THURSDAY. AUGUST 23. 1934. Holt Rh. (':1.<\.\'(-II H. \,n:uK 1), nmxxu (:1- Ba.1'rie--Clark Rb. Dobsnn lb, M; l{(.'n:I.i0 cf, Scott . M. 'i`i.u'Ij.~m1 c Jmmin;:.~ 1), Hare .~'.<. W:1H.< H`. R.1m- _-u - ')h '6' ` - -Quarter for Round Trip 1. .. Ulnpirv.<~-\N;nllzLco zmd Horig-er. Page Threel Servun, g nations of the world. ion of Canada. Esz`ablz s/tact u 355 ADVERTISE Advertise what you are doing. Advertise what you` are going tn do Advertise to hold your old trade Advertise to get new trade Advertising Advertising Advertising Advertise in the LIBERALS RETAIN TWO SEATS IN BY-ELECTION tising should be consistent and persistent Guelph. Con;<:1'\'ati\'e. Early returns showed D1 . King leading in even_-' poll. .\Iayor Robson held no meetings dur- ing the cam-paign. while Dr. King campai5_:ned vigorously, ve cabinet mini. including` Premier Hep- burn, speaking on his behalf. In \ln1-H1 Grov tzhere were three burn, speamng ms oenau. In North Grey there rrandidates. R0-land Patterson, Liberal, had a majority of 3.0`0'0 over E. M. Cooper, Independent Co11. I gg4%~,.dv:5mc@ is not a cure all" is a preventative di::~3:1'1":c`f?.. '-3_ m` ;;E*;'v Years Ever widening the scope of its service, the Bank of Toronto now maintains branches throughout the Dominion, with facilities for overseas and international commerce that have enabled it to render invaluable aid to citizens of a country that now stands fth among the trading nations of the world. In the provin-cial by-elections in Wellington and North Grey on 310:1- day, the Livbm-11.1..-4 were \'icto'.'iou.<. giving Premier Hepburn the .~'.'.-.nu- standing as at the election in June. Wn11{na+nn South save Dr. J. H., and 6,000 ov-er Victor Chris-Lie. C.C,F. candidate. The by-elections were nmde neces | sary by the death of Paul Munro in ' South Wellington and the appoint- ment of D. J. Taylor. North Grey. as Deputy Minister of Game and Fi.=.h-| nvipc u y Nobody learns now to invest except `by 1n\'(::`Lll1g' and the -early cxpericncu `\ IS always c0st1y-very costly. The Northern Advance Q %Disti'ict New galnnisfil Had Tavern on ---*` i A I . I`? I The Ontario Municipal Board has refused to grant a p~e`rmit for the cpe1'atio11 of 3 taxi service between Oriliia and Midland. The C_N.~R. ob- ljected on the ground that the rail- ways were zvreatly providing a. service cf two brain; a day. with four dur- ing the summer. Robt. Mornson, of Hamilton had :1: narrow escape from drowning at! Orillia on Friday last. When driving`, - his sea ea in 21 race on Lake; 1C0uch`ic11ing`, he was thrown bac`k-| I ........J.. :...a... 4.1". .n+-zu. I 1 I Clarence Buchanan, reeve of Me-` dome, and :1 Liberal, has been ap- pointed road inspector of No1't`.ne1'n Developxnent in East Simcoe, succeed- in! Clifford Jermey. who is retired. 1 There is a shortage of cottages at nearly al summer resorts on Lake |Simcoe and Gecrrgizm Bay. which Iwquld in(lica~t0 `>c11-at more people aroi `able to take 21 Inoldday this year. ------ w ` Mr. 2m(l1\T1`.s. Luke L;-atherdale. of iCoId\\'at-er. celebrated. their golden] `wedding last week. They have resid- ,ed in Co1'dwate1' since `their 1mu`riage ` at .Eady fty years ago. ` standing at we election In aunt. Wellington South gave H. King`. Liberal, a majority of 0.253 over Mayor Beverley Robson. of l I Vegetable growers of the Holland` ma1::.Ih reclaimed area are organizing. and -hope to erect storage faci-]`i't.ies for the better rna1'k0tin5.r; of their pro- duce, I '1 ms sea 11821 in 21. iVVaal'dS into the water. . . . l C`.w.1'g;ed wlth a semous offence` against a thirteen-year-old girl, Wm.` Der1';.'mo1'e. age 67, of O-ri~l`lia, '.va.s_ Fcommitted for trial by Magis r.rate' `lJes last week. 1 Edward Ha1'bo`t1;1e. a 65-year-old! Osprey townsdmip farm'er. wa,- found`- dead in his barn on Aug`. 9th. He was {a bachelor and lived alone. ? --- `at one I On S-.1turday, July 11th, 6 073 ':u1`.< simcoe, passed through Aurora in seven hours, The 1 Of these 4,732 were no1'th`bound :.11 i 1.341 south-bound. lmezms 0 I-points 1` `Crn\\?`f0rd M`:-}<`.a(-hern. ago 20. of!m-an--< l(l\\'a1'(l H'd.l'D0`l'.I}l- 00-year-old Mr. William Pollard, of I(~e.<\x-wk, 3 `'9d `one of the best known stezuners that `at time plied the \\'uter.< of Lake [dead 1331' 0 A112, `"35" has in his possession three light..: (`rain i the Emily May. Emily May was built at Belle in 1861, and was the chief of transportation to Orillia zuui north of Barrie for many `C1`?1`f1`d M`CEa`h'1'11v g 30 Ofivears She was 21 large side- \.l100l(_`l'.~ Omav Was S1`i0u51Y mJ111'0d 0" Sun-i.witl1 ii. speed of 14 miles an hour and day and Wm. Tompkins severely coum carrv 800 passengers biesitler. shocked, when their car went into the freight, Many of our early sett`la=i.~ itch 11931` A1`d 91`a- MCE3U310l`11'5 10% :n`1'i\'ed on the Emily May and old- `Vas f`1'LCW1`9d in th1`9 - 1311109 -*7 and hi5 itinie1*.< recall pleasant 1'cc0`llecti0n.< of skull cracked. lthis ne vesseL After plying thew: ` ----" waters for 29 '(-a.i'_.- she went ashore The Ratepayers Association of Col- at Belle Ew-avg, where her reinaizns lir.g'wood has forwarded a _resolution Stu] ]ie_ , inf` rn-n+nc+ no-ninm. nllmrnrl ii-um-(rill-,H'-' 'lw. Lin Rn-+nu., hnilrl in lgfifi `(Ii Miss Wilhc-lminzx McGil1, 18. and Hector Goltz. 28. of Toronto. were drowned at Wasagu Beach on Sun- day. and Mrs. W. E. Taylor. sister of. Miss McGi1l, nea-1ly lost her life. The} two victims, neither of wvhom could; I curiwu u-nn`r hnxiuur nnrl n-ninrr hrxmmal I Wilhelmina McGi11. age 18, and; ?,Hecto,,- Goltz, 27. both of Toronto. iwere d1'o\\ ned at Wasaga Beach on |Sunday. The tragedy occurred with-: '.in sigllt of 'hund2'ed.~2 of holidayers on` `the beach. Neither were able t0i_ M..- n,...;.:,. 'r...,1m. .;=+m. .-.r- me nezmcn. .'Ve1Lnur were uuu: LU1 swim. 1VI1'.~'.. Br:.<;<~ie Taylor, sister of,` the drowned girl. came near losing; her life in an eifort to save them.! `She `z< revived after :1Czl1'1\_' an` h0u1".~' resmcitation e`01't. 1 \XTu.Hn-u- nnf n fhn _v11nHr\u' uvuf-nu-1 Y'l01.l1">` YU.\'Ll>'ClL'dLl()Il L`l|U1'L- I Wading: out in the . water` they struck a sziml bar. with \vate1j, unly a foot deep, and venturingii fu:'thc;'. dipped into between three '3 !and four feet of water. Suddenly a ` `wind storm blew up paid the wa.ve.si3 began to 1-o1~1 in and they got into (1if'('L1lty. and both lost their footing, 1 Mrs. Taylor noticed Goltz go undeil ` 1 1 and in an GffO)`t to save him. was ai.;o |d`:agg'0(1 under. She was brought .,0 Ishorc by H. W. Stool, who waded in fLi`.13' dressed. 'I`L.n `r\r\t`:1\iI n4 +i1n fuvn vi:-iI\'\.~ urnrn ( Iuuy (u`Csse(1. ` The bodies of the two \'iv`:i1ns were ` not 1'er:o\'e1'0(l for nearly an hour. and although articial 1'4.-. `v\a.= `kept up for hours. t11mv> was no 112-! { sponse. -"----_ 1 GRANT FOR AGRlCUL'I:URE j [N SCHOOLS WITHDRAWN` Special g1'zmts paid to public and |SL'[):l.l`lt('.` schools in. by the! Ontario Depacmu-nt of lC for` l teaching: z1gri<.-ultLu-- in public and kacpzuulse SCITOOIAS ha\'e\ sbucn dis4:.on,- tinui.- 2-.cco1'ding` to ilon. Dr. L. J. Simp.~'on. Minister of Education. Grant< -;-amed for the school year Sept(:mb(-31'. 1933. to June. 193/1, will ;b(. paid. but no _L'_'!`&lllt:~ urn to lw paid for the year 1934-35. ` l`l1~o l<'*p:i1't2m-:1`: :`.l. is (ll.\`l'()lll.i.l|,l-} I ing contracts for zul\'m'ti.' in V3)`- ious DUbll('21tlOll.< in\'ol\'ing' an :rnn'.x::'~ (::<}>.3ulitt11 (- of >$l3:l.00`0_ Tho . on tu: Ln~'m-r*tor.-` , .m :. ._i.+:.....i...i ..+ -co ? nnn 1|` your. Accordingg: to D2`. Sim spt.-utors` g'1':\.nt.< \=.'(,-xx: n by c'r.L~ n. zx nu bhttt the plan of pz1_\'inv` this work -.':'.Lv..~'-ml .:r,-I ..ur...4 Lnx Hum: \ n 4'. .~n |`.'2`.`JL'` Uit` Some felt the 35:21:11 1 A4-' 1 --nn.n.- nzLL.u y specter +m~n\(1rH.' ll l'llL{1CI' lililil LU [11 `f the inspr.-(-to1':< and >1` ag'ri<-L1ltLn`u . e1'. pul)Iic:1nd .~`=-1:-:~.1"x1.n 1\nI1\I;|V:'u:, 1-n huh} H1L`s on ('St1m2lL~"(1 voqu in rx r-(\v1:H H1 \`. 1|` int.e1'c- mm` com'. v Eon \-..'i1:1`. the zulvr,-1'ti.-:n1,-;. said that no ad-o.qu-ate t-on 1`m`e'ived by the mo- 9 expenditure. `H ll I l l, (wti r r attr- ~.-.u nrn (,'ElL`U H ending: impson. tim- not asked numbm" fml Ln..- '1'. (.`XI|'|)Zl!`I?l..` . H-R321;-.` to ad- o?" :u:ri`<:u!tu1'e. 0}` to \\'ith(lrm\' n to `nave t_hr- .......l LL,-. ... JUI |l?'.'l| hon us 1 0m'bzm n +.-. r` .<'."::O()1! now an ! ;*icu1Lu1`(,~ (X A f` HIVU L!l(' the in- |L'.LllLLll`l,' O.A.C. 3 E William Allan. of Churchill, in an interview with the Weekly Sun t\\'enty-ve years ago. recalled that he cou remember when taverns were to be found on almost every come: ` of the Penetang road. There was one at C1`o:~:ton s Corner. at the to\\'nli':.e; 1 one a C r.erry Creek; two at Churcnill, f\'I`I +1. ;lHx- nnn n+ the fth: one at Cimmhill, known in the early days P` as Bu11_v`.< Acre, was a gzrezrt pmc< - for g'hting'. At the old ;<`now f::ir.~ ' you could see a scrap anywhen: :1 inoise came from. There is an in- `_tL-resting` story of the way Chu1'c`ni1ll _;got: its name. The rst c'.hu1'ch in [the neighborhood was at the sixth ` glino. .-\ tavern keeper located on the [same corner and named his 1_)'l;xcr_ _ I ` `tho (my. I Bully s Acre" I I i L'r.erry ureex; two at uxxuru.-nu, on the: 4th; one at the fth; the seventh-; two at Stroud; one at the twelfth. and one at Paiuswick. on the 13th. These were all along the vleading road in the township. Others were scattered here and there at .ot,`h`er corners off the main high-way. I 'I`1~n A\~n7I_-v~.n` "\n}\H`I: (1? H10 nr-'n1(` :1'Recalls Boats of Early 65 Days on Lake Simcoe . \ .otih~er on me main iugn-wu_\. I The drinking habits of the pe-"ole `were in keeping with the number of ,taverns from which liquor was sup- plied. Liquor owed with sp-seizi`. freedom during elections. and lt |and sticks formed the ultimate ziigxi merrt in the political controversie.~ ul ' `the. day. Rullv s In the second game of. the semi- nals in the -North Simcoc League, Midlantl evened up the .~'e-ties at om win each when they defeated B:u-H-xi `n,,..1_ 1...; TI`. louvv Midland evened we se-nus nu. uin B;m~i-: iat the Agricu:ltural Park last Fri a.fte1'noon. The game was mtlier loosely played from the local . _point. seven errors being counted. ui `of which helped to swell ;Vli(llun1l .- total. The visitor_,- started the sum- ing 511 the rst when wibh one out Armstrong : to left. stole sec- ond and came home on .\lcAr1.'nui".< `hit and B0yd .< long lly. In the third Midland counted two !more, Bo)-so ML~Ai`tl1ur and Boyd all `reaching 1'.~"t on (.`l`l`0l'.< and Dm- lswan out n. l\\'0-l')_`.L'_L'0l`_ One more \\'a.~` added in the iiext frzinn 1 {when Caswell reacht-(1 f'n' on an |,........ ....,i M..1{nnr:h- rlrnnnrirl SLUT- `when (jaswcll ream-n<-(1 ll1`~1 u error and ML-Krmzie droppr,-d ;:eon .< y a.'f'ter a hard yun. l.s`i.\'th szuv the and of Midl;md',; imr. two runs lwinp; (-ountt.-(1 to t.`::c-,i,- total to six. I 'I`hn lm-:11: \\`(-1'0 blzmkx-(1 unti |t:':`.ei,~ total to xxx. ` The locals \\`(-1'0 untii tlw fou1't)h. when t.ht-y wt-ru able to .~ !m\~- `two runs over on thrvo si11p:l(.-,- and an error. Chalk struck out thrr-o in t.i<-. 'H'-mwz-. M'(-Kvn7,i(.~ .~<-cllrvxl 13:11 - x`i(:`s third mm in tlm: . whcn m \\'z11k(!d, went to third on S(`0tL'.=: sinjrlo and value homv rm Tlmmp; r-11l(\\"': (']'lni(-(k. .\'lH},.'.,'ll` ( t-1(lm": MILDAND 6, BARRIE Z- First Class Fare and One-G Between all points in Cnnadn--als( Coing from Noon. Friday, Aug. R 31, until Noun, Mnrltlzly, Sept. 3. u t7..n .' ., (`n...nnn'nn (`run cAN.'b?%"};':@[T`a~a MWNAL r nnnvn ,, (`I'))\/lF`f)D f' [Hl Ukllllt ('] 10i('(*. VUIVI Duwuw r.-- , TRAVEL BY TRAIN -- SAFETY -- SPEED -- COMFORT \7--r Week-end`:Aug. 31 to Sept. 4 - --- R-.. I)_......I T'nv:I\ REQUEEE F4:A;RES Every Corner To Sell You Myst Te__l_l C33 I (III: u-nu V..- _.-.._. -, Cnnadn-11lso to cerxuin UJ4}. dc-..-;lin-aliuns. Return Limit, I,ml\'ing(k::5linrl|ion mm. up In Midnight, 'l`uc.-lay, Sept. 4. , Scpl..3 . Full infnrnmlinn. from tickvl. lI'\"l l1S. - 4--.- ,.-m. n. .. A - Church Hill Tave1'11, Believing,` the fourth line a. better location, he later moved there and carried his sign with him, and thus the name Churchill was l;1`Z11lSf(5l`1`(3d from the sixth to the fourth. _ .. - nu. I .q_ I .- u ' 0 l l I 1 1 . l i had been xuunu Pails of Whiskey on Store Counters .\'o1- was the consumption 01' liquor conned to tavern.<. At almost every store a pail of liquor and 21 cup stood on the counter and all comers were free to help themse`.ves. No logging bee `could be hel(l without an abundant supply of liquor, and after the bee was over men fought or danced as the fancy moved them--pr0- vided they were not by that time too drunk to do either. Where did the money come from to pay for all the liquor eon.~'umed ? It came from the s\\`eut-stained dollars: that should have gone to the creation of homes. I hm -e been told that the man who kept the old Tyrone tavern at the fth was able to sup- ply his boys with two or three \\ z1tch- es every year from among those that left in pawn `for liquor. Many a good farm was drunk over the bar in the old days and the own- ers and their children forced to be- gin life over again in a new loca- tion. - u. cert, she had to be cast loose to `axe the dock and freight shed: After burning: to the wate1"s edge she drift- ed on to the shore near .'-\lland'.ie station. whiere the remams still lie. Saillng Vessels Severztl ; sailerl on these waters during the deveopment of H111: ter1`itoi'_\`. The Sultmia was bullt at Beavnerton in 1849, the St. George and Queen at Orillia in 1851 and 18.53, the Edward John at Belle Ewart in 1859, the Sarah Jane Hari`i.< at Beaverton in 1864 and the Lu-eelle Bacon at Holland Landing in 1870. Powerful Tug Boats This was a great lumhering 1v::g'ol'i the last half of last century and sev- eral stauneh and powerful tug boats operated in the lumber trade on these \\'8.tel'S_ The l.~"db'(:l zmtl Victoria were constructed in ISGO and 1864. follow- ed by the H. HzLtlm\\'a_v. Conqueior. ' Advance and R. Kendrick. They were engaged in towing large rafts of logs from around both lakes to the big sawmills at Orillia, Barrie and Belle T7`m'cn'f. Later Steamers The i-st steamer on tl~.- v::xl.,r.< to be propelled by 21 screw was the Fairy. brought to Orillia. in 1863 by M1`. Gossage, a _.i11'\'(>j.'n1-. Sh: ran `regular trips between Orillia. I-lama. Longford and Washzuzo. Then came Mr, D. L. S:mson .=x Carriolla. \\'muh also covered the above trip daily. The iEnterp1`ise. built in 1881. wa, the only twin-.=.oc1te\\' stezuner to ply these lakes The lslay. built by Capt. .\l;-.- Inncs, in 1884, the Longford. by William Thompson in 13.85. a - ze called with plea; by older resi- dents of the town. who ex1_icjv:>rl tinny trips and (*xc1n`. on t'm~n `m \'Z\1`- ious point; for many y<-ar.<. SH-\`\'.l Il`lU.l .i E\\`a1't. * In he eighth Bzuwic mmlu t,"!1ci1- nal `bid for :1 win. wlwn Tholnpson was hit by :1 pitched ball, stole ;<-0'c0nd. and came in on Jennings single, T,mmmw_..hnn1:l Imvn nullod out in Jennings` snign.-, Jl`ll1in_L', .~` _ l12l\`(`. pull:-(l with :1 win if his suppmt haul qtncd up. He struck out ve and allowed ten hits. The hits were well sc:1ttc-1`- ~cd. the run_.: being` ; rm e:'ro1`s i':u:l1e1' than the \'i. ability to `bun-ch their l)ing:l<;. Chalk went well fo1'Mi(llz1n(l, ha\`in;: ton . and allowing six hits. tl11'e(,~ of which (`nine in the fourth. Swzin and Stur- geon \\':l`(t the only Mitllziml lmt-tei':< to reach ixst twicr-, \\`l1`iic Walls` and Jeimin_r.< were the only two Barrio < l)Z11.i.(`1`.~T to ;1'\"t two hits. l{(2nny Walls in left ekl tiirned in 21 good olcling 5.3211110, nmking foul nice (-:,it(:~l1(-.<.. 0:10 of \\'hi'h ioi)b.':d T-lollt of 21 :~'urv(~ homc-,1`. Scott` also mzulo a nice catch of S\\':u1'.< ilrive ow,-1' st-(-nml. Scorr by in11h1g.<: I.\Iidl21n ............. ..10`-. . 1 T3-~-~--in 000 T? Scort by 11111111145: 1\ n 1-. .\Iidl21nd ..102 102 000---(S 10 4 P.2u`ri<,- ..... .. ...000 210 0l0~-:1 ti '7 31i rf, Armstrong 55. NI`cA1'thur 0. Boyd Zb, S'.\':u1 1h. Holt Rb. (":1.<\.\'(-ll H`. Chalk 1), B0130 c1'- Dnm-:n_(`.1m-]: Rh. T)nb. LOSELY LINKED with the sound principles of conservative banking that have stood the test of time, the Bank of Toronto has ever" been an institution that has looked forward with courage and condence to the destiny that the future holds for the Dominion