Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 17 May 1923, p. 6

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To yell that we want no nmrel saloons and no more d1'unkenn<~ss yblll must have beer and wine is us `jcunsistent, as it \\'0111d be to shout` i:1_;uinsl murder and (leclure in 1'2\\'m' of sllootlng with 1`evo1\'e1's 01` not more than t.\\'enly-two ca1ih1'o.~- (Charles A. Seldom `in the Ladies'~. `llome Journal.) i \\ CURE `|JL,`lUlL' U\V1ll;-_'.. Collcenlrzxted action is \'01'_\':110c(-sv sary if the crop is to be 01' \':1111C` for any other purpose than for food. ! Human speech calls for the exewl ciso 01? (fo1'l._v-F0111` dix I'01`e11l, 111usc1es.| JOB The - Northern - Advance Letter Headings Note Headings Statements, Bill Heads Envelopes of every kind ll'(i 0|: Pl-}.\ \\'l-Il<}\`llA% in Ontario will nd that them, states the Domin- sn +..,.nr O`1nV'1- The attendance at the market on` Saturda,\' was not large, but con- siderable produce was offered l`or sale. Butter sold l'ron1 35c to 38c 11)., with ucltuations to 4Qc. showed no change, selling from 25c to 27c a dozen. 28c to 32 a pound was asked for chicken, and the de- mand was not brisk. fruit and vegetables showed no change. Green onions, rhubarb and lettuce sold at 5c, 5c and Tc :1 bunch respectively. Potatoes were quoted at from 65c to 750 a bag. but werel more or less a drag on the market. No hay, wood or meat was offered for sale. Prices: The prices for n- nn_ n, IHUIU U| ICED cl. uta Butter . . . . . . . . . Eggs . . . . . . . . . . S. Chickens . . . . . App1es-- Russets . . . . . . Tolman Sweets Spies Green Onions : Rhubzwb . . . . . . . Potatoes . . . . . . Beets Carrots . . Parsnips . . . . . . Onions ..... . . . Cabbage . . . . .. Turnips . . . . . . Lettuce .....' Q AUTO LICENSES 1 1{'fURDAY s MARKET TEN BUSINESS C0.\l)l.~\`.\'D.\lEN'l`S| I-Iandle the hardest job first each day. Easy ones are `D10:1,S11I`O.'s`. T\n nnl `ha nfrnid nf m-hir-isn1- uuy. llailb) Uutib an: j_Il\'.`xl,DLllV:.V. Do not `be afraid of ci'iticisms- criticize yourself often. Be glad and rejoice in the other fe11ow s succ.ess-st11d_v his methods. Do not be misled by dislikes. Acid ruins the finest .fa,bi`ics.. Be enlhusi-.1sticAit is colnagious. Do not have the notion that suc- 'ce.=s means simply 1110n(')`-lllzlkillg. v )0 fair, and :11 least. 0110 decent act evm'_\` day in the ,\'o:11`. T.Tnnn1- Ihn nhinf` "FhnI'r.\ nincl ha llllillie ,VUI1l'St`ll. IL. Hzuunonize your work. Lot sun- shine mdiute and penctI'zLte.-The `Columbia. Crew. ! T1'zLveI1in:.: l:n"1fl's between Owvnl [Sound and .\Ie21.fo1'(1 are much lower! `since lhe new Px'o\'inciz11 road was completed last. year. The rates have idropped almost hall`, and the j0u1*ne_\' takes less than an hour, xvllereas 11' few years ago under `bad road condi- tions it took three or four hours to [go 10 Owen Sound. EH31 E\'(`I'_\ (12!) H1 Lllt' }l`ill. Honor the chief. There :1. head to eve1'_vthi11g. Have condence in yours make y0u1'se1f it. `LTuuunnniv1n 1-nnv 'u'n1~L' 1 u Folders, Programs Posters, Dodgers Sale Bills, Cards Mercantile Circulars Invitations, Circulars EE% ww The ambitious young business man Webbwood, Ont.-- I was in a very weak and run-down nervous condition, always tired from the time lgot up until I went to bed. Sleep did not rest me at all. My sister recommended Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Com- pound to me and others told me about it. but it was from my sister's advice that I took it. It did not take long until I felt stronger, headaches left me and my appetite came back to me. I am a. farmer s wife and have many things to do outside the house, such as milkin , lookini after the poultry, and other e ores. I eartily recommend the Vegetable Comgound to all who have the same trouble I ad, for it is a ne medi- cine for women."-Mra.LOUIs F. ELSAS- BER, Hillcrest Farm. Webbwood, Ont. Another Nervous Woman Finds Relief Dm.o- LI...-m-. M:,.l.:,..m _uI g..4.......i Branches: Bau'1`ie, .-'\11undu1e, E1-mvale . . . . Uv'J`l U! 200 small 0. -In can easily nd a safe place in which to deposit his savings, but it is more im- portant to nd a Banker friend who will take a personal interest in the solving of his business problems. '1'... L.....:._...... ........ mun I-u-Snap I-do IHS DUSHICSS PYU UICIHS. The business man who brings his account to The Bank of Toronto will receive a friendly interest in his aairs that will be of assistance in promoting his business success. 03-1 on: 11213.51 3 bask. ...25c b21sk.1 .`.25c bask" .. 30c bask. .50-10c each `....5c each - .')FJ'v)OU 1U.` 25-27c doz. 2S-32c lb. 30c ban 30c baL 300 bask. 7c bunch 5c bunch . 5c bunch 65-75c bug mng11 hack 1 35-380 lb. r): 0'7.-. HA7 self, and Con1pluinin:_.: of a pain after ar- 'rr>st for I.he1't, a `man named Hoff- man was operatecl 011 at \Viesb-.Lden and vw-as (found to halve swallowed 16 skeleton keys. Weak an';.l\JAe;x`/c>Ai:s. Mada; Well by Lydia. E. Pinkham si Vegetable Compound I ! 1 ;THE RED _C_ROSS - -. ._.-u asks the generous people of Ontario to come to the help of ` COCHRANE an Ontario town. Announcements Blotters, Receipts Memorial Cards Circular Letters A 3,400 people live in Cochrane : have had typhoid fever or are now sick. The town itself has gallantly carried its burden until now. The Red Cross asks Ontario for ~ in order to run the Emergency Hospital with 20 nurses and 80 beds : Also to care for hundreds of convalescents still urgently needing special food and care to restore them to health. Please send your contribution to the Hon. Treasurer. Ontario Red Cross, 410 Sherbourne Street. Toronto. ADELAIDE MPLUMPT-RE MUIHUI IVCIVUIIU IIUILICII III-IIIB I\ClICI Port Huron, Michigan.-I suffered for two ears with pains in my side, and if I wor ed very much I was nervous and just as tired in the mornin as when I went to bed. I was sleepy a the day and didn t feel like doing anything, and was so nervous I would bite my nger nails. One of my friends told me about Lydia E. I inkham s Vegetable Com- pound, and it helped me so much that I srmn fell. I'zne.- M1'S.ClIA1cl.ES I3m~:1.m, 50]-Mt}: St., l`urt lluron, Mich. /':\vvs:.I\ ...l.. . L ..H`.... rIlI\FVI nv\vv I\UV\I.D|:v\t\ 4 (This advertisement in publilhcd gratis by thin newupnper) $75,000.00 _o1='6'nTrAn{f6' 780 President wgmsurrgaim FWLTMLQNTHSE unu-nu. n,\.., : xu u LA\A|.VJll' Alll\.Alu ` Womnr v.'hu.~u`er frqm an feminine ` ailment .-hawld try Lydla E. `1nkham s Vegetable; C.>z:x;;ound. C 1' VA: u. -.4._. Debentln-es of the Town of Barrie. 5; Per Cent. Issue. _ Good Investment. See me. O. W. REID II'\'I'VI \ 1 I Y\II)IZVf`7I`(\I') .\ \"I"I I V V U Q Q_aaI-7 FUNER.-\L DIRECTOR AND ` E.\lB.=\L.\lER ` Open day zuul night Phone 218. 47 Elizabeth St. W. BELLIISSUER T A..nn1A THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. OF CANADA. We depend on Long Dis- tance to order milk and `cream from farmers, and to find a market in the cities for butter. We purchased over $100,- 000 worth of cheese by Long Distance at a cost of $16 or .01G%. This cheese we sold by Long Distance at a cost of $30 or .03%, and never saw the buyer. We sell thousands of dol- lars of surplus milk by Long Distance. Masonic Temple Building A 15 cent Long Distance call enabled us to get 12 cents more a. pound for our butter in a nearby city-w1-ites a farmer. Long Distance is the cheapest way to sell ice cream. vu - .---_-.-, -.v.w - _.._ Successor to J. Arnold Insurhnce by Long Distance May we tell you how Long Distance is being used to incrcase sales in your business? 7 O\VEN STREET Page Six .L'.}-'.{). | A. \V. Smith, < Clerk of the 'l`m\'n of l:I.rri0.} Every Bell Telephone is Long Distance Station FOR SALE _,,__ , Each acre of corn grown in Ohio costs on an average 46.26 hours of labor. Canada is now second on the list ` as an exporting land, the per capita being $100.63 per annum. A new station is being built ` the Canadian Pacific Railway Fredericton at a. cost of $50,000. Half a million Canadians look to the forests each day for their meals and lodging, and more than lU0,UOU Canadian workmen are engaged in converting forest products into one ` form or another. The large party of Hebrideans 3 who were brought to Canada on the ` Canadian Pacific Steamships Meta- gama and Marloch have gone to Red Deer, A1ta., where they will form an agricultural colony. Seven hundred farmers and farm laborers arrived in Canada recently i on the Canadian Pacific steamer` Mozitczzlin. Tips: colonists are proceeding to Ontario and Western points where they will take up farm work. ' i The project of a ship canal across Scotland from the Clyde to the Firth of Forth was brought to the fore again at a recent meeting of the Mid-Scotland Ship Canal As- sociation, and there is a possibility of something being started in this connection in the near future. Milk, Cheese, Ice Cream sales are Increased! A single pair of potato bugs would, without checl-:, increase to 60,000,000 in one season; the hop aphis, developing thirteen gener_a- tions in a single year would, if un- checked to the end of the twelfth generation, have multiplied to ten sextillions. Canadian air pilots flew 294,449 miles carrying 9,153 passengers and 77,850 pounds of freight in 1922, according to a report of the Cana- dian, Air Board. Saskatchewan pilots led in the Dominion, carrying 3,622 passengers. Manitoba pilots carried 1,622 people, and British Columbia pilots 1,122. A company has been formed in London to exploit sunken treasure in Navnrino Bay, off the west coast of Greece. The promoters state that there is a matte`: of $45,000,000 in bullion and other forms still at the bottom of the Bay. where it was sunk with the united fleets of Egzypt and Turl-zey by the united British, `French and Russian fleets in 1827. Last summer 4000 forest fires cleared away at least ten times as many trees as were cut down for lumbev, pulp and paper, and all oth- er indxxstrial purposes. A very lar;=:e percentage of the fires were caused by careless can , ers and sportsmen who thought it would die out or cast avay a lighted match or cigar- ette end. Im_r.w:ovement of camping facilities at Barzff for automobile tourizzts is 12m-.' being xnnde; The Mount Run~ dle camp site is lming in*.p1'ovc(l and enlzu'g'er,l, and will be equipped with all mo:lern appliances. It is ex- pected that as: n rowlt of the open- ing of the Banff-Wlnclm`n1e1`e road flnC.- Ivnnvt l>"\r\ fnnu-(c-5 `-1Ir\'{`L`:n 4-L..,u.~L Though 301119 11' tough and can sin of heat and culd, IL,.... ....A r\n:~:`xo I U1 IIULLL illlll Udlll, lull IIlU.JUlI|._V `ll them are easily killud if the right memmls are u.:e(I. But what pnz-, zled scic-nlists sfor many _\'mu's was than kiHcd" IlliL'1'()})()S semnccl zrblej to come to Hf :t.:uin. You ('0u1(l 1-cu .I.,.... ..,. .l....,l up Ann. nuiiu Luv l\ll1 llllilll cl-3 uv'u.u an \I in :1 very S1101`! spam- would uppour in 5 '1: lively as r:ri<:I<(.-ts. ('m'm'y was mzulo. II \\ `nunnv union-nhnr: hrrnr-1} IIVULY TIE |Jlllfl\l.'L.`|. J lH'l| was fun 1nan_v microbes bra-er! by In .=uw(1s or 5-'.pr)1'(.s, `which are ixldustructible, save by re. ll!|!l|i|Ill!llIilllll|il!!|!lIl!!|lIll[H1IIIDIIIIIITIHIIIIITHIIIIIIIHIIII!I!H!iIllT!I]IHI1]IIHIlTlHU!lHH EIH H11 V corded. A curious cu:~'.1mn o.\"isl.s :un0ng the natives 01' the lSl:l.ll_(l 01' Rztizttteu (the chic.-t island of the lemvztrd group of the Society iSl:1l`l(lS) vt.01)ro- serve the Inmnory of deceased re- latives. In the large church at lfturozt, tho principal settlement on that island. will be seen a. great number of brass lmntzim; lumps hanging from vbrackets all about the building. Each of tl1ese has been presented -by some native family in memory of some beloved member of the clan who had died, and they constitute 21 memorial, such as :1 bronze twblet or a stained glass window would represent in European countries. up-nu r.. w. nu: prospects for t Canada of the ently needed 1; -s-u v~nVVvv-n` v try 5 namrzu re:-ourr_-es were much hri;r'm:or than thry had horm in the past two or three years, and an in- creasor] traffic from Great Britain and I\ orthr.-rn Europe was indicated by th Hargeiy increased western movement on the company's ships (luring the past four months of this year. On and alfter July 1, when an amendment to the tCor0nm"s `Act goes into effect in Ontnrlo, it will not be necessary afor 9. jury called on an inquest to View the body of the person upon whom the inquest is held, when the Coroner, with the consent of the Crown ./\tl01*ne,v in w1'ltinp;, directs that the viewing of The body shall the dispensed with. .\l|(`I{()l5I-IS ILHU) ' M l`1.\l()lll|'1S PEI!I |`I'l`l'.\ l`l'll) ISY L;\.\ll H `READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS.` Ier and Ther LJLLH hlilllu 1`-Z,l( ml the . .1 1).. Some quotationsfrom recent reports: microhns stand gxrcut rul nnlrl I111. I\|I| a>.\ U1 CUIOIIISL urg- (la-*.'r.-lop the coun- :~:ourr_-os much ry un xvnnrc and nu Sn, T0 !)|'IS'l` ROY rohns are vr-,ry 1 l r,-.\'lro|ne.=z nmjm'it_v 01' lud mmy hos ' in. door n of h dllu (Ln . -n :L(l1'.~:- fnund H121! moans 0| .... . n . .. I .. Ottawa Issues Instructions on Cus- toms and Excise. OTTAWA, May 14.-Tl1e dates on which tariff and revenue changes take effect under the new budget p1'opos3.ls are set forth in a memor- andum to collectors of customs and excise issued by the department here Saturday night. Thp nhnnqns are held 120 be in ef- was made oerore that nay. (b) Changes in Inland Revenue Act as respects cigarettes in effect on May 12. As respects the repeal of section 378, excise tax on sugar pro- duced in Canada from sugar beets, in effect from January 1, 1923. ' (c) Changes in Special War Rev- enue Act, 1915, and amending Acts, in etfect August 1, 1923-except the provision proposed by section 2 of the resolution re excise tax on wines of all kinds, except sparkling Wines, etc., to come into effect on 8. date to be xed by proclainntion of the Governor-in-Council. The changes \gi_1igh come into effect on August 1 are those cencerning the stamp taxes on cheques and receipts, and the sales tax. ` IECL as IOLIOVVSZ (:1) Customs tarl changes in ef- fect on May 12, in respect of goods lmporteq or taken out of warehouse for consumption on and after that day, and goods previouslyimported for which no entry for consumption made before that day. rm f".`nnnr.rt:n In Inland Revenue .\'() l`l(`!C m-` I`u:.~"r vns'r1.\'(; 01 , \'o'r1:n.~" I.l.s"l` Saturday mgn The changes are held :` feet follows: /..\ l"nufnn1: tnwi r-hnngasx I ` Three Steamers Are Im1l1'lsoned.oi1 Lake Superior. SAULT STE. MARIE. Mlch., May 14.-Three steamers, the Frank C. Ball, Cletus Schneider and the H. P. Mclntosll, were on Sunday practical- ly marooned in the lce eld of Lake Superior caught by the ice oes which set in last Tuesday. Pushed by a. strong north-west wind they were carried to a point about three- quarters of a. mile from shore, three miles above Whitesh Point. Gnmn unvinfu urn: hm1'nD' VFIH an tn mues ano-ve w111L\:uu:Iu :u1.uI.. Some anxiety was being felt as to the condiiton of the boats larders. Sunday made their sixth day of im- prisonment and over a. week since they left their sailing port. The nfpnmer (`.m't. is still being tney Len Lneu` Bailing pun. The steamer Cort is still being held at the Soo, to be available in assisting stea.mers. About twenty- ve steamers were on Sunday scat- tered throughout the frozen eld in a distance of about ten miles above the Point. A few steamers were in the bay. Whsarn fhn thy-ran steamer-s are im- LLH:` U'd.,Y. Where the three steamers are im- prisoned the big ice elds have an- chored themselves to the shore, the huge masses in some places twenty to thirty feet deep, pinning the steamers in so that it is impossible to get out or allow assistance to get them. They are not in a. serious danger, however, but their release will depend only on a change of the wind or when the ice melted loose. ---- 1 Tragic Death of Little Child at Georgetown. GEORGETOWN, my 14.-One or! the saddest tragedies which have oc- } curred here for some time took place 5 Satu1'dz1y, when the two-year-old son ` ` of Mr. and Mrs. Edw:u'd King Iellr 1 H0111 the G1".u1(I l`runk I\'u.ilway . ` bridge and was instantly killed. 1 ` Nu nnn \vIInm:qr`ul lhn :11-r-Idr-hf ` Ul`lLl23't:` uuu WLLS UI5Li1l1I.ly luucu. ` No one witnessed the accident. I The child left its home on the 5 Cream River early in the moru- ; ; ing, prcsunlably to follow his 3' i f'-.HhcaI- In rhn nun:-r n'.iHQ unmni K/XCUIL l\.lV\.`l' l.".lll_) Ill lHU IUUL ll` fzither to the paper mills, some distance up the river, \\'h0I`C he was employed. When, after some time, he failed to retuvn, consix`-.ei'able anx- iety was felt, and seavcli parties were hastily organized. V\/hnn ill] Hut-I'r fnilrlrl nffnric tn Lli'~5Llly Ul'i:',iLlllLl.`u. When all their efforts failed to discover the child, it was thought that he had been drowned in the; river, and accordingly the streain was 1 drugged below the child's home. As no truce of the little fellow \='v.s found the Search was resunled furtllcr up ` the river. Toward evening a sack with which the child had been play- ing was l'0und on the bank under the railway bi'itl;.;e. The body was dis- covered it short distance from it. The little 1'ello\v s neck was broken, and it is thought that the child, attempt- ing to crust: the bridge, fell through one ot' the spaces between the rail- way ties. ' l)L-purlcu Arrives,` in En;.','l1uId. LONDON. May 14.---Art 0'I31'im1. - who was` (lt-porn-O from inglzuul _ ilflel` 1114: March 1'ui(ls, us an Irish u;,'iIuIm',urriv4-(1 at midnight Sum!-.1y, ul, llulyhvzul, wln-re hm was hundud v to Sculhunl YLLl`(l (lutuctivus by [our 1-5cr,rLin1L: lr,-1': Stun; u1l'Ic When lcuvin;_: Dublin ()'l51'iL-n pro- l(.-slcd Lhul. h- xvns nut, zLl10wc(l lo lruv:-I rsl-class. 110 also wunlc-(1 to be Lukttn to MLllL3llL'HU,`l`. His (escort. ignored his pron-st and brought. 111111 to llolylxttnd thi1'd-clu.s`s. n Iu .....|m..n.....u n...+ n-11.-1,... NH I Notice is hm'eh_v Lziven that I l1m'e' complied with Section 10 of H10 Voters" Lists Act and that I have posted up at my oicr at Barrie on the 30th day of April, 192?}, the list of all persons c-milled to vote in the said .\l1micipz1liIy for Hem- bers of the Le,<;is1:J.ti\'e ;\ssembly, and that such list. remains there for inspection. And T how-nhv r-all nnnn all \'nfn1'r: LU ll|Jl_yH'7d.U l.lHlU'|.'lil>5. It is lnulerstuntl that 0'Brlun will In: brought to London, \V[H.'I`0 IL is` stzxtud hu wlll nenmln in custody pending u. decision by the House of Lords on the validity oi the donor- tutions which followed the raids. Cawnnvillo Mun Burned. CAVANVILLE, On't., May 14.--- Lato Saturday afternoon, while re- pairing :1 forty-gallon gasoline tank which he belleved to be empty, Clit- ford Elliott, aged 19, an employe of Coblcy s blacksmith shop here, was badly burned about the body when the tank exploded, setting his clothes on fire. Elliott used a pair of heated tongs to loosen 21 nut. zxklnv f`,:n-Oar uyhn mnu ufnnalna LUUEU LU IUUBUH U. ulll. Oakley Carter, who was etandlng nearby, was blown against the wall and rendered unconscious, but later recovered and was removed to his home. Elliott was removed to 0. pri- vate hospital In Mlllbrook, but later was able to return to his home. Queensland Labor \Vlns. BRISBANE, Australia, May 14.-- The earliest results of the voting In (he Queensland. elections, show that me Theodore (Labor) Government .ms lwml returned by a slightly in- creased majority. lm TAXES CHANGE. CAUGHT IN ICE FLQE. __ WENT TO SEE DADDY. The Northern Advance Auuu: uu tux. ) ` 31' 1 tar timef nsi(`-.e1'ab1e ch forts L _` 4|... TURKEY TO BE \VII ED OFF THE MAP IN 1928` ,'u5pI;'L:1iuu. And I lmrehy call upon all voters to take immediate proceedings to liuw any m'rnrs or omissions cor- rected accm'(1in_:; to law. Imtetl at B:11'1'ie this 30th day of; April, 1923. I A \\. _ QIniIh_ Lieut.-Col. McKe11(h-ick Predicts the Last Great \\':u- in 1928. The next and the last and the most devastating war will `come in the spring of 1928, and if it doesn't you can ll my coat tails full of old boots, was the prophecy of Lieut.- Col. W. G. McKendrick, speaking to the Empire Club, Toronto, last week, as 21 substitute for Editor W. J. Ca.1ne1'on, of the Dearborn Inde- pendent, Henry Ford -: paper. '1`hnf war will vhn start:-rl hv peuuuut, ru:u1`_y ruru : pupx-:1 . That war will `be started by Turkey and I venture to -predict that the United States and Britain will wipe Turkey off the map, he predicted. The road-building colon- el s idea -was that the Anglo-Saxon peoples were the league which God had created to right things in the world. You may tall; about the League olf Nations until you`1'e'b1ack in the face, but what are you going to do with Russia and Prussia and Turkey and -Persia and China ? The League of Nations will not suc- ceed because it is not built on the 1`i,4l1t basis. The Ang1o-Sax011 people are the Israel of God's \v01'd--tl1ey are the -Creator's league." 1.1,; nu-uh-n T-Ta'n1-v `I-`nr 9: Han are tile `bl'L'zuU1`5 u:u;.;uc. He praised Henry Ford as the man with the quickest -brains in America, the man who could pick out big basic ideas, the man who worked 15 or 18 hours it day -because 119 loved to \\ GI'1\'. who iii-ed and dressed modestly despite his hun- dreds of millions, who ate little and worked hard, and was more intent on building up men than in build- ing motor cars. His millions have not spoiled him. He Values his money as :1 means to provide `men with work. He is the {nearest servant I k11;o\v. It` I were handing o11t halos the iirst would go to Henry l<`or(l.- Ne\vn1a1'ket Era. CI{4EE.\l0I{E )llNlS'l`I'}l{ IS U.-\LLl<}D T0 l l:`.XE'I`.-\:\'(i ` sliovelling" <\\'e(-ks before sowing. '1'i1.l lllkilh Ill \Jll|(/IJLU till it will 1)ay ion Entoniologist, to treat their seed peas this spring as follows: C0211 Oil `Tre:ttmex1t--C0:11 oil has been `found useful in dest1'o_\'ing the pea "bug in the seed. _/\l)out :1 half gallon 01` coal oil is suilieient. to t1'er.1t, about 5 bushels of peas. `The idea is to thor0ugl1l_v moisten every seed so that the oil will penetmte and kill the insects. For this pm`- uuu Luul. `pose the seed may be placed on :1 3 tloor, the oil applied, and the peas Sl!0\'C11(l over thoi-ou;:l1l_\'. 'l`he sl1m'elling' should be i'e1wute(l evo1;\' (lay for at least. tom` days, the first to be done about two r`\nnnnnt.-nun! nntinn iu vnw-v .111`-(Inc- The P1'esb,vte1'_v of Barrie held its regular meeting at Allundzlle on l`rida,\-', May 8th. Thu fnnv T. .\fr~T.r.\nn of T7h'nr'M"nrr1. l`1`l(1ZJ.,V, ;\1d.)' GUI. l The Rev. L. ..\IcLean of B1'z1d:ford, was elected .\I0de1'ato1' for the en- suing six months. A nnll in fnvnr nF tho `Rpv, Chas. sulng SIX HlUllL1l5. A call in favor of the Rev. Chas. MacDonald of Creemore mvas pre- sented from the collgregzttion of I onetang. Rep1'e;<.entatives from Penetang appeared to support `the cull which was laid upon the table` to be considered at .1 special n1eeLin:.;' to be held in Stayllm` on the 22nd inst. Routine business lfollowed. rm... h..m~1n-mum rue nlhh-amend in IIISL. IKULIHIIB Ull5UlUS5 ILUllU\V\:'u. The P1'es1)yte1'_V was addressed in the afternoon by Rev. W . )1. Roch- ester, D.D., Secre-tz11'_\' of the Lo:'d`s Day Alliance. Part 3 \'nlm~-` Lisls. 1922. Nluniri-1 pulity of l`m\ n of Jim-ric, (.`o1lI1t_vl n1 Silxlcnc. |

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