, I` think there should be some investigation, for in reading the prescription put in by the defence I nd that the accused was suffering from `medical use stated Police Magistrate Jeffs in. im- pzosing a fine of $50 and costs. on Geo. .- Walsh for illegal possession ofrli-. 'quor. ` The words `medical use . had been written in the s ace` for the name of the ,_ailment_ or relief -of which the liquor was prescribed. V -- ---- ...-I. L..--aI an TnIu 99 Wlcll us: uquv; new ,.u.....-....-_. The case was first heard on July 28 when the police ave evidence of`nd- ing bottle of a cohol in Walsh's inc-` 4...- -'l"hn unarmed claimed `that gxuuyu Expects to T rn S.'SimcoV- ,_ .LL-..`--..;- ~..' nnnnnvul-nvlu e was spent last. e welner roast ofthe Unite ation took this: a presentation organist, Miss: 8. Graham read`. iss Anna Leigh with n nnmu .T'hirteen_Nominated , _'__ _,_;_ L EIVIIL UIIW CVQGI I I O H N vein The next election will-be fought on the tariff-, Mr. Woods declared. The Liberals have always been presum-- abl blow tariff and the Conservatives hig tari , but in reality there is lit- tle di eren.ce b.etwe'en them. The re- cent tari reductions would not have been made if. there hadnot been six- -ty-ve Progressives in the House. Mr. `Xfnnn nannvi-AH A-hnf kn Milli nnt in .;y-nVe rl'0gl`_eB_BlVE5 111 M18 nuuae. H1}. Woods asserted that he was not In ifavor of Free Trade but he dxd favor {tariff for revenue only. Under a pol- icy of protectxon the consumer, whxch in the end means the mass of the peo- Iple of Canada, is the chef sufferer. (III- .. .5- ..L......_.. main :3 an anvnvn 5:17:35 Manufacturers and Conservatives `who say-the country is being ruined ,by tari reductions don't tell you that the United States` -market `is _open to every manufacturer of farm im- I plements, he stated. Canadian man_u.facturers_ can market `their goods across the line duty free. Why should they be protected here? . Un- der -a policyof protection they have built up their bxiness and extended their export`, b in doing so they `have sapped the life of the people of icanada. a ' yaw VJ. \lIonIUr\asn, in Int`: vc-av- -.---'--_. Vwoods stated that Hon. J. A. ' Robb s tariff policy was"o posed by- ,.a number of Liberals an t t Sir 'Lomer Gouin has been in the ouse .;-only once since the Budget vote of n `I924, on which he did not [vote and .was not paired.` Libera1~Progressive Deal Denied 9 Hon. Arthur Meighen has been (Continued on `page 2) ` CHAMPIONS or W CHURCH LEAGUE{ By defeating St. Mary's 5 to 1 in the nal ,and deciding game of the -series, Baracas won the championship of- the Senior Church League. `By taking advantage of Hanley s wild- ness and ineffectiveness in the first innings, they ran in four runs and added another in the second. After that Hanley settled down and pitched air-tight ball but his team mates could do nothing with Meredith s, de-` livery; Both teams played good ball in the eld, only one error being cred- ited`_ to each tean, and there were lsexiregl sensational lays. nnnn vunrlni n mlvtnnvndnntd nH-on`! E`Bea{ St. Mary s 5 to 1:in Fina1;' On1y:One Hit Made Off % Meredith.. 1- ` , rpnuu IJUL uxuucv ks after which e passed around. `up of `Hayes dropped the throw and the seve 1 Senstlonul Lays. Ba acas made a Jetermined attack on Hanley s slants in the first frame. After Walls had grounded out, Cot- ty Tribble doubled to left. McKen- zie drew a walk and both runners scored when Campbell hit safely over second_. ` Bill Tribble waited for four wide ones and Meredith cleared the sacks-with a double to right. Stew- art Bryson also strolled to rst but the next two men went out, leaving the runners stranded. In the follow- ing innin s Doyle made a nice pick- alls hot grass-cutter "but runner was safe. A. Tribble and Mc- Kenzie went out ' and Campbell tripled to -right, scoring -Walls with Baracas last run. . - ' 'l)I1- l'l'I..LLI-).. DGFHUIIB lb run. Bill` Tribble s error; on ' `Moore, Moore's steal and Byrne's hit to cen-. tre, the only` hit secured off Mere- dith in` the ve innings, accounted for St. Mary s one tally in `the second. . `MnwnA{+`\ Inna v-nv:nn\`A' ant` `I71 Dtg 1v1a.ry's 0118 tauy 111 DHCVSUCUIIU. .. Meredlth was invmcible and_ In three of the ve -innings he retlred `the side in _order`. In the first he fanned the side, a feat that was dup- licated -by Han1ey'in. the third. (`ovv\vJ\:.-an 1nd 4-Rn 11-+n-mu 1lI:+h R +.'r-L 1.108580 "Dy namey 111 I118 unru. . Campbell led the hitters with a tri- ple and_ at single and he" also played a nice game in the eld. Doyle for St. Mary s and Bill Tribble `for Bar- acas were also prominent defensively. Box score :-V-' - St. Mary's . . Dhlunw , A1: 1) A R Player Doyle, 3b . . . J. Saso, rf .. T. Saso, If . . Moore, as` . . . Stone, cf, 2b Hayes, lb .2 Byrne, c . . . B. Hanly, p G. Hanley, 2b Cuff, cf . -..: Total . . . Piayer _ I "AB. Walls, 3b .'. .'.`3 A. `Tribble, .g 3 McKenzie, lb` . 2.` ggmngbell, ss . LL`-. (IL Cam bell, ibble, 2 '. W.- . Meredith, p . .. Bryson,..lf . ; . . Hart, cf . . . .`.. 'I!h'ompson,_` `c . . St. ;Mary s' Baracas 1. . .. yalll of Buffalo this community. olng nicely at- s leg reset.-lils eedy recovery. dweH,John and newau amended te John Ewen, July 2% f the Insutute of Mrs. A. Bar- -slx ladies pre- lven to the hos- donauon. Dara. e delegate to go of the Insutute let to represent mnfnh llhvn Tan Baracas . . . . .. 4 1 u u x--_-o- `Sumfnary-#Two-base hits, A. Tri o- : ble, Meredith; `three-base hit, - Camp- bell; stolen bases,-Thompson, Stone; ' struck out, Meredith '7, ~Hanley 7`; ' bases on balls, Han1ey.4;; hit by- gtcher. Meredith (Stone); `left on sea, St. Mary : 2, `Bet-aces 5. 'Tvuno9nn.___.`,l\'II gnu` ri, I588, DU. Mary 5 6, Danica: U0 . Ump'ires--Moatt and _-Kgin. Tari `the Main Issue R. sou)! HURT % jwunnnmacan BENEATH AUTO` Was Riding Bicycle-; Chargei of Negligence Against 7 ' ' S. Walton. i Rupert Boldt, a despatcher employ- I ed, by the C.N.R. at Allandale, is in the Royal Victoria Hospital suffering from injuries received when run down and dragged two hundred and four- teen yards by a car while riding a bicycle on Bradford street late Mon- day night. Stanley Walton, driver of the car, is out on bail after having been `charged in Police Court on Tuesday morning. with criminal neg_- ligence. Walton drove on without `stopping but through the timely ac- tion of Fred Mitchell, night watch-E `man at the tannery, who witnessed the accident. the police were notied and Constable Rayner was ,able to 10- ` cate the culprit within a few hours.` Boldt_ suffered no broken bones, butl --.h.. ...II-. ._-..L...I iuuual n|)nl\%:n"nl` {I'll DUIUD surwteu IIU uruncu uvuca, uuh was badl gashed `and exconated m several p aces. The most serious of `L2- 2...-.-..--_ ' 1...... A--- ann1n WG3 uuut saaucu auu Unvvslsovvu an: several his in'uries is a long, deep scalp woun . It was feared at ,rst.that he had received a fractured skull, but an X-Ray indicated n such injury ` had been suffered. Alt `ough he_ is in no danger, Mr. Boldt will be required to remain in the hospital for several days owing to the extreme severity of the shaking-up and bruising which he experienced. . i nu--- n11u'_.__' .... ........`I........ -4? 51...! APUIICIIUUUQ Thos. 0 Mara',` an employee of the. Brennan Paving Co., who was in the: ! 1 .car with Walton, told the police that: Walton refused to stop when inform- ed by him that they had struck some- thing. 0 Mara was also charged with | .criminal negligence, but the charge' against him had been withdrawn. `He ; will give evidence for the Crown at! the police court hearing on Friday. The police have since learned that a few hours prior to the accident the two men had obtained liquor on a script supplied by a local doctor. ` It is alleged that Walton was under its inuenceu ,.r "`` `I :..A.........J.2..... ..L....a. l\` of` n A n n 1 1 vu, uuuuunum . important 0 the most of- tromng weed: ent cultivation d `is that the g weeds which . after picking Boldt up, went for Dr. mnuence.- gr An interesting story of the occur: rence was given The Examiner by ; About ` Fred Mitchell who saw it. -twenty minutes after eleven I was - ` sitting_in the doorway at the tannery ' and I saw the man go past on his bicycle," began Mr. Mitchell. Im- mediately after him came the car, go- ing at a terric rate. I thought of the man on the bicycle andvwatched to see if anything would happen. The bicycle was keeping close to the right curb and so was the car. Without slackening down the car crashed into the bike at a point just north of the -tannery and dragged the wheel and the man to a point north of Thomas service station. It was two hundred and fourteen yards. I know because I stepped it out afterwards. "After hearing the crash Mitchell yelled to Thomas to phone for the'police, and `Turnbull. `Boldt s clothes were in tatters, he was covered with dirt and blood and he lay unconscious in a `pool of blood. Constable Rayner who shortly ar- rived on the scene did meritorious work in locating Walton. Upon in- vestigation, he found that the bicycle caught beneath the car had left faint marks where it had been dragged over the wet road. The constable careful- ly followed the trail `along Elizabeth to Toronto street. Next the route MANY ATTRACTIVE SUMMER HOMES l LINE THE suomss 01-` BAY AND uucai Count Lally de Tollendal, who fou'g'ht.for the French at.Pondicherr'y over two centuries ago, has long. been dead-, but his name, applied by one of his descendants -to the village which grew up inthe vicinity of Lov- .....r n-......b ..1~.nu+ man, .=+.m lives. For `day it is quiet and pastoral, an ex- - wmcn grew up 1111.118 viuuuuy U1. uuv- ers Creek about 18,30, still lives. For years Tollendal was a thriving com- munity, bustling with activity. To- cellent retreat for the cottagers who . spend the summer there. The village first came` into existence when Geo. .McMullen erected a saw-mill on the shores of the creek in 1830. Capt. Robt. O Brien,la'ter Admiral 0 Brien, soon bought the mill and then sold it to the late Edmund S. Lally, who had come to Canada with his young Scotch bride the previous year. For his home Mr. Lally built a square log house on the shore near the estuary of the creek. This same home, im- proved to meet the requirements of modern taste,'is at present occupied in the summer time by Mrs. -Pugsley. A grist mill was erected beside- the saw-mill in 1835, and to the two mills settlers came. from the surrounding country for their lumber and our. Ten years after the building of` the grist mill, Mr. Lally was appointed `county treasurer and moved to Bar- rie. Alex. 'Sibbald then rented the saw-mill and carried on there until it was later destroyed by re. J as. Priest operated the our mill. for _ some time and later it was taken over by John Galbraith, who succeeded John Chantler. The mill when erect- 1 ed was the rst in the townshi and it was .a huge structure. Its men- ' sions were 60x40 audit was four 7. storeys high. Galbraith. ran the mill unt_il_1'902. ' By that time other mills had seriously interfered with the bus- inessiof, the Tollendal` mill. Hence _-when the dam wpplyinggpower` for `the mill went out in 1902, it was. nev- fer_`~re aired and` business operations V `cent . ,At_erlying.idl,e for ve years I the building` was purchased by Thos. n-n-in-' ufhn `lznv-A it down 1:.....`.. at - `DE nnuomg W88 purcuuauu uy snug. }Ro rs of'Barrie,' who tore it an used the lumber so obtain " to" Vicontfnued` on pae '2) (Continued from. last week) - LL- ..`I._......... BUMPER CROPS ARE REPOR'l'l-ID IN sIMcoEco., UIUIII-ll LU El-lull`! parents. pson of Toronto th Mr. and Mrs. I From all over Simcoe county come glowing reports of the crops and, whether from the north or from the south, the story is the same-crops of all kinds are splendid. Possibly no `retards will be broken, but the yield I of all crops, with the possible excep-E tion of potatoes, will be well above average. Members of the County Couneil who met in Barrie on Tues- day spoke in enthusiastic terms of the prospects and all agreed that this is a golden year for the farmers of this I ;county. I 1 u.....ms4-am in in full swing. Fall. E! C`0unty Co_un`c`il1;ors. Speak in` Enthusiastic Terms of ' Harvest. ' I zcounty. = _ I ' Harvesting is in full swing. Fall, `wheat is all cut and most of it in the | barn, the barley is. pretty well cut and by the end of this week harvest-` ling of the spring crops will be gen- 'eral throughout the county. Some wheat has been threshed but nothing much could be learned of the yield.` Some wheat in Nottawasaga is re- ported to have yielded "fty bushels `to the acre, while the yield in that! township is estimated at between for- ty and fty bushels- West Gwillim- bury reports forty-ve bushels. Fig- ! uresare not available for other town- I ships but they will be much the same. r`Av|mI'1'ni`B}\`D Q'E;`(D hag l smps DUE tney W111 De uluuu one zsausc. l Considerable alsike has been ithreshed in Essa, Vespra, Innisl and E West Gwillimbury: the yield is re- -ported to average between seven and eight bushels to the acre. Hay, clov- er and alfalfa have_been exceptional- 'l.v good throughout the county and al- ` -though the weather was not the best: during the haying season most of the. ' [crop was saved. l Qvlnnlllnln QIIIIQIIQ ornwg R Of [crop was saveu. Sunnidale always grows a lot of I peas and this year the crop is splen- ! did. ' Somepeas have been` cut, the farmers there not having experienced the same difficulty with rain that has affected those farther south, notably; `in Innisl. " ` 9 I TITL21- LL- .33.-.4-u:nL n-ur\I1v-ml` In 1111115111. - While the district around Guthrie` suffered badly through hail three! weeks ago, crops in the rest of Oro` are in splendid shape. Rain has re-I tarded the harvest to some extentbut I no damage has resulted. l'I'IL_.---..1__--L LI... annual-Iv 4-`an mwn;n namasre nas resuucu. Throughout the county the grain! crop is ne. Oats," barley and ryel have rarely been better and this con- dition applies in all sections. Wheat is nossibly a little better in the south. 1:~.;..1:.... :. Hm mm- m~nm+.h um: lnw . is possibly ntue better 1n me so1_11:n. I Earlier in the year growth was slow in corn, owing to lack of hot wegzther, but the needed heat has come withiry the past three weeks` and the corn }}a s grown wonderfully and promises to be on a par with the other crops, 'I"1nn 1-In-vnn nnlrl cnwino `iY'I1.Vl'l'l-`H ! De on a par wltn Lye uouer uruya, The damp cold spring injxzred the notato crop-in several sections and this is the one crop that may not go over the top. In Tay, however. pota- toes are reported to be the biggest ' crop of all. V IVIJYV XTIIIIVIX $:- --u:wv-_j Major Horace Lawson. made a re- `cord fol` the course at the Barrie Golf and Country Club last Saturday, `Aug. 8. While playing with Alex. Galt, he made "the eighteen holes in. 66. The card was:- 1 Par 435,343,343,435,343,343--64 Score.. 445,332,454,445,333,343--66 TL- unnnp\Iv:l\11n unnnvl` 111115 1'\11l IU 1U! kl WUUK . Kendall spnt. md. is spending a. C.G.I.'I`. camp near Midland. all and family endling holidays 9. . Patterson and! spent the holi-