i3 165 I 65' LUV. 165 1!`? 1 75 `TH:-:3?! us? Rssrma -"PLACE? -Lgnuaams up TO THE RAIL-WAYS. .l.l UBllI'UI'. UUUULY GHHUUC. Bmie, August 14h, 1902. First publication in Buuuz ADVANCE August 14th, 1902. 33. 114 Esuuugkokasc .......... .. 37` M93 165 115 " -- .......... .. 42 1276 1&5 The Adjourned Sale will take place on TUESDAY, 1111:. 251'}! DAY or Novnmnzn, at one o'clock p. m. , in the Treaeurer s Uice. 11:) 111 112 113 FOR [109 104 I05 106 107 108 155 101 103 `Nb. KR 5? 32. 'nt\ 76 77 78 79 Oh 61 60 IN BARRIE Lots 670 and 671, plan 96. . . . Park Lots Arnold s plan No. 8 O 1n-...I`Il L El 00 U Au 9 kuuu LII-ll u 5, 1"5'an&11'T . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ Front Sh, Lot No . . . . . . . . . . .. 3 PHELPSTON (FLos). s 1i.}r?1'$.' ixi I I I '.'. '. `RT 66 ll 06 KG. North Back St. plan 122 A N g . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . d 13...: Q. -1-.. RE. '2"o`i`a3` T".`."." """" `if; 15 26 8 28 N 55.E Q . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22 12 28 SVW~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 7 13 20 S 16 E 65 S . . . . . . . . . . . .. 14 14 16 Ws}a.ndN52a.E} . . . . . .. 16 14 152 .A VILLAGE OF BEE'1'ON. West Hendrie St . . . . . . . . . . 119 BRADFORD. I V1 C2 `IV; -V run n . pa . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. No.24,nt...... . . . . . . Broken. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Ordnance . . . . . . . . .. 1 Rev. Dr. Briggs, of the Methodist I Book Room, Toronto, i "not an ; Irishman for nothing. He has the i gift of wit which is one of the char- S - acteristics of his countrymen. An eJi- 2 ample of it, Which he gave at the recent meeting oiconference, `will be i especially" appreciated by his follow 1 publishers, The -Doctor was making his report on the subscription list of E The Christian Guardian, and had to touch upon the sad fact of many sub- scribers being in parrears. r "The paper has hosts of friends-, said the Doct_or. _ (`All over the country .a._ref`. those who boast of being unremitting. } , ,suppo1h_tors .01,` the Gu_a.rdie_m._ But, 4 . -for my` `part ,-*`'I woul n1u'ch;, -preferl s that theygshould be.i~ occasionally.u.re-ti mitting supporters! "-'--Cana.'dia.1; Ma-' L gazing. V .. 4. .. i D , ,. A _. , Al E 'Weo,AuK8u, Nos. 3. 4, 5, 6;77. 8 and 9 . . . . . . . . . Two spam se..1m. 1. 2, 2 1&4 .5, 6,7. 8, 8,1011 & 12 - t.Sj)quc9 St.,NoI. 1, 2.3, 4, ,5, 6,7. 3, 8,10 11 & 12 we-seeds: 8a., Nos. 6, 7. _8, 9, _l0I'nd ll . . . . . . . . . . Eat Cedar St., Nos. 5. 6, 7, 4 ,8; 9;-l'0u'nd ll . . . . . . . . .. West Elm St, Nos. -1.. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 a_nd I1 . . . . . . .. East Elm St., Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5,6.7,8Il1d9..." n - . . on ll-17171.7 WABAGA BEACH. ADVERTISING THEY Usi: BELLE EWART (INNISFIL). "!"|P Ifvruu umwu. .I.uu uuugy -v--- _ lried and` Mr. Devlin struck 00 h in the `ditch, being rendered M` He has carried _0 or-e boned. me my w'" _ __ -_ hi: 3 Demise of-.3 Well-Known Pioneer. 2 '.,_ Another of the ea.r1y.resid'qntI `of 1 .Toronto, or of York rather, has j- joihed the` great majority by the `.dea`t,h_Io_t_ Kenneth McLean Wishart. of 5 West *Fl'.mborjo_. Mr: Wisha;r`t` wasf born in 1820 a.te'1`oronto, being a. son . of ;.Cp.ptai!1f'Alox.' _W1aha,z:t_ Var H.- M. -42nd R'egt;, (CBlac.k Watch)", who held 9, ata mil1te.ry__a.ppointmbnt in York 1: : ico`nnoc tion withothe militia; `When , -a. young man the deceased "left "1'o-- '; .ronto. then no longer ,Y ork, and I n o o o on u o o n o n o o no ; SfINN1j)I>ALE.% ARTHUR CRAIG, VESPRA. ' Treasurer. County Simcoe. 10'7 1l\lI 21 11 T10 . shops ....v... .- wnoan--cow. can-nu Mr. Idarryvde Windt, in one of a`! Working u`wa.v`for' zood` or series of articles in The London E - press, dealing Hey from New Yorkto Paris, says: T116 natural toharms of Dawson Oity have hitherto been Sadly neglected by \vriters,on the Klondike, and yet it is (in summer) one of the prettiest places imaginable. Vriewed from a distance on a still July day, the, `clear. bright-looiiing town and gar- rlen-girt villas dotting the green elds around are less suggestive of the . black Arctic than of Italy or sunny 1: man of marvelous energy, who never Spain, Stroll down through e the Principal streetlat mid-day, and you ; will see ya well-dressed but cosmopoli- tan crowd of `both sexes, some driv. ing and cycling, others" inspecting the A or seated at ower-bedecked 1 `tables in the fashionable French` Restaurant _du Louvm, with its ; White-8-P~I`0VnC'd "garcons and central snowy altar of silver, fruit and hors'- . d oeuvres all complete.` has a, continental lodli. from the glit-' teringv lewellers shops to the ower and fruit stalls, where you may buy roses and _ strawberries (Klondike- grown) for a dollar apiece. Indeed, you can get almostcanything now in Dawson City, by paying, for. it on a. scale regulated .. by the local daily newspaper, which is solvd for a shil- ling--and sometimes more. The prices here dwarf those of Nome City. Even` in the cheap eating houses, where sausages steam in the window, the most modest meal runs away with at ve-dolla.r note.; A Publisher : \Vit. Briggs, Methodist is "not, an Irishman ior nothing." _of acteristics of .countrymen. An er :-, 2 - oi gave the-' ~ meeting of Confernce,j`will especially` appreciated publishers. The Doctor was making ; I I '4 l 5 3 i 3 1 I 1 i i 5 .3 3 i I i E with his overland jour- ' Everything ' with 5 nsvov UUCIJ. evil dur- -vuu Jan Ll-'\l\l, uuu ; navy ing these 36 years.. Knox College has existed since i 1844. It has been now 58 years in } operation, -when I came to it the; professors were Dr. Willis, Dr. ~ Burns, and, I may say. Professor Young, for in three or four years he 1 Cosme back. These eminent persons have all passed away. Dr.- Willis was a ne,acu~te,theolog'ical scholar, a ne Greek scholar. well read in patristic literature, and in the pos't-Reforma- tion literature. Dr. Buras was at knew he was getting old; indeed he never, did get old. Professor Young had qualities as a teacher which, I thinicmy "distinguished friend who has honored, us with his presence to- night,`Professor Watson, would Ven- rlorse what I have said about Prof. Young. He was a, man of marvelous intensityand enthusiasm in all his worlg. After teaching for a second term of .three or four years, of course` he went to the university, where he. continued to teach phi1oso- phy until his lamented death. These are all gone, and three other pro- fossors with whom, I have worked are gone. My young friend, first my student, --after.wa`rds my colleague, Prof. Thompson, an admirable man-,., after a few years of the teaching i with poor health,_passed away. Dr. l Ingles, after one year, lerlt us,`tal-ting a. pastorate in Brooklyn, and long; ago passed into-the better land, and f last year--this is a recent, sorrow--; we lost our young friend, Professor 7 Douglas. You umierstand, therefore, s that `while I look, back with pleasure, f with a measure of _satisfa.ction, al- though of humility, to my copneo-T tion` with the co11eg.8.,i`tis tinged sadness when I think offchese -admirable -men, two _o! them fathers who` received me as their son and treated ,me. with great, kindness," the others _be1qved colleagues also. , : 17...... ' n..;l1.~...... 1--.! ..._-...I...-4....I -Ina `v 1oT I0 10 19 10 E6 16' 16 16 12 14 nn 16 16 16 16 $55 20 135 T35 Z6 r tively few ; those who are country-bred. " ---j 5`; xS.2v- `tort " . V of Canada by Canadians. A , In the Canadian Magazine for Oc- \; tober Mr. A, H. U. Uolquhoun has ' an article on winter -reading. in which Va literature `of_ her own, and that our reading public should not neglect it-- not that people should read the" books because they are :produced here, but because they. may be useful `to us. Mr. Colquhoun thinks it , quiteas absurd to uiidex-rate as T to overrate the native literature, and he mentions a number of works in his- ~`toI_`Y. biography, `autobiography, and ction that a Canadian ought to read. If one cannot indulge in the splen-did treat of reading Parkman, he can at `least read Prof. Pelham Edgar's 'I`he Romance of Canadian History, made up of selections from Parkman, and -it may be added that he who reads selected chapters from the writings of that fascinating his- torian will thirst for more. There are sever.al'books, among those mention- ed by Mr. Colquhoun, that are prob- ably not read by Canadians general- ly, and the fact cannot be considered other than a. regrettable-one. _It may be that the bio raphies of our pwblic men are politica , or even partizan, and yet if these works were widely read it cannot be doubted that they would spread a_ -useful knowledge of the country's affairs. To what ex- tent are `the biographies of Sir John ; Macdonald -and Alexander Mackenzie read by the young. men of this coun- try? In the city they find compara- readers, but_ out in the country, where no book is wasted, these `books have had some circula- tion. The city youth acquires much` of his acquaintance with public" af- fairs and political history through ~ the medium of tradition, very often grotesque and unreliable, and so it 1 follows that our literature, politics and everything pertaining to us as a people is taken . more seriously by View- ing thy. past with more seriousness, they approach the future with stauncher intention; and often_ accom- plish larger results. In the cities es- pecially. there should be a wider reading of : he, reminds us "that `Canada has"~`qu,ite '-`I Canadian history and. biography, e en though similar works ~, dealing with other nations and times mustbe left unread. . I 90 70 EA 12 1% Z5 10 1% 14 inn UIIV 21 33 20 66 10 69 `~.w.vvU6v.V. `, \ - V .4;e::,,'1?.lnis; nompubg. explain; w .aauq;_:, gicre in .ju'xtapofl-d j ;"l)`i_1na'f'l_._ =;| eatest. tine. .u-y,g -It" xplging tngt,:%so1itugy' 7q1r`a\'e' in tho wtieat h1d.~T$`he Ia)`: .mer s wife is .rest1ng- there. perhaps, at her_owureques't, The `poor-, soul _ was refreshed by the passing trains when she` was alive. _'3Bhey brought s_ug'gcSti0.l1s of pepplo pleas-= ung in gay cities; of'bea.uAtitul 1 buildings` and happy-`faces: of glganql` * pictures an.lA ga;l1'c~.nt.n;usic; to! 33.11` {that variety of interest. which `her monotonous, work-a-ft1g1_v.. existence` failed to `touch. So :the fanrmor .s' wife~sleeps`her long sleep under the oak tree in the wheatield. And may- be her dreams are sweetened by the 3 shriek or the engine whistle and the 1 rush and mar 61` the vestibuled train. [1 , I l `28 8 90 4 O3 4 8. 5 46 8 90 8 90 4 81 IS 43 4 43 3 72 3 63 7 32 14 12 12 71 23 :v--' at -:4; 932 598 891 nnn 33 5 36 1 78 138 j activity. ` ~- \ ' 7l`I.:.. _. .I_-u.I_L ---..|_-:_._ ...|.-. n-.i9_ -. .. ...... .......-.. ..,5..-. Why, -do the _L7;1'aveyar'ds snuggle up to the railroads? Nothing could be more incongruolzs. The peace, the stillxiess, the pervading solemnity of the one; the clamor, the strenuous-= ness, the fervicl hurry of the other. I The railroads are not responsible, b60.Sl1c they would hardly cure to re- `ml.n'd the passengers of the chances of sudden death to people who fare for- ward atgfty miles an hour. It isn't good business for them to have pas- sengers clutching nervously at their accident insurance. policies, taking. gthem out once inla, while to ndou.-t, exactly how much they will be ahead `by dying._ The railroads are cutting "down grades, straightening curves, `double-tracking; doing everything, in b `feet, to in_crease speed and annih_ila.te; d-istance . It hardly prots them to `plant A a, remin-;?er by the waysi' lo} . fthat we an all hurrying onfltp. lg ' *`sphere- where time and space ;e'1 1ni}. fob!` nothing. They have no immled-j Jito interest in that 'b_ourne_ whenqel 1116- '-traveler ` ever returns, -else`-' t_hey_ -; `would never sell any return tickets, It": not the railways, then, that seek .'1.ho._ cemeteries. . but the _ cemeteries _ the railroads. j "The . .1.people don't, care, but the. lis{ing;giVo.._.l, dead`. people : `oy`es"= have` fairer`-'.Worlds."a.nd their mind; 'a',!`o;` <..ur-ted - withgsqmc V knpwledge which "th5;v` l " Y : I 1 #1 ih8,M `no; ..f`;:l:1.eLl.>m-:;,.' ,||.P.,71"iI.` Joind *h0;i8'3.';'5 6`m>'I'W;h_VmV.`tbey ' J "1~;'aie1,:;.; _*..,`;3.; Fh91ej&P#i@ ` I 39 39 `I65 165 Dawson hi Summer Time. `If u __ 63 65 pp woman nAb_nNe. I nu-nu. vu, .1. u.ua._ua:a..ul, u"Cl 1' ~:ious proceeding for this eveningmand not very profit.ahle`or. instructive. the Chairman has stated that I be- ,:anAmy ministry in the little Town of St. Mary's. I did so exactly" `50 y<"a.t`s- ago, and was received by a wind people in a very` new part or the country and at a time when things were not advanced as they as. at the present day. lodged in the wilderness. _ which I had to travel around about it were very often blazed roads. had two congregations, six miles apart, and the greater part of the way was through the woods. The young generation here do not know `what a blazed road is,and I need not take the time to explain it. The people were very kind to. me, and it is most interesting to me to think now of the appearance which my congregation presented when they were dismissed on the Lord's Day. In five minutes the woods hand swal- lowed them up, and I saw nothing more of them until the next Sab- i`a,th. AlL;.- _L ,L ;I.,.,_;_, St. Mary : was { The roads 1 I 7 Ill? lII,\!l4I.C \4IDDC LIL JLLIUL \J\J1lC5W' Not only so, but the college has ha.~d.t-he satisfaction of being -on the `best, `of terms with all the other the- i ologig;a_.l_ schools in, the church, ' and, * further` than tha.t, our intorcourse with the theological schools of other .- iionomfnationa .'in-, 1`o_ront'o has been most kindly. "It gives, me grout plea.- si1re_,. to :99 arountl zrle -to-night emi- nentf`. gentlemen trepresentlng -these colleges. ,i1.1enA whom `I .'grea.tly hateem, _my,f_r';end";-,1?rinci'D!i.l _Shera`ton~" ind !ce:u`_oC;lI_an9l1Qr. gill Vi(;9I}1;- ma ' ,_you.wi1l pardon "the use of the word, IJULJVAQI uvA\.vv\D \v\"lVGI6\A\oo G:llD\Io Knox College had graduated 146 i candidates to tho ministry before I ; had anythin to `do with it. Since` that time, t at is since` 1866, it has graduated 583. The whole number of its graduates is 729. If- there is 3 anything that I am `proud of, and it is jtha;tf`I have great pleasure wher- 3 over .;I go` all over the `Province in? meeting ministers---I call them yougjg ministers, although some of thom are ` not` 'young,;now-who have -been with me in,-the classes of Knox College tunic)`-'n:\ Lu` -`L- n:nI1hsnu-4: `n.-`an 2 I I -. `ivjc 1 Aftor seq-ving apbpu-t fourteen yeo)r_s. l. was asked to come to Toronto on the resignation of a. Very dsistln-guish-_ ; `ed man whose work I was `afraid to touch ,that of the late Professor 3 Young. Ile_had taught for ton ; years in Knox College, touching i phy, and, I think," some othr Vexcellent work, which had been both the Testament, the whole scope i of New Testament work and philoIo- du- rartments as well. _ He rcsignod in 1865 `in order to take chug: of t high schools. He was a, high schoo inspector, and, as some of the gent- lemen here present know, did vary of permanent value to the Province. in that capacity. T ...-u... L...` --.. ..n.u.- _ -----..._ ._-__ . g-uuw \.vurru.\.ouJ . I came here as quite a. young per- son. `I am not going to tell you my % age exactly. but I was quite young at the time, and .1 did what I could; I , know. in "the most imperfect why. ` 'l`h_at was in 1866, and 1 have been! Working (way ` for' ; - ~ I [(11-\Ir nAA.rA Ig_-n 4`-`.115-A3. 1:3-anon I .-u-.-v.., V uvvau gu ' llalyo _ V-1' C0Ul`Se,_Ml'. Chairman and gent- lemen, you do not expect me to re- \ieW_ my life to-night` or to attempt anything like an gutobiography. That `would, be`, I am afraid, aye:-y ` g- Hinnc nrnt-and-inn inn 4-Lin .nun.:...... .._.1 `guy an cuu ua guublal I , ' Well " replied the obscure philoso4 phor, you see, the dead can't hurt me. It s the living I mistrust. 111 could "manage. them as easily as I do `my dead people I wouldn't be work- ing! out here for fty dollars a. month and free house; Still, I have an uncanny fouling. sometimes. The ticker port of a murder trial comes over it. I listen, of c_;>urse. It's better than as novel, because it : real people and real life you lfnow. And the jurry brings in its verdict--`-guilty. And the j_u'dge puts on the black cap. `May God have mercy on your soul. 'l`ha.t. s t.hi1'ty--the end of the story, a,n_i the reporter s work is done. But (313-3.12 message sets me thinlsjng of my is great company, `but. some- ' . times in the mid-dle.of night the re- 4 f,~.`}'e1;I_d$ 'u__1 the back yard. Where have - strung up, come to Visit my Charge-?' win he go round shaking hzindswith 1 I their goals gone? Did they need - "mercy? :31. t-heyoget it"? Will that condemned murderer. when` he's " all the people who have gone be- ,. fore, like a. Methoclis.t parson at a tea meeting? There : about four trains a day, including freights, come through here, but the hardest one to .~ handle is the tmin of thought that sidctracks here after twelve o'clock gt a, wild winter night. ` II`).-.. .1- +1. nm..unn.'....a.. .-._.._...1.. ! ! I t.u.:..u up uni won; 01 tne Iatners. ; It .wa.s (with teelings. or especial `than!-zfulness for the sparing of Prin- cipazl Caven as an active and `domin- =h'm; `his `friends celebrate-(1 the 50th zmniversay of the` ozdination of - rincirral Caven by, a banquet in his `honor at Knox College the othr .m".;ll`... ..n reply to the toast of his hbalfh, he said in pa.r_t: ` .' . P l\1\I'|I\n\:\ 1| .. 111__:_.... ,, , `.1 JHA uzsforce in the probity of the church: I.nmo.-.#.n::3u!n- ma!!!-5%-:Fil*r . [9 1 Athoilg `whee as? nets of rrebycengn |c9n.fderation. that... p,act._. I91 1,875. . which . ga\'e such s`te1`i'gth aiid vitI.`_l- .ity to Presibytedanism in Canada"..- i,cnabl_ing` it _._to go fov'.Wa.1~d. ecourag80,Il8- I ily to its` `.work in the welt, r }. rinc'ipal Caven stands supreme._. He *was Moderator _ot` the General A!- hsenxbly ` in that historic year, He has seen most. of the leaders of the church, of those days `full in the path `of duty. Within the past few months `aluxost the death `of such? men as (:1-:.mt and Robertson has emphasized the fact that a. new generation must takto up the York of the fathers. 1+ - A-- u-.... .:4I. J_-1:_-_- -h_--- I g .-mm...";.:.o;.;;;.1.;'.;;1n;;'i~,...." ~ 5.600 nah at one haul and are com- pulled `to throw thouaa.n_ds_ back for wont of seine` room.` Cannoriu no running at. breakneck esoed.` Labor Rlver, 13.0.. . sometimes =ca.tch over`. {A irnmno -Anna` -cat. queuing`, A1`: '._... ` Young sows Qhmxidinot in brea nu; of good size, nine `to twelvg, months: old. They will give you] E Huj._g'.g`1A1`gjg2V,'..:_;)_igs V- I vnnaoaumng UItv- Ila IJUIIIDIAUVID ll}'VU\II J-JIIIIKII .15 very scarce and srna.l1_girlI un- ployed as helpers o.ro__Ama'.k1n `throo do_i1'.rs a. day, Working the Yotufg Horses. Many find themselves short of horse power and work young horses to hard. A young horse is `usually a.- Will- ing cne. He has not learned how to save himself and will under the ex- ma.tedo more than he is really `able to 'do without injury to himself. Go easy with the youngsters. A little too much work or too big an effort may permanently injure 9, three-yeah old. and a. four-year-old is usually no better tted for hand work be- cause of the changes in his mouth. It doesn't pay to take any chances of ruining a. promising horse for the sake of a little extra work,,--Na.tion- citement and urging necessary tor his I a_l Sgtockman. - _ .. ` The Skin: of F9118, The skins of 1-uit `or an kinds should? never be oa.ten.. but before removing the skin the fruit should be carefully washed, `to avoid the trans- ference of bacteria from skin to pulp. Experiments have shown that 3, st(;-` mach whose contents contained' no ` microbes alter a, breakfast of steriliz- ; ed food, ending with grapes of which the skins were eaten, contained 500,- 000 ,micrfobes` to.ea`<-h uid ounce. These microbesecause .the fruit to de- cay before -`it can be digested.--`Fa-rm nd ,R_a.n:.h.* Ibo V vv Ia They don't bother me, went on my friend the telegraph operator. in the winter the snow covers `em all up. It drifts and drifts. until you can t tell where the snow ends and . the tombstones ' begin. In, summer ' it's the busiest, greenest, h,ea.rt,somest ;p1a.oe in a hundred miles. Au the ; 91051.2 VJ `crickets and grasshoppers and chirp- ' in; things seem to favor this spot, and the bees like the owers that I `giant to ple'ase the quiet people un- ;der the sod. A good brisk grave- Igard on a summer day, with the ' ' irds singing and the owers bloom- inggis a. mighty sight bettervthan a` sunbaked rock or a, beetling. hill sav- age with scrub. and that's what many 3, stationmaster has to put up 5 with in these parts. ,. "An:-I v v A . . n A u . .... ,._-I -....-___n 11,__1,, - 1 Here are a few facts about London A child is born every three minutes, and adeath is registered every five minutes. The city contains over 700 railway stations, .nearly 800 miles. {of railway line and eleven railway ibridges span the Thames. Daily a ` million persons travel on the under- ground railways, and 2,500,000 in 5,000 omnibuses, 7,000 hansoms, 14.,- OOO cabs and 7,000 tram cars. `The total population is between 6,000,- 000 and 7.000,000. Four thousand postmen "deliver 10,000,000 letters weekly, Walking a distance equal`'. to. twice` the circumference of the globe. Sixty thousand letters are written a. day, consuming thirty gallons of ink. . ' , _ _...-v.. -_.ww-v a1vIl||I!lla 33 52 Ell at the hour ofone 'o clock in the afternoon. at the Court House, in the Town of Barrie, proceed to sell by Public Auction so much of the said lands` as may be auicient to discharge the taxes and all lawful charges incurred in and about the sale and collection of the same. mI.- n-n__._:_._ 1-.- -__ _-.., ,.,-n . . - ,.I, _.--2-- VIIIIUVUIUX-I VI uuv Blllo The following lots are patented` (except .where.ol;herviee etated) : ~ FLOS l`--1.- I. 37 38 39 40 41 42 COUNTY` OF SIMGOE,' By` virtue of in wsrrent lissued_bY ; - 10 Wn, , T the Warden of. the Countv of Sun- . V ' -- coe, hearing date )t,he..F_ifth dsy.of August. in the year of our rd Nineteen Hundred and Two, and to me directed. commanding me to levy upon the several lends mentioned and described, `being in the County of Simcoe, for ur- renrs respectively due thereon, together with my'do sts, I hereby give notice pursuant to the Assessment Act and Amendments thereto, that unless the said arrears and costs be sooner plaid, I shall on = - J Tuesday, l8lh daymof member, I 902 IIV 31 (III : '6r%smcoz 'l'reAasurer s Sale 011-nds voawpa-a \I 9106- UIIU LG: " ` nch is '37-3 sp-;stgis1entf `Mg gsglge, ` ` ,. 4` 10 ll 12 `13 14 I5 16 17 18 19 lo.v , Description.. I W of E 1} . . . . . . 2E9} . . . . . . . N 3 WeaI:60N 3!: Saigon CntcI; 1p'to Wont." an Low: VIU UV-, LIV; '20 - o - u n o Concession line part W 1}. . N Lavincouru St., No. 119 pt A N Lavincourt 85., N o. 224.. N Lavincours Sm, N o. 107.. N Lavincourt Sm. No. 132 . Con line No. 38 pt . . . . . . . N Mary Sb.. plan 406 No. 5 O pars W Q . . . . . . . . . . . . anus I-ll uvllnvwuvu AVG L1 Ul. 4and5 North - Homewood Ave. Nos. 1! '7.._A0...`l'B1 an un nu a.J.vuIvvI UV DJ E. 1.` UI 6,7and8pti} . . . . . .1 S part Broken . . . . . . . . . . . N Harvie S*.., No. 43 . I`.nnnnnnh-nu `:'un -nuns I17 `I E 5 . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . North Homewood Ave N 0:. A......IK `"1 -I19 nu vuunv ]"d.l M3. "And you never feel creepy? You're" not afraid of ghosts? "mn `o.uv\].'-..I .LL.. _L_.,,._. c on Dnul-jug Facts About Londoil. ii 3 `L7I.i I.'. ..' I I Broken . . . . . . . Iloiito _Bx-cod low; 11% Eon ORILLIA N onmmm (Drv1s1or}). A-r-ac. SOUTHERN DIVISION. 2 -3 A --- `T..- NOTTA WASAGA. vrgnau 1 vluu. . V It was something like that Lucret- tua reasoned some nineteen hundred IJAAIIII an.-. 1......-. t] `In 11 .-__ rn_.._..;. MATCHEDASH- Lot. Con. Acres. '7 1 RA I-00 Pete: Devlin, an old and respected `resident of_?M`a;e_ teggeehip,_: wee moi-e dently killadnon .-.Thnredey lest. He w_;.a:..;;i)Vt`:4(:li'st zfib\ 1`tinge for I eds he VA ` 5Scott's Bookstore, Barrie IOFTENTHECHEAPEST ALWAYS THE BEST ALL SCHOOL SUPPLIES AT THE LOWEST PRICE MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION THE OLD RELIABLE V SCOTT-s BOOKSTORE v-on Ivuprvcovu uauusv Iu.uL'bU\7u uuuuxcu years ago, says 11. F. G. in Toronto Star. The great Roman philosoplier and poet confessed that nothing was more delectable than a shipwreck sen from the shore, because it made- the beholder congratulate himself oh his own safety. `WDI...-uv A....N. I._4I.-.. ._.- H __-_-L Iffcali '3 6 72' 2 86 18 61 KICV 10 68 E 11) 15 13 2 01 297 &&\J 15 81 nn- A16 03 310 830 14 79` 12 69 12 68 XIIX IV! 1029 3 11 3 11 3 11 14 63 432 C j V 00! \II `D 2 I-I\3ICI?- l get .'t.he"hap:p`ler it seems to, be.- At one atom of pla.ce--no'i need to mention` the name here--it is in `the bleak, wind-bitten north country _-`-the graveyard, a._ icrpwded one - at `t-hat, is in the ba_1cl;,ve;rd of the star tion-house. It is all the society the" ' tale3're.ph operator has, and imagin- ation shiver"! at his thoughts on some wild, ` eld-ritch midnight when ` `the sky is 3, mirk of snow` and dark. and the un'ch.ic`n'ed wind screams _a,t his casement and makes dirges in the telegraph wires. Still, better that company than none, and what does it. matter, so long as a man. has a. roarln tire and a. bright lamp? I talk to that particular operator, end asked him how he `liked the gortally quiet set he was moving in. .0 was note. melancholy man,` but he was sentimental. He said. he didn't care, because the dead people- only made `him feel that much cos-* let. "I get a. real pleasure out of it, he volunteered. "When I think o1 them lying out there still and cold. I thank God I'm alive and in 3, wdrm room." V A 74.. ..____ _,___.4L_-_. 1-!` '.. . v` .L`Z\I 57' 218 I (`I1 IIIIIJ 7 71' '29,! II`!!! 305 I\l\E 5'15 7 37 305 CIA! CoIts& . Fees. ` $165 IRK fhllougihor} opomor. nun lntoratlngly q ` Anon; .g,., Ac:-on nail _rho;:- Silent xnnntiift-1`: ~ natI-A. Grnotomo ' `subject '1`:-outed In E 3 Most. Entertaining luhner. A Q .Ha.ve you ever n.oticed--you`Im,ustt have if yo}: look through 3, car Vwin-:2 \do'w--how /the buhying grounds, s"eek' V 'thefcompa.nionship of the railrohds! Travel north.) south, east or west.` through this broad Dominion and you cannot escape these silent ad- monvishments.' In every hamlet, town,_ and` city, the railroad skirts the ccm- story. The White church with the I steeple, the swelling mounds, `the Ipectral tombstones. are inevitable} lectures in the railz'~o-ad landsgzape. and the nearer the railroad aoeme-" `anti Anus. nuul. .1... L,....`:.... : . .. _ ,