Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 3 Sep 1925, p. 2

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i3E2Nnrth9rnAhn&nt2'! ILBM BROS. |Phone 61.6. - Five Points Laundry called for " and delivered Prices reasonable Wo1'kmansh'1p guaranteed on all family washing THURSDAY, SEPT. 3, 1925.. H. R. Wz11'1'en, 1\1anag'e1' AUTO LICENSES sc5'`"Eii'I'ioN 4- un-Amman--Inu ennlJ\Il OIL Debentures of the Town of Barrie. 5; Per Cent. Icnnn Good Investment. CV`! I I v ------ -'--__ OP VITAMIN-RICH COD-LIVIR OIL EVERY RAY classes UL IHUIUUL v\:'uu,1r;-.3 u._5..~u\,.\.u. in Cramula (luring; 1924 reached` 652,121, compan'e with 586,850 in` 1923. Onntario was the leader in both the number of cars 1'0};-'iste1'e and the 1'e\'e`nue received from this; section of the automobile imlurstryi with 308,693 cars yin-lding a revenue` of $4,784,697. Thoughtful Mothers ..... -run-`m CHILDREN x%77?}i:iis`Eiz -nn1A 7 OWEN STREET Ma.scmic Temple Building __ .___- - -an-any-u-I--I--I-I-I-1 u - :.-_.:, _.-.- _ >7 Successor to J. Arnold lnsurtmoe GIVE TI-lain CHILDREN FOR SALE . . . . . . ..12c ....14c1b. .11c to 12c ....1lc lb. ug um Issue. 241 With the 0-pcning: of school thlsl wcr.-k our boys aml girls again s`u211~t on another year's work. It would be well if they could be instilled with what a yca1"s work at school` 1'! I _.: ..1 ,. .. .. ....lr. n.|Ir\ Barrie. `co-operate with tc~z1chci's if the bestil \VlUll \\l|i1.L `cl _\C D \V'\JLI\ Luv .~s,..vv. mt-ans. Boys and gqirls, as 2. rule, are if care free and happy, and it is right I ` that they should be, but in spite ofici this cl1zn*act<.-1' is being_-; formed and 21 ' U year counts 21 whole lot. Upon the:-11 te-acliers great responsibility rests, l U not only in the pi'og'ress boys and ` [J _-_*'i1`ls make in their : but in the V mou1(Ling` of cliaractcr. The teaclxers in Barric-, and in the su1'1`ouVn1ling' 3' (li:~1t1'ict.<, we believe, realize their re- 0 sponsibilities and will emleavor to lo t the-1' part in tleve-lopin.9,' all round stu(lenit:~'. Parents, however, must `~` 1'0. :m- to he obtained. Pztrents it should know \\'l10l`C their boys and ` I` - . ..n .:....,. ....,1 1..\,.... ol~..,&`t THURSDAY, SEPT. 3, 1925 girls awe at all thY are 0111; wt for ;`00d. That beautiful, even shade of dark. g1ossy hair can only be had by brew- ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul- phur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray or streaked, just an application or two of Sage and Sul- phur enhances its appearance a hun- dredfold. name rmohnr +n nrpnnrn the mixture: drediold. _ Don't bother to prepare the mixture; you can get this iamous old recipe im- 1 proved by the addition of other ingre- dients at a small cost. all ready for use. 3 It is called Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound. This can always be de- pended upon to bring back the natural color and lustre` of your hair. Fun-vhnrlv nape VVveth's Ewe and I 1 1 color and lustre` or narr. Everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound now because It` darkens so naturally and evenly that , nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or 50ft 1 brush with it and draw this through 1 the hair. taking one small strand at a ' time; by morning the gray hair has p disappeared, and after another applica- ` tion it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy and lustrous. SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK It's Grandmother's Recipe to Bring Back color and Lustre to Halr Page 'rwo- "9 3'11: mxuu I..Iu_yJ u.u\|| 116-8, and know that`, \',"I'C the inuence is` i 'I`he' Nova Scotia coal strike cost $18,724,300. The men who were idle for" ve months lost in wages no less than $4,000,000. Had they se- cured everything` they asked for it would require a long time to make up for tlhis loss. A little xvisdom and juclgment on the part of the Government might have settled the dispute in a week or two and most of this loss and su eri.ng avoided. On Friday last forty vessel-s layl stvansdcd in the Wevlland Canal be-- cause of low waiter, due in a large ineasune to diversion by Chicago of super lake waters. Ma;t.te1`.s have been g'eet-inlg: worse all the time every year. Ruined bzvthinwg beaches, unsafe z1.nc=11o1'ag"es an-d a.ba,ml~oned ha.1`bours are causes for alarm, bn-t a tie-up in the Wdlwlwannl Canal shows that it is time for action. Whzvt is our Govermnc-nt doimg about it ? That the -1.4 beer had reduced bootle.g:gi-1i.g to some extent and had satised some of the people, but its high price and weak alcoholic con- tent prevenated it from being an en- tire success, were the principal points broug'ht out at a meeting` held in Stra:tfor(l last week when a num- ber of prominent citizens and city officials met with a special commit- tee of the United Stzutes Oongxress, which is inquiring` into the temper- ance situation in both countries. " Tlhe motor bus is making rapid progress in Canada, as well as in other countries, and this comparative- ly new 1l'1(tl10(l of travel is having` a marked effect on t1*a11spo1'-haution problems, which will become more widespread as the building of smooth roads prog'rcs~: The Canadian Nat- ional Railway is trying` to meet this problem in a practical way by the use of the new Diesel cars. Tests. are now being made and if the new type of electric cars prove a success {they will be used on several lines. STU! 1JzLyl11g m:uvu_\ p1'ove~1nenIt.s had be: discarded. Greater care in clearly needed; must be issued, should be serial k which is taken up e the principal is duced, as well as th At the same tin` spending; in recent away beyond all who hopes to get taxes of 20 years L,, , I. * there, while spectators i--prize and $500. . one. : arrived Although warned by church adver- tisemen-ts against the demoralizing effect of beauty parades, 300,000 people stampetled into Long` Baech, Cal., on a recent Sunday to wi 0ness 300 girls paraded in the least amount of batihin-g" raimenwt ever seen shoutetl ap- proval until they became hoarse. Miss Marjorie Williamson won first The stay `away from Long" Beach appeal of the church reached (listan-t ranches and stirred simple country folk to cur- iosity concerning` the event. The result was that every ranch family ivve1'cd to Long Beach. The same appeal reached Los A.ngL}'eles, nearby. with the result that 150,000 from there. Long` Beach merchants are still counting` their pro- PA fit 5- LULUDU Ull QIIU lluhlullun xcuuun i Much of this enormous loss is pre- ;i_vcntiable waste. .'-\1t.hou<,_;'h the fire. ;`}1o.'~:scs of the United States continue ;;to mount, says the bulletin, it is` Hnot nr.-ccs.sarily an indication that tjthny cannot be reduced. The exper- ,- E,-i.c- of the 1924 Inter-Chamber Fire ?\\'n:L: L'onte.~:t shows that losses in - y the n.porti:1;.;` cities were reduced to ithe e.\tL-nt of $4,000,000 over their uveru;:'e for the preceding` ve years iicoineidz.-nt with the activities under- itaken by local re prevention com-V Imittee.-7. The per cupita loss in these ;cmnmunitie.' was $3.10, as compared ;with the national zwer:1g'e of approxi- ;muteI_v $5.00. A L,.,.. .1.-nu.` In .~.-nun A1nerica s bill for re waste last year, 192:}, was $1,044 a minute, an :annual loss of $548,000,000, exceed- ing all previous high records. These |`zll`(: the figures of the Acturial Bur- 'eau of the .\.'a.tiona.l Board of Fire '1.,'mle1'wi`il,e1's quoted in a bulletin is- ,.~:ue by the Insurance Depurbment of ithe Chamber of Commerce of the iUnitel States and the Nutioiizll Fire VVu..~1e Council. nu ___L /1' .............4.. .).. l The total amount of property dc- stroycd during` the year was equival- ent to more than half the annual in- trcst on the national debt. ` vv unu; \/Uuu\.u. l `I u p A!,!., ._-.........- I--- 2,. -....\ (Founded 185 1) Published every Thursday morn- ing at the oice, 123 Dunlop St., 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. .~\Ltrhou;.~;h not ofolzully announced `it is lcwrnetl at the Pamliamem. .B1x`iIHlm.\:s, Tmroxvto, that the re- l\`L'Il1l(.` on gzxso-H110 has netted for the month of July about $395,000, which `is $60,000 more than for the month Eof June. The total revenue for the :20 (lags of the mon-th of May and 1thr.- completed months of J-une and July is said to be in the ne1':.rhbor- jhood of $895,000. lIIl|LlZ|.V ',7UoV\Io Wl1ut has been lone in some icities mi_e~l1t well be Lluplicatcd in othcns through enex'p;etic re preven- ltion p1'o_ carried on under the l:1u.pie<>.< of local Ch:ln1l)L:)`.~'. of com- inu-rcl_ uml .~imi`.zn' o1':,-':111izat.ions. Al- t.lx0u:l1 re \va. is u n:.1.ti0nz11 prob- lem, it can only b(; solved t.ln'0u:_-`l1 the (3OI)1`l)ll1(.'(l emleavor of all co1mr.un- ities." 1 GASOLINE TAX NETS I . n A - A An I FIRE COST $1,044 A MINUTE lI'\l\ lVl.4lhl $395,000 FOR JULY Canadian Finance, of Winnipeg`, points out that we are too apt to cry out againsrt what taxation takes from us without reckoning; up in the other column what taxation does for us. "' --~A- ~- .......1. +1-.,\ +nvnHnn fhilf. collumn WHEYE Tkixablull uuca Av; u... It is not so much the taxation that should be criticized as the way in which the taxes are spent. If there are things which can be dispensed with as needle-ss luxuries, then taxes should not be raised in order to pur- chase them. But civilized men, in communities -that are organized, de- mand so many services that the chief question is to supply these services at re-asonable cost to the taxpayer who wants thean. """r r- _,.......4. .....-..\..& +-n hr nnn- WHO \VaIlUs uieuu. Citizens cannot expect to be con- sidered consistent if they clamor for in1p1'ovevn1ents in one breath and" for lower taxes in the next, for no pro- gress can be made in that way. What people get in the way of public im- provennem: they must pay for, and they can -t haw: eve1'yti1i11g` they want. and lower taxes too. A ,2 A.1.. illlu IUVVCK LHAUD R-UU. One of the chief 01'oub1cs from which all too many municipalities are suffering` is the promiscuous issuing of bonds, pa1ticu1ar1_v the long term bonds on which them is no serial rc-' tirement provision. Cases could be cited where, with in-tvercst and prin- cipal combincd, communities have ._..:,i .,m,.....I rfiincs Hm vnhm m" Hm L|1'UlHUH4L. pxuvxmuu. uunpu ..v`...\. ..- paid .sc~\'cral rtimc the value of the im1n'ove.mont.< they sought, and were still paying heavily after the im- been worn out. andi I 7 , :.. :.N..:...\. L.n~,L~ is : Notes and Comments 03031019` , _: Cl(.Zl1'l_V IIUUUUU , cunt VVAl\.AL -.~u..u.. they invariably bonds. a part of every year so that` being` steadily re-l the interest cliamcs. ` A 1 suulxlin uuceu, `db WUA1 21.`. Liu: luL\;J.\.nu \....Mh\_... time, while `public years has run bounds, anybody_ 1 back to the low ago is i1inlru1gin_u_' in an elusive dream. To get back to the lower tax levels would mean to get back to the in- ferior school systems and the bad roads and poorer ligjlitiiig of `those day`. 111,, ....- ......i.. (\| +`nu 1-\\r\\-n WHAT TAXATION GIVES US ll'cl_Yb. Taxpayers are paying for more than they were and in many cases more than they should ; but it should not be f01`_:1_`0ttcn that they are get- ting` more, too, and that in many in- stances what they are gt-ttin~_2' is worth the price they pay. ml.:. 2.. .... ......-u~nannt- Pnv nvhvnvn- LHC 11111.1; Lucy 1.ru_y. This is no argument for cxt1'a.va- gance. Extravagance with taxes is a wickecl injustice upon those whose hard-won ez11`ning`s contribute to the public treasury, and is not. only dir- ectly burdensome, but is ma(lo in- directly pernicious by the poison of a de1no1'a1i7.in_{_-,' example. except those earning` ` pensive seats. Instead of complaining` over the actions of their more successful sis-r` ters who captured by the thousands the hearts of Canadians, let the girls of this and other Canadian towns C011;~:i where they stand. It isn t to he wondered at that young men are g'litin_:.-' shy of l1lZl!'1`ld.}L'(.` in this country, t'or the girls ha\~`e made them afraid of the expense involved. .\'owada_vs a girl not content to ;~`.tart life where her parents started, or even where they leave o. She wants to start life on a scale that is simply ruinous to any young man, enormous sal- aries, and there aren t many of tlicsr: hereabouts. Girls n0wada_\'s want. to he taken to the best shows and near- ly al'\'z1_\,'s desire one of the more ex- They want diamond eng'a:::ement ringrs, and anything` less than a $10 or $15 Christmas present is scarcely looked at. Then there are motor drives, boxes of chocolates, a house furnished on a costly scale when it comes to marriage and so on until it is no wonder the Canadian youth fip;ht.s shy of marriayze or keeps po. ' it. They cannot stand the ex-pense. In England it is probable Uhat the _2'e-t-rich-quick craze hasn -t reached our stagre of nizrfmicence. The ;.:'irl.< are probably more human and so our Canadian 5.,rirls are losing` out. I.`he_\' want too much and are remlenin,;' marria5.1'e impossible.-Ex. is BRITAIN'S HUGE DEBT IS REDUCED BY 32,000,000 `Homlon, Aug`. 29.-Thore has been a rcnluction. of the nzutional debt of Great Bri.L21in of $332,000,000, oluial ,L'u1'<:s issuml )'G`tC]`(lZ1_V show. Bz1=. on the situatniom an April .1, this _\'t.`.(1.-1`, the internal debt. has been reduced from 6,554,- 810,001 to G,52-1,771,914, and Uhe cxtennal debt from 1,- 125,8l3,339 to 1,121,55.`),87~l---be- '1n;:; a drop of $634,251,565. f\drLn.. ....:t..`l Hn1\1Co.?n..~ 11n1Iv..1'{xr|- ! ARE THE GIRLS TO BLAME ? ...i., u my w ....n,..u.,uw. Other capital liabilit-ies, hO\\'u\'C')', rosc. from 66,490,593 to 68,032,- 092, or an increase of 1,541,409. Speaking at the annual 1neeting -of the Canadian Bar Associaition last week, Sir James Aikenis said that a clever crock of a laxvyor was more danlgerous to the profes-sion and the community than a stupid one`. He held that any ivtuden-t should not be- gin tihe mudy of law until past the teen age and his tnels-s for the pro- fession had been revealed. The Cznuuliian National E.\:h.ibition has an area of 26-1 acres. .-\c1'eag`o of Wembley is 216. issuing` bonds is and when bonds I` .!-L1.. The Northern Advance .WiEa wim FACTS SUPERPHOSPHATE IS AN ESSEN- TIAL FOR BEST RESULTS. The Cost Is More Than Repaid--'I`he Hessian Fly In OumrIo--0. A. C. No. 104 Winter \\'heat;--G|-owing Hubam Sweet Clover With Oats. (Contributed by Ontario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) The department of chemistry, On- tario Agricultural College, during the past year carried on experiments in eight counties to show the effect of lime and phosphates on full wheat ` seeded with clover. Phosphates Essential for Fall \Vheat. 1-n_....__ ,.L..........Ll.... .:....I.... 41... nrrvr\vvv_ ; uualauwuvu ._.uuu...,.... -y. .. ..... .. .--.-_. From observation during the grow- ing season and from yields the following points are noted: (1\ Dhnqnhafnu aavn an increased touowmg pomts are noteu: (1) Phosphates gave an increased yield in every case, averaging fty per cent. I')\ "Nan nan-1-. nf n'|nvnr was won- C6111. (2) The catch of clover was won- derfully improved by the phosphates. (in .`I`.i7.n and mmlifv nf gram was uenuuy 1LLlpI'UV($u U) Lllt [J|lUUpllI.l.C:I. (3) Size and quality of gram was Increased, as well as yield, by phosphates. rm 'T"hn nnef nf Ann nrmnds: of! I Returns to Branlsuec-it. s for the full ca;len~dar year 1924 show a total of 19,608 fztilums, W-ith liabilities of $688,690,965, an increiasa, of 2.8 per cent.. in number and of 9 per cent. in liabilities as compiared witli 1923. There was, however, a. dc-.c1'oase of 12.5 per com. iii failuwres from the _--.J. ..,.n- 109`) nnnl lr>(-lino Of D01" pnospnates. (4) The cost of 400 pounds of acid phosphate per acre was more than covered, leaving a substantial prot in every case. (K\ Tf In nafivnnfall fhnf nnnrnxl- prom. In every case. (5) It is estimated that approxi- mately half of the phosphate remains in the soil for succeeding crops. H:\ Tjmfnu nnhm: HH1n diffnrnnro in [He SUM LUI` Buucucuxug uxupa. (6) Liming ncukes little difference to the growth and yield of fall wheat. Its eect \VU| undoubtedly be seen on the stand of clover the following 1 year. T`zn'n1nv-1: arm /0 ndvimarl tn QHDIV year. Farmers are Well advised to apply u cold phosphate (superphosphate) to 1 their {all wheat at from two hundred I to four hundred pounds per acre. 1 _ ,1 no lll4-`illtll A-n_y All V--szunvu In each of the past four years the Hessian y has been working more or less in the winter wheat crops of Ontario. In the Field Husbandry - Department at the Ontario Agricul- tural College the ravages of this pest have been studied in each of forty vzirietles of winter wheat. The esti- mated avera:.:e percentage of plants containing Hessian y was 3 in 1920, 26 in 1921, 7 in 1922, and 16 in 1923. The susceptibility of the dif- ferent varieties Varies considerably. The Imperial Amber, O.A.C. No. 104, Dawson's Golden Chaff, and Red Rock were below the average, and the Early Red Clawson, Kanred, Gold `Coin or No. 6, and Early Genesee Giant were above the average for in- fested plants in the last four years, the percentage being 4 for the first and 22 for the last of the above nam- ed varieties. O. A. C. No. 104 inter 'heat. The 0. A. C. No. 104 variety ot' winter wheat originated at the Agri- cultural College by crossing the Daw- son's Golden Chair and the Bulgarian varieties, and has made the highest record of five leading varieties tested on one hundred and twenty-eight farms throughout Ontario. Not only is it a. high yielder, but from equal quantities of flour it has produced more bread than the Dawson's Gold- 911 Chart. It is interesting to know also that it has been more hardy ` ` even than the Dawson's Golden Cha. and almost as stiff in the straw, and seems to be less susceptible to smut. Growing Eubam Sweet Clover \Vith Oats. In the eld crop experiments at `the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph in the past three years, Bi- ennial White Flowering Sweet Clover ' has given a greater yield per acre, al-though later, than the White Flow- ering annual or Hubam in the tirst `year's growth when both kinds were sown alone under similar conditions and at the same date in the spring of the year. When Sweet Clover has been grown with Oats, the Biennial variety has given good returns for autumn pasture. The Annual Sweet Clover when sown with Oats, either `at the time of seeding or when the Oats were 3 or 4 inches high, has been a nuisance in the grain crop. A u mixture of O. A. C. No. 72 Oats and Annual White Flowering Sweet Clov- er, however, is being cut this year as a hay crop, and in the future this combination will be studied more particularly from the standpoint of green fodder and oi hay production. So says Dr. C. A. Zavitz, Department of Extension, 0. A. C., Guelph. Heavy Pruning Waste of Energy. Very little difference was noted in the behavior of heavi1y-pruned plum tree and trees receiving much less pru. ..ig in tests conducted over 8. number of years, with several stan- dard varieties oi` plums on the grounds of the New York Agricul- tural Experiment Station at Geneva. In the opinion of the station horti- cuiturists, most varieties of plums require but little pruning following the proper shaping oi` the trees after they are plantd. Since little prun- ing gives just as good, if not better trees, it is regarded as a waste of time and effort to pay too much at- tention to the pruning of plum trees. The chief recommendation is to thin out thiolx growths where necessary and to remove broken or injured branches. When the orchard has not been ` pruned in the winter, :1 time should be taken to do this work in the sum- mer, but not later than the middle of July. It is not good to p1'un'e as heavily in the summer as in the dor1n.~.nt season. summer pruning is said to aid in fruit bud formation, but this has been dlspufed more or less by e.xpe1'lmei1t:.tl stations. A_-_.,...1.-.....J.. an n .... .,... ..n ......I.. \.9.] u_, \....,....... . ~ . , . ~ . _ . . _ _ .... Approximately 20 per cent. of each potato pared by ordinary household l methods is lost in the process. The loss includes much and sometimes all of the portion of the tuhe1'conta.inlng important soluble salts. Potatoes that are boiled and baked in their skins lose practically none of their food value. 11.0 P91` CUIIIWL. HI .L(/tllkllul-J ..;v... ...... peak year 1922, and decline of 9 per` cent. from 1921, the peak as 1'eg`ards liabilities. Failures exceeded 1923 in the rst three-quarters of 19241, but dropped behind in the last quanter. Liabilities were larger in 1924 than in 1923 in the first two quarters, but heavily in the last three months of the year. Bank suspen- sions, which were second only to those of 1893 for eleven months, ac- coumted for 40 per cent. of all the 1- 1 ~1-.2 The Hessian Fly In Ontario. v._ ___1_ ..n 4:... ......L 1.... .......... I Sale of Valuable Residential! Property in the Town` of Barrie 5! 'of Barrie, except that part sold to I Tenders will be received by the undersigned on or before the Thirty- rst day of August, 1925, for the purchase of Lot Number One Hun- dred and Nine (109) on -the North side of Worsley Street in the Town one Richard Power (being the north six/ty-ve feet thereof) and a right of way over the west ten feet there- of. This property is one of the n- est rsidential sites in Barrie, situ-ate on the Northwest corner of Mu1ca:- ter and Wonsley Streets, and occu- pied by the late Dr. Bosanko. rm... \.:...1.,..+ M. 431117 nmv handm- [Jllfll Uy mu: 1014.5 4.1;. LlUJuuL\v. I The highest or any other tender I not necessarily accepted. Dated Aufzgust 10th, A.D., 1925. Stewart & Stewart, Solicitors for the Estates of Isabella Bosanko and Charles H. Bosanko. iThe Harness Man`: mg. Owen St. Barrie, Ont.j Phone 268. ` OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO` g Specialist _ in Emba1m- 3 3 9 3' O0 `Smith Kain` ALL KINDS or HEAVY} AND LIGHT HARNESS Blankets and Robes All Kinds of Repairing Done Full Line of Travelling Goods 129 Dunlop St. E. J. BYRNEE \.us.uuv\.u lizxbilitiic-~.=. uooooooooooooooooooooo; 9 We will pay the following prices- Green Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cured Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Calf Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Kip `Hides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 HIDES WANTED! BARRIE TANNING CO. and see as FUNERAL DIRECTOR IF you want investment advice---good, sound investment advice, based on long and varied experience --you cannot do better than confer with the Bank of Toronto branch manager. How to dispose of your cro.p prots. Whether to put them in a bank, bonds or mortgages. How to obtain loans for farm expansion-alI these questions will be answered gladly and wisely by the Bank of Toronto. The Bank of Toronto will give you that fine service and cordial treatment that has earned for it the name of the friendly bank. BRANCHES : Barrie ; Allandale Elmval e The value of the automobirle as a direct producer of revenue to the various: Provinces of Canada is for- cibly i}1ust`1'a`ted in statistics just re- leased by the t1'a11spo1'tzntJi0n branch- of the Dominion Bureau of St-arti-stics, Otztawa. According` to these gures the nine provinces of Canada and the; Yukon LHS1t1`iCt collected during` 1924 $12,681,721 from the owners of motor vehicles. Owners of passenger -x 1,, L`-.. n. - 1.. ..,...` ~+ nnuHnn Barrie. %Barrie - Marble - Works \ Memorial Tablets ' Corner Stones R Markers Monuments `Canadian 85 Scotch Granite I | PRICES REDUCED {JOHN F. MURPHY, Prop. Telephone 734 79 Bayeld St. - E I BARRIE S BEST LAUNDRY H. A. Sims, 1\I:ma2'er 1IlULrU1' \u:nu;u.-..:. uwm...- \JA ,,..u-v.._._..- cars paid by far the 1a1'gest pontion of this amount, paying a total of $7,359,208 into the trcasuries of the` di'e1'cnt provinceas. The total of all classes of motor vehicles registeredl ` 1001 ..n..~..-lmll ` /` N- _ ,1....

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