\.)ll21:Lll:],_!l1uu b~a._yn. .|.L.uuJ uu..vu.. v.v..~ the strait, only some little openings lbeing -left where they place their nets. , . Probably smaller iwvigs were 'V0ViD- in }lack_-'and forth in the form L 91 What:. d1edV.`f.w@t18?% .1 Fi}? He';ap1;ix{ga that Z. --.. __._A.A..2.. __ VVILL WORK NOW. A -uuv 111. ;rovu.I.1UJ o vuguua, .1UlU. 1.11 the French Onondaga Dictionary, from a. manuscript of about 1700, 16 the Mazarin. Libra.ry, Paris, Guya- bnsnnn`-n an .......- __ L1-- ' -`- `- the Mazarin Library, Paris, ouenta-ha is given as the equivalent of the French word Cl-aye, which in English is hurdle, at screen, or wooden grate. It will be seen that the six Jetteis from the heart of this word, are identical .with those found in the name, Lacus Ouentaronius of the Creuxius map, supposed to be de- rived from Ontario, lake. An acn- alysis of the name Gayaouentaha will probably disclose a fair descrip- tion of the sh weirsin the Narrows, the base of the French -name of Lac aux C.Laies.. This could have only a local signicance, unless it should appear that other Weirsa of like char- acter existed at other points- which is not probable. |w.'ei-as constructed- in this m~anner were common along the Atlantic coast, and are illustrateci by White in Ha-rriott s History of Virginia, also in Bever1ey s Virginia, 1675. In fkn -mnlvnnk (In... .1... ..._ `'\2 ._LI --- __._. 9, On several maps Lake C0uchich- ing is Lake Contarca. The Relations give this as the name of a Huron village, (Orillia), and tribe of Kontarea, ,which Brebeauf des- scribes as a. day s journey from Ihormatiria. A site at the narrow passage between the two lakes would be about thirty-ve miles from Iho- natiria. The Ducreanx map locates L. Contarea a few miles west of Ste. .Marie on the Wye, which is not more than ve or six miles from any supposed site of Ihonatiria. These facts appear to indicate that the earlier site of Kontarea was near the narrow passage between the lakes and that previous to 1645 the village of villages had removed to the west of Ste. Marie on the VVye. The Relation says: Last winter the Hurons had a real fright in con- sequence of rat false alarm that had reached them that an army of Iro-- quois was. on the point. of carrying the village of Konta.rea., the 4 chief bulwark of the country. --nu vv v The Kontarearonons are men tioned by Vi-mont as a distinct tribe, sedentary, and speaking the Huron language. When the Hurons aban- doned their country a large number took refuge with the Iroquois and were known as the Hu-rons of Ken- hare-a. That the name was generic, and related to the country of the Hurons in some instances oertain. If Lake Couchiching was known as lake Kontarea, it would be very strong evidence of a residence near it -at some earlier period, and that Brebea.uf s statement of a location a day s journey from Ihonat-iria was correct. An analysis of the name shows that it was derived from Gon- tare lane in Huron, and as g and k are interchangeable in Indian names it would become terminal a the result would be Kontarea. La Hontan appears to have had in mind a Waterway on all sides of the Huron peninsula by giving the name Taronto to Lake Simcoc, Severn River, Matchedaszh Bay and the passage between Ahoendo and other islands, -and the main land.. There is no question whatever in `my opinion as to the common origin of Toronto as the name of Toron- - 1n 1 'r 1 , 0:_-_-_,. 'lJ`..,_L :,. 1. U'I'U1l UU Ill`! l:uG ua.uuL7 \.l.1 A. \1 .v.. OI to Bay and Lake Simooe. Each in its place was a gateway of the country. fncozf you all} Mrs. Fred Hayes of Beeton, receiv- ed word a few days ago that her nephew, Percy Hayes, was a passen- ger on. the ill-fated. Titanic, and is among: those who perished when that vcsvel went down. He was a clever young man, about sixteen years of ---~ ----J .-.n.. t5l'\?VIL:\'\lT 4-r; Tnwnnfn ) Ul1.ug 1ura:u., uuuuu wuxuvuu. Jvuu-u `I-In age, and was coming to Toronto to take a position with the York Loan Co., with (whom he -maidb an em- gagrememt before leaving England. His father, who came to Canada four yeam ago amrdl is: living in To- ronto, was anxious to have his raxnwy new wuau. umu. euuu: ;.un,_v nu the t :to leave Englaxnd, with the expectation of joining the zather in l North half and-' south east quartz}: of Lot 6, Con. 5, in the Tqwnshxp of Iumisrl, oontainipg 150 acres pf choice clay loam wlth clay subsoxl, _`I`I ___`l`| .-......J .....J :v\ II 113"`: nafnfn UHULUU UIBJ xucuu vvu.u um-J wuuuavon all well fenced and in a high sum; of cultivation, ve minutes walk from school, 1% miles from church, 3% miles from Tlipmton G.T.R. station; On the premises are a new - ., _ _ -4, - J 1...: .1- _A-nA-A.J I-.1-snags Euulilullc \II.L IILIG IIJLU u.Av up saun- ten roomed brick veneered house, equipped- with furnace, dumbwaiber, telephone, hard. and soft water. `Two bank barns, one 40 x 100, one 60x 30, cement ours, equipped with littzer carriers, windmill, and water 'throughout, also tracks for slings, silo 10x30. ,T'wo acres orchard, ve`acres vhardwood: bush, \a- saw... This property will be sold cheap, as the proprietor is going West. For further particulars apply on premises or to W. '-T. Hill, Thornton, Box 16. ' ' V Womenfs commonest ailment '-the root of so much of their ill-health`--prompt1y yields to the gentle but certain action of Nat-Dru-Co Laxatives. 25. a box at your druggist s. IATIONAI. DRUG AID CHIIICAI. CO. OF CANADA. I.lI'I'ID. 1` ll, ` `plica _hnes8. LOS'_T ON TITANIC. `F OR SALE PER Flues!` I S;.;v_lng [IN ulJu --g -r--- S:_-w-rul mmm.un.i-ca.tions were read .3n1 thu (Xrllllcll got down to the main lmsixwss of the evening, .which' v.zL.~`. the two formatl readings of. a "by-law to 1-:1i:~:e by debevntures the sum uf rIs2.3,f;()(') for permanent road- in)p1'\'v111M1ts and culverts` as Out- iims-d above. After considerable dis- cxns-'iuu tho second reading` was paw.- and the by-law `will be. sent on To the 1'21t(~payeI`S With the hydro-' ek~r.-trio by-1a.w 011 June 3rd; ~ M-.1.yo1' _Co,wan in introducing the by-lm\- said. it. was a question whle- `thcr tlwsc permanent improvements) .shoul.ll. lx. p:1i(_1 by raising money `on del>enl1m-.< 01' out of the g`e'nera.1 rate or \\'l1<'Il1(:I' it. would be better not to- do it at. all. Tl1e.ma.'ority of the I>4a0pl<- . to think radcford. St. impI`U\'(*lll(`.l1lS should be of a pet mmlcnt clmractcr. The only equiv- ablu way U do this is by debentures,` as tlua pmple will then be paying for] it grnxlnnlly and will not feel thlei annual ]r1_vrm'.~'nts. The cement cul- verts tlltwllgrll Ag'I'iC11.1t`u1`a:1 Park are an l.\l')3x`(>1llT-l` 111-('08-Sity from asaxritafy point of Vl('W and when. they are stlrur.-,t-cl all this can be lled in 439 n1al<: n 1nrr~r~ L-omlplete park. II`! n 1 9. 1" 1' 11---- Thai Br-adfovd St. will be mum. 1y rt.-built zmd a pevrn-anent. roadiw-ay 'oon:tx-uotud from Tifn` St. to Eliza- beth St. if the ratepayers give "their aseremt, to :1. by-law which will be _prese11t-d to them on J 11118 3rd Was ing. the d0r_-isinlx of those members of the. (founcil who Assembled `at -the. special m(.-cting on Thumsday even- urn. , Only nine. of the peoples? repr sent:u.ives anxswered the invitation to bu [)]'L`a'|(`1lt and the Council Board looked -.1 bout as sparsely popu-latd 2: f\..JH1n .. ~r\.r\v1I - .-.1-. .134: I UJU1u:u. um-uv MU t""""d 1""'.t""V.VV\_--5| as ,~;on1v uf O1'il1ia s new s:ub.-di_vi- si0n.~. '.l`]1u Mayor watched the Alder- znmx >:I1'z1._ufg."1L* in until he could count L-igrht. a. quorum, and: -then p1`()(_'(3(`(](`({ to business. Thlose pres)- ent wm-o: Mayor, Reeve Bennett, A1dL`l`llH`1l ,\[211'k*.s, Sarjeant, Frasier, Lam-, (ix-ax. ('_`1-.11-1: and Ruxsk. The Absvyul um-s wore: Dep.-Reeve Wesr ley . .-\l McLean, Bidwe11,1 Dz1vi.<, \\'i.~1um and Bunker. . Paving Bradford, `Sn V.%m,1.:J Titn St. to Ehzaabeth St, ,$20,6 00j' Concret/a culvert from: -nou-th . . side of Elizabeth St. to jg 1 I through Agricultural Park`, ' . . V to west side of Brwdfondj '. ' j Sm-ect. .. 1,990 Concrete culvert arcoss .Hjgh ' _S1:. cast of BPaadf0!'d St. . , V 400 For sidewalk, road! construe. V ' ` tirm and renewing culverts V on Kc.m.pe11fe1;d1; St. from Duckwnrth St. to Rodney St. and on Rodney St,.'f1-"qm. Iitmnpcmfelcltl to B].a,ke.st`_ _ 2,700 41;.-, x\r;u.lJL`uL\;-Luv, u .n.auc '---v-V Roail i1m>mv(*I11e!I1ts include the 1711111` >.._`LZ.... 1- L` . ___.1 ..,...,. Q+..n+1nr n JJUUIL Jlll[?I'l)V(`lllC lLlb I-IIULLLUU UILU V *" pikiug' nf the road from Stn'at;t:;3l com.-.r (I)1urkw01't.h S11) to Rodney` St. (T. H. 'l{edditt's comer); 9011' strmtixngr \\'uI tables and 8.` Side .Walk nu tho north sidsevof TKe1'0PP'. feldt S1. 'l`}1o.se im~proveIIlIeU1tB` W_1~1'1 m.a.k<.~. zx 1-aka shore avenue of T1113. -one ml." 1h- nmsat beautiful driveW`&Y3T -of The Tuwn, as Well as 8. walk. We WHHM have all these bY'1'9 "votxal nu at the same time toave `le (~x}<-11.<<- of another election. AL]. mu. asked! whestherr the Comm] .-1 21 whole knew ~anythw8 0f11uz~'- improvenn0n~ts, and Reeve Bennr-11V n-plh-(1% that when an` mud mm` uf; inspection WW made sew-ml w<~.-L54 a,r.v;o,, these 11151183 t.a1k-:1 nu-1*. Ald. LOW6 W88 I10? P(`S`fIlt. Mn that occasion. ` V St., mul up Rodney St. to Blake` as s and donia y be using light-' A141. liusk thought the K6Il13P9n" feldt S1. improvemenrts would be mT1`~*b well, spent. and} he en(lors4:l. 'Br21(lf0-rd St. exapemdioture. Saying`. it, was throwing money 8-Way 1&1 cnntirmo spending small sumsr 011 Npaim wh.<~.u a perm.a.nent_ roadway W88 the necessary thing. - V '1`), "Ir . _ .1 "* "-'\- -u\v'\.ut2-7u;J vos4ooau - The -Mayor noted that `these un- Drovements did not constitute- I Thxs K-m.pe1`1fe.1dt, or Lake Shore I , , , 3.... , _,__A.__ _'.._-1--.J... `Ln +111!!!- \.u..u`..... -- Clark Thinks People it?.D9iwn bf Extravagance_--Reeve Be1nrvnett_,_ say; it i, Not A Scheme of His `to Rue]: the_B`y_-Lawe Through; Do You FAVOR This ?[ $25,663 1 V .. - z--v---v,u- vvuwjazuul W'~u'U" thew they De0p1e.wan_tech mg: am. Pl`0V*e*n'1en ts `or not, `The? work had been gone mto in. detail ' and the estlmates carefully prepa,red- for 311 the work. `Bradford? St.. road*way would cost $1.25-a square yard to construct, and it would then be a pemnsa:nent,,roa:d'. The necessity for .ra.is.i.ng this money on --debentures was apparent if the aldermen wouldl consider that there is only about -$12,000 of the Town s expend-itxure which they control for all purposes, and i.t'Iwoul:d.-' be impossible to make penmanetnt imrpnorvements out of it. For years our roads have -been. ne- glected and only sidewalks eon- structecl, and now `it is i-xnperative to do something with the -roads. ~ l`hisI does not mean increasing our `taxation much, as there are some de.bentu.res edn*op4p'in.g out `each year. Around .TO:W'11, you hear ' people say Why don t you make the Town `go ? But they forget that it tak- es money to make anything `go, and the people have to provide the money. . CURBIM} AND GUTTERS ON FRONTAGE I. Vf'X `5'63}.%132`v33uiI1*Z3In;``}L a.bouet._ $22.50 and, this would be spread over 20' years, making the a;n-- nual payment very small. V . "PROPERTY WORTH $1 Foo'r MORE. i The cement curbing` [along Brad:forc1~ Sta would` be on frontage tax, which will cost the property owners at 46-0. a. foot front- A _..- zn'.L`4. 1-; ___--_].J, -...._-' J... It W88 at lm proposed to make the roadwa. only 24 ft wide-, but it has since eon` decided to make it 30, feet less the width of the gutter on either side, whichi would leave 27 feet to build. There is almost a mile of road to conetr-uct fcrom Tifn St. to Elizabeth and property along `there will increase `$1 `per foot when the road is done. The es- timates include 28 gm-ates to take the water o,yet $25 each, and sufcient manholes. _ . ._ .4 _ ,. ' FINEST Dnxvmvn IN .CANADA. Cbntinuing, lbheu Reeve said` there {was a great agitation to make Bar- lrie -an up-tao-dvate Town, and when [the Council went on the inspection tour, they saw that we had the n- cert driveway to be found in any Town. This was Kempenfeldt St., lor the Lake Shore.'Roa:d, and it can be" put in ehape for about $2,000- fwll of rank weeds anti 7 __--.1 -A: anvnn. 'lD'V\Q;_ " It is. now a disgrace to the TOWHI A is eason, only to bri- g the vote on at the same: \t.iIme as: the" other by- l.a.wsI. The quesutaon was sumptly w_he- [I badly in need `of some repaime. ' It was the general opinion of the vete- .payera that this driveway coulds be made a thing of beauty and a joy forever. A - , - The total expenditures `under this by-law would mean only about %. of a mill of taxes. . Clerk Donnell hunted up the de- bentures which would retire in the next two years, and` informed Coun- cil that we would: have $1700 less: to pay in two years. A . ' Ald. Lowe maintained that /there were places in Town which need the money spent on them more than the Lalce `Shorre road -111 Little U! Wuavoo -w----_~ mrgmum . the hubs in sand`, and there are other -places which need: improving. Reeve Bennett--We can do these things out. of the general rate, but people _ha.ve been clamoring for a If Ald. haataaxen theltripl around with the rest of us he would have . seen` the importance. of. this work, ea.1d- `Ald. g,_Sa.rjea:n_t, who `the vworkto :*be'dof1e n+]*\n.n cu.-...J'. _-_,`I I I 1 ` the work __to9be' done 'this_,yeai', `but other work could be done out of the general rate; County money, etc. MONEY N E_EDED 'T0v MAKE TOWN Go Reeve Bennett didn 1: ,want' the member-m n-F (`|.m.......'1 ._ LL s of ade Fand B~d-A'd- succumman AS TRAIN swan l T0 TORONTO [Edgar Chapman Found Dead ` `on Cobalt Train--Porter ` Tried to Awaken Him I From Last Long` ` T ' Sleep. E `I U5N`Ia'\I'-rt) lo I,\I\.3Lb III-V6 LII Ll]: IILLVJ 1.. .. and T excelled by none. . Mlovre harm than goodj will` come by V the propa- 'gation of inferior g'.rades.. Besides, the armzetr will find: himisnelf left with them on his hands,` as soon as pair; There are other candidate's ate q~ua.ntities. Under normal condi- tions there will [be no _~mra.rket. for McIntyre potatoes next fall. ' It is reported that large quantities of these potatoes have_ been buted th11ou;g'h-.the- Province, and that fa1'-mars ane_ planting them. This is serious. The standard of Ontario potatoes has been "high in the` past ......lI ....-..1'l....`| I... ..-..- `n.r-___ `L........ Lying in .a `lower berth of ' the` sleeper of the (n`r.T.R. train` from Cobalt which -passed through Barrie at 5.10 Saturday. morning, the body of -Edgar Chapman, .3. Toront-o man, who has been prospecting in the Colbalt district, was found by one of the car crew when he `Went to .arous,ae the passengers just before the train an'rived* at the Union Station, Toronto, about 7 o o1'ock. _ - is. sent out. by `local dealers in potatoes to farmers not house for- seedging purposes that of` Prince Edwamd` Is1m1"d P0? tatoexg known as McIntyres. These potatoes, as their ' selling price. in- dicca.tes,. are of , inferior gra.des,A and etheir entry? -into `the `Ontario mar- ket. .Was because of scarcity alone. In years of average local Supply there wouldjbe no sale for them at all. Their chief .detm-iment is a blue `streak that runs through them, which turns black when thry are cooked. Then they _ have deep and numerous eyes, which involve` [considerable Toss in peeling. So onaturalj was the ma1i sa position that the porter, una.wa.re that death had taken place, shook him vigor- ously by the aunt before he learned that the sleeper was past waking. . Death is supposed to have been due to -aisudden. seizure of the heart. 'When,found* the+m.a.n was in his underclothes, his other aipparelg be- 11.3` -piled neatly at foot of his i L._'..1.L av- .y--- A Search showed -that he had $103.50 in his pockets, a gold watch, some blank cheques on" the Union Bank, and a letter `to E. Chapman, Drawer 19, New Liskeard, Ont. The letter was from -his daughter Effie, .who gave an address at 46 Kippendavie avenue, Toronto. The remains were remover} to the Morgue, where later they were id -- tified by the man s brother,Mr. J. Chwpmzm, 46 Kippendavie avenue, ..-mg." v % REGARDING romons Bu; INDUSTRY MAY LOCATE AT %COLLlNGWO0D ".Mg:|Iityt J. Pom toes- frdm? P. E. 7 -Isiand Shbnld% Not` Be" Used For` 4' V `A SeAed-Blue `Streak Runs % Through Them and Have T Deep Eyes. ` Agree to Build Plant Worth $280,000 and Employ 200, O. If Town Gives Them. $40,- 000 and Fixed Assess- " -menffor Ten. Years; 9 A . AMr. Franklin A. Umsden; repre- senting the Canadian Vending Mar chine Oompany, was in Collingwood for a couple of. days last week nego- ttiating wifzh the Town Council and: the Councll of the of ';`raf1e, A tentative agreement was reach- ed and will be submitted to the rate- payers: as soon as the necessary pa.p- ' ersyoan be prepared. The agreement provides that the company will erect ,.bui1dings. -Plant and equipment cost- ing approximately $280,000; -am} em- ploy an ' average of . two hundved -skilled w.ovnk"men. The company agree to pay -a minimum wage ._f one mil- lion dollars in years, and any deciency will be returned to the ' `town at the end of each. five years on ~ 39. basis of four,-per cent. y . ` agieee-.to qpayeebotnus V oi ; `four the full completion ` "`ts-Em , E` v. .,,-_r_`V_ .' _ . . -,, 2 "y E0 w"21UI.IDU.Illl5 IIJIJU 11:. says The V0 1'li-n.gwood~ J ujoawema 9A;D?\r ANC wh- -Some discussion resulted as V to, who should be responsible for the enforcement of a. `by-law, dening the duties of the Town scavenger, some contending that the Board of He.a1't.h slhould look "after this new ofcial while others; maintained that as the Town paid him the Council should keep track of him. ' The by-law provides for.-at system- atic removal of night soil from dry earth closets. by. a regularly appoint- ed scavenger who .will, visit. every "part of the Town once a month. Each householder so served will be charged 250 -per month, which will pay" the s0a.Venger s salary. - ` PRIVY VAULTS MUST Go. `According to the provisions of a new Health By-law, all privy vaults} must be cleaned out and the eon-1 tents` taken off the premises.` Peo- ple may substitute dry earth closets, which will be under the supervision of the Sanitary Ins=pector and Town| scavenger. All privy `vaults must be done away with and pit disinfected. by August 1st. D $4.4 HA `.`The law must be camried out no matter under whose `I control he comes, was the laconic comment of the Mayor. = The first part of the meeting was taken up by the intmoduction, dual readings and passage of the by-law 1501- an expenditure of $25,600 on roads, culverts, etc., a report of which will be found .in another! column. ' When an -aocount- of $11.50 was ! presented for the expenses of Reeve} Bennett and Town .Engineer Mac-1 donell to Toronto for the purpose of] getting the consent of the Provin-' cial Board of Health to go on with sewers -mentioned in the by-law, the Reeve stated? that the Provincial Board s- decision to stop the pollu- tion of all waters through emptying| ----no-`.0-\a.|n. ..uauv- -va.4.-any v'.|. vssv .u.A.vUu:A mexmbeis were present, -but -it. re- quired: one more to make legal the two-thirds vote on` the sewers by-' law and! after much ` ringing of the telephone by Ald. `Marks and .\"n3 or Cowan, the" Deputy-Reeve` was prevai-led upon to leave {his own neside at 9.45 and come down to cast his vote in favor of the sewers extension by-law. Hem- sn the two-thirds` of the] Council, remarked `an: alderman as! Deputy-Reeve Wesley walkecf into the -legislative chamber during the progress of the special meeting on` Thursday night. - Nine. of the _fteen I .-...........J....:... _.....- _...._...1. LAKE SIMCOE WAS ONCE LAKE TORONTO! lggrrlo. T I % Some Interesting Ancient History of This Locality--In 1660 . theHurons Were Monarchs of All They Surveyed in These Parts-Iroquois and Ojibiways Were Also . ' Here--Some Called it Lake of the Fish Weirs. By-Law Passed by Council Providing for Work to be Done on McDonald, Sophia and Wellington Streets by Day _L`abor-Sep`t'icV Tanks `Will Be Necessary Soon- A ` Scavengers Duties Defined--Privy A Vaults Abolished. l ` i _I-n the Ontario Gove1'nment _s arch- aeo1og'ica1T report, TGe4n. John S. Clark discusses in an interesting manner the origin of the name of Lake Simlooe. I B % oanlzks SEWERS 0N THREE STREETS k)'lLlIll.o'\J U-, VVA{.L\.~lL C-Ia|tl'1l\.IIAA|~P _ saw .-.-..v..-., | of 1660. This was previous to the destruction of the Humans, and while the J esruit missionaries were on the ground and in daily com- munication with them. The mis- sionaries -make no mention of Tar- onto as a name of the Jake, 01'.i:D. any other connection; The name Ouenta.-rvon was used, and I desire to point out a few facts which lead me to believe that Toronto and Onen- ta.ron- may have been identical in meaning.` The form Ouentaron sup- pears to have continued. as the name of Lake Simeoe for over a hunod-med yeams, from Sanson, 1656, to D An-` "ville and other French maps as ning with La; Hontam, who was in the country from 1684 to 1691, the form To:-onto? appeared and nal- ly prevailed. La. Hontan aeco-m- panied-.D Anvi11e in 1687 in his ex- pedition `against the Senecas, and it ;is. somewhat -signicant. that the not- only gives. the name Toronto- to f Lake Simeoe, but to its outlet` new f_ known as River.` Hetalsoi. _` calls `Matehedash Bay The_Bay- of Tgn-on ,"="_1wh.ic_h- be > describes `asf Ometmtamniusw on the Ducreux map late as 1755 a:n But beg'in- ` .l4UIrcn\l nu aoocvv V. It may be well, he says, 126 allude. `go. the known name of TLake '.[{0I'0`Ilt0," Wrucu nu uqvvnnuxn ..... twenty-ve leagues` long and ftee wide. He places the name on; some of his marpe between Ohouemdoe Is-_ land and the mainland, and other? `maps vappaneny fdllowing La Hon-LI tan carry the 1 name Torroilt-0 quie up tothe River of theVFrench. La-I `IIont`a:r_1' names-. Que of the Indian vil-. 1ages' Toro;1tio?g?x;eron,' which` he says` was [~ de;stnoye`djby the, Im-quois,` and-| it` nea_;1'..Lake_`.-.~. Couchiclgiiig. 7i'0f-T % -uv-rvuumu nun Us/vvus i am 30113. .lJU'VVGa It~is by order of the Board of Health, stated the Mayor, __ and they have power to `authorize such .work on `sanitary grounds`. They could not get the necessary names on the petition, as many of the owners of property Iare non-residents who don t care whether they have a sewer or not. Many of the people living on tghe street Want it. Richard Forden and Charles Mur-i phy of Toronto didn t know good ad`- vi-ce when they heard it. They ap- peared in Thursday s~ Police Court, before His VVorshi.p Mayor Cow,an, on -a charge of being drunk and in- capableg Looking with t1enient~e.ye on their fall from grace, the pre- siding magistrate let them out on suspended sentence, giving them several hours to change their ad- dress. He told them there were enough bibuxlously-inclined" people in Barrie to drink all: the Whiskey here and advised them to get work and shun I the joy -Water. Apparently they were dubious of the drinking capacity of A our citizens and stayed here on Fri- day to be h-andy if thierre was need __ A_L-2.. ._-_._,-_- __..`I_-J_._ (_-L--_. I lof sewage into them, meant thsa.t_it was only a. matter of a couple of years before '.we will have to put in more sedimentation tanks. . It J tisrt af this rm:otmeT W {I`)ve;puty-Reev. e Wesley `arrived, very much out of breath- by his -hurried` trip, and Ald. ,Qnsu11\.a\v1`- :-mi-u-n4J--:.n..1 L1... 1... 1-: xuu us my, at unvctvu DJ .1113 `J-lull Ill. 311.1. `Sarjeant introdtu the by W! for the construction of the following saew_ers': Mc_I_)oa1ald St. from:\Ola.pper- ton to -O.WIen St.; on Sophia from Sm~.ax1l:Ato Eecles, and on `Welling- ton St. -a distance of 250 feet west from O1`-axpperbon St, the Work to be] .J........ L_ _`l.._ 'l_L-_ done \J.naUtr1.I\.-A v\.r.L& Kl by day labor. ` #*TWh- petition for the Sorphla St. sewer ? a'_Sk(1?d xldl. TA. 3. L__ __.,'I-,,, I -'vV' v `-'`'.-.-` `'u ``yt""`& \" 7 uuu ithee are [three ways of getting `sewers, viz.: the Council may lay them on its own initiative, f the Board of Health may order them laid, or the property owners may AL: 4-: Ass 1.`-.. LL A... ....,, . !for their services unloading schoon- lers. They camped in George Les- l1ie s eld in Ward VI on Friday [evening, and with boots off, were Ucooking. a meal in the open air, when P. C'. s Sweeney and Lambie gathered them in again. RM. Rad- enhu-rst gave them 30 days with hard -labor, and. they will help plant |the' potatoes` at Castle Sissons. ' UL LA'(bLA\LJ LL uLJn.u.L, IvuAJ J.u\.,\/\.L -L_\.L,. ULIRJ }J1.\.rIt)\... petrtlon for them. Simcoe, which is very near the word given by Cuoq of Kah-ran-tha, to make an opening. Denonville, in writing to M. Seignelay in Nov., 1686, says` M. de la Durantaye is collecting people to fortify himself at Michi11i:maci~na,, and to occupy `|`_`the other passage at Taron oo, which the English` might take to en-, ter Lake Huron. Now, if as I sus- pect, Toronto is a "contracted form of -a compound. word derived from the Kaniatare, lake, an.d.onto, to open, andi the -name Ouentaron is also a compound Huron word deriv- J _E._ _ ._.- LL _ U.-- __-. no-. Jun Z1; -pnvv L.I.LlL\J'LL Huron ontuare root equivalent VV \IL'\.l \J.\.-`L L V for In awu u. uwuuyuuuu ed from-' the Lake, and a two names Ouentaron and Toronto. tare lake, will explaliik wIh5:1 the Hurons were known as e 11 ans, and their country, or at least the country around Lake Sinnooe, as Toronto. There was another name occasionally applied to Lake Simcoe by the French, which ]::vas11I1.ac 9.1% C1a' , hich in ng is won be,.:g%he `aket of the Fish Weirs. These were descrig by Chamzain in 1615," as 1009. between kes Couchiching -and.` Simooe, in the .1-.rovv. cha.nl lnxowlfl as the arrows. e -1a.ns, own as Ojibwaysi of the present day, speak of the locality` at Mitchekun, which mean: 25:, :2: W was em, or eta ' across. e structuyre'wa_s oomsnosed of small stakes. ~ ' Q-"feet. vih length, `into the clay Nvhiohf constitutes the bot- `bf `and were from ,4 inch `__ to-E Limches in . diameter. :10 o saws:4Thewea1moat: close mag.--;;._..v=<'-3'12. .,~.......- 4"-1:541- m..m'm n ` 1 V! i; ':' Huron to Open, 01, aa doom. or . `fgatewa.y, it wtll go - far to estab- 1 hsh_ an absolute ldentrty between the - Both of these names based on On- '