rcau l._u.c suuuu... _____ __ __ ` come in behalf of the congregation: r Rev. Wm. Morris, \ Pastor of `St. Andrew's Church, : Orangeville, Ont. ` "Dear Pastor,---It is with great 1 pleasure that we have assembled iiere this evening to bid you welcome as pastor. For reasons known to you . this welcome has been delayed, but I probably the welcome is, on that ac- count, all the more cordial,`as a bet- 'ter opportunity has been given us to know .a_nd recognize your devotion and your worth as a servant of the Master and a pastor of His people. i Your preaching, of the .VVord-.-so plain, so simple, so practical, and i yet so searching and so soul-satisfy- ,* ing; your genial, kindly, earnest, `manly way among your people; your - deep sympathy for those in sickness- : and sorrow; and your broad, liberal 5 Christian sympathies have already . endeared you not only to your own :| people, but also to the- citizens of the onurn '(YDl`IP1`2r|\f, ' CU LC uuu. an-Iv ..v -.--. -,- , , 1 town ` generally. . We hope you. will ndgin the peo~ ple of St. Andrew's congregation that spirit of helpfulness that is ever. needed to strengthen the arm, quicken i the thought and encourage the heart -of the minister, in the discharge of his duty. You will no doubt find in us many failings and `shortcomings. , `You will soon find that we are nei ~ ther too bright nor good for human ` nature s daily food, and yet` we trust` thatyou will not regret having cast in, your lot among us. _ -welcome, and to assure them that they will find a warm place in the ialfectionsof their people and many an` .i`iig'le `blinkin bounily, for (them in the homes of the_ congregation- -May the Lord spare _-you many daStS"'_to`. do his work in this place and `may you be a.-bundantly- prospered, in your labors. ~ g ~ l s_ . Morris replied briey and_ in 3 .appropri,ate`- terms; V The gathering. `which. was . large: numerically l and e~`it}1ofrotfghhI`y.' representative of the ,,.`I '-congregation, ._w_as; then.` brought to - -1... lnrw simnmz the long emetre. "A-J PAST-'OR S WELCOME. . VV 39 `B. a. close by singing doxology- . * Only the o/ther day, Mr. T. "G. Hammond, the famous young Stock Exchange walked, created a. e great -sensation by beating alll records for a. twenty-four-hours _wa1~k.V On the Stad-iu't.n cougse, Lond_on, he covere ' ' ds 1n"tWeuty,-tour 13; : m}1r=f8 58o`_.yar that Mr. Eriherofbf a .;x f'e'in_rk-_ WW7-KEKING RACES. is briey and, in terms. gathering. . large V numerically and representative the _was. then brought _ nging the long `metre. 1: 5 uuun was: congre5.ti51;-: iabie performanceifn aitearn walk to - Brighton. His time was 8 -hours 26 minutes 57 seconds.` The best pre- .vious was that of :Butler, the `Poly- technic crack, who did the journey in 8 "hours 43 minutes 16 seconds. One of the best road -walks stands to the credit of J. H-ibberd, the twen- ty-six-hour walking champion of London; On `September 12, 1899, he started from Shoreditch to tramp to Yarmouth, a triing distance of 124% miles. He arrived at I o clock next day, having covered the distance in 27 hours 45 minutes and 59 seconds:` _ ,,1__LI- _..I..a. l\: 4-I-en >f\Q|I-;(\|lQj"_ Pele .`week and nervous . ` 9 . people need e toniethet 2 will build them up and make them well end. . I `strong. Celery King in the tonic` that willo . these` things. Large _ - package 25 cents. at deal`-` ` as _ era for by_ mail. s. c. wens 8: Co.. Terenee. - A remarkable point of the perform- anpe is that Hibberd, at the_ time of tlus big "walk, was 50 years of age. 'I'-_..__ C....ZLL 4-La true. '4'] uuuxa 43 .|u.u:uuwu an-.. 9, - V . . . . _ _-` this blg `walk, 50 years or age. There was Jamesrsmith,` the Ips- wich sweep. On `February 5, `I866, `Smith, who was then about 55, left Ipswich for London. He walked to London and back, a distance of 140 miles, in 33 hours 40 minutes. A marvelous performance, for Smith had no cyclists or motor-car to ac- company and fed him and tend him. :1, 1, 1--_.- -1 `I... ...L..A \.\Jl.JAlJu.AnJ sIoon\- -v- --____ _._-_ Anather elderly hero of the read was Mr. J. Nugent, a vegetarian, who walked eighty miles along hilly roads, in 24% hours, without once pausing to rest. r L_`-_ _......L ..-.a-...-.n.-Aim-xv-11 }_Ja.u:uu5 Lu 1. Unau- One of the most extraordinary `road races ever seen in England was contested on the Brighton road twenty-six years ago. 1t arose out of a club discussion as to whether a. man could walk fty miles without boots on a hard road. A 1 I I1 ,,, .1 - ..Z.....A UUULD U11 a. uunu svuu Sir Roger Caldwell and a friend took up -tne challenge. They walked in top-hats, frock coats and feet cov- ered only with woollen stockings. Before Caterdam was reached the friend gave up. Sir Roger stuck gallantly to his task, but four miles from Brighton fatigue overcame him, and the gallant pedestrian col- lapsed and fainted. L___r_-...,1 .....II. .491, 9 layacu. auu ....... u. _ Another barefooted walk, with a ` `more successful issue, took place only four years ago. Mr. Andrew E Billington, aged 27, engaged to walk E barefoot from the Royal Exchange. ` round Hyde Park, and back, without T a stop, in less than three hours. He started at 7 o'clock, and de- spite the fact that he got a tintack: in his left heel on the way ,.was back by 8.35. `He hadn t even a blister. In the same year-I9o4--Mr. C. W. Hart, of Southend, accomplished a.` remarkable feat by running all the way from .his Southend home to - Glasgow and back. The distance is - fully 1,200 miles, and Mr. Hart did it in fteen days. His best run was ; 309 miles. __....:._..A -11- Rlnnrnnf ` JU9 Luuca. We ,-have mentioned .'Mr. Nugent. the vegetarian pilgrim. Mr. G. H. ` Allen, of Leicester, is another athlete who has den}onstrated,w_hat can be done on a dtet from whxch meat IS` rigidly excluded. ~~*A---L4-- 1I\l'\ I MP I rlgluny CA|..|uu\u. In September,_ 1902, Mr. A Allen strolled from I_.e1cester to London, a dxstance of nmety-seven and three- . . 1 quarter mxles, m 20 hours and 22` minutes 25 seconds. During the whole 0 fthis long and trying ord- eal he took no refeshment other than wheatmeal biscuits and`water. Not even a glass of milk or an egg passed his lips. l_.__-_1- .... n #1415: Mansion r - - - - - - -v . He ` strode up House almost as istarted.---New Yo: d that ementl E? 353% Ice uni 31.'h`ia . woman says iqdla E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound ` cu_r_ed her. lmd her letter. ` "' `IN _..A.. .c 6,); As-H`|1n1-win cure Urn .I.\rI3i&IL ll\._A Avv V Mrs. J. A. Laliberte, of 34 Ikltgillerie ` St., Quebec, Writes to Mrs. Pinkham: ' '4 ~3- ----A T `IOWA ADE VV Lluvuu DI, Vcguuucu, For six years I have weakness, heart and nerves, trouble, but in Lydia table C0mPund IN ; for female ` liver and kidney E. Pi_nkham s Vege Vv .-no been cicietor-ing found a. cure. red with the uiuu B V Usvvbvov v.._r. _. -n!:c1's_ fan suck woman. -4. _--.... -r...z:.. is pink`, 'rHI3 TU!` SIVII -vw---_--- For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham s Vegeta le Com und, made from roots and herbs, as been the standard remedy for female ills and has positively curedthousands o ubled with ing-downieeling", atuleney, t1on,dizzinesso 1-nervouvis > :1. un... `4IniI"I>. vnu tn it`? IVVII 13 Any.`- rode to the Mansion` lmost fresh as when he -\Iew York Telegraph. You Thin COUNTY VOFSIMCOE. % fIreasurer s Sale of Lands COUN'.[`Y SIMCCJE, A By virtue of 8 warrant i|sned..bv; the Warden of tho.` V V County. of Simcoe, bear-inc dame the 2lst,day of August, T0` W1 ! : ,. in the venrof our Lord Nineteen Hundred and Eight, sud . A. V to me directed, commending me to levy upon the several lands mentioned and described, being in the-' County of Simcoe, for arrears respectively due thereon, together with my costs, I herebv give notice pursuant to the Assessment Act sndemendmente thereto, that unless: the said errors and costs be sooner pad, I `shall. on A Tuesday, I 31 Bay of llecemher, I908 J -_- .I.I..!. :. .1... ..........-.m .4: Hm f`.nm~6. Hanan. in the Town Of Barrie.` uww _-..J _, I ` I at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon, at the Court Home. in the Town Barrie,` proceed toeellv by Public Auction so much of the and lands as may be sufficient to die- uherge the taxes and all lawful charges incurred in and ab mt the sale and collection oi the ume`. V -- V vlI'l_ _ l-II__..:_.. `I-.- --.. 1-unborn!-at` lnvnnnf. wlmra nthm-wise stated) 2 No. . .1`741m. ................. ..,..-...24 4 5 2 Pa N`; (the .1. Fraser Estate) as dose * M cribed in registered plan No. 38297 17 9 12 ' TOWNSHIP OF MEDONTE. 3 W2-.lof_ .......... ..... ...... ..e2& `~ _ - j 63 1 24 4 E 29 of W 53 W.P.R..'... ......... ..e2 & . % 63 1 29 %5% W 24 of w 53 W.P.R ............. ..s~2 & ' 63 I 24 [0 i ll 12 13' I4 15 16 17. 18 '19 av 2| 1|.-\ 5.6 31 39 40 41 42 43 46 I 47 43 49 50 51 "52 53 `The foliowing lots are pate nted_(except where otherwise stated) : 54 55 Pt` 33"} `ED vs D U. e not men! ollow- James St. Block . . . Georce St. Block .. Div` :22 . . . . . . . . . -.,. 3; S20W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . )` 67 N38ac.S5CofW . . . . . . . .. The Adjourned Sale will take 1 atlswo o'clock p.m.. in the Count H NE1..;........ ITLI no-unnrnnt` A via rd 1:. 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. N Homewood Ave ,n1'a.n 428 Nos 3 8L 4 P5 spuv; ..... .... ........... N Mary St. plan 406, L0. 10 pt . .. -N Mary St., E 2-.100 No. l_89 pt . . . . . Ti`.-p nll [inn QR nlnn DC ` Barrie, August 27th, 1908. . First publiomon in THE -BARRII '1.` Jl.|lIl'V DI:-9 19 ',1VV 4-`V "."" I" "" Ens C311. Line 38, plnn 392 pt . . . nwnun. 1`I'u`I3I'D I E14;-S; W1 ..... "E Ce-v.;ar St., N721 Wlm su., No.`?;'. 5: lo` 1 : E Elm St., No. W 1%-illow St., N4: Broken . . . . . . .. E ION . Broken . . . . . . . .. 1? 1 '7 Dvug . . . . .. E pt Broken . .'. `OoQQQQQiOoooooo< av; VII` van 0 othgg W.12No.l9pc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. W1;ac.No;20pt . . . . . . . . . . . . .. rr.r\\'l11TL1Il 1"[ Leas2ac.Nnt.S E-V9N'&S% Np_g,S%,.E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. E3 ................................ .. .vrnm1u'.Q111 P 4 P I o." 1: u nn TIT Description. Work Guaranteed satisfactory -4 +1-NA ARREARS 1-`on TAXES. have t he newest type and the latest presses, 7,and ourprices are Right. ` / T1`, O o c I o o u o Q Q o g o s - no . . . . 9 36 1 TOWNSHIP OF NOTTAWASAGA. TOWKSHIP OF SOUTH ORILLIA. ll 3 50 1 TOWNSHIP or INNISFIL. .... -u . g IL 008 TOW s's1'13' -0-F" UNbIDAL1;. 16 '5 lob .............. .. 14 4 86 ............... .. 28 3 25 TOWNSHIP OF TOSSORONTIO. 3 13 2 9 15 2 5 16 1 WASHAGA BEACH LOTS . ,360`......Pc 10 0` non. C` `I cant `I u-nu C` coon. - `I than it o o o u I 3| (6 Cl 60 66 If It SC 06 06 It II CD It In to CC (I It It 66 (6 16 1 10 16 T 10 I6 1 10 16 E 10 16 1 10 I6 1 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 I0 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 I0 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 10 16 ~;i;l-ag ot sudbum. IVVLVQLILL `J1. a.\avuv;-v--- V ;,NS 19 6 43 219 350 569 ............. ..19 6 2 5 45 350 895 ............. ..23 6 100 356 350 706 TOWNSHIP OF VESPRA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10 9 70 10 25 2 00 12 25 . . . . . . . . . . .. 7 13` 20 656 200 856 . 19 14 38 995 200 1195 take__;1|ace on TUESDAY, THE 15:11 DAY OF` DECEMBER, ....... ..1o 12 1: 1-16 1-1( 116 1-16. 1-l( 1-11 1-14 1-14 1-1: 1-1 1-1 1-1 . 5 . i . g 1 5 TOWNSHIP OF TINY. 4 1] n ] Printing Isnnoocsw n l l l l l `| I000 ] ` 'IIOa 1 ..... Coat .... .... IQII `Ill .... .... coon .. . .... u... .... IICI ...o C000 ADVANCE, Barrie, August 27th. 1908. place '. iouse. DANIEL QUINLAN, ' Con. `Acres Arrears Qosts 8; Tots lees 0 13 14;. 200 Ann uvu 100 4 2400 ll 10 13 10 (7 v Treasurer, County of Simcoe. Lat 35-47 530 200 73 .849 2oo 1049 7 35 13 57 10 15 8 O0 3 39 `8 79 le. . she a. lawn: Barri Large- n Clap. uishena 223 ll 29 6 94 6 45. 15 04 I7 90 17 12 in. Leads 71 05 17 05 4 96 11 11 16 45 1o 6 58 26 .`\t\ E3 25 OR sv 27 26. 26 26 26 26 2 '3 31 3| 04 27 37 Ali 26 .26. (ll! 63% 05 05' 05 04 350- 350 350 300 Uvv 300 l`\l\l\ to and meet; 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 bl-U 225 225 (`IVE in it you... _! of our ~ CI! 225 II z\ 1229 5 35 14 77 10 35 16 57 13 15 ll 00 (I'Il\ 573 14 J1 3V 9 94 9 45 18 04 01* 19 35 19 3 Q (I- IU Vt 317 I'\l\I\ Lv I)`: 721 25X 251 25! 251 250 250 250 252 251 251 25 251 25E 10 59 10 76 10 76 19 83 48 60 10 08 EIOVOI4 base: arrie. ERY lien- uf, at Iomeg e such roperty 'n 830.. nd will: r word wgtt} war 3 will N I same T oic. nedilte J dcr sentence THURSDAY, OCT. zznd. zmws F. Creighton, who was un- oi death xn Owen Sound jail, is dead. The two pr incipal difculties in the (`---Ll. A\ Co-{nnrt DTP _ elected bfacclamation in West Sim- coe, V _ Fred Von Ingen of Alexandria, La., was. shot and killed while` on his bridal journey by a former suitor for his wife s hand. ' l ,P `l __,J 'KYr\o-`1n1;#D, 1 Jan, 15 ucau. two principal difcu_1ties way of South African Umon are the color line and the dual language. A bcautifu1_banner, the gift of .H. R.H. the Prmcess Qf Wales, was presented to the Umverszty of Tor- onto. ~-A 3- - at-1-.0-ant mt! Irurfik SAFETY % "SAZ "~ UHLV. Lord Milner say; th_ere is g s_trot}g and growmg feeling. m Brxtaxn xn favor of a mutual 1mper1a.l prefer- EIICL . Miss Ray Bucey, a young nuguau-I woman, who says her jewels are, worth $100,000, was deported from New York. "` - ,3!` __A IV!-VI AVID` The British Government will pro- vide :1 fund of $1,500,000 for the re- lief of the unemployed and provide work by ordering new warships, - "` 'I_--,1 L-.. nu-no-r-I- "J """`u -- ~ - _ The Big Four Railroad has prom- xsed its employees an increase in pay and work 1:` Taft is elected, and a cut of 10 per cent. if Bryan succeeds. 1` YY_, ,_-.1 .. 117'" SUB UK IL] yV.I \\lll:o AL -A-an --v vvvvv `Mr. Claude E. H rwood, 3 WY` clie College divinity student, died 'of_ _typl1uid fever contracted while- mimstcring to workers in a, ra.i1waY camp. -ur 7 -9 41.. ,_nA i vvuuour. l\lr_ William Mclnnes of the get?- logical survey reports that there 15' -a wide belt of good agricultural land that will be opened up by the flew Hudson Bay Railway. 1 !_+-i-I--3-~:---M----:~~ unuuuuu Ala) L\ulAVV"Ju ` ~ I A young man named Wentwortlu. from Grimsby, was palfltmg 3 barn near Jordon, when colts at P13) came cntunglcd in a rope and PM '3 his ladder over. He was kxlled -by the fall. / New Blades . . . 1 The Zl5SC5SmC11t returns give 012- {awn a population of 80,284. ' . Owenf F1554; ':1r"c-`('1-0`i`r.1g"gt:ew:;.*f`V Qiamage in 1 central and northern Oklahoma _. - nmucu uuu. ILUI Lucxu \/nxauv-r-_--v John Jocko, an Indian boy Pi Cornwall Island, was thrown from a horse and killed. H . .,-.3.` - - V . -In uuu A\l|l\r\Jo The body of A1ber_t Martin of `C01 - Unna was picked up In the Vet near. St. Clair, Micli. , 1: 1-',11:_-....--u IICC. Miss Ray Bucey, young English- - ...1..\ Dl|`7C I. ` ---~-- or mum-I: are _ , . -...... usnwls. ' . ' Hcnry Stccper of Mc'G|111vray township was drawn into a thrasher and tatully injured. A_ I . .1, - .1....LLY. . 7` 7---u -us.un_ Iu.JLu\.u. ' ` 1`0rcst tires are causing the death; Of thousands of trout `in the streams Of New York State. * _ `I ~ I .g vnnu IJUIAUIM _ Seventeen suffragettes were sent; enccd to terms in jail in Londonvyes- tmlay. They refused to pay 1.11163 '7`! vv - . n ` .1 , A ..'.....'..o "H" ---~_7 -V--UV " 3': V `_ The Kaiser's fourth son, A_.t1S`-15" Wllham, was married yeSterd8Y " the daughter of the Duke of `Schles- 8`Ho1.~:tcin. -_.'o-- .\lr. Clcorgle Badgley of Tyndingh _.9 8a was struck by a train. and lies_ 1:`! 3 Critical condition in Bellevxlle H5Dita1. His horse was killed- An.attempt will shortly be mad? t0'ra1se the Royal Savage, the. a" shxp of Benedict Arnold, sunk an Lake Champlain in 1776. = 'D..:I 4 1 I ,__!LL 'a'ou~1-null- V V . . u auylultb l|| A] [ V- _Rai1ways are troubled with snow- dnfts in the west. ten `cfeet of sVn0_W` being reported in som of the ,cut9 hear Medicine Hat nd ~M3P` 'C`k` SATURDAY, oc'r. the ._y'`__ Miss robbed $5.300. ,D!'. Taylor, who was inifl 13. r:.` Kmgsville by driving into 3} '1_1..y_5 W`. died from his injur-ie_s`~. ->, "P1. . U. 4r`1u..'._ Clvni. " Wu xrum ms` nxuun-ma. -T YT? Purchasers of the U1,1ip'g!vS'tDk ' Amls` composeya. strong` 3 ltish d gerxcan syndicate. c ` `.1. 6 new town of -Mgth N. O. Ra1lway`._a, `Out by re, V ; ' Hon /{Q uh. FRIDAY, OCT.. 23rd. ------9+++++'M-+M-4-4++P++i%%'4*++++4-4'4-'~4"P%-4-+++4+z Events of the Week - xactl proportioned that ajwhen glasge `ix heal against the face, the edge 1- LI... ovanf 2. cnam bl3dC 13 [1519 igilllit 511,6 lava, guy `.3, is in the exact position "for a clan; easy cutting of the A Complete an: xurmel SAFETY RAZOR OUTFIT consists ol Holder and 12 sharp Norwegian Stool Blades, packed In a com- pact neat covered case. SILVER PLATED- BLACK LEATHER 90113.` umlm. DI-nun CASE THE `iA!:IGLE" -QOLD AID GUARANTEED BY ' YES 0} we for The theme of Lord Northc1ie s address to the Toronto Canadian Club was the need of capital forthe development of Canada. _. Montreal is `enveloped in a thick fog on account of the forest res; and shipping on the St. Lawrence is `again at a standstill. V Capt. John Robinsonvwas killed at Kelley Island,. jumping overboard to save a pet dog, and being crushed ` against the wharf. ` Two highwaymen, who robbed and assaulted Mr. C. A. E. Reid, a Mont- real jeweller, have been senteneed, to. fourteen and ten years respective-.. lu I0!` ms wuca uauu. ` What is the use of expending over $Ioo,ooo,ooo to deepen the Erie . .. canal to twelve feet if before it IS ple nished Canada is nishing the . Georgian Bay canal which will th` handle all the business? This ques- 3:. i tion is placed before the _American people by Mr. Edward Hu`ngerfo?rd' P in "Harper s .We'ekly. He says the _` development of the Canadian water. tel route will close .the elevatorsfat -Buffalo and lessen` the commercial supremacy of New York. V The M` Georgian Bay canal is to have twenty-one feet of water when it is pl: dug. The Erie, with twelve feet of ye water, Mr. Hungerford_ c1aims,'in; would, at least, be a barge canal. in It is calculated that. it would accom- de modate 1,000-ton` self propelling at _ barges instead of the 25o-ton barges Cl .that had been pulled by horses. Mr. _ Hungerford _ canal,` ' while `costing more, would accommodate vessels of a .capacity of 8,400. tons; would make .BuFfalo and `Cleveland, Detroit and 7 Chicago, every town that has a har- , bor on the_ Great Lakes, an ocean; .1, port, sending its `freight, without .0 s` breaking bulk, from its wharves 1, `through ,the United States: to each u ;.;far-c'o1-net of the bro-ad"`s"eas of the .3 ,-'entire world. `Clearly the Erie twill tj never suf-c.e for any such purpose, 1, t and Mr. Hungerford attributes the t '0 tenacity of-the Erie canal promoters `i ._ in part to'the Buffalorinterest. He '- remarks that an elevator .built in I Bualo in 1895 at a cost of $500,000 *' -returned enough in dividends in two 1 m years to `repay its`, entire Cost of: 1 construction. ' Another" elevator tahatx} was burned two years after that was 19 not rebuilt. -Its owners. j ' ' 3 3- to drawtheir dividends from a_co_m- {boll eof" prot, and rebuilding g , , if _a. better route- to the f,s'ea-. -?werej~ ound-,7y_ ' vessels` of the size ,whi`ch_=n9w,p1y. to ;Bu,alo . from the Great `Lakesy 4 i_ _[ Mi-.~ iHunger'fo_rd_' ? w.a_;.rnay7tlf1e_?;j people` . ,_ l ofgthe , ,Unit_ed.,'States ;tha tf vtl15['::l3_etter ` '3 fadian: The .e,Ganad.xans.a F . `:53})'9> 3'.l'?;i*3'.1?!8 .v. ."i.:..-.._.`.95....tL;1 ', , F;1 "f.i . ~Ts=a`na`slr .*,,h11,Ild%:t$",i`-9*? their mrlda ears "=::s'ro' e c1`s:,-~:to.,;guz8$t;.:t)}_e.; {p,.011llS, . L. GOLD PLATED-- PIGSKIN ' CASE adian terrxtpry. says-, are `among J. llc the of ` proceeds to `suggest t_l of` the route and Otta`wa and ~ 4 says: . . ` '_..'..."-outing ` GEO`R`GI.AN BAY-V CANAL route ana say. _ Take y_ourfat1a_s and make a. care-"` ful studyjof the Province of Ontar- `it Place a. ruler from the vast V G 'an -Bay`, at the head} of_ iHurw - fto` wh_at_~_may easxly-sbo; e riyereiinj .tt.n.e.. neizh-g They. kA;`#t}A " oath: -j_- Bring United" States Trade Through Canada- (gag: Continued V1 on Page_ Five. L Lanny... Ford wa..rns{.th9`peo.p1e States that thxs better opened through Can- "~- Canadians. he ' Anon t mart V fgest ne pU$lUuu.\.a . % " % . Lake` . Erie and decide for jyourself inii%i?:t**5;ra:tjilff rm: whih= _i a? t{he1;atl,1 .of `_1g';sg;;_1-esi;sta'nJce, , the path most ap_t`t`o_ 1-B_'; chos eh`. byj` thq freight carriers to whom every nnle saved means, t1meand coal. _ LI2_..!.._|.In.I IIIUC BGVCU lllvlly GIIAIU up. >u-.~.v--u '`e`C'anada. does not ,go b`iindfo1_ded- Into` canal-digging: It`has-, 'for"o_nc_e, and for all time, rejected `the twel- -4--I--A. ._....1 .. ~.u-mg! `qnnnm npf. anu X01 au `CIIIIC, (cJccLcu `LIIC uvvur ve-`foot canal "as grossly` `mcompet-` cut and its canal from Georgian Bay to the, St. Lawrence byfyv.":1y of {he Ottawa and Mat\ta'wa. rivexjs will a.........e.. .55 `nab Annn making` Mtne Klltawav 3nQ_ lV1{Il\l..dW,_'d. 1`.Iy_cI_a 'vv,un "be t-wenty-one` 'feee_, deep, . making Chicago and Mi1_waukee and Duluth" ocean ports, subject-;only `to sailof severallhundred miles through ex-` clusively British soil. There, is no question in the minds of'the men i who` have examined this Georgian Bay canal proposition ; as to the ef- _fect its completion willihave on th_e ipdecreasing commercial supremacy of New York -City.` The Georgian Bay canal will do more than paralyze - freight traic through Lake -Ontario and the Upper St. Lawrence. .It' will cripple the .toll-catching `elevat- ors at -Buffalo and proclaim the Eric A barge canal the `most atrocious and expensive farce yet placed upon the backs of the greatest of all the states. It will make `it quite an in- different question whether the twel- ve-foot Erie is completed in one cen- tury or two, for it will, in itself, pro- vide the direct and simple water routefor the grain of America s.` golden_west `to the densely populat- ed natxons of Europe. 1--- ....L stage, but it will cu llutsvnla vs a.-u...vrv. The Georgian Bay project has not yet gone much beyond the survey be built in time, ....,n ...1.... :+ in rnadv if wo'u1d seem bu_t rt Wlll De Dulll; nu tune, and when it is ready it would that the money now being spent on the Erie willghavc been wasted. Canada. -13 going to handle not only the freight. originating on its own soil, but much of that coming from the south of the "boundary. And so with domestic freight, so with that from the across the oceans. The short route for through freight. lies across the Dominion. The short route is" the` cheap route, and the cheap route `has an irresistible atal `traction for the bulk, of the busi- 11,055. Rev, _Morris friendsof Bar- .ae and vxcxmty, and they are legion, ` wi1l'read. with interest the following, which is taken from an Orangeville _ g;a;;se;: f`I`I, ' per. Theiladies of St. Andrew's Church tendered a rec_eption to Rev. -W"m. `Morris, their new pastor, and Mrs. `Morris on Tuesday night. The re- ception was held in the Sunday 0 School room, which had been nicely 1 decorated for the occasion. icolfee and light-refreshments were served ! `in the prayer meeting room, where also the decorations were very pret- ty and in excellent taste- During the latter part of the evening a delight- ful musical programme was pl'OVld~ ed.` Rev. 11. Harper, pastor of Or- angeville Methodist Church, made a happy. speech in which he conveyed greetings from his congregation and i expressed the hope that the good `feeling and spirit of co-operation _ now existing amongst the pastors and churches of Orangeville would L continue uninterruptediy. A letter _ from Rev. G. A. Kix, rector of St. 1 Mark s Church, was read, expressing '_`the wri_ter s regret at his inability to be present and wishing M.r. Morris success in his new held of duty` Shortly before the programme was brought to a close, '-Mr. A. Steele, whodischarged the duties of chair- man, called Mr. ,Morris forward and read t_he following address of wel- --M- -.. k..I....1: ml? 1-I-in nnnareationl Petting Ilvhnn