Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 10 Aug 1922, p. 14

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v, Barrie ID runun .0wI by thr- -clear, and In- pfmence of I}: ph over the `M. on tho Si! --V_ .__...l L__ A `letter i.\ ooltullllngz :: KEV Illl Llll . annoyed by sum _.'4L Y " -Ill!` A150 ` Makers of `Toilet Paper, T Indumted brewaq etc. Inc uuuuuay wmpany umltet Hamilton - Ontario Branch in Truro, Nova Scotia. Made in Canada far Canadians is sold it once Japans IT'S sd DEL1c1{ _'Ihursday,1 vv upnnl -uannur Douglas Pncki Belling Agents Limitgd. To 4 levl -cup?` T Fruit. 7% Veveled 6.- _,_,, I /Z 'CVClC\l Sugar. 1/{cup Wa % bbttle ( Certo. Use full]. nesi. avo V crush well 2% Ibs., crushed fr tle and ad boiling, c simmer 1: sugar, mix and consta a vigorous re. Boil h continual s re, add Cc well. Skim Nfajies jam 0 I-ICDLIID? jelly, -color -avor And ym jellies rim never att ' wasteful \ VVCIGDUI LII \ Certo is is the :12: fruits whia jeXl." (`a free from tive. or gel *7 1000 Fireproof Rooms Close to Eperything" Direction United Hotels Company of America 1 Po1'f0r_`t j(=.Hi~est'1'um is wort}: \ imr. isn't A your grrnge How to Y`! You Su('{ it the first ; time. (`or fails. Fro Bonk wit bottle. J. IIC \,lf boiling fox Re_sult-- HE the ___ Oh .,, 'coPvmcn'-1 TEA CUP LIL! llll . fr 30 min "l'|I-, fl lnterd Page Fourteen HM` 1116`: highest class. -include people from all over the world-the kind of people who demand and appreciate hotel accommodation of the People of this sort, when in Tordhto; naturally choose to stay at The King Edward. You will be pleased ` with King Edward service, too. For sux-ie l:eii(;f that famous old remedy inglhtoar .7!1iottl . TORONTO King Edward Guests Never before have weoffered roofing such as this at so ' low a price. It : the beat roofing and the lowest price in our history. Only our unequalled b u y i n g facilities this Imnmin- lo . . per roll of 108 sq. feet rwn -AI R_ad 0: Gfefn \$T2;9* um, an Au uuruulu umcuse. U116 01! and DUTY}. 9th--'Do not worry over ants on the ;buds, as they are harmless. A I I a..Iua5U n ' 5th7~Do not make the soil so` poverty istriken that it will dry out with the first gleam of sunshine. 6t'h--Do not disturb them. I 7th--Do not cut away foliage after I blooming. asthe leaves are their lungs, 8th--Do not Iea.ve_foliage on during win- `ter, as it harbors disease. Cut off and burn. )f}1--'nn nnt nynuw-u nunn .....4... .... LL`- at wt`Vl`1e1:` I drainage. i U1 uuvuu uurcu nuuues. 3rd--Do not crowd the plants. Allow a distance of three feet or you will retard proper developments. `4th-Do not -allow dampness to remain !at the roots through lack of - proper I drainage. T I nu-5, mu: 1. cuuy season. 1 There are hundreds of varieties of Peon- ies, ranging in price from 35 cents to 5550 for a root. One of the finest Peonies grown and also one of the cheapest is 'Festiva Maxima; it should be in every garden. Some other good ones in the, cheaper varieties are: ` Duchess de Nem- ours. Edulis Superba,` Felix Crousse, La Rosiere, Madame Calot, Mons Jules Elie, ` Al-batre, Asa" Gray, Couroune d or, Mont Blanc, Marechal Vaillant, Solfatre, Triom- J iphe de l Exposition de Lille and Madame 'de Galhau. . . - Summing up the most emphatic don'ts.i lst-Do not plant in the spring. A _ 2nd---Do not plant the crown any deep- er than three inches. ` ' Q...-l. h- .....a. ......____I .-L- 0 1 A-- ma gxcuucav unuguuicence. ` There are both single and double varie- ties in the herbaceous Peony. '1`-he lasting qualities of the singles are not equal _to the doubles. `but the blossoms are of excep- tional beauty, and being if any a. little `later than the doublw, they help to pro- long the Peony season. I Thorn urn I-nun.-`ant ... at ......1-L!-_ _t FL, nusuau nu uuuuu: U1 oepremoer. During the building up_ period, directly after blooming, they appreciate-a dressing around their roots of bone meal and plenty of liquid manure from the time the flowers are over until autumn. This will amply re- pay the gardener for his trouble. Give them a good start and they will go` on for many years. requiring nothing more than an annual top dressing. Indeed this must be -borne in mind that after planting the roots.of the Peony should never be ` disturbed. It is not until Peonies become thoroughly set" that their display reaches its greatest magnificence. "I".l-mm; urn .1-unlrlu 1.:-.n.I.. ..--J J--J-`- EDI) cavaugmucu. Peonies; should never, under any con- dition, -be set out in the spring, as. they have been known to sulk for 'years from this_ insult. Peonies planted in the,fall come very early in the spring, bloom, then build up their roots and flower buds in the root for the next spring s blossoming per- iod; then rest, or as generally described, become dormant during the -middle of August to middle of September. Dnrimr Hm kn:lA:n.. .... ......:,..: .::__-u_.l ll `E Bcpm {L t Sweeten ft- Stomach :13 uu::_y I/HIXVU 011 IE. _ Some double flowering va_rietfes send _up single Jlowem the first couple of years `after planting and before becoming esta- blished and to the inexperienced this looks as if he had not `received the variety that he ordered, but this is one peculiaritycf the Peo ; it `will come double when.it {gets esta lished. ' D..m.:.... -L.....u ....-.-- `._.L,, uuacu. w_uu Uuuu men: only. _ Peonies love full sunshine and dislike shade. Plant your roots immediately after receiving -them. The middle of September is -best, -as they can then make some root growth before winter sets in. Plant the roots three to four feet apart and set the crown of the plant _no deeper than three inches below the surface, -as deeper plant- ing results in shy blooming, or in some ` `varieties, no blooming at all. Be sure to .with a mulch of straw or well rotted man- mark -and correctly name the exact spots i of planting. Be prepared when November . arrives to cover the newly planted roots I ure. Don t use fresh manure as it will l rot tlieroots. In the spring this can lightly dug in around the roots. Bone meal is best as a fertilizer for Peoniesg and they thrive on it. QI\VV\n .l....L.I_ &`l....`.....:.__. _.__:_.,4_ - AUCUO ""1"i$ top half foot of earth should be mixed with bone meal only. Ppnninq ln\I`A full I!IIf|n`\:I\h nun:-I .I:..I:I..' 5nuvvoua vuuu ure spring. If one anticipates planting Peonies this fall it would be well to prepare the ground for the roots immediately, so that the_ man-I ure will become settled. As Peonies are de- cidely gross feeders the soil must be made extremely rich -by working into it a liberal quantity `of well rotted manure to a. depth of two feet (under no condition should new 1 xnanurevbe `used.)- I might add that if the ` land is lowelying or inclined to, bogginess, y it is absolutely necessary to provide drain- 1 age, of broken up material at the bottom of the bed; as the saying is Peonies abhor 1 damp feet." r ` 1 '1'}... mm l.....u' I..-` -1: ...._u_ _L-..u IV, wonders ot the -age. , 7 The Peony is 9. true herbaceous or de- ciduous perennial, dying down to the ground each fall and -pushing up fresh growths with the spring. A If nno yonn3r{o+na nlnnl-in... D.u....:.... 4.l..:.. P 'In hearing` the name Peonia, or Peony ,. some of us may have wondeted where such a beautiful ower got its name and may have forgotten completely, reading in the Classics, that Apollo as Paeon stood spon- sor: to the Peony (Paeonia) whose name the plant proudly bears.` In early times physi- cians` were known as Paeoni and the herbs used by them as paeonae. Pliny cites it `as the earliest medicinal plant known to his contemporaries. The fact that the Peony is much more easily grown than many other perennials commends it,to every home gar- den maker, quite asidffrom its wealth of ` bloom. Its plants put forth glorious blos-, soms. A half century of careful, scientific cultivation. has brought forth perfection in ` form, variety, color and delicacy [of per fume, that is truly one of the horticultural 4 wonders of the I 'l`lnn pnnnu in a `unit: Ln-In ....... .... ..l.. 1 GARDEN` 1NcoIu7LI=TE WITHOUT THEPEONY This . Incomparae FloWer' Easily Grown; Soon ' Planting Tim: L Collingwood. Aug. 3.-Illegal liquor op- `. erators have been hit heavily in the Police Court here. On Monday a young colored man. Frank Libertus, was find $300 for ` having liquor on the street. On Tuesday G. Hollingsworth, proprietor of the Tre- mont House. was fined $500 on the evi- dence of Libertus for selling liquor. while this afternoon Joseph Austin, a farmer from Stayner. was fined $300 for having a quantity of mash for the manufacture of liquor, and James McMartin, proprietor of the Cadillac Restaurant here, was asked to contribute $500 or spend six months in jail for selling liquor to two Provincial detectives. ` ' v use he used over old shingles or for new Order from this advertisement. We will ship. Risk Free "C.O.D. on ep- provel. We repay 10.00 orders to any station in Id Ontario at $2.95 and to New Ontario and Quebec at $3.25. Price in Maritime Provinces. $3.50. Samples by mail on request. CATALOGUE FREE write for cnlnlnmnn all ml.-. |...:|.I:__ Special train service `and low` fares are . offered by the Canadian National-Grand u Trunk Railways to. Western Canada. Con- ` suit with your nearest Agent for train ; service. etc. Comfortable, roomy, conver~ tible (berth) Colonist cars of latest de- `sign, _and restaurant cars serving meals and lunches. will be attached to trains. Special cars will also be provided for wo- men. .Travel the National Way" to Winnipeg when destined to any point be- yond. The `Canadian `National reaches direct all important distributing centres in Western Canada. 32-33c Western Ca1`nEa;rlIz;.-H gwuwuus ILLEGAL LIQUOR SALES PUNISHED BY HEAVY FINES IN COLLINGWOOD ..a nu ilot 4 yhe HARVESTERS WANTED rah wzsrsrm WHEAT FIELDS b g ` The Cigarette Menace A forestranger of repute has given the . Canadian Forestry Association a unique r proof of the great danger of lighted cigar- , ettm in of near the forest. As ,av means 1 of getting information on the number of , fires that can be started by cigarettes , along the trail, he covered `a distance of a mile dropping at intervals twenty lighted cigarettes. Nineteen of them were found to ' have set smallfires, all of which were of course immediately extinguished. The experiment was conducted in a dry peat country. The ordinary smoker little sus- nects the lurking danger in the woods. Hundreds of the worst forest fires recorded in Canada this year have been due to the evil habit of `tossing away lighted tobacco. Burning the Children's Property The far-reaching consequences of the annual forest fire plague throughout Ameri- ca has been well phrased by the editor of the Boston Herald who recently remarked: What `adds tn flip nifu :4: `Lot cm-A--L A` ...... cu ucau uuuvciy iumoereu that [her ests. unlike Germany's, have` been easily in half.` One quarter of the wl German Empire is wooded and practic: every acre controlled and exploited skilled foresters, ' ".1 uuiuer reSOUl'Q83 OI Germany are not only thoroughlyprotected against forest firm but have been intensively de- 1115 wveloped by scientific forestry practice so that Germany in 1914 cut more timber than comes from the whole of Canada each year and at the same time `Germany is : rapidly increasing its capital stock of forests. The explanation is that in the last decade the German. foresters have so suc- ceeded in excluding forest fires and in op- : erating their entire forest area as a self reproducing timber farm that while tak- ing great timber crops out of the forest year `by year they `have not in the slight- est degree weakened the national store of commercial woods. Canada on the other hand has allowed her forest wealth during the last few decades to be so ravaged by fire and` so destructively lumbered that her for- Ge'rma`ny s, `have ` cut whole Emnirp ie urnnzlnrl .....: n_n-L:---- (Q) T Please give some information as to the forestry policy of the German Em- pxre. ' I tux" -- - - _-.....,v. I . .,....... u. umrway uummlssxoners and care- L ful. regulations have been drawn up and closely adhered to by which railway fires I are being rapidly reduced. The Govern- ` ment Railways are now giving good co- operation in forespfires prevention so that the total losses from railway sources per Vannum_.have `become a minor factor in. Canada s forest destruction. The monthly l records sometimes show large numbers of fires set by railways but further enquiry will bring out the fact that the greater number were quickly put out without material dam-age. . I II'\\ "\I- ` ' ` CATALOGUE ' for calalozuo of other building material bargains. The Halliday "Company gimitecl Hngsilton ntniin ' (A) The control of the privately- owned railways, such has the Canadian Pa-V cific, as regards precautions against setting forest fires, is amply taken care of by the Board of Railway Commissioners and regulations: H-Ava ha... .1......... .._ --.: : uuauuu nerala wno recently remarked: " hat `adds to the pity is that most of a timber burned in our woodland fires so young that it belongs to generations : old enough to protect it." ' I (A);I`he owned t] regards" precautiom FA.-5.4 L`:..... ._ _~ (Q; Is there any Dominion law obliging the railways to guard against setting` for- est fires? (AL VThe control _the_ nu"... .._-L-- --, __"-~...- aavvv LBJ ID laul IIFUUI I (A) If lightning fires and fires set by bro-. ken bottles, etc., were the only menace of the forest, nine-tenths of the fire rangers would lose their jobs. Unfortunately, -while lightning sometimes is-`a minor fac- tor in certain districts, (-and now and then it is just possible that broken glass may concentrate the'sun s rays and start a - blaze,) the serious fact we have _to bear in mind is that four fires in every five are started by a careless human being. - The campfire, the lighted cigarette, land- clearing fires employed by settlers to burn up debris, are responsible for the main losses. v (Q) In the minds of many people. the cause of most forest fired is ascribed to lightning, action of the sun on quartz, broken bottles, etc. and to spontaneous com oust'ion. . How far is this true? In 1: n:_:_;_:_ -- - -- - QUERIES AND ANSWERS` on FORESTRY MATTERS iV(`1.X)' The timbe In AL .....I.. LL,,,, resources of Germany 12'hlV ` hfntpfnri nnru:nn4* THE BARRIE` EXAMINER `3\'rER ow s1-nNc.u=.s Magbe used overold qxingles for goo . from than ndvm-Hngmgno, U1 U1 vuc wumel practically 'i mrnlniharl -kw ally Through Solid Trains towinnlpog Without Chan 0 _ _ ` ne--M-eals and Lunches Served at Reasonable Prices. Special cars for Women. Convertible (berth) Colonist can of Latest Design For furthar particu]ars apply to nearest agent Canadian N ational-Grand Trunk Railways. GOING DATES Plus half a cent a mile beyond to all points in Mani- toba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Edmonton. Calgary, McLeod and east. LUIJG, DZISKKICHCW b east. ' buying enables us to offer this bargain. It's 0 wonderfully fine, heav thick. enduring roofing. Every roll is o. 1 quality and they average over 80 lbs. in weight. We stake our reputation on thin too in ii . Every roll lucked by our three-folud guarantee. GOING FARE ya to wmmpsc _ ----vu rial. IIVII T cENTBiE-STNWAIVWES-TERN ISANADA ravel the National Way" to`Winnipeg when destinec Special Trains .Lo ave--Q 'l OROl\l`I'O-(Union Station) August ll-9 a.m., 12.30 noon, 6.0 August 21- -. 12.30 noon, 6_.( For Times from Other Stations See Special 3 .u wuu AuustI4th;';d 2rd- -Toronto. I nll1...--..___1 n . EVCIT roll t I gnu-an gov: 7-25' jfjj thereof In I ._.. - _ - u `r -4-; U1 ULILU, \.a.1e00I1 1:351. -ueeton' `W1 831 Lollitigwood, Penetang,Mid1and, Parry Sound, Sudbufyo C3PT1 east thereof in Ontario. _4_%-9,000 1-. 6.00 pV.m., 10.30 p.m. 6.00 p.m., 40.30 p.m. 1191' .qfnf;nI-no Qnn Co-.....2--I PI\.,-2,, n .. u I-VII-Ill` pll TV}/innipeg destined to any point beyond_ ? [ R -_ UNTIL. I CAME To Ii \N THE HOt~A=\`I'AL: : @1911 IV loom. Pnvulu suuinu. Inc. A HALLHDAYBARGAIN ' MINERAL SURFACE ROLL_ROQFl_NG _ T x Ontario. z _ K `I . Train Service Pdster ` plug. half a cent.a_ mile from starting point to {Vinnipeg I RETURNING FARE $20 from: WE@EwPE L--Toronto, Inglewood and all stations south and west -(Standard Time) atioi:al~Grand o, Caledon East, Beton, Mea.ford,_ ._I 1'1 tn 1 IMPORTANT nlsrmiunue 0h--that Backache .'

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