gust 24, 1922 ul ulc nations. Retrospect is often pleasant. The true Canadian has little time for that. His heart and mind are on the present * and the future He knows that if his country is to come to full fruition as a nation it must be by still worthier efforts on the part of its people individually and Collectively. No single province within the Dominion s far-ung boundaries can afford to disregard another Each must be in sympathy with all the rest. The East must share in the problems as well as in the joys and prosperity of the West The West must have faith in the East Bound by an invisible but unbreakable chain of mutual aection and goodwill they can and will putand keep Canada in the very vanguard of the worlds great nations. Tho: t"Q\lI'l\r\l-nzxouo Al .I.... .....:......I -_:__. n_,_ L.. , In. I wul nu 3 glcal llall0l'l5. The development of the national spirit has been fostered in many an hour of peril. difficulty, and struggle. It is beginning to bloom in beauty and strength. its progress has been greatly advanced of late years by the action of important organizations in sending delegations to` many sections of the country, so that their members may add to` their first-hand knowledge of their home land. Such an organization is the Montreal Board of Trade which` will celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of its founding by beginning on September 1,a thirty days tour of` the Dominion. The members will not only see the country in all the glory of its most beautiful scenic settings, but the journey will be so arranged as to give them a new perspective of its wealth of soil. forests. minesand waters.'and impressions of its indus- trial and commercial growth that` would beiimpossible of visualizing in any other way. i `D8311 There is striking monument in Montreal to Maisonneuve, founder of anadas Metropolis. `As in his life time. his thou his were of the West. so does the` memorial to him cf to-day. The sculgtor has caught the spirit of the adventurous.pioneer in t e poise-_of the body and the head. Vision. courage. determination are plain to the observant eye and understanding mind. Maisonneuve and the host of gallant men and nrble women who laid the foundation of the Canada of to-day, |ong,ago embarked upon the greatest, andllast quest. But their faith in the new land is as a living ame in the hearts of their successors. They see their country favored by geography and nature. a link between East and West. and extending almost 4,000 miles from ocean to ocean. They know that it is endowed with a richness of natural resources beyond the power of man to calculate Above all they fe]0lC in its attainment to a place and a voice in the councils of the nations. I).so-........... ._ _t-_e -|,,, . an , A RAMAg_E-ALcoMBRAcK Thereis lstrilcin Malso under anada`s Metrooolis. `As in hit Hfn c:?.?.eu}.'?.I Montreal Board of Trade Perpetuates Maaisonneuve WEDDINGS LII`: IJZXI IIU 124 $2 a year. 1 ruv, unty of Shncoo. an [0 npansqnneuvg. time. A. Moffatt, Plumber and Heater Phone 531 Cleaner, Presser and Dyer 109 DUNLOP ST. PP- B"'i `M PHONE 229 _ ')ZOZOZ();o:n;n:...-...:-.- - -- V I AM A PRACTICAL TAILOR AND READY TO ATTEND TO REPAIRS ON_ ALL CLOTHES Goods called for and deliverd. PRICES REASONABLE .. V _ _ .l have the only dry-cleaning plant within your reach J `--outside the city. L And} Now Your Furnace SOLE `AGENT FOR HECLA FURNACES `U lIIUU3d|lU3 UI UCW pcvylc. Shortly aiter leaving Prince George, the party. will pass through Mount Robson Park. This is a veritable wonder- land of mountain scenery, some 650 square miles in extent and set aside by the government of British Columbia as a national playground and wild life sanctuary. Here will be obtained an excellent view of Mount Robson. with an altitude of 13,068 feet. It towers above the surrounding peaks. sublime, majestic, with green glistening glaciers and pure white snow adding to its beauty. Sometimes itsown summit is lost amid the mists and clouds; quite ol'ten'that summit is the centre of raging storms. But on Mount Robson they beat in vain. Nov! Iacnor parlr an-inthnr vi-|4\I|nOa:n lrin.-Anon kno Al 3.33 10.70 6.55 A2! Lllcy Uta; Ill Vallln Next jasper Park, another mountain kingdom, but 0! greater extent, embracing 4,400 square miles of sublinn mountain scenery, is entered. Here the party will spend 3 day at asper Lodge, the new Alpine chalet built on the shore o Lac Beauvert by Canadian National Railways, and the first of a series to be built throughout these Northern Canadian Rockies. At night they will leave for Edmonton. _ From Edmonton the homeward route will be through the rich farm lands of the northern part of the prairie provinces to Winnipeg following the trans-continental line of Canadian National Railways t rough the rich pulp forests and new {arm lands of Northern Ontario to Cochrane, down through the famous Cobalt mining districts over the Temiskarning & Northern Ontario Railway to North Bay. thence to Ottavrz. ` and back to Montreal. Kaien Island. there will be every opportunity to gain an insi ht into the enormity of the halibut and salmon industry of t e province. From Prince Rupert eastward the party will become acquaintedwith the Skeena River, with its historic and romantic traditions, its arresting grandeur, and its fame as one of the most prolic salmon streams in the world. They will see too, some of the Bulkley and Nechalto River Valley country, one of the newest elds of settlement opened up in the west. Unknown to the vast majority of Canadians, the luxurious valleys that lay between the mountain ranges in this area, are suitable for mixed farming, dairying, fruit growing and cattle raising. In the years to come their productivity. now a matter of knowledge to com paratively few, will offer means of livelihood and competence to thousands of new people. Qlnnrrlu cffnar lanuina print-n (`_ar\r4-In rl-no narfv: 111:`! nan.- suns $i.75 '. FIRTH Office, 10-12 Owen St. Cold weather is` around the corner, but is your heating apparatus in condition for the long winter months? If you are about to install a new furnace or wish your present system put in good shape for the winter, let us take care of the piping and sheet metal work for you. We are experts in this branch and guarantee our work. Page Seven` Fhnadl nib h K b nzih `J `ears Costs Tomi? .78 2.62 18.49 I\ LII. Ill hip dnh | I :00 8 .23 8.23 9.38 7.20 7.20 2 .02 2.02 7.18 ` 7.18 V 5.25 an: icean ZCIISC xuc uuvuuuy 22 knotl. eve! built the Clyde- a .00 10.00 2.50 7.7 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.60 2.50 3.14 c uu VIII unyllv .000 features an rxiuel flooring a n reception- oom. [another tin over 300 ran ah cafe. 3 ng, and 13 R. all the prin- he total length nenade deck ll ich is enclosed. n bad weather. unter various acific run. and: tlonal ventilat- electric fans re features of ants. and an- wlmmlng pool` een feet wide, eoth of eight Costa Total! u an .-__ UIVI 17.10 4.70 39.26 19.15 22.88 6.87 12.53 92"! Toronto "Branch: 73-75 Wellington St} West |5.2o vain ` CAD BARRIE MARBLE WORKS EAWSON, WELGH ls CAMPBELL chmorod Accountants Phone_Mnin 5874. 59 Yonge St., Torontt. H. J. Welch, CA. G. D. Ounpbeli, C.A.' T. E. Lawleu. C.A. V W. S. Hulbig, Protiuction Engineer. Manager Cost and Eiciency Department omen AND wonxs, 79 BAYFIELD s1". Phone 734' John P. Murphy, Prop. 'P.O.,B9_x 642 Lust Decomber Mr. W. G. Scopis of Co'oourg_ had a 28.000 cubic foot Pease Economy Furnace installed In his $30! : after giving the outt a fair trial he made the following reporta- TFURWIKC 13 Thursday, Augut 24, 1922 . EDDY S Pack Your Butter In This Tub made of indurated Fibreware-- which in wood pulp-moulded un- der tremendous hydraulic pressure and baked to flint-like hnrdnen. Aorda pduitive protection a ninut deterioration. Every farmers ouid use - Absolutely lmpervloun to talnto and odors-there are no crevice: or cracks or hoopu. They are light, for ahipplng-nnd to strong and durable and so easily cleaned. they can be used over and over again. 0U0 5.20 P633 (5 Butter Excellent VR%esu_l%ts in Cobourg mnumman % mnawnnp EC_ONOMY And many other similar} reports all prove that this heating appliance has exceptional merit. May I send a twenty7page booklet. giving derailed infnrniation? [Write or tele- phone for it today. - HARRY BARRON we ate pleased to say that the Pease Fcnnomy Furnace instalied in our store -5 qiv.-no excellent satisfaction. ,it pro- duces ample heat. and this is done with much less coal than we used in the old furnage. We recommend the Pease Economy." aux.-. paw`. wxynv ugurnuru up Barrie, Ont. - Te|ephone'.i80 HEATING CONTRACTOR - v v - - - u - -u-I vu-wow I A. Two cups of cooked peas, one cupful oi diced celery. one cupful of chopped wal- nut` meats, one tablespoonful of chopped parsley. one tablespoonful of salt. Mayon- nais, lettuce or watercress. Drain and chill I the peas, then mix with `celery, nuts, salt` `and enough mayonnaise to moisten. Ar- range in u mound on bed of crisp lettuce or watercrass. Cover with`may_onnaise and sprinkle with the chopped pansley. repelled by two turbines. and. us speed mu 1! round from h. the actually nl 90 Iran}: Perhaps it is as well that the temptation to pose is removed from us at present. It is hard to look heroically noble when one s nose is peeling, or when one s complexion resembles the aming` tomato. Doub`- less our picture will do us more justice when our.coat of tan and sun-burn has _been removed by the | cooling winds of autumn. _ --until such time as Mr: Binning s Barrie is a photographerless townl studio is completed. Even if a citizen did screw his courage tothe sticking point, and. resolve to pose for that picture that the family have been `nagging about for the past ten years, he couldn't do it. No glaring arc_lamp awaits to `dazzle his modest eyes, no shrouded lens leers at him from the corner. like some huge Cgclqpean eye in a remorseful mood. T esufamily album is getting a rest these days, and is not called upon to l act as a repository of studies of Uncle `Jed, who has apparentlyl swallowed a "ram-rod and is tryingl to look blandly unconscious of. it, or of Baby, who gazes `round-eyed as- tonishment at an imaginary bird from a recumbent position on his' infantile stomach. Ofce and Shqwroom: We11s'B1ock,Owen St. ' H . ' Telephon -No. 78 J.TW. McCutcheon, Manager Cook with Gas _Save Your Fuel THE BARRIE GAS C0. NO` LOOK PLEASANT" NOW Normandy Salad Limiied develop- Collingwood Bulletin--Critics of `Premier Drury, who impute to him divers forms of apparently _undesir- able. political astuteness, appear to have `over-looked one detail. Mr. Drury is a non-smoker and who can conceive of ye compleat politician without an aggressive cigar pro- truding from his mouth? The prime minister himself ex- plains his abstention from tobacco as follows: -["|]'__ ,p_;.1____ :_ L3- ,,,,_,,, . I ~ ONE REASON PREMNIEIR. DRURY DOES NOT INDULGE IN SMOKING LUIIUWSZ ` "`My_father in his younger days, was quite a regular smoker. When -a n - u u - - a - \.a.u vu vuc LLIIIIJ ULIUC UClUW- The Severn that empties Sparrow Lake flows through the real Muskoka scenery. There are little rocks-, and big rocks,and cliffs which rise sheer u~ from the river-side, but which are never sufficiently steep to shake off the grip of the hardy shrubs and scrub p_ines. Summer cottages are numerous, and here and there the landings of little stores run out to accommodate the transient whose supply`of coffee or` flour may be dwindling. And small wonder that supplies do disappear, for never do meals seem so good as when cooked in the open by the side of the shim- mering Severn. ` en.-. mu-J nnnnnnn \.IJ. uuuxoca The three or four mile stretch ofl river that comes between the canal and Sparrow Lake is more like the pictured streams of old England than a Canadian scene. ,The `border- ing meadows are emerald green; and the huge willows that skirt the stream are faultlessly mirrored in the placid waters beneath. Finally, aftermany a curve, it flows into Sparrow Lake, a mile-square oasis in a desert of rock. Here summer hotels flourish in lieu of palms, and there are over a dozen of these havens for refugees from the heat-stricken city. The edges of this sheet of water are dot- ted with small craft, from which tired business men, clad in the conventional dishabille, lower tempting worms and shiners to the finny tribe below. "l`L'.. G .... .... 4.'I.-;. .___,_L_-._- n I u l uuc wum lb, LU uUU1`g'la.H Day. The scenery is everchanging along this route, and `does not present the endless succession of rock and tree which so soon becomes wearying. From Barrie to the head of Couchich- ing well-wooded islands and points break the monotony of the shore-line and the summer cottages are flanked by pleasant, prosperous looking farms, stretching back to the nest- ling farm-houses that could pass for summer homes as well, but for their air of permanency and the great barns that rise behindthem. The. canal at Washago makes the rest of the route possible, for power-boats at least, and the lock-keeper s job is no sinecure on warm, bright days such as we. have just had. During'| the summer months the locks must be` opened for boats at any hour of the day or night, though most of the calls come in the day-time. of course. I "l"L.. LL--- ._.. .l!-.___ ___!1, . . 1 n, A. C. Bricker officiated behind .the plate. The teams were: Hawkes- tone: T.` Pugsley lb, C. Turner If, H. Pugsley c, Fletcher 3b, McConaghy 2b, A. Pugsley lf, Reid p, D. Pugsley cf, Vanderburg ss. L .Barrie: T. Burton c,`R. Flaherty p, J, Dobson lb, D. Emms 2b, .Buster Clark ss, Archy Burton I 3' K. Lally cf, N. Moran rf, H. Car- i son If ia.|.l.aCl' DIIC glllllu i From Barrie s very doorstep one [of Ontario s most beautiful water- ways unfolds, beckoning the `owner of launch or.canoe to follow out of Kempenfeldti across the north-west stretch of Lake Simcoe, through the Narrows into Lake Couchiching, down the canal and the picturesque bit of river that empties into Sparow Lake, and across this Lake of the` Sparrows and on down the Severn, if one wills it, to Georgian Bay. r Tho annncnvv iu oxraav-nkgnninm nlnnl; {EVER CHANGING BEAUTY ! ;oF SEVERN WATERWAYI DUIICB Wlllllls run W55 Scureu. The Barrie boys have nothing but praise for the-Hawkestone hospital- ity, and did ample justice to the repast which was set before them after the game. ' A nwznbow nf;n~:o-n1-3 knIn:r-u-I e Building Issuer I . ArnoI'd CE he blocked it and caught it as it was coming down. In the last frame Bar- rie had two down,and a Hawkestone man on third. The next man up hit to the infield and was apparently thrown out at first by a large margin, .but he was called safe and Hawkes- tone s winning run was scored. Tho Darrin knum lnnun nni-In;nm Inni- Juxuur. ` I 7 One of the features of the gamel was a spectacular catch by Emms, at] second. The Spalding travelled down | waist high, ilke a young cannon-ball, and `though Emms could not hold it] ----vv--2--vow1 jug ----ac:-1 Barrie .. and Hawkestone crossed bats once more in a-contest which was one of the drawing cards at the. Hawkestone. garden party, held on Friday, August 18; The cash cus-l tomers were treated to an excellent game of ball, and thevvisitors were defeated by the narrow margin of one run, the score being 4-3 in fav- lour of the Hawkestonites. Reid and R. Flaherty were the rival twirlers, and both turned in excellent games; despite` the fact that Flaherty is a junior. nnn A9 Q`-un 4-`nn+u..nn :14? `Ian n-nnnn o ` HAWKESTONE 4, BARRIE 3. &%&&w$m&a&%&&m' . I gwwawxawwwmamwmgi HDGI BASEBALL Stop: 1 Hot One THE BARRIE EXAMINER LJULEUI IUU IUI J get all the news. I was a boy, however, he gave up the habit rather than risk my acquiring it from him. It meant quite a sac- rifice for him, and I always feel it would be a low down trick for me to` start the habit now he is dead. And` of course, not knowing the joys of to- I bacco, I don t miss them. ~ .in the Chapel of McMaster Univer- awn .-v-a n\n_-I " run-a\u\rAvl|Jl\rt\rI\ I An interesting wedding took place sity, Toronto, Aug. 16, when Miss Edna Arnold Alcombrackt B.A. daughter of Mr. J. C. Alcombrack, Richmond Hill, became the wife of Mr. George Earl Ramage, B.A., son .` of the late George Ramage and] Mrs. Ramage, Ottawa, and formerly ; Science Master in Barrie Collegiate] Institute. Rev. F. B. Waters, a coll-g ege friend of the groom, officiated in ' the presence of the immediate relat- ives and friends of the couple. Dur- ing the service soft music was playedi by Mrs. J. E. Peel, sister of the bride. I The bride wore -a crepe-knit silk suit, I with touches of tangerine, smalll French hat to match and corsage of l Sweetheart roses. Her only ornam- ent was a platinum and diamond `bar pin, the gift of the groom. There were no attendants. After the cer- emony a reception was held in the University reception rooms, the wed- ding party then motoring to the Queen's Hotel, where the wedding M ding breakfast was afterwards served 1 Mrs. Ramage left on a honeymoon , trip down the Saguenay. They will 1 make their home in St. Thomas. | BURNS-_TAYLOR Dr. G. R. Burns, chiropractor, of Barrie,- and Dr. Elsie Anne Taylor, his assistant, were quietly married in Collingwood on Monday, August 14. I The. ceremony was performed by Rev. I H. B. Coumans, pastor of the Baptist ,church at Collingwood, in the pres- ence of the bride s sister, `Miss Ina Taylor of Collingwood, and Mr. M. `Kelly, also of CollihW5od. A wed- ing breakfastwas afterwards served at the home of the bride s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Taylor, Sixth! street, Collingwood. Dr. Burns form-l erly resided in Toronto. 7 Subscribe for The Barrie Examiner and . -4 11" d... ......... on .. _---.. |'iI_!I!EIHiI.'.E Imlualualual | }!'l'68l'8