Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 5 Feb 1925, p. 6

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r|:rlUY HUADLEY Organist and Choir Leader Teacher of Piano, Organ, Voice A Terms reasons Sophia _. - ....-.~ nua- . HILDRETH F. LENNOX, A.T.C.M. Teacher of Piano Pupils prepared for Toronto Conserva- tory examinations in Piano. 2 North Street. Phone 387W MAUD E. CLAXTON, L.T.C.M. Teacher ofVPiano and Vocal Pupils prepared for Toronto Conserva- tory of Music examinations leadiny up to and including A.T.C.M. degree. Studio--King Block. Phone 424 ________________________j Music and Unive 113 Worsley St. ` to Conservatory oi rsity of Toronto. DR. E. G. TURNBULL Graduate McGill University. Montreal Ofce and. Residence--Cor. Elizabeth and Bradford S,ts.."Barrie. Phone 105. ' Oftit.-e'.hours: 9510 a.m., 1-3 p.m., 7-8 p.m. -... nuvn - IIVIETI LYUN 122 B1oor.St. West. Toronto, will be at 91 Owen St.,- Barrie, 1st Saturday of each month. Diseases pf Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Consultation hours-11 a..m. to 5 Barrie nl-mnn 9 m.........- 11-....- -- -.n u uuw I1. HUDD Formerly of Drs. Ross & Ross, Barri` Late Surgeon Specialist with the Imnerial Arrnv AIL .......... wIuII\oIl vulgar] anu A especially. Office-140 Dunlop St., Phone 710. P.( L. J. SIMPSON, M.B _ PHYSICIAN AND. SURGEON Office and Residence--Collier St., cor- ner Clapperton St.. Barrie. Phone 2,7I ---`-_-_-"_""-:'-'---`--"`-"" -, ._... ......u uuu Iu_l3III Consulta.t ioni'1ours-:11 Barrie, phone 2. Toronto, North 20 Hoa n:n_m_d;,, Baker : or Wholgwheat \JlllUU."` Barrie. un. rl. I. AHNALI. Associate Coroner County of Slmcoe Office and Resid_ence-Corner Torpnto and Elizabeth Sts., opp. Central Church Office Hours: Until 10.30 a.m., arid 1 to 3.30 and 6 to 8 p.m. Phone 167. -.u -. nu. uIuEI-UVV I Graduate of Toronto University Phone 61 * 0ffice--58 Collier St. Hours: 8-9 a.m., 1230-2 and 6.30-8'p.m. DRS. LITTLE &. LITTLE Physicians and Surgeons. Barrio, put. Office, and Residence-47 Maple Ave. Office hours: 1 to 3 p.m., 7 to 9 p.ni., or by appointment. Phnnn 9.12 uuauc uuun-5: J. to 3 7 to 9 p.!1fls, appointment. Phone 213. A. T. Little, M.D. W. C. Little, M.B. _____________________________ uuunuuauuu. uuutsraa ouucxcur, N0- tary. Conveyancer, etc. Ofce.--Hinds Block, 8 Dunlop St.. Barrie. Mmvmv mn T.nAM uunurwl r. lvIcuuAl_u', I:l.A. Successor to Creswicke & Bell BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, ETC.-. MONEY TO LOAN. Ross Block. Barrio I PLAXTON 4'. PL TON BARRISTERS. SOLICIT RS. ETC. Offices: 707-8 Kent Building Toronto, Ont. C. W.?Plaxton. G. Gordon Plaxton James O. Plaxton DR. W. A. LEWIS Surgery and Diseases of Women Associate Coroner County of Simcoo -and- ' an n .. _.._. -.,, RADENHURST &. HAMMOND BARRISTERS SOLICITORS. ETC. Masonic Temple Building, Barrie MONEY TO LOAN LOOK FOR 'l'HE-LAB ON BOTTOM OF LOA . A Good Knorgnont of Oahu. "`.`!..-,"'`.1.;'Z`_' _'.."1`_::" DONALD ROSS. LL.B. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, E110. Masonic Temple Building, Barrie MONEY TO LQAN T uanc Du.l'5UUIl apeclal Imperial Army, 41 General Surgery and agnm-iallu Gonodiif LONGMAN . `Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, etc. MONEY TO LOAN DUNCAN F. McCUAl_G, B.A. Snnaossnnr tn (`Yrnnwinhn Ry ail DR. MORT| M ER LYON I\In at 1'1'r.._L nu, , ' Lulu` DR. L. H. BIGELOW Inn`... .3 n1....,, - DR. FRED A. ROSS I! l\` T\_._ T\---- n "` DR. H. T. ARNALL fa (`nu-nnnn rVn.....-. ..a Winn You Ask for 3 Lot! of I-n`I\ 1-; II 11 can %% PERCY HOADLEY anist and (`I-.n:.. 1-,... -. \.I .n-\/JAAI -1;c'>s-s`.i3-lock, Barrie. ji 3. M. SYLVESTER star Ban-in -l".:4:--..- OPTICAL MEDICAL MUSIC lock, 8 Dunlop MONEY TO ,uuuwL unurcn and Terms reasonable. St. I "St, Barrie. P.O. Box 1078 roux g Rl:`.ADl_NG NEEDS a-pans? I y'ps. _ Obstetrnco Phone 80 `Bahf indi-v vlvher` uu ll-J\ Babv -hot\ P995` ing f hairi 9 ifs bob] \I'lIl .-\t,]:l_l` COMPANIES OF THE T ` HIGHEST STANDING Auto Licenses Issue W. BEJLL, 7 Owen St. W. J. RICHARDS onto on Am: mam- ue well s;Ip[;iied at- nu um rutry at nllory 136 Elizabeth Street AIJRIIZ Qg Duhlop at Mulcaster Phone 31. I hated cooking because all I ate turned sour and -formed gas. I drank hot `water and ollve oil by the gallon. Nothing `helped until I used Adlerika." `Most medicines act only on lower bowel `but Adlerlka. acts on BOTH upper and lawer bowel and removes all gas and poisons. Excellent for obstlnatelcon- stlpation. Helps any case gas on the stomach in TEN minutes. Wm. Cross- . land. Drugglst. Agent for McClary s Furnaces 52 _ Elizabeth `St, sco'rr s BOOK swans" W. D. MINNIKIN` Phone 952W __BREiD- PHONB2'5; _..- -..-v..., ....... ~., ..-. ...yw..~ ..~ n gnaw; anAwItaao He was awakened` at dawn by the rolling. thunder of guns. Emerging upon the poop in nightcap andsslippers, he beheld a sight that increased his` unreasonable and unreasonlng fury. The four buccaneer ships. under canvas were half a mile off the Boca Chica and little more than half a mile from the remaindertof the fleet. and from their anks flame and smoke.-,were belching each time they swung broad- side to the great round fort that guard- ed that narrow entrance. The fort; although returning thefire ivigorously and viciously, Was- suffering badly`. Yet for all their manoeurvering the buc- caneers were not escaping punishment. The starboard gunwale of .thesAtropos had been hammered into splinter`s."and - a shot had\ caught her astern in the coach. The Elizabeth was `badly bat- tered about the torecastle, and the Ara- bella's maintop had been shot away, -whilst towards the end of that engage- a ment the Lachesis came reeling` out of the fight with a shattered rudder. ,steering herself by sweeps. There " was a terrific ex losion; halt the tort went up in tragrgents. A lucky shot from the buccaneers had found the powder magazine. . 1'1 , .1-nnv hnvn hnnn n. nniinlmnf hnnrn puwucr xuuguzuw. It may have been a couple~.of hours later when (Captain Blood, as spruce and cool! as It he had Just come `frame levee, ste ed upon the quarter-deck of the We or1euse,bto confront M. de Rivarol. still in bedgown and nightcap. "1' hnun fn r-nun:-f `M In Ilnrnrr fhnf n are avnlnvav lI\ll.V -Funeral. Director and Emballner Ambulance Service - `Phone 431. Motor and Horse Equipment Car. Mary and Elizabeth Sta... Barrie LU 5U. It was she r obstinacy and empty pride that drl ve him, and he received the lesson he deserved`. Close upon fifty lives were lost in the a.dven_ture. together with half-a-dozen boats stored with ammunition and light guns. The Baron wentback to hlsflagship an in- furiated, but by no means a wiser man. 5.1015) auu pl.'Ul.lL UL L118 UIILCFPFISB. It is an honor which I must decline." said. he quite _coldly., Wolverstone grunted approval and Hagthorpe and Ybervllle nodded. I will not lead In men into fruitless danger." ` `T.nnlr vnn M In (`null-n-Ina ahnn [HUI] HILU Ll'Ll).LlU5b |.l}1llU1-`.' , ` `Look you, M. le Capltaine, some you are afraid to undertake this thing, I will myself undertake it." M. de Riv- arol declared. It I do so, I shall have proved you wrong, and I shall have a word to say to you- to-morrow which you may no_tjllk'e. I am being very gen- erous with you, sir. You have leave to go." - `H xxnas: nhnnvv nhnnanxr and nrnnhr UuUUSLUU!_$1'. 1 xcaptain Blood smiled sardonic ap- preciation of the honor reserved for his men. It was precisely what he would haveexpected. For therbuccaneers the dangers; for.-M. de Rivarol the honor. glo ry'and profit of the` enterprise. "`l'f is an hnnnv whinh T rnnnf nr-lino " a natural breakwater, and as the inner harbor is approached. another strip of land thnnsts across at right angles from the first, towards the._mainla_'nd on the east. Just short of -this it ceases. leav- ing a deep but very narrow channel. a veritable gateway, into the secure and sheltered inner harbor. Another fort defends this secondvpassage. Eat and north of Carta-gena lies the mainland; which `may be left out of account. -But to the west and northwest this city. so well guarded on every other side, lies directly open to the sea. It stands back-Tbeyond a half-mile of beach, and besides this and the stout walls which fortify it, would appear to have no other defenses. TI- unvnnlnn Inn l"1n~\Ga-ulna D`l'\I\l: 1&3 Ant ll.\/U Ill) ULIIUF UUl.UHHUB- It remained for Captain Blood to ex- plain the difficulties when- M. de Riv-' aroi, informed him that [the honor of opening the assamlt in the maner which he prescribed was tobe accorded to the buccgneers. xcantain smiled sardonic an- %.L'E4*'.VI.lll`~+"%" A lucky shot from the buccaneers had found the powder magazine. V no Iulgnua uv uvnavvu - . v a - . . ..u-3.:-u. Geographically and strategically considered, its is a. curious place. It stands almost four-square, . screened east and north by hills, and it, may be said to face south upon the lnner of two harbors by which it is normally approached. The entrance to the outer harbor. which ls in reality a lagoon some three -miles across. lies, through a neck known as _the Boca Chlca--or Little Mouth-land defended ,by a fort. A` long' strlp--ot densely- wooded land to westward acts" here as beam some thirtymiles to westward, and, indeed, away ..to the northwest, faintly visible as a bank of clouds, ap- peared the great ridge of the Blue Mountains `whose Vpeaks ~were thrust into" the clear upper 7 air above the ..low-lying haze. The wind was weat- erly,.. and it bore. to their ears a boom- ing sound which in less experienced ears might have passed torthe break- ing of. surf upon the lee shore. can.._-oru 1.3.: 1-`... ,- ---.:, v.. ---u.- uyvau w-av awv DIlU.l.'Uo "Guns!" Enid Pitt, who stood.with `Blood upon the quarter-deck.. Blood nodded listening. 3 T, H 'I`nn rvrnan nurnu-n. nn-lug..- 0101.....- Woma-n s Savt:;ent ` . Will Help Barrie_ --,-.-.,.- ...- ..--r an Damme! What's*cto laugh at. yo porpoise?"1p|uttered mulborrycoat UL: 111,) sum: Setting ,a course .for Hispaniola, since they judged that thither .must Rivarolv go to refit before attempting to cross to France, the Arabella and the Eiizabeth ploughed-briskly north- ward with_a moderately avourable wind for'two days and nig ts with- out eve`r`catching a glimpse of their quarry. The third dawn brought a haze which circumscribed, their range of vision to something between two and `three miles, and deepened their growing vexation and their. appre- hension that . de"Rivarol might es- cape the - ltogether. `They had-Jamaica on their larboard pxauauuu UL ll. `.L`ne omy_ smps to De` seen in the harbour were the Arabella and the Elizabeth riding at anchor and the Atropos and the Lachesls careened onthe beach for repair of the damage sustained in the bombardment. The French ships were gone. r" > `DIAAA ICF}\a-- .....1......:: 4.-v _-u_,,,,,v un- uu'uuu:uu1g me!" . -' I You do noteknow the ways of buc- `caneers.- If you persist, Cartagena will be drenched in-blood; and w.hatever the outcome the King of France will not| have been well served. . The end of it all was that M. de Rlv-| arol gave a. promise at once to make! the necessary preparations, and if Cap- tain Blood and his officers would wait upon him on board the Victorieuse to- morrow morningmthe treasure should he produced, weighed in their presence and their fifth share surrendered there and then into their own keeping. Avvuauaru 4.1.... L . . . . . _ . . ..._ 4.--: tv -4 .-..... .._...v.. onuvv uuvu. uvvu xxocynu. Among . the buccaneers that night there was hilarity over the sudden abatement of M. de Riva:-ol s mon- strous pride. But when the next dawn broke over"Cartagena, they had the ex- planation of it. The only: ships to be seen in the harbour warp Hm Av-nhcxllnl _..-- - -~....... ......,:..y vvunu buuv. ' Blood was` reduced to despair. If` he followed now, Heaven knew what would happen tolthe town. Unable to reach a decision, his own men and I-Iagtho1jpe's took the matter off his hands, eager'to give chase to Rllvarol. TITILL.-1.. .... * L--." A - ..... ......., -rue: V. cnvv vnnuuv nu 1|ulVa.lUh -Within an hour`, the water-casks at least replenished and stowed.aboa1'd, the Arabella-and the Elizabeth put to sea upon the'angry` chase. What nnw `Dn+m~9" nwlm-1 H... .m....... ....v gauge 1.: V um LII No, said Blood thickly. And for once he~w'as,communicative. It may well be that he must vent the thing that oppressed him or be driven mad by it. And Pitt, after all, was his friend and loved him, and, so. a proper man for confidences. "But if she knew! If sheeknew! Oh God! I had thought Ito have done with niranv! fhnllrrhf fn arm. uyuu Lue angry cnase. What now, Peter? cried the young Jeremy Pitt. Lord man, what is there here to fret you? Surely tisn't the thought of Rivaro-1! u\v_ n __-p,1 1-.3 `~ u. uxsemxuwz un U00: 1 new thought to have done with piracy; thought to have done with it forever. Yet here have I been committed by this scound- rel to the `worst piracy that ever I was guilty of. Think of Cartagena! Think of the hell those devils will be mak- lngof it now! And I must have that on my soul! Qnffintr n nnliwata n- T_r.I..........:...I_ L` L`q1xuc. > ,. _ ' I Am I "to understand that you are `threatening me?" ~ L Van: Rn nnl-Jnnnny 01... can... an 1...... I Luusuu, uua as your uppul.'t.u1uLy. Riva:-ol carried in his hold the trea- `sure plundered from Cdrtagena, a.moun- cm: to forty million livres. He has aura pluuuurcu l.l'U1l_l L;ul.'I.U.5UIla., amoun- ting forty livres. He Thas gone into Port`Royal with it. Whether he defeats me or not, he doesn't come qubof Port Royal with it again and sooner or later that treasure shall find its way into King William's coffers after, say, one-fifth share shall have been paid to my buccaneers. Is that agreed, Lord Willoughby? `F1l ln'Inv-nhin nfnn ants and uhnlzh-ua. 1U 15 d. Eftiil. Uuuuruuxuty. It s myself he s hunting at Tor- tuga, my lord, said Blood. "But, I'm thinking while he s about it, I'd best be looking after Jamaica for King Wil- liam. He laughed with more mirth than he had used in the last two months. Set a course for Port Royal, Jeremy, and make all speed. We'll be level yet with M. de Rivarol, andwipe off some other score at the same time. But you are not equal" to it, dam- me! cried his lordship. .Any one of . the Frenchman's three ships is a match \for,both of yours, my man." 117.. ..-.__.. ___- ll _-l.i ?iI__.1 -__.1 1-. .....-...v.. .v., ...-..-.. V- _,v...-..., ---., ..... .- "In guns-aye," said Blood, and he smiled But there's more than guns that matter in these affairs. If your lordship would like to see an action fought a.t;sea. as an action should be fought, this is your opportunity. T uv\'i-____-1 -_.__..n-_1 1_ 1.2- L_I,1 .o . ELL FUICL nuyal. ' , At Port Royal? The little man squirmed wrathfully on ihis seat. Wrathfully and at length he informed Blood that they had put into Port Royal last evening to find its Deputy-Governor absent. He had gone on some wildgoose chase to Tor- tuga after buccaneers, taking the whole of` the fleet with him. 1'1~n D31-\`mr\1 nuvnun A4? I-'lnIn')" 'D1nnr1 VVUKC IIULZ LV1. UK: I\.lVJ.'Ul 11!: La/AU BUIIIU of our men prisoners. Berhabs dey dell him. Berhabs he make dem te1l.. Id is a great obbordunity. ' Ti- u` rnxranlf hn u hnnfincr nf Tor- UL L115 LIUUL WILII 111111. Is Rivarol aware cried sharply. Tf nrnq `Fhn Thifnh A Urn.-:u zuurpxy. It was the Dutch Admiral who ans- wered him. Vou1d he go dere if he were not? M. de Rivarol he take some 1 A0 A11 Innnvs v\|n:ur\r\t\v1a 13:-u~Ir'\nI-xa Rnxr ne 'd.B.Kt.`u .|.Ul.' UFUUF5. DIUUU. FUSE. I am negligent of your lordship s concerns in my consideration of my own. You'll be wishing me to land you . at Port Royal." ' Af `Dnv-f `Pnva'l`7 The Hffln rnnn DUUU \V Ulll. Ulla Go home, if you Will, said his lord- ship when comfortable. Here is a. great chance for you, since you declare your- self sick of piracy. Should you choose to serve King William out here dur- ing the war, your knowledge of the West Indies should render you a very val- unable servant to `His Majesty`s Gov- ernment. which you would not find un- grateful. You should consider it. Dam- me, sir. I repeat. it is a great chance, you are given." Diff nnv-no In fn r-nnnv-4' fhnf fhn urnnlz yuu `cut: gnvcu. Pitt came in to report that the work of rescue was at an end, and the men picked up`-son1e forty-five in all-- safe aboard the two buccaneer"-ships. He asked for orders. Blood rose. \ T nrn 1nnn-`I AP vrnuin Inn;-In1n8v\ u Ian very uluuu `cu. yuur se_rv1ce." B1ood!" shrilled the little man. ['0 'Sblood! A pirate! He swung to =the Colossus _ Who followed him--A damned pirate, van der Kuylen. Bend my Vitals,` but we're come from Scylia i to Charybdis. ` -"Q11 anl 1-ho nfhnrv a-nl-I-nu-:I'l1v nap` LU uuanyuuna. -"So said the other gutturally, and again`, So? Then the humour of it took him, and 1Te yie'lded to it." "hnmmnV VVhnf fn lnnorh 9f 1rnn h`e _ Damme! VVhat s to laugh at, you p.orpoise?'. v spluttered [mulberry-`coat. A fine tale this'll make at home! Ad- miral van, der Kuylen first loses his fleet in the night, then has his flagship fired under him by a French squadron, and ends all by being captured by a pirate. I'm glad you find it matter for laughter. Since for'my sins I happen to be with you, Prhfdamned if I do." 'T`hov~n a cu rn 19 T Irv-|n11 . ---- _, ...., --.- .....-----...... v - V. There s a misapprehensioneif I may make so bold al to point it out," put in Blood quietly. You are not "cap- tured, gentlememyou "are rescuied. When you realize it, perhaps it.wi11 oc-' cur to you to acknowledge the hospit- ality I am offering you. It may be poor but it is the best at my disposal." -T391-nrnnV `nn vnn not-rnif. vnnv-ucdf Uul. IL 15 L116 UUEL ad. lily UIEIJUSEI. "`Damn_1e! Do you permit yourself to be 'ironical?" he disapproved him. "I am Lord Willoughby, King VVi1liam's Governor~General of the VVest Indies, and- this is Admiral van der Kuylen, commander of His Majest,v s West Ind- ian fleet, at present mislaid somewhere in this damned Caribbean Sea." UTI`u`-nn- T`Kfi'lIno-v-.") aunt!-. 'D!nnA nnA lll Llllb uauuicu \.zd.l.lU|JUa.l.|. ID\.'f1.- King William? quoth Blood, and "who may be King William, and of what may he be K1ng? .' T urn nllninor +n' T-Tia T\/rainufv Vina llldy IIU UU A1115 3 I am alluding to" His Majesty King ~ William III-WiIliam of Oxjange-who, with Queen Mary,` has been ruling England for two months and more." T'I'vn v-noun air 4-hcnf 1-hcnr 1ro v-nnan ? G_3MJTH.& C0- xzuxgxuuu LUl' LWU IIIUIILLIS uuu lllUl'C. D'ye mean, sir, that they've roused themselves at home, and kicked out that scoundrel James and his gang of ruffians? - HYL`*1l-RA! .(\t`|n"-` -up-nu loan.-1') T`(TI.qa-u...-. LHU |.ll:\'H. HdVU yuu_ LJCCH. 21!. 21.115 Briefly he gave an account. After that. with renewed assurances that aboard his ship they should be honour- ably entreated, Captain Blood led the Governor-`General and the Admiral to his cabin, what time the work of re- scue went on. ` Ur`.-. `At\ur\nr\ 80 -nag. well! It 9.4.2.3 Lin land I uLL1'1.|l I S1ife! Ha_dn t` you `heard? VVl_1ere the devil have you_ been at all?" 'Rv-inflxr kn a-nun on gnnnnnf Affnv ' of this?" Blobd Blood scanned the French ships, and chuckled. The Victorieuse and the `Medusa appeared to have taken no more than a` few scars; but the third ship, the Baleine, listing heavily to larboard so as to keep the great gash in her starboard `well above water, was out of account. ' . Having parked their auto directly in front of a. police station, three robbers held up an ice cream plant at New York and escaped. with $3,000. _ .......- `-3,-.. uauvauuuu n.AAvAAAuuA V C-vo VVhere the fort had stood they now beheld a smoking rubbish heap, and the victorou_s Frenchmen with the -lily standard trailing from its mastheads was sweeping forward to snatch the richdprize Whose defences he had shat- tere . - l7l7lthin a quarter of an_hour they hadl `rounded the head and stood in to the harbor mouth, Within saker shot of Rivaro1 s three ships, to, which they now abruptly disclosed themselves. 'rI'7I.-._- LI__ 4:, ; 1 - moving, the Elizabeth `following, ever in obedience to the signals from the Arabella, whilst Ogle the gunner, whom he had summoned, was receiv- ing. B1ood's final instructions before plunging down to his station on the main deck. ` Led now by Blood himself, they laun- ched themselves upon the French. umnr sc`nooL BARRIE` BUS. COLLEGE Mon. and mu.-.., 7.30-9.30 { _ ,,,.,__-.. .. v-v wand, -\InA\JIVs`)a `Vegetable Market Onions, small basket . . . . .. . . . . . . `Potatoes, bag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E Turnips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2\ for 5c Celery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . . . . . 1 Cabbage, head . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Parsmps, basket . . . . . . . . . . .. 20 1 `Carrots, basket . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 ` White beans, pt. . . . . . . . . 10, 3 ft Poultry, Butter and Eggs. . Rtvffnv ' Eggs . .` . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eggs, ungraded, dozen Chickens . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fowl, dressed. lb. Ducks . . . . . . . . . . . I...` Cream, pint . . . . . . . . . ` Buttermilk, qt. . . . . . . . Av.n.ln7\J\2ll( Pork, per lb. . . . . . . Lamb, per lb. . . . . .. Beef, fronts . . . . . . Beef hinds_ . . . . . . . . Hard wood, cord .'.. Soft_ wood, load . . . Hay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . thereabouts,` having crept thither un- observed by the city and by M. de Riv- aro1 s ships, and all the time the air had been aquiver with the roar of guns from -the sea and land, announcing that battle was joined between` the French and the defenders of Port R05 '` Thizt long, inactive Waiting was straining the nerves of `both Lord Vvilloughby and van der Kuylen. Blood faced them smiling confidently. iIt's this way, now: there's nothing at all to be gain- ed by precipitancy, and a deal to` be gained by: delaying, as I shall show you, I hope. Sure, it'll be time enough to go` forward when the fort has shot its bolt ..." He broke off to listen Aye, I was right. The fire s slackening H_o there, Jeremy!" (1-..- 4.1.- __-_, -4! --- rI- - I`-- Apples, basket ....v -..-v- ..., .. ..- `....-., . \ Came the paadiug of feet along the decks, the creaking of blocks and the hoisting of nail. The helm Was put over hard, and in a. moment they were "(v 1:o-"Vbe continued) Miscellaneous ` .. 50-75c .2\for to 5c ... 10-150 10c on On 9:4: .0" fi" _A11;Ii$ . u LUU to 35 to 25c for 25c . 144170 . 22-25c 10-12c I 12-14c ..$11.oo . $5.00 ;$14-$16 '38-40c 55-6001 50~55c| 23-25c 20-23c Olin 20-60c `E015 25c `Illa DUC 5c , U! "I OPHIDI Eyes Examined Gleeeee Fit`! -Graduate Canadian 0phthalm!c College, Toronto. 43 Elizabeth St ., `Barrie. r 'j1 VICTORIAN onasn on-' an-in Rnnngln u. M. SYLVESTER Bandmaster Barrie -Citizens Band Formerly Director of music Christie St. Hospital under -D.S.C.R., bandmaster, of 134th 0.8. Bn.. bandmastqr of 76th Toronto Scottish Rest. Teacher of Music. EDMUND HARDY Mus. Bac., F.T.C.M. Teacher of Plano. Organ, Vocal, and Musical Theory, Organist and Choirmaster of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Gold medalist Toronto Conservatory 1_\1us_ic and University of 'I`m~nn+n How WATERHEATING PLUMBING TR-Y

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