Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 28 Jun 1923, p. 7

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....... ......- Inn: nmg. J. 1`, P_-1)'E'1"]`l:1, Owner `and Manager. .._..~.,.,........................J \ Like The - Northern -j Advance mnmion D337, July 2, 1923 JOB Letter Headings Note Headings Statements, Bill Heads Envelopes of every kind Chiropractors. - Al\II -5 I J. T. Pm'ETTE :3 DRI abs PAR (f:.1iIl1\r\ 0 I` SPECIAL: FURNITURE ! 2.15 Pace or Trot. . . .$40n.m~ \;. .::.`-. Trot . . . . . . . . . AS300 2.25 Pace or Trot. . . . }()0.m an Pace or Trot. . - . .-$200 I-`ree stabling, hay, stmxx uh. . 1". re. Free entrance-. 5 to enter .xmi NH` SII'l- 10 D91` Cent- ducted from all money winnma 5.`-*I1`:\ `i\'id'd 50. 35. 15 I 10 per cent. Horses eligible _\1;_v 1. Willi. Trotters allo-Wed M seconds. All races mile heats. to :1 liH1=- 1- Best Lady Rider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - ~ "11lb10 G010 P1 Best Gentlenmn Rider . . . . . . ` . . . . . . . - - - - WI-llmble Gold PI Best Lady Auto Driver . . . . . . . . . . .. ~- -- "0-llmble Gold 1 ! Best Gentleman Auto Driver . . . .. . .- - - I111-able Gold P1 Best Looking Baby. 1 year and Athlnun e......;_ -n --- --- ,',,,.1o.l ` `X.-Junble Gold P1 An up-t6 -{date stock of GARPETS LINOLE UMS ETC. FURNITURE Prize Prize Prize Valuable Prize Prize ,-,4}: for Small Bills grand Stand, 25 Cents .. .\x"'\ I \`III'.I 60 Elizabeth sisreet. Folders, Programs Posters, Dodgers Sale Bills, Cards Mercantile Circulars Invitations, Circulars . $300.00 $200.00 . UK?` and . ve ` nclt` Lilhll I0 uarrie on the ;morning of June 23rd, where they were met by a large number of Orange brethren and friends, inter- ment being nmtie In the Union ceme- ttery of that place. The funeral ser- vice at the grave was conducted by his late pastor, Rev. Mr. .\Iust.ard. and assisted by Rev. Mr. Somer- ville, pastor olf Ivy Presbyterian church, followed- by the usual Orange burial service, conducted by the officers and brethren of Ivy L.O.L. No. 450. Mr. Carr was predeceased by a daughter, Tillie Carr, who died in Barrie in 1913. aged eighteen years, and leaves to mourn his Ioving mem- ory his Wife, one son. Arnold, of Toronto; S. J. Carr of Thornton, a `brother. and \fic:- 1u--~-~-A - 1uI`Uul0; 5. J. Carr `brother, and Miss Ma and Mrs. Maurice Hil siste-rs.-(Contri`buted.) It is only 3. question of time be- fore every pedestrian will be behind a. steering wheel-or in -an emer- gency ward. ,- ............\.n. A short service was held at hrs June 22nd, at 8 o'clock, and was {late residence on Friday evening, largely attended. Rev. Mr. Utxstartl, pastor of St. David`s Prestbyterian church, of which the deceased s was la Iuenrber, ofciated. Testimony of the esteem reverenced for our late `brother was evidenced by many {beautiful oral tl`lb11leS. His re- gmains were taken to Barrie on ;mornin;: June 22m who--n n~-- Recommends Chiropractic for Billiousness me ume uz ms death was a. mem- ber of Ivy L.O.L. \*o. 450, in which lodge he had held various ofces. occtrpying the .\Iaster s chair for two years. He was also a member of the Scarlett Chapter. His demise is a distinct loss to the Orange Order as well as to a. host of ad- miring lfriends and acquaintances, for once hztving met our late brother Carr was to never forget him, for his kindly diSDOs'i[i0n nnrl nnlar =+..,......k uauer as well am disposition and qu of charactex". c _u, , `To Tomato Plants Cabbage Plants Aster Plants . . . Wool Again we are reminded of the un- certainty of life in the early demise of our most highly esteemed bro- ther, VVi1lian1 John Carr, oif 1792 Dufferin St., Toronto. who passed away at the VVestern }".0spital after a. brief illness and opelntion for in- ternal trouble, on Jun; 2151. The late Mr. Carr was borx; ` E_:_!berl, Simcoe County, Dece-umber `7th, 1866, and was in his 571h year. In December, 1893, he was married to Eliza Jane Arnold nf Tvv me. ,~..,. I wcic uuwn zc a. dozen. Great quan- tities of green produce were offered for sale at the usual prices. St1'a}v- rberriesv sold for 30c to 35c :1 box. I-`lowers, mostl-y peonies, sold for 15c a bunch. Cream brought 30c 21 pint and wool sold at 20c to 250 3. lb. Prices: Butter 33-35c1b. Eggs . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 25c-27c doz. Chickens . . . . . . . . . . .. 28-32c lb. _Asparagus . . . . . . . . .. 10c bunch Lettuce . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5c bunch Green Onions . . . .. . . .. 5c bunch Rhubarb . . . . ... . . . . . . 5c bunch Potatoes . . . . . . . . . .. 65-75c bag Beets 20c small bask. Carrots .. ....25c bask. Parsnips `. . . . . . .. ... .25c bask. (`.n=n.m "" ' ' I Last Satu1'day s market was a busy place, with the, attendance much .larger'tha11 that of the prev- ious week. The three staples, but- ter, eggs and chickens, showed prac- tically no change, although eggs were down 2c dozen. Great 300 tn 52:, p. SATURDAY- S MARKEE Announcements Blotters, Receipts Memorial Cards Circular Letters \VlLLI.-LWI JOHN CARR Mrs. Ashton. of 127 Ascot Ave., Toronto. Under date of April, 19-22. writes. that suffer unrrm-am, u ::x5AHl'.'t`Il years, L r 1`.hormon, Margaret Carr Hill, Toronto, ed`) .. on-(ac bag . . . . .25c 30c pint 2 "hnx-pa Skin an`. uuu, 1111' 1115 L quiet strength The Northern Advance ouc pmt 2 `boxes 35c 2 boxes 35c . 2 boxes 35c 20-25c lb. 33-35c lb. 5c . 3 small has]: While not as good as 3. dollar, 21 n'ick1e does its best. It goes to church more often. ::\v.:Luu5 ed the lack of : not be g 111 11. league oven in er Luiy. Bowling can be traced to the thirteenth centu1'_\'. In the reigns ct Edward III. and Richard 11., Parlia- ment and the Kings, fearing it might jeopardize the practice of archery, then so important in battle, put it uder the ban. In the past, as now, eminent people were en- thusiastic Ibowlers. Charles I. "dram: fron1 the {bowl and bowled for what he di-an.l<." Ganrblin:;' in connection with the game, indeed, -became a mania. These excesses rendered it unfashionable, and miter the revolution it died out. Salva- tion came l rc-m Scotland, where it had been `known since the sixteenth century. It was not, -however, till- the early part of the past centur_v that the Scotch built their many ne greens and drew up laws for the game. From the land of the hea- ther, like its compatriot in the realm of sports, golf, it spread to England and all over the English- speaking world.-Orillia. Packet. uuucl uuu: 01; April, 1 -`-.i'.. writes, that after suffering nine years, she was made W911 by taking adjustments from ucna Lttu iuuu. LL is iuree years ago since the ladies club was 01':.,'unized.| Pzuticipation in the pastime `-by the fair s-:.\', is thought by some, 21 new` thin:.;. That such is not the case is proved by -.1 passage in Shake- spea1'e s Richar 1-1. The Queen, in reply to her ludy s suggestion or a gzmle of bowls to relieve her ennui, says: It will make me think the word is full -01' rubs, and that my fortune runs agailist the bins." This also recalls the l'1C[`tllLI biased bowls were in the sixteeiitli cen- tury. 17 cu. sicvus 111 ualiaaa. A ne clu'b house.has vbeen built, with complete accommodation for ladies and gent1emen s dressing rooms. and with snaeinns Sifrinxr nntu auu 5U11LH:.'IllllS uressing rooms, spacious sitting out verandahs. This is as it should be, for there are now more lady mem- bers thau men. It is lhree orgzmized. S-CK. is Ihnnsrhi hv ammo -.1 nuuxca n nuv I uvlbu U1 1Ul.UuLU. uuristrlictlon .was begun last year. First a base of nine inches ott` cinders interlaid with tile drains, was deposited. This was rolled down to a thickness" of six inches and on this six `inches of top dressing was placed. At the pres- ent time it is a. beautiful carpet of green turf, 16.5 feet in length and 1153 feet in width, surrounded by regulation ditches. Twelve greens can be accommodated, and thus nearly one hundred players can taKe_ part at one time. Five strings, each holding three 750 .watt nitrogen lamps, make it one olf the best light- ed greens in Canada. .\ nn n'ln'h hnnm-. 1..." .n.,.,... .k..:IA. 1 I . The game of `bowls, \the oldest. British outdoor pastime, next to anchery, is ourishing in Orillia as never before. The new green on Colvborne street, which is now being used, is considered second to none north o-f Toronto. Construction Ihegnn 12:1 vonr IN:-a+ a More A6` 0RlLLIA'S BO\VLI.\'G GREEN ' v THE HISTORY OF THE GAME I OR a distance 01 sou miles, Detwecn .$uu:u.a_x'b'. the junction of the two main lines of the Cuzlaulml . Pacific Railway, and the Manitoba boundary, ?in:x'n- are only twelve points with a population of 0%.`. 200. This means that for 880 miles there me . .5; twelve points at which civilization has `to any at ~'wnii encroached upon what is one of the last few rcr.:.:;.;- ,` ing accessible wilderness regions of the North Am~ ; ican continent. From the French River, north of the Georgian Bay and Lakes Huron and Superior to west of Kenora. a tract of land 880 miles long an of unknown depth is practically unexplored} and this part of Northern Ontario is one of the m richly endowed sections of Canada in natural beau _ Sylvan lakes, streams and larger waterways for a network through the country and almost incred- ible stories are told of the size and quantity of fish. particularly red and speckled trout to be found there. It is a well known haunt of big game. That this countrv is snnrselv nrmulnfpri in nlnnnli it is wen xnown noun: of mg | this country is sparsely populated is alone responsible for the fact that it is not known to more tourists and sportsmen. Each year hundreds more are absorbed by the country, but the lack of accom- modation has kept many more hundreds away. Three o{ the most fesclnsting districts of this glorious tract will therefore be rendered more attravtive than ever by the erection this summer of comfortable bung..~luw a. scheduled senior church` game played on Monday ; Tx~inity-St. Andrew's defeat- Y..\I.C..-X. 11-2. Owing to f space 2. detailed report ca.n- given. Where World s Record Specklgd Trout was Taken PENETANG Horse Races, Auto Show, Etc, I We never saw a woman who was inclined to be bald, but we know a lot of men who are bald against Itheir own inclination. I ucyl. a5u\:uiLLu'u1 `iuuu. I Are we to tolerate a condition where, with every forest area on a rising market, our own citizens with a false notion of personal license, shall continue to start four thousand forest res a year, killing the very resource `from which the industrial workers of Canada stand to prot most ? I believe the provincial govetvnnients could well afford to] spend on forest re prevention every dollar olf their forest revenues up to.` a point. where the forest capital ceases to show an annual depletion. It even one-half of the millions of forest taxation were spent on the most modern of forest protection we would nrapidly diminish our shocking annual losses of timber and go far toward placing the timber resources on a. -business-like basis. Lula UL 1L century [0 repair. As the situation now stands, Can- ada should gain enormously from the siwmple fact of possessing great spruce a-reas -with powers to make utilization effective and relatively cheap. To the south we have a partially deforested na- tion, exliibiting an insatiable demand for the products of a spruce forest, chiey newsprint paper. Even as England s coal served to enrich her during the last century or more, so Canada's spruce and `pine forests should be taken as representing a commercial counter almost unmatch- ed by anything else we possess ex- cept agricultural land. Ara fr. fn`nv-nfn .-. ,........:.'.:....1 xv :3 excellent waterl l l 4 1 I I I 1 A u m Auuuu mun: Juleulgelll [O (X15- cern in a `bush `re the -destruction of a multitude of pay envelopes. It drives the plain facts home when we visualize every human-caused forest re as a blow to our national well- being that will require three quar- ters of a. century to repair. AS the :imIn.finn nnw manna (`I-an, l I It seems self-evident that if the plague of forest res in Canada is permitted to continue, the exodus df - population from our timber grow? ing areas cannot very Well Ibe pre- vented. We have a. large percent- age of Canada's halbitable area unfit for -farming. That percentage must produce timber and mines or be eliminated from our slate of assets. From the points of view of -re dam- age we may omit consideration of mines. ages of forest conag-rations to con- tinue at the present pace, it is only a. -question of a relatively few years _ until we force lfrom our northern areas the great body of population and all municipalities subsisting on forest man.ul'actures. T -rnonrd fhn Fnrnn} no .... .. .......- Thus, if we allow the rav- ` ILU1 I-.`bL Llld.ll-Ll1l'clCl1.1I'e5. I regard the forest not as a mass of trees. "but as the raw material of industrial expansion and of prolic einployznient, and as the mainstay of our thousands of Inunici-palities de- pendent on wood-using industries. It is much more intelligent to dis- cern in :2 `hnzh m' Hm .docn~un1~.'nn FORSEES EXODUS OF PEOPLE BECAUSE OF RUIN OF FOREST " V l READ THE ADVERTISEl\IEN'1`S.j By Hon. Clifford Sifton rim): one, Lwn or tour 'tiL:ux`ni"u' Lahly with a (:42 - ` 1. The simple -`In: `n-`umince will en ,- n1u.~;i1 1-;-wet rates ) hotels r 'm... I2`-~- A-- $1500 in .Prizes'! $1500 i;1-Prizes I [HEB inche that R 1 var HUEGIS The French an elevation w' _ .. , .... --.cu-mg as-AL. nnplzoni nzh ti.-amps at French River, Nipigon 3 (Lake of `the Woods). These ca izhuse which have proved so su- `)f the Canadian Pacific in the well built central club house, :'3l'f.`d and facilities provided ;\-xi)`. `re sm-xounded by cosy litt Hm u.'i(:, two four perso 5r.:umm".ahiy camp . wrus simple IWELS lI1lpI'S-SIVB. There are' now 75 mem~bers of Barrie Lodge and Beaver Lodge that have crossed the Ibar, `50 of these are interred in Barrie ceme- tery, one lies in Flanders eld, the others lie in various parts of the Province. It. `gs tting that their memory be honored every year in some way. I `\V1l.ll l.lUWl:`I'S. A short address [was then given -by Rev. E. T. Douglas, in which he pointed out that it was tting that` we should cherish the memory of the deharted, but that it -was even more important that we remember the living and help to bring cheer ant? comfo1't to those who are lone- ly and sad. The service throughout was impressive. ~ - 'l`hm-n nrc: nnur '7. ........u....... -12 The Oddfellows and Rebekra-hs ttingly observed Decoration Day on Sunday, when the graves of depart- ed menrbers whose remains lie in the Union cemetery, were strewn with orwers. Arriving at the ceme- tery` in motor cars the _OddJfellows and Rebekahs marched to the Odd- fellows plot, Where the objectot' the gathering -was explained by the Noble Grand. A couple of hymns were sung and prayer offered by the chaplain. The names of the depart- ed were read by Bro. A. C. Bricker. and their graves were then decorated with owers. A eh.-u-4 ...:,:........ -..-, ODDFELLO\\ S AND REBEKAHS I{E.\lE.\lBER THE DEPARTED LARGE .-\SSOR'l`.\lE.\"[` - OF CAKES FOR .-\FTER1\'OO.\' ww- READ THE .-XDVERTISEHENTS. v....vl..uunun .3- Phone 406, Barrie. Butter Crisp Bread BAKERY 137 Dunlap St. Buns Pies and Tarts French Pastry Layer Cakes Hilrs PHONE 101 7 Page Seven Verandah and_Living-Room Furni- "ture and Garden Seats at Torontb prices. Fe'*$`3::;s A. E. SMITH D`is. Burns

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