Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 16 Jul 1925, p. 2

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, Minister; 3. L SQUIRE, Deputy Minister THURSDAY, JULY 16,` 1925 I `| Memorial Tablets Corner Stones \ Markers Monuments `Canadian 85 Scotch Granite ` PRICES REDUCED JOHN F. MURPHY, Prop. I lBARRIE S BEST LAUNDRY ELEM BROS. 1` Phone 616. Laundry" called for and delivered Prices reasonable W01-kmansh'1p guaranteed on all fami1_v washing` AUTO LICENSES Debentures of the Town 0! Barrie. 5; Per Cent. Issue. Cana(la`s present policy is to hew! ve cents wovth of wood and sell it to Uhc United States to make it into , 1-11.... ,.I...:.. 'I"l-m TTnH'n(l r- , Good Investment. _.__--.-.._T_ 7 OWEN STREET `Masonic Temple Builuivzg __- - -I-rI041'1'1TIT1 `I - .l.I.a-...-., _._.. _ Successor to J. Arnold Insurance w1au:Z1b=;i.i.m,"fs"sti'i:`1:2 _A_ .. I Av-nnh-I g . . . . . . . ..12c . . . . ..14c lb. ...11c to 12c FOR SALE : of High- ~k drin.-t_*'r5. .11clb. Five Points Barrie. IO Ullk: LIHLEU DLil.lA.`b `nu xuanx. A nu`. a ve dollar chair. The United States policy is to give ve cents to the how:-1' of wood and produce four dollars and ninety-ve cents worth of chair. That is why Canada is not pro.=perin:.:' as it should. l In commenting on the menace of`: the bicycle under modern traic comlitions, .\Iag`ist1'atc Brunton of Toronto said: Children have quite as much right on the streets as motor cars, but. it is most unwise for them to })1'eu1iie that they are safe. because they are within their rig'l1ts.; The fact tliat. a victim in a traic accident i'l21(i the right of way is usually poor consolation. THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1925 V The travelling` motorist is order- . ed to telephone ahead to the next town of his coming`, so that owners of ner\`0u.< hors may be warned in advance. This law was made in the State of Iowa twenty-five years ago and has just been repealed by the Leg'is1ature. If the words other motorists were substituted for the \vor owners of nervous h0rses,"] such a law mi_9;ht be useful in On- tario. ;. The coal situation at the present time looks serious--for the con-' 1 sumers. Everywhere the coal mining _. industry is peculiarly subjcet to labor troubles ending in strikes, because coal is a necessity. Coal is a mon- opoly of the mine owners, and the bringing of it out of the ground is a monopoly of the mine workers. Coal is a national necessity; winter comes and people must have coal. lt is this that makes the miners be- lieve that their (lemamls must be . . ..~ .. . ____,u.._ .1. met. llL`\L' LHUL L/HUII Llllldllu.` ulurn. us. And it is this that makes the gnine owners condent that what ever happens they cannot be hurt. They ](ilu\V' that if enough coal is not taken out to meet requirements the avail- able supply will bring any price they ask. The only solution appears to be that all mines must be national- izc-xl. A monopoly of such a national necc.-s. should not be in the hands of private ownership. SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK Gray hair. however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few apphcations of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. nmw cfav mavl Look vounzl `Page Two its hundred-xoiu. Don't stay grayl youngl Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound," which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition of oth- er ingredients. .Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use prepara- tion, because it darkens the hair beau- tifully, besides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; af- ter another application or two. its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous. anglgyou ap- Pe3.r years younsr. When Mixed with Sulphur It Brings Back Its Beautiful Lustre At Once (Four;ded 1851) . an Old Home Week` H`un<.lreds are waiting 11121 of ` zrn 3run~ ton :y heir rights. in of t the` to t mig not of t Gm` an sior obli : n`-a1 Lookir nrn- monthst St,, worst se rear Parliame 2.00 in years ions barren 0 sing eluding & gust am lic ques -- Dromise: ',-`li Lrt Looking back over -the past ve months t-he Ottawa J-ournal sees the session of perhaps the worst Parliament that Canada has known years. It nds the ve months of achievement and their .con- weeks such as to inspire dis- and amazement, with grave pub- questions sidetracked or com- promised and millions of dollars voted without scrutiny. It wishes that the nation could have been congregated in the galleries of the House of Commons to witness the spectacle, the inference evidently be- ing that were the people to see the performance of Parliament under its present leadership they would be quick to make a change. The Journal recites the reasons for its conclusion in part as follows: Of the long list of promises in the Speech from the Throne practr- cally nothing got to the statute books. The pledged solution of the railway rate question brought little but com- promise to cover; retreat from an im- possible position; the much heralded measure to control ocean rates end- ed in a Cabinet rout; high cost and humiliation; amendments to the Grain Act so favored elevators over farmers that even the Progressive worm turned and rent its erstwhile leader; a $10,000,000 rural credits scheme, an evident de~liberate fake, was luckily killed by the Senate; a liigli-soumling coking scheme, brought - - - n:+1m.- am. A` I..-L..-.m. 11701:` Of~< com 1:ali' pres vill-2 boa 900 in say pri: the chi rer iou Vlt hl.1'ih-S011l1(l1l1`L." cunillg, acinsuu.-, u.uuu_..... in at the lastminute, was either still- born or the victim of infanticide; a transferruable vote bill, promised re- peatedly. never made an appearance; `the Home Bank depositors bill had to be taken in hand and put into half decency by the Senate; incapacity,` muddle and biasma, marked most 01` `the ministry's record. ` ~4 < .. . 1 _ L1... .........&..u ` 1'. i`._\', at (I capacity. y:;~u1'.< wh <.-nou.:h L `.i\'i i` its princ acit-y to 1 1'11-0 trim has slavi 1L'Hf;'L`(l tn lizlmcnt, zxy.-`C of sion for o`\`. '.'.1`(-wt (Ire ih2Ngfthg;nAhuanre\ Linc uuun.~v;_. .. ...--_.., Of the vital needs of the country -check of extravagence, reduction taxation and debt, prevention of thewlrain of human and raw material the United States, a vigorous im~ `mig`ration policy--this session brought a hope. Continued heightening tariffs the world over was met by *`G.o\'ernn1en~t scal tinkering based on - 1_,L-_.A` ....... Tnllnat-vial rlnnrn- \JnOVO1'Ill'llEIl`L uacau |.'uIl\L:zAut, .....,-.. 12m electoral map. Industrial (lopres- ` sion. unemployment, and mounting ' `obligations saw the Government :in`.a1`ch on in extravagance, oblivious `to world conditions, careless of busi- ness stagnation, heeclless of thel strain and drain on the nation through taxation, emifqration debt. Decline of iinlnigvation, de- lclared and admitted to be a vital. 5L r..... `Ln fins-nu-uh-|an1' lm`|`l l and 'cla1'ed amt a(ll1llLU.:Ll LU us a nu... necessity, ;~:aw the Government but confess impotence and failure. Mani- `festly dishonest budget st,atemcnts;. enormous increases in debt; sustained w - . __-L:-._ . ......4-..,.nnn-n 1-nH'Hnn: enormous lm:1'v:u.~.u: in Linux. .n..,.,.,....... high taxation; patronage millions like manna from heaven] l to favored constituencies-tl1cse u _ `..:_.:-....7-. Av-\`\' 1-nnhr +n :3 C I } c L` 0 u Fielding and `to were the ministry's only reply to a condition growing increasingly grave. The truth is that this is a sick Government in a sick Parliament. Weakened by the loss of men like Gouin; still further .weakened by retention of men like .\Iot.hc-rwell; the combined disease of intrigue within its ranks and of log-rollin{_:, and barter with Pro;:rc-:s- .=i\'es witliout its ranks, desti'o_\_*s the Government s usefulness and makes it a national menace. Without a sure majority, it improvises from day to day, living on hand to mouth policies, keeping` one eye on St. James Street and the other on the West, a creature of the arithmetic of division lists, with office its central l'd.\'U1'CLl \;Uuan./Lu.nu.u..: v , aim. ..... .. And the P1'0g'1'ess.ive record is no bc-t,t.e1'. This party coming to Ot- tawa to sanctify politics, has been an influence towards h_vpoc1'isy and honesty and sectionalism in Parlia- ment. The old parties had and have their faults, but never p1'ofesse per- fection. The chief evil of the Pro- {:1`e.=sive party has been its insincer- :... ,I.\,...:+ n-unnhm mm Hm itg A SICK PARLIAMENT 3:1`:-.~`.~:~i\'\: [Ji/l1'L_\' nan ucxn run .uu....,... deceit greater even than its Through four years, four \vh its numbers were 5,-Tr.-at to control legislation, it has divided its time between selling` out principles or provng` its incap- promote them. Foamin~_e' for free trade in the C0l'lSi ,i`l.11CIl(:l(?.~i, it .-:lavi; voted for tariffs. Chal- to move its platform in Par- it has never had the cour- the act. lts professed pas- economy was reduced to o_v. silence in the face of a deal of extravagance, and of clamor for a meat deal more. In its feebleness in debate, in its in- ability to take the initiative in any- thing, in its failure to achieve co- ho. or unity, or di;-zcipline in its own ranks, and, lastly, in its down- ri{.>;ht rccreancy to principle and its willingness to play mean politics, it has lowered the tone of even this Parliament and made g'ovcrnment less honest and stable. .\Ir. .\Ieig'hen, cont1'a.<.t.ed with this .' of his opponents, has unit- . , u __:...1:..,..1 1.:. .....Au 11: run`, `Published every Thursday morn- 3 'ing at the oice, 123 Dunlop ' Barrie. Subscription $1.50 per year in Canada and Great Britain, $2.00 in United States. Subscriptions payable in advance. Advertising rates on application. Morrison McKenzie, Publishers. Lilla .~LUl_\' U1 um U]IlIUII\In.a, nu.n uu-u I and vitalized his party. His pro- fxrammc, resting` upon unohamrinp; principle, but applied intelligently to change, is the ablcst, clearest, sane-st ONTARIO HEALTH SERVICE IS WASTING HUGE SUMS Dr. John W. S. McCu1l'ougl1, Chief Officer of Health for Ontario, re- commends t.he combining of munici- palities for public healrth purposes. At present in Ontario each city, town, vi1~1~age and township has a local [board of health and a medical oflicer n 1 ,,u1_ Vl1l-,...,. n-Inn nnurnvul-c nf 'boaru OI l'IC"d.ll.rll mm a u-cuu.a.. mm. of `health. There are upward-s of 900 of such local health governments - I\,L_..=_ `L. L...` ,.m1-m" n4` fhocn UUU 01 Such lUC'd1 ucauu 5UVL'.1uuu;uug Ontario. In but eight of these, says Dr. McCullough, including the principal cirties, can there be said to be an eioienlt health service. In all others the organization consists chiey 01' a part-time medical oicer of health, with, as a rule, but small remuneration and swbject to the var- ious well known disabilities of such a local officer. Li-ttle money is pro- vided for public healtlh purposes and what little is expended is frequently used at the worng end, in the cure, rather than in `ohe prevention of un- sanitary conditions. 'v 1.. .1....1:....-.. ...H-L. Han enl-n'an+ nf' lnnnl San1t.:11'y cuuuiuuus. In dealing; with the subject of local school management, of which there are often many as a dozen to 20 in a rural municipality, the Prem- ier, as Minister of Education, has struck the keynote in `vhis recom- mendation that local school areas should in the interests of efciency and economy be combined. The same principle holds true in respect to local public health administration. Opportunity should be allowed for the local units of a county to com- bine for sanitary purposes. V, The total for local public health administra- tion, part-time and full-time in On- tario amounts, to approxiinately $1,500,000 annually. Outside of the eiglit cities, there is, with cer- tain exceptions, llttle value gained for the expenditure of this large sum of money. There is no concert- ed effoivt to control diseases such as cancer, tuberculosis, or the venereal diseases. There is no adequate pre- natal care of mothers and infant mortality. "" ---r-~-',..__ -1.` 1'.`..,..1.~...1 ,4\11-mt` mBritain the unit is In the United States ` uzux L21-1u._v. The experience of England, Wales and Scotland and of the United States has shown that the small town, village and township health unit is too small to bear the nancial burden of a full time public health org'anization'and they are atlopting the plan of combining municipalities for public health purposes. In Great called a Com- bined Area." the county is usually the unit. The ad\'anta_g'e.s of such a plan for On- tario apparent. The a5rg'1'eg'ate funds now spent might be utilized in the employment for the area of a full~timed organization. Instead of an army of 900 or more health oicers, we would have, perhaps, 60 ...L.. .... L1 is nnalnun rln nnlxlin un:u, Vvtlu health work and give it. 1 thusiasnl at The l1ai1`s})1'in_2` of :1 watch is made by drawing steel wire through a hole in a diamond. A pound of steel wire costing" only 21 few dollars will make _1_; .-..:1-~ -4-` ."n+n1- l-\ni\-_e-n1-lnn- urlrn UUDLIIIS \Jlll.\ Ll. AVIV II\JAllQAbJ v- n.. ....-vv-- eight. miles of watch hair-spring` wire [worth more than $60,000. Notes and Comments % Don It forget that wood ashes are excellent to spread over the ground where you intend to plant late rad- ishes. Wood ashes are good for most any garden crop, for that mat- ter, and they are rich in potash, an element that costs money. :~:t4=.t;-mt.-nt of policy that the country has had in years. And Mr. Meigxhcn is the puppet of nobotly. Ngobody n.:.\. \`,.km1u nnnfvnlu him IS Lllu yum.-t:u UL uUuu\|_v. .._...,.,.._. owns him. Nobody controls him. His policies are his own policies. His principles are his own princples. His mstakes are hs own n1istakes. Be- side the wavering`, the back-slinlin_g`, fclw muddlin.'; and vote-baitin_u' of Liberals and Prop,`1'<:ssives, his clear- cut, uncoiiipiioniisiiig.-' advoczlcy of a Canadian policy for Canada, the old tried historic policy that builder] C0llf(:(lI'.`1`2lt-lOll, stands out in hopeful relief. urn: L., .- ....,. nnnuinn I l`(.`ll(`l. The country, we are convinced, is turning: to that policy. It is sick of this Government and of this Parliament. It is sick of log:-rolling" and l)21rterin{_,v` for votes. It is sick 01' Government by lisitening; sick of ex- tr:xvu::zmc<-; sick of debt, of taxation, of rlrifi and impotence; sick of the tliiiigs which, in four years of boun- tiful harvest and favorable oppor- tunities, have seen Canada move backwards, her in(l:ustr_v lung'ui'sl1ii1g, her people becoming exiles, hcr rich- es being: exploited by others. It is p1'epa1`in};`, we think, to wipe out this ministry and this Parlizunenst, and to give Canada a leader who will lead and :1 Government that will govern." children Always Thrive ON.:._ I` j scows "EMULSION t-- -.----w---- or run; coo-Ewan on. IT ABOUNDS IN VITAMINS \`\'U \'\'Uu1U XIGVC, ycxnxwya, uv who would embrace public 1 m Watch Hairspring wvunu \.nu-.uou.-. lama..- as their daily business the supervision and en- present lacking. The glorious twelfth was celebrat- ed on Saturday last. The Northern Advance M1B1ANw1N,T1E 1 BARRIEOR LEAD Locals Errors Are Costly In] O.B.A. Game at Mid- land; Score 6-4 victory to `tie Barrie for the leader ship of the No1~,th Simcoe O.B.A. league in a ni-p and tuck svt1"ug'gle staged at Midland on Monday after- noon. The Baryie management is protesting the game on account of a decision in the seventh innings that retired the Barrie nine with the ty- ing runs on the bags. happened in this way. Emms was perched on third and Dobson on second. Two were down and Arm- strong` was at bat. Emms began to steal home while Ma1'aole was doing the wind up stunt. Maracle saw him and shoved the ball across the . L1, VI-H. , ....L...1-.... nn+n`1()I` The incident . nun zulu vuuvuu uu: ucuu uy.-.~.-., Vll\ pan to the catc~l1e1'. The catcher stepped up to the plate just as Arm- strong o`crexl at the sphere and` Emms was called out because of .-\1'mst1'on_;"us inte1'fe1`ence. If the protest is allowed the game will be mplayezl, providing.-' it a`ects the standing. D- IV!` .~1n1\1I\'In1] nnf nn']1-1' h('f+\' ouunxuuh. Barrie slammed out eigxh-t hefty blows, three more than the Midland ag'g'1*eg'wtio11, but they also commit- ted more errors. In addition the errors were bunched, vwhile the hits weren't. At that the local nine play- ed good enough ball to win nearly any old ball game. They met the pill hard and often, but the Mid- land oufcelders grave Maracle sen- sational support, as evidenced by nine put outs in centre and left field. Dyer crashed `three long` distance clouts that the centre elder gather- ed in, and Caesar, Hand and Dobson were treavted the same way. 17' II I ,,_-.... LL,. .vCn4-:1-\-an A4` +`",\ MidA1and came through with a (3-4 ictory hip eaguc . 11-1` 1 ,,, 1,I'-...l,... .``L,... \\ U15 L,Luwv\.u mu. .........~. . -._, . Midland were the victims of two neat double plays. In the second stanza Beauchamp laid down a single, but was doubled on Hewson s slash to short. In the seventh Fox was forced on Brown s rap to the box and a relay to rst retired the side. Maracle and Burns heaved pretty ball. Uaracle kept the eight hits well scattered, and while his slants were poked out his support cut oli bid after bid for a safety. In addi- tion he connected with t'he apple for three bonade two ba-g'g'ers, scoring` two runs himself and driving in a brace. Burns allowed but ve safeties, one in each of the second, fourth and fth, and two in the .seventli. He slammed out two safeties and scored two runs. His s:uppo1'~t was good and bad, two double plays providing` the elding" features, while several errors be- hind him paved the way to disaster. .\Iar.1cle and Burns retired four bats- men apiece by the air route. Mar- acle deadiheaded three to rst, while Burns walked one and hit another. G 1 . Lzuxun uu...~,.. .,..`, .....\. ..__ .,,,, Carson, with two doubles, and Dobson and Burns with two sin:.7:1e.= each, (lid the mo.=.ut of the willow xvield-in_: for Barrie, Anmstrong and Dyer getting the other two safe-ties. .. . .. . - . 41,, 1,..,I1'.... U...` .,_,.. ,,-.....:, ll\g --._-. . ,, Barrie fo1`gcLl into the lead for the rst and only time in the gfarne with`- a counter in the third. Burns and Carson went out to st.urt. On Mar- ac1c s error Emms reached first and n1eam1ere:l to second, sconing on Dob- son s single past third. 7 .. . . .. , How about : for Barrie ? for the call. sun .1 .....D.- r..- Mid1'.-md tied the count in the fourth. Maracle led off with a double to left and wendcd his way to third on 21 passed ball. He scored on StLx1'geo1i`s long y to left. In the f-th they opened up u long` lead. pushing` a trio ac1'os.< the pan. ,. went out second to fi1'; to st.z11't. Brown stopped the ball with his bodyi in:-teun.l of the but and was t1'zm.<- ported to the initial suck. MLn'1':1y'_ popped to first and all looked Serene.` but Moo1'e s poke (.`\"`LiL`(l Dyer and Brown came in. 1\`1a1':1cle came` 1h1'0u_2Ih with his second two szicker, scoring.-; Moore. SLlll`f.,"COl1 di-=il`to:l one at Em~m.<, who erred, la-.tti1 1~g' Mar-acle in. Duncan obliged by ying to rst. `*9 x ,1, ,, _.. flu: ._ Npxuqg-L1\r\Ilr\l' runn- rsn. Beaiuchamp s-campered over the plate with the fth tally in the sixth. Caesar dropped his fly and Beau- cha.mp readhe-d third on 21 passed hall, .~:~coi'ine; on Emm s mull" of Fox's drive. Hewson in the meantime popped to short and 21 double play, Burns to Emms to Dobson, rertired the side. B:n'ric trln'eat.ened to tie things up in the `seven-tih. Hand struck out. Blurns laid down 21 sinp,'1e and Car- son and Emma walked, filling: the bugs. Dobson scored Bu1'11s and Ca1'.=.on with :1 single over second. Small fanned and Armstrong; came to bat. Then Emma attempted a steal of home and was called out. - -. , L53`. hL|'(|l VA Il\lIII\. 54--vu -u.y., ...-....`. V.,,, A single by Moore, 21 passed ham, and Marz1cle s third double, scoring Moore, g'avo Midland another tally in the sevonLh. Noimlaor team collected a run in tho; eighth, but Barrie broke tln`oulp:l1 for a run in the ninth. Hand flew ei:_,"11'tl1(:fty LL... t1-.. H/H.l1`..n.l The Ha_r_1_1:3ss Man ALL KINDS OF HEAVY! % AND LIGHT HARNESS Blankets and Robes All Kinds of Repairing Done Full Line of Travelling ~' Goods l` 129 Dunlop St. Barrie. to cc-`ntre for the first out. Burns poked out his second single and Car- son scored him with a double to left. Emms went out pitcher to first and Dobson ew to centre for the last cut. Midland : Moore cf .. Ma1'ac'10 p Stu1'3..>'eon c . Duncan lb . Beauchamp ` "llewson 21) Fox If ....... .. Brown 5.: .;\I,u1'ra_v rf Nine vacancies in the Senate, not counting` those in the heads of some of the ohl gon=t1emcn.-'I`oIegram. Barrie : D. Emms 2b Dobson lb ...... .. Small rf .......... .4 .-\1-m stro n 3: 3b Dyer .. .. n-,....... 1+- \Ju\,Iux .- }'rIam| cf .. Burns 1) Carson c l Score by innings: `Midland ....... ..0 0 0 .` lBz11'rio ......... ..0 0 1 ( ... . l)'d1lll: . . . . . . . . . . ..u u - ., ., ,, _ ` _ Summar_v--Two base hits, Mar- aclv 3. Czlrson 2; double p1a_\`;<, Dyer to Emms to Dobson, Burns to Emms to Dob:-yon; struck out, by IVI-araclo -l, ` "'~ ~ `- lwnnnu nn 11:1: hf}. 1\I}H'. to Uousron; SL1`uL':\ um, u_ AVl|L(l\/l\. by Burns 4; bases on balls, of?` Mar- ucle 3, off Burns 1; hit by pitcher. by Bu1`n.=, Brown; left on buses, Mid- land 5. Bz11'1`iu 7. Umpircs-Butch .-\rbou1' at the plate, J. Dzxvcnport on the bases. What John K. costs you John K. McCarthy drives to his summer home. every Friday night and comes back Monday. . . ...-. .1 I I , ,L_- :; .'_ I--- LL-.. '2 Laura I-nc rnaay mgm. auu cuunco um... ............_,. It s 98 miles, and he makes it in less than 3 hours. His roadster can turn over 60 miles an hour with ease, and it rides comfortably at 45. ` - -` - 'lI-,_ __ L`... .......I It noes Comxunuuny an. 1.1. John K. gets about 14 miles to the gallon on the road.~ As a careful business man, he gures that oil and gas. cost him about $5.20 for each round trip. I I It Iu|',n__.;L-- ..l .J..l2L- COS! mm a.DuuL -.pu.c.u nu: cam. lvuuu ....,.. No one could ever accuse John K. McCarthy of delib- erately being careless with property, either his own or belonging to someone else. But every time his high- owered car gets above 25 miles an hour, it causes need- ess destruction to the road by grinding away the surface. John K35 trips to his sum_me_1: borne cost the }l)eo3le"of On the 238111 --annivei-sary of the Batle of the Boyne the Loyal Orange Order reairmecl its principles and beliefs in equal rights for all and special privileges to none. I655 ucau uuuuu l.\J nu. -vuu ..._, 5. ..... _- .._. _,_, K s trips his summer home cost the people `of Ontario more for road repairs than they cost John K. for gas and oil. There are thousands of John K. McCarthy's in Ontario. They mean to be as careful with other people s property as with their own, but they do not know that speed laws are meant to preserve road surfaces. -- uv I ll !\IL.(`....LL.. &I-.3. -..-Lynx-Hcnrnnnl` SPCCU raw: alc uu:cuu. I.v kn.-- If you are a John K. McCarthy, this advertisement is addressed to you. The Government of the Province and the various County authorities have provided an extensive system of good highways over which you may travel without cost. They look to you to do your share in keeping thesehighways in good condition. - - 1 1 9. -n- n J ._r..._.. ..............s.. hm-. + uriifnnv In Keepmg uxcac 1u5uvva_ya u. 5v... .. ........ .. You wouldn t wilfully destroy property. Don't wilfully destroy the highways. HIDES WANTED! We will pay the following prices- Green Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cured Hides . . . . . . . . . . . .. Calf Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . Kip Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 The HON. GEO. S. HENRY, I BAii1iiE TANNING co. If you are a John K. McCarthy this message is for you An advertisement issued by the Ontario Department ways to secure the co-operation of `motorists and truck tlvers, Aut Clubs, Good Roads Assoriations and all other public spirited bodies, in abating the abuse of the roads of the Province. - - ___..._._ R .,. ---Box Score-- This is the time of year when a heavy toll of life is taken tlhrough motor accidents and drowning. In most cases carelessness on the part of some one is responsible and until people realize that it never pays to take chances there will be accidents.

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