;uuu;a.u: auun: Lurul U]. 161118.18 LI'OllDle. The Vegetable Compound has brought. relief to thousands of women uuering from such ailments. Let it Jxelp you. ` ' I No stomach filled with sour poisons can digest food. Everything you eat turns into more poison and gas, making you nervous and weak. Simple buckthorn bark, glycer- ine. etc.. as mixed in Adlerika. expels all sour poisons and gas from BOTH upper and lower bowel. Removes foul, decaying food-matter you never thought was in your system which caused sour and gassy stom- uch. Adlerika is EXCELLENT to guard against appendicitis. V Wm. Crossland, 'lruggist. Sold in Elmvale by W.J. Mc- Guire, druggist} T IF STOMACH IS SOUR, FOOD'WON T DIGEST -ThAursday-, August 17, 1922. I got up on And let (hm And the Izuly Out to jnin Subscribe get all the ne-.w.<, Fie`ld-mouse uh! Birds and lvuvr` She never said :n_ Each S_lP(`p hli ' .'..!`..*:...*":. ':.'.*'..::a'::"':.'.-..". Illmlm on. improve Ippotltm. stop sick hnduohu. rollovo lull- ""."'.': r%'J.$`if .'.':'.'}'. .'.`.'c`i'y' "all ly. yo thoroully. ' -Sh!` ~l1Jad(- :1 .~u_' Lips with fin For all the HM]: Were cmldlml Sing a mug )1 Twilight zma I 8a_.t nodding And the Inn- The moon. she- `With flonvinz "Garments all 4 And p(-url ('11 i%%*%4 g%%%+- IKRIIIID. III `ILJU Coffee Shun. 4 cafeteria plan. ever service y< assured of grxxl --and .\crvu-4: you. XI VILC, be had` Meals or Tab I000`Fircpr "Close to Direct ion b Comp-any _Thursda y, ing; ' T034 Just as in lxin l,_ J I Ill l\l|l In {add VI. vh: The A Tom;u-row-A-it-lylnt You don't need a month : treat- ment to prove the worth of RELIEF IS IMMEDIATE. It restore: normal breathing,- Itops mucus gatherings in tuna! and bronchial packages. auuree + long nigfsts of quiet sleep. 1.00 at our druggist's, or write `or e tria to Tcmplctons. Toronto. Sold By Wm. Crossland. In Allandale, by A. E. Patterson. V Hey :%_E9Y9r RAZ-M%AH! Relieves T I_{_heumatism Thousad vouch for the relief obtained from Aswan}, suiamsn cows. 1... .I__lA. __--.l - _._AI_l_ A...-_L -.-uccuabaly uUueuU1u' (ILIUGS. Such symptoms as pains and irreg- ,uhu`1tie.=, :12}-zone feelings, backache, headache. hot ashes, nervousness, with a general run-down condition, indicate some form of female trouble. TEA Vno'nfqh1`n (`Av-nnnnr-I` `H-- Notice of Application ' for Divorce 1 WANT You To swap 6 ARGUINQ WITH MY HUe>bANo . YOU'VE c.o'r' To be MORE. REs9z"\`VUL To t-m~1- :- age Fourteen 'yv vs. 01 ggLLj- V Mona. Afr L.As'r- NA< -- W `Non MY . 4 .-\\\.h aggup . .-._ 5 seen at the broken shoreline itself. where V.-- _..c- --... -.. The final touch to a finished picture is a colony of summer cottagers find amid sheltering elm. cedar and beech. relief from the strife and turmoil of city and town.` Here there is a strange and picturesquel mingling, of the" old and the 'new--a re-' minder of _the heroic past of pioneer days in the midst of the white painted cottages of summer transients from the great city that has grown like Jonah's gourd. The` reminder of the past is St.` Thomas Church. . A Reminder of the Past l The building was erected in the `thirties of the past century andplooks as if it may stand unimpaired beyond the 'thirties of centuries yet to come.r It is a "rare com- bination resulting -from priniitive,appliances l and finishedskill. The walls are `of puddled clay that has hardened with time to the firmness of concrete itself. The pews, long benches with straight backs, like the Wains- cotting, are of butternut, finished with plane and sawn out of trees cut from the: -pri-meval forest, and -still rivalling in the exhibition of mechanical skill the best workmanship _of today. There is, too. a touch of the old land beyond the seas. in 1 the beautiful stained glass thrugh which 1 mellowed light enters the sacred edifice. 1 and in the organ. a century old, but still. 4 rich in tone, brought from the orginal home i of the pioneers. The whole structure is a -2 tribute to the craftsmanship` ofthe builder, 4 the late Alexander Campbell, father of i Mrs. J. J. Brown of Barrie, and to the : zeal and public spirit of Col. E. G. O Brien, '. `Anna mu uuuuuc. nuwucu: In all equal area, outside of a section near Burford and in parts of Markham and Scarboro , have I seen` more beauty in roadside trees. And, despite the fact that even here the woodman has not been sufficiently sparing of the axe, in no equal area of good land have I seen so large a proportion of [the itotal acreage left in timber. N I. I. put` Despite the condition of the weather at harvest time the hay now stored in" the barn is in prime condition, with nearly all the leaf preserved, this being largely due "to the method of handling and the time when cutting occurred--before bloom had begun to appear. Prof. Hume is one of the many sweet clover enthusiasts. the en- thusiasm in his casegbeing largely based on the effect of this clover on soil fertility. As proof of what the plant will do in this respect. Prof. Hume can point to one of the best fields of oats I have seen this year, a field in which the cat crop was pre- ceded by sweet clover. n One of Ontario s Beauty Spots The attractions of the Scotch Block of` Oro do not lie wholly in well cultivated elds. Nature has been lavish in her dis- tribution of her beauties, as well as in a soil "that responds readily to the labors of 1 the.hus`oandinan. In a drive of a few miles the eye is gladdened by a sight of the wide ` sweep of valleys; the-imagination is stirred i by the long range of high lands marking the northern horizon. and the still greater ~ hills of Vespra to the west_._ while looking to the south, Kempenfeldt Bay. seen from a ridge and between paralled lines of road- side trees, shimmers like molten silver be- neath the rays of'the afternoon sun. `Where Men Love Trees 1 Man has also`performed his part. not only in what he has done. but in what he I `has left undone. Nowhere in an equal . . J section -1....-uv a-nan. wnuu av: lllllla 0 yet IUUL ctauu. `That second growth was assured," Prof. Hume said, by elevating the cutting bar us much as possible in harvesting the first crop. The hay, although cut during a very showery `period, was well cured by turn- ing out the coils when the sunny days "came." I'\._._:.. AL, ,, I-.- 1- 5 IV HUGE: Where Clover Flourishes Excellent natural drainage. supplexnented by tile, and a plentiful naturalsupply of lime in the soil, have made the rection peculiarly well adapted for clover. The red variety is favored for the most` part, but here "and there sweet clover has put in an appearance as well. On the family homestead of Prof. Hume of the Univer- sity of Toronto is a eld of the latter from which two tons to the acre of hay were out between the 7th and 10th of June and on which a second crop, left for seed, is now i breast-high and forming a perfect stand. 'l`l....s ,........_..I _..-___u_ ,,,, I I '9 is I (Toronto Globe) Few better demonstrations of what is meant by mixed farming" can beseen anywhere in Ontario than in `that part of Oro lying back from the broken front of Lake Simcoe, south of, the dry lots, and between the fourth and fifth concessions of the township._ Fall wheat, barley and-oats, all of" which `have given abundant yields this year. are the grain crops,- and there is evidence of? well-planned rotation in the extensive areas of clover, which are {now a vivid `green, following upon a liberal allowance of mid-sunuiier moisture . I_n thef block referred to the lessons of thorough cultivation. brought from the lowlands of Scotlandghy the first settlers, are [still be- mg applied, the result being that field after eldrof oats shows scarcely a weed in sight an a season that has been peculiarly fav- ,orable to weed growth. The present appli- lcation of these lessons in cultivation is seen. too, in plows already at work turn- ing over stubble to assure fall killing of such few weeds as there may be or in pre- paring clover sod for the sowing of fall wheat. " lI1L__. t'\I___ wt, -1 5. Fork River, Manitoba.--"I saw in like newspapers where Lydia. E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound was doing 00 much good to women, and as I needed something I began to take it. I used to be` very sick but I am not now. I live on a. farm in the home- stead district and we have to do all `our own work. I tell all the women 1 lee what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound does for me. I think it saves me from going to a. doctor and is the best medicine women can `t|ke."--Mns. WM. COULTAS, Fork River, Manitoba. ' `Iunlh. 1.1 ru..I-|.-.._o_ Iv4_.-A,v- Combination of Good Farms and Rural Beaut_y;. ,- Summer Homes. T | MIXED FARMING saw AT rrs 3551 IN ORO 4_OLL,'l CKN`-T Vou at-_ . /3-l%-n __ _, l HARVESTERS EXCURSIONS ' I Via Canadian National-Grand Trunk I A flat rate of $15 to Winnipeg and half a cent a mile beyond is fare of all H:u'-' vesters excursions to the west by `Canadiim National-Grand Trunk routes west of Quebec City. Solid trains run through to Winnipeg without change. New conver- tible (berth) Colonist cars will add to the comfort of the journey and restaurant cars. will be attached tothe trains. serving meal-3 j `and lunches at reasonable prices. Special cars will `be provided for women. Full information re fares, train service, etc. -apply to. nearest Canadian National-Grand Trunk Agent. 33c l u.. ;muuA. vvunn mucluuu :1. uull. I 1' 11-12 . . . . . . ..-. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 14.00 `Barrie Hospital._ care late Wm. l 1 Ross . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 102.00 `Municipal World, supplies . . . . . .. 18.81! Council adjourned "to meet at New! Lowell Thursday, August 31. at 10 am. I T. F. BURROWS, Clerk. u_. u. uuanauanu. uculcul. luau :1! .VV I1` saga Beach 1 J, Kenwell, grzwelling. Con. 2 A. D. Harkin, gravel .... . . ;. Geo. Powers.- work -at Wasa.g.a Beach fl Il._,41,, ,,,,_. __., ..._.a... an a-n~\I\A repairs 3 E. J. Alborough, work on road, Wa- saga Beach J_. J. Dumond. cement road at _Wa-{ cnlvu LL-m..I. n` Robert Lawrence wrote re obstruction on `Palmerston St.. New Lowell. Mrs. C. A. Campbell sent a `communi- cation re obst.ruct,ion_, etc., at Wasaga Beach. A ..... ..L__. f. . .| u,v vvuuxcu Ul uuy age. Women make a serious mistake in allowing themselves to become so weak and nervous that it is well-nigh impossible for them to attend to their ..-necessary household` duties. gunk Qtvrnnfnn-no nn main ......1 1....-.- IJUGVI-It AA number of accounts were presented and paid, viz: Express C0,,` `charges on grader ` rmmirc Q " "V" ` _._.... _.-... V... gvupvy All Ill\t Ulltbllc ` The County Clerk sent notice that the County rate payable by Sunnidale for 1922 is $10,600. """'."' """""". . I The August SCSSIOH was held 111 Hall. Sunnidule Corners, with all the memhs present. and the Reeve in the chair. I nu n A vaunsu tuc,Aavluu_y uruuiuuu U1 service. , 1 Few summer colonies are more happily placed than is that of Shanty Bay. At. the front are the silvery waters of Lake; Simcoe, on either side and in the rearare` `bits of the -primeval forest. Community life there is, but wholly free of community noise and friction, and in old St. Thomas Church there is a link between the log cabin and privations of the pioneer days and the. productive fields and comfortable homes dotting the valleys and hillsides to the north --fields and homes which form alike the rich heritage of those of today and the en- during monument of those who are gone. who was the chief financial support of the infant congregation of the early day;'. Near; the altar is `a. brass tablet to the first of ] the O"Briens, born January 8,` 1799. and!( died September .8, 1875. who served his? country both by sea and land," and to his [( wife, Mary Sophia, born June 29. l798.`|( died October 14, 1876. Another brass t-u- H blet there is also to the memory of Lucius ( Richard O Brien, first President of the l Royal Academy. and beneath the shelter 1 of weeping cedars. just in the rear of the 3` 1` C little church. granit/crosses mark the lust. !resting places of Col. O Brien the elder, and that Col. W. E. 0 Brien who main-i tained the,fa.mily tradition of service. 1 l T Four Qnnnnnr nn'nn:no nrn ....n.... L....--:l_. I JJUIIUIL . ... . - . - u Iuthltlnlunc 1, Martin. unloading cement and `moving grader .....;........ L Lynn, work Con. .7, Colonization road .. I. Mumberson, work Con. 7, Colon-, ization road . . . I .1l'-_.;2__ ,, , I ti - IV I .... IIIGALIUII I uau . . . . o . . . . . o . . . 1. `Martin. work Con. 7. Coloniza- ` tion road . . . . . . . . . ). McArthi1r, work Con, 7,. Colon- ization road . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. G. Ardagh. plans Balsaxwn St., `work on Con. l6,..'....:..... ., G. Ardagh. plans D. McMackono road. Con. 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . [. Fisher. work sideroad 9. Cons. `II 10 - SUNNI DALE COUNCIL ___-r v- ago`. 3 an aI-Inl.n&l U\II Manufacturers and Marketers of Imperial Polarine Motor Oils and Marketers in Canada of Gargoyle Mobiloil. u m , mun: wuu. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a medicine for the 3.1}- monts peculiar to women. It is pre- pared from medicinal plants, with care and accuracy. It can be taken by women of any age. ' 'n111nn rnnlrn o mush-um .~.!..o-..1.- :.. Av .7 - -.v vvpr .1pTT&Cl How to read the Chart: ' I.P.O. means Imperial Polarine Oil. I.P.M. means Imperial Polarine Medium Oil. I.P.l'I. means Imperial Polarine Heavy Oil. I.P.T. means Imperial Polarine Transmission Oil. x It you unve anotner make or, car consult the Imperial Chart of Recommendations to determine the grade of Imperial Polarine which you should be using. J * If you drive another make of, nQ(!l\r|nrv`Ar\p'aO=;\-n L... .I-a._.....:._- `L - ._, Imperial Oil '4nu.I....:....-... ......J 1u....'L- MAKE OF AUTOMOBILE ` ` Overland . Gray Dort . . . . . . . . . . Mclgaughliia (44-so). tlflilnul M4 Dodge Bros. . Ford. Chevrplet (8 Cyl.). . . . Model 490 . K AII -A.I_-_.ll, aim Credit `to Lydia 1: Pinkham s Vegetable Compound ,uuu ['l`!'3U} . . . . . . All other Models THE BARRIE EXAMINER IVIUCICI `QUU . . . . All other Models] 2.00 "7 2000.00 50.00 16.70 3 106.66 !I 2 U .00 I 30.00 , ac: mull. ' Dated at Sudbury, in the Province of On- tario, this twenty-third day. of June, AD. 1922. R. R. McKESSOCK -& COMPANY, 26-38c Solicitors for Applicant. .36.6T _42.00| 35.00 I" 29.10` 7.00! if : Barrie 1`Orillia . ` I 3 |JVCV\`llldll\l`.'| {C okstown IA istou 'Beeton V Schomberg i ound -' Cnollingwood . 5 Gravenhurst Oro. Coldwater . . Bracebridge Elmvalle Midland . . . . Newmarket . I l`1..._l_ .L-_,,.A E Summer Engine Lubricant rnnmnrs win: nesnms HEALTH I.P.I-I. l.P.H. I.P.M. !.P.O. Tiin. l.P.M. I.P.H. DATES or Winter I.P.M. Reading the advts. is time well spent. l.P .M. l.P.O. `LPoHc l.P.M. l.P.M. V I.P.M`. in FALL l-`AIRS I922 IHARVESTEARS WANTED FOR WESTERN` , ` WHEAT FIELDS ' ' ' ' ` S9435-' 18'20ll Special train service and low fares are - - - - - - - - - - -- S9133. 11-13 offered by the Canadian , National-Grand Z uept, 12.14 Trunk Railways to Western Canada. Con- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Sept 12_15 salt with your nearest Agent for train set-_ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ . _ __ Sept_ 14_l5 vice, etc. Comfortable, roomy, convertlble _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ __ Sept 15; (berth) Colonist cars of latest design, and _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ .` Sept. 22 I restaurant cars serving meals and _lunches _ _ _ _ Sept 21_22:will be attached to trains. Speclal cars _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ __ Sem_ 25_26;w1ll also be provided for women. Travel _ _ _ . ` _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Sept 2830; the National Way to Winnipeg when des- Sept 2830 ; tined to any point beyond. The Canadian ' i i ' i i n:.. 9 A iNational reaches direct. all imnnrtant din. (Pu . an .Oct. ;offered Canadian,National-Grand Con-U sult ser-_ vice, Comfortable, convertible a irestaurant lunches xwill {will ` ltined reaches direct all important dis- `? tributing centres in Western Canada. 32-33c Rveuad The Examiner Adlet Column. NOTICE is hereby given that Robert Krchibald Logan, of, Angus, in the County of Simcoe, in the Province of Ontario, Es- quire, will apply to the Parliament of Can- ada at the next session thereof for a Bill of Di.\;ox'ce from his wife, Cecilia Maud Lo- gan, formerly of Angus, but now of the City of Hamilton, in the County of Went- worth, on the grounds of adultery and de- aertion. r\_4._.l _L cn__.n.___,-, 3, II In I A A