Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 19 May 1927, p. 16

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_ ..... .. ....... cavsova sue ux uuouu) u.`uU1l.l `Arthur Walker has returned from the University of Toronto, having -completed his fourth year in medicine. `Paw '1|I| un `l! n{..mlv....a..... 4 A-.-- xx. .lV1U1.'llH.U, nraurpra bft. ` Born--At Colllngwood, on Tuesday. May 17, 1927, to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jackson (nee Beatrice Brunton) aaon. Arthur Tlfoibnu 1...... ..-A---------! A--~ ' uuu .I.'4l.&lllllLUXl u The C.N.R. is making arrangements to handle an extra volume of traffic over the holiday. Han` IInGu|ou-un'.I .6- `IT'--- uvcr tut: uuuuuy. V .Ralph Whlpps has` returned to Van- couver atter visiting his sister. Mrs. H. McPhail, Bradford St. * Bm~n--A+ (`!n1llna`x'um~..-1 I\I\ m.......:.--- GU13 WEEK a Mrs. Geo. Poochei has left to spond some weeks visiting friends in Toronto and Hamilton. -[ma nun In ---I-I-- -----~~~- `.-wan Lrwnus u1~\:n'_a.VennurBl'.;.` ` - v ` \ Mrs. Luke Spearn spent a. few "days `with her daughter in Toronto. Y1'..._..I.'I 1-n__,v_ I.__ -._,, wiigs.` W.?3..ell `and hdren or Detroit spent a week with Mrs. D.\Bell, Brad- `tord St. Torn;-nu Q08-an... -0-`l\-4...'u. _.. __A '. n zuru at. V ` V James Stinson ot'Detroit spent a few days with his papents in Bradford St." this week Mr: (Ian Dniinillnw Inn. 1.04. 4... ..._.'_.s wvp-QC uv. woidllanal-\Il_ and `V4 vuasvo Harold Park has gone to 4Ba.tavia,o N.Y.. where bk has accepted a. position. Miss Dorothy Pyburn of Toronto is visiting Mr. and-Mrs. Chas. Cockburn. Mrs. Dan. Mt-Lelsh of Orillia spent the week with her parents an A'.la.n- dale. - hx uuuuuvs Suffer'1;1;gwl91`1~1.r.1`s`elf, he de- ,bility to sympathize that ever too great a trouble minutest influences that O the IYIOFR nhirlnn nonr- _ _ . - --t-I lildld Thursday. May 26.--Ori the James Ellis farm. lot 23, con. 7. Essa-farm stock and implements. Sale at 1 p.m. W. A. Mcconkey, Auct. , _ 4 T 20:: JIIUU SUI Huron. ulu uJUuuLy 111 WHICH ne `lives. These maps abound in detail and are on sale to. the public at a nominal fig`- ure. They can -be had on application to the assistant director, geographical section. department of national de- `fence, Ottawa. There are now available? in western Ontario sheets covering the districts of Toronto, Markham, Bolton. Brampton, Hamilton, Galt and other sheets covering the part of the prov- Jnce south of a line from Gait to Lake Huron . vguuuuuj u,uUU in me maritime provinc- es. As the area surveyed became greater, the demand. for maps by all classes of the community; increased. Head offices of agricultural machin- ery, motor car manufacturers, insur- ance, transportation, power and tele- phone companies, commercial travel- lers, agents of allkinds, make use of them for business purposes: motor and other tourists, to gain more detail- ed knowledge of a locality than the very small scale of the uual map shows, and thecitizen. can, by means of this map. appreciate the layout of the locality in which he lives. These n1nn.q nhnnn an .aA4..n .....- ---- about 30.000 square miles; 20,000.inl area survnvm-1 hnmm- uu tut: gruuna. The surveying and collection of thegbom above details is done and obtained b.v gage the geographical section, a branch of. M,._ the above mentioned department. Tmplace the 25 years the -work hasbeen in hand 1 ve there has been completed in Ontario, and] since I 9t21 I f>I{?u Quebec; 5,000 in the maritime provinc- tau, l_.!`:.'. u ulrrerent sign for hard and! soft wood. Telegraph, telephone and .i power lines are also shown, and to` complete this topographic? map, hills and valleys (known as the relief) are shown by contour lines to every 25 feet, thuslenabling the user of the map.` to become familiar with the nature of the . country, such * as difficult hills;-I swamps or flat lands before he gets` on the ground. I The nmvtrnxyinn nun ....n-_;:-,, - -- auu al.l.'!':a.l11S, eacn house in the` village, or on farm, churches, schools, post of- tices, garages, hotels; etc. Thee spe-: cial buildings are indicated by a let- ter, so that the average citizen can. readily locate them from the usual sign for a house. Woods are shown in de-` tail; i_.e;. a different sign for hard and 3 wood. Telezrnnh fnlnnhnnn .....a s...-,2 nu.-nus, an a. scale or one inch to one mile. Each sheet is named. us-5 ually after the largest town or "village within the area. The map is most com- plete in detail,.showing first, second and third class roads, railways, rivers and streams, each house in the;v1l1age, or churches. schools. nnnf mu; NE./,TOPOGRAPHlC MAP 1-`on ` 1'1-us ms'rn_1c1'% BEING MADE uuya. b ~ `Messrs. ,Marshall and Kennedy from, Allandale and Messrs. Cowan and Boy-.` es from Stroud were appointed to sup- ' port the call `when it is presented at the meeting of Barrie Presbytery to be held in Creemore on -May 27_. I days; On Monday night-,,May 16, `at a well attended meeting at the Presbyterian congregations of Allandaleand Strand. held in the Essa St. church, a ,very hearty call was extended to Rev. John Galloway of Glencoe, Ont. Of the six candidates, Mr. Galloway received all but a few votes on the first ballot and the choice was made unanimous. Mr; . Galloway was the last candidate heard. The ntinnnil nffnv-Ad In t91nn $141. n... uauoway was the last candidate The stipend offered is $2100, vtiith `the use of the manse and four weeks holl- davs; . _ _ u - , ,,5;l \_ mas. w. A. TURNER ` _ /rhe death` of Mrs. W. A, Turner. Royal Victoria Hospital, removes a ( i which occurred on Wednesday. in the is I E woman- who during her life in Barrie ' was very active in various circles andat one who `will `be greatly missed by a a wide circle oi.' friends. About a. week e ago Mrs. Turner underwent an opera- e tion and was reported. to be making 11 ` Gordom McK`pley, husband .of de-` ceaed, was formerly a resident of M`ine_sing. Mr. and Mrs. W..J. McKin- ley 1,9,; Barrie attended the funeral. \ \ vv IBUUIISIII), I0!` me past four years. 3 The deceased is survived by her hus- band, Gordon McKinley. three sons, Edwin,` Robert and Ray, \and one dau hter, Helen,`-all of Kenosha. She is is; o survived by two brothers, A1- bert Murkey. Hgughton, Mich., and Charles of Baltimore, . Md., and two sisters. Mrs. Gustav Lindow, Medford. Wis., and Mrs. Otto .`Fisher, also of Medford. One` grandchild alo survives.- vvlxu BGPV Q 1 n MRS. GQRDON McKl`NLEY (Kenoha. Times) A short illness ended in deathewhen` Mrs. Martha Fredericka McKinley, 48, Wife of Gordon McKinley, 1600 Sixty- se/cond street, died at the Kenosha. hospital today (May 3). ` Mrs. McKinley was born in Michi-' = gen," Nov. 4, `I878. the daughter of the late Mr. and`Mrs. Ferdinand Murkey. She spent most of `her life in Houghton, ` `Mich. She attended the public schools there and was admired by all who came to know her. She has lived in Kenosha. (Wisconsin), for the past four years.` deceased is survived hv Hnr 3..., . . many years. He ` rie for 23 _rII VI \`lI"\l'lIJ=lV \ Arthur Campbell Garden died'this morning at six o'clock at his home in Hamilton, aged 67 years. He was very well known in Barr'ie and throughout In 1910 he was warden and shortly afterwards removed to` Hamilton to be branch manager for: the National Drug & Chemical Co. for had previously travelled was a resident of Bar- years. During his residence here he was a leader in Conservative circles and later played a prominent. part in_ politics in Hamilton", being one of the county of the city's representatives in the , Legislature for two terms. last provincial election he was appoint- ed Registrar of Deeds in Hamilton. For some time he was a member of the Hamilton H'ar`bour Board. He` was of a genial, kind-hearted disposition ` and had many friends. ' . 1 Mrs. Garden survives, together with two daughters, Mrs. Nina, both at home; also one grand- daughter, Nin_a Jarman. n v Jarman and Miss ` After the ` I I I I 1 t 1 . uuuiuuf or years in deaconess work and as a missionary at Norway House in northern Manitoba. Sixteen years ago she was married and lived in Mon- M tana. till a year ago when she return-. ed to Barrie in impaired health. Sur~,i viving her are her husband, one sister.` Mrs. Flesher, Magnolia, Alta., and sev- em `brothers, Frederick Sarjeant, Mark-? dale; Eben, Walter` and A. J., Barrie; James,VToronto; Samuel, Orillia. and Charles, Vancouver. The funeral took place fast Friday aternoon from the home of A. J. Sarjeant, 192 Dunlop St.. to Barrie Union cemetery, Rev. W. E. Wallace officiating. I . auu. uuu uveu mere and ine`BAarrie ever ; `since. Her husband diedsuddenly last . October. Surviving her are three; datfghters, Mrs. E. Berkhead, Mrs. H.T, Travers and Mis Doris Stewart, 9.115` in Barrie; two sisters, Mrs_. Devaney and Mrs. Mayberry, Winnipeg, and two 1 brothers, John Rankin, Winnipeg, and 5 Thos. Rankin, Buffalo, N.Y. The fun- .1 era! toolr place on VMonday from the`; home to Barrie Union cemetery, Rev.;] J. S. Shortt officiating. -. ' I l Mas. WILLIAM STEWART ` Just eight months after the death of. her husband, .Mrs. .Wil1lam Stewart , died last Friday atiher home. 35 Mary jSt., in her fifty-fifth year. Her death `followed an illness of two weeks with 'pneumonia. The late Mrs. -`Stewart was rlage was Tena Rankin, a daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs.` John Rankin of that born at Wyevaie and before her mar-. iplace. Following her marriage thirty-i Ifive years ago she came to Allandale and had lived there and in,Barrie everi `since. I-Tm` hncahnnd .11.: .....:.a----- -V u1.`n:1. umess . ' ' I The late Mrs. Touchette had resrded fin Fort VV`iIliam for upwards of 20 years. Her husband carried on a suc- ;' cessful rgiail business on Fredericaj street, fo._ many years. -He died in; Febrgary of this year. V . i 3 "Besides two daughters, Mrs. Redvholml ?of Fort William, -and Mrs. Shields of Sioux Lookout, she is survived by two .bro'thers and three sisters. They are Arthur Wilson of Wheatley, Ont.; `Frank Wilson, St. Marys; Mrs. John .Musgrove, Staples, Ont.; Miss Etta .iWilon, Staples; Mrs. Alfred vWa1ker, '-Ford City. One son died in 1911. , I` fiyears, William George Lynn, an old ' McKellar. hospital, brief - illness *1 Graham, Toronto; `Mrs. B. M. McCut-: ___ _ -- vnalril VI. `sq ' MRS. GEORGE TEGART , The death occurred quite suddenly on Sunday, May 8, of Hannah Stewart, past three years; wife of the late George Tegart, former- his health had been `falling, Born in] ly of Barrie. Mrs. Tegart passed away Innisfil township, Simcoe County, on` at the home of her daughter, Mrs. B. 5 September 29, 1844, the late Mr. Lynn W. Smith,` Blake St., where- she had came to Toronto in 1881 and until his come only a` few./dayspreviously from , the West. Death was due_ to heart trou- ble. The late Mrs. Tegart was born at I and esteemed resident of -the city. -passed away on May 17, in his eighty- third year. -For the .Linton, King township, over seventy- , four years ago, and was -a daughter of Charles Stewart` and Mary Hall. In. ronto; Archie C. Lynn, Hamilton: 1879 she married,Benjamin Robinson, Isaac C. Lynn, -New Toronto; -Mrs. of Downsview, who died in 1885. She! Wm. Dawe and Mrs. Caroline McGhie, then lived -for some years in Weston; Toronto; Mrs. `M. Cowan, Drayton. H.; and later in Toronto and in 1898 she Lynn, his youngest son, formerly of; married George Tegart of Tottenham. the 121st Battalion, died ten days ago.i They lived in Barrie for some years 7 ' `and twenty-one years ago moved to - MRs_ A_ v_ TOUCHETTE I Zealandia, Sask., where Mr. 'Tegart The death occurrelgorotn vl\i1`a1.l3;aI1n1. 2:; 2:33 ilo%1c12'u? r$33se.?3.a gl\?r:I 3g'1;?~Z,5 Mrs. A. V. Touchette, widow of thegjgra h`} , 3atuf`f ?"a]l ;j`,f;i late A` V` Touchette for many years knewrhergslxifrvivingg her are flier daugh-' a West Fort William merchant. and- - ' ter, Mrs. Smith, and one son, C. B.," former-ly_.of Barrie. Death .followed `a Robinson of Zealandia; four sisters`; Mrs` W' '7' Be Be""` M W` -T'i years. Surviving are three sons and three daughters: Donald A. Lynn, To- 1{`en'N}-3mntfr1,' nd MES` Art1};u(fthEei.'! on Dnsi I Slgart Sa 1? at? 1, '.1I?hl Iune!,_'_ fo. ane wa (3 Om e e 11 ` 61. ial took place on Wednes ay, May ,' Mrs. from the home Rev` J" J` Black of _ ficiating. Burial was made in'Mt. Te-` ggoggrioxgggzngfhgnig sngggivggiglfstvgg gart cemetery, Tottenham. The ,palI-- . bearers were R. A.,Stephens, W. C. RmZ1herS`% i11d threg S`i,trs'uThe32) at? Hunter, W. T. Stewart, W. J. Bell. `" 3" 9?` `W " -- . Benj. Smit-h and W. J. Walker. , Frank John, N g MUSEf0Ve. Sfnnlnu nd - `run-.. -I-.uL- W occurred on May 11, at. Fort William, Qt; widow the Touchette, William mm-nhm~.+ om: .,.._._u-um wuavruas. LYNN After a residence in Toronto of 46 ,'years, George esteemed passed third falling.` Innisfil township, retirement in 1915 was engaged in the, lumber, business in- Parkdale. He was` predeceased by his wife about two- and, ~ Lynn, Hamiltom` New -Mrs.,. Dawe an Mr: onniln- It--nI-2~ - IUWH him. I A n 1. 116 turn Sunday. . u-nu-n-Irswl \`lr|l\l`_lp J": Word- has been received of the death on May 1-2, in Edmonton Hospital, bf_ Mrs. Wm. Grant, Jr... formerly Miss Eva May Huddleston, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Major Huddleston, Thornton. .Mrs. Grant, who was forty-tour years of age-was born at Crow Hill and went to Killam, AI`ta.,~follo ing her mar- riage` twelve years ago. Surviving her are her husband and one daughter; her parents} three sisters, "Mrs. T. G. `Johnston, Barrie, and Misses Mabel land Mina Huddleston, Toronto; and three brothers, Percy and Bert Huddle- ston, Thornton, and Wm. H. of Killam. The funeral took place atK1llam on _ | Sunday. Mas. .1. M. snsnims 4) V1 illnnum. ..-.4.-_ 32,, V\`I\lLL|AM' GEORGE LYNN War a nnaI.I......... 1.. nu- .A. C. GARDE (`Q1-nn1nn11 r~u.._..~n_,, U-3, auu pun.uu,uxu, uuupuragons, n1qot1n- es, asters and similar owers which have` a short season in our Ontario - Lypc U1` COlO1]!`. on this account alone 3_ the amateur is well advised to depend upon seed in sealed packages only .` from reliable merchants. There are 3 other reasons also for advising` such a -. course. Mostflowers when they sta: `going to seed deteriorate very rapidly and. succeeding blooms are few and small. To keep a garden at its best all fading bloom should be removed be- fore there is a traceof seed pods. A_ Short Cut ' - Practically every half-hardy vegeta- f ble and most of the more tender flow- ` ers can be started inside and will be ; ready for the table or the vase from a 4 fortnight to a month earlier than `if 1 one waits until the season is far i , enough` advanced to plant outside. , Planting in flats or berry boxes in any - southern window about this -time with- ,out any special forcing is all that is necessary. If the earlier,.vegetab1es, such as spinach, lettuce, radish,_ beets carrots, parsnips, and similar crops are out of the way one can plant cu- cumbers, melons. squash, and for very small gardens even beans`an`d peas be- hind glass, and they will be ready to go out as fine healthy plants when neighbors are only sowing the deed (about the end of the month. It is par- ' aticularly desirable to give the melons and cucumbers, among the edible typ- es, and petunias, snapdragons. nicotine '1 es. and nurnms vn1mIn-|- - I 1 4 1 c ( 2 t x t t F S. a ii ti ..w-.. nu. All | Wl..Jse Good Seed T_oo much emphasis cannot be laid` _ upon the importance of good seed. With flowers particularly, one is often in- clined to save theseed of some espe- ' cially choice s-pecimen without realiz- ing that few_flowers reproduce them- selves exactly from the seed unless certain-.very elaborate precautions are . taken. X row of several different col- oured sweet peas, for `instance, will become hopelessly mixed in a single season. The seed from a brilliant" red ` variety may produce nothing but in- different weak coloured flowers when saved in the ordinary way. On the farms of the large seed houses andin the professional horticulturists experi- mental plot'e ch type is kept widely separated and in many cases the in- dividual flowers are protected with netting. Otherwise bees and smaller in- sects -will carry the pollen from one flower to another Without regard for type or colour. On this amateur is well nrivicm +.. .:.........a -..l.UDLn -3 Friends from a distance attending _-.?the funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. Mc- _ Phee and Miss Hill, Toronto; Mrs. Ni- - 3 chols and Mrs. Smith, Guelph, and the manager, superintendent and two em- ployees of the Canada._Wire & Cable Co.. Leaside. Floral tributes were re- ceived from the Nugget Publishers, North Bay: Canada Wire & Cable Co., ;_ Leaside: Officers and Members ofeBar- \ rle Soldiers Club and employees oh the ` , department of maintenance of way, C. it N.R., as well as from many personal` ! friends. U]. ivir. anavivirs. William Sweeney, now =of `Toronto. He was brought up here `and went overseas in 1916 with the A 157th Battalion. He was badly wound- ed and never fully recovered from in- juries sustained on the field. On his ;discharge from the army in 1919 he `i returned to Barrie and for some time lvconducted a book and stationery bus- ; iness in Allandale. In 1925 he Went to North Bay as manager of a store there. I Surviving him are his wife, formerly ': Miss Effie Cooperof Allandale, whom _ he married ' in 1910; five children, Lorne, Lloyd, Gordon, Viola and Ber- nice; his parents; three brothers, Clar- ence, Harry and Gordon of Toronto. and two sisters, Mrs. Hart of Toronto , and Mrs. ,Nichols of Guelph. * The funeral on Qnnnv 5+-+........-,., JJLII. LUII AVE. 15-6, Wnlle Essa St. Came out with two wins to their credit. de- feating Burton Ave. _10-5, and -~St. George's 8-2. Lefroy and Allandale open the disltrict league locally on the H01- gate St. park next Friday evening. Softball Notes Doug. Hedger is the new manager of the South Simcoe team under Freddie _ Plant, who is president. Hedger last season managed the Allandale Senior Softball team and in 22 games lost but one. Hedger has the same aggrega- tion together with the exception of L. Hedger whose place is filled by Gil- christ, a star at any position. His smooth-wm~L-mp 1m++...... ,.o .......|i M auu 1VJ.l'S. Vlwcnols or Guelph. V funeral on Sunday afternoon was conducted by the Barrie Soldiers Club. Six members. Trumanwilliams. L. O.` Vair, Harry Gartner, `Frank Johnston, E. `E. McFadden and W. S. Barnard, acted as pallbearers and a volley was fired over the grave by a firing party composed of T. H. Burton. John Powell, A. C. G-lidden, Harvey Jones, Fred Gazley. E. Jones, Fred Gosney, J. McEwen, D. Butler and Wm. Debenham. B. J. Hill sounded the Last M : Post. TB.......:l... A!A.-- " ' LIIU Luucrux. Born in Barrie thirtye-sevenyears `ago, the late Mr. Sweeney was a son of Mr. a,nd,Mrs. William Sweeney, :0f\TOr0ntO. .He W29 hrnnnzrhf nn ho-A |.uruVI:. WE.ENEY V Lorne Sweeney, a veteran of the Great VVar.`died suddenly on Friday morning of last week at North Bay where he had been living for over a year. The body was brought to Barrie where he was buried with military honors on Sunday afternoon, a large number of returned soldiers attending the funeral. Dnun `D.-.....:... A.I-.1__L_, in I GARDENING HINTS ARTICLE NO. XII II__ A LORNE SWEENEY Qtxnannnn n "nu-....... 1 quent watering and heavy fertilizing are absolutely necessary. In Southern : Ontario the boxes can be put out at l ported, as w 150 lbs. Have ken crockery to provide 4 manure is av this next, an garden soil. {before puttin move all bloo growing` qui ,handful of nil ed watering c the box, if t foot long. I1 should be use e, an early start in this way. cumat . Window Boxes . The yvindow boxes and hanging b-9-S-' kets can be got ready for placing out-. side this week. These are very C01}- centrated beds, producing about SIX times the growth for the same area as in the normal garden. Because of this concentration of growth. rich soil. fre- once with little fear of frost, in the central section of the Province the 24th of May is usually -considered about! the right `time and farther north, no-soil with ano1 very great `risk should be taken_ before` Three or four the 1st of `June. It a. light frost does'ti1izer at ten threaten, coiwggng 316 b01`uWithtn3VsiE;:aind wattglinrg aersor g coonwi proe :ay,as ee gull?-)ficiently." Window boxeslshould be, boxes is far 4 `as long as the window sill, about eight rout of the bi inches wide atl thet tori). six at! thedbot- tiumsl, Gtgrmalti tom and at eas nne nc es eep. ngpan ,w These are insi e measurements. Theageraniums, al: corners! must e strongly reinforced begonias, fern with iron straps and the box well sup- cia.lly._3uita,b1e Tms THRlLLING.E`I".I`C` 5; uurlub, a. star at any position. ` smooth-Working battery of last year is together again. Montcriefv will be behind the bat while Bi11" Binnie. his star pitcher-,.who has returned to town, will be burning them across for him . - Episode . ` ` LHouse Without a Key MERMAID COMEDY HONEST INJUN MomAv-raasnAv+wmEsmv nu-: BIGGEST o1= EM ALL! TONIGHT, FRIDAY All! SATURDAY` . ----tax G5` I WI; Two Sho;v: Each Night-7.l5 and 9.15. MATINEE TUESDAY AT 2.30. V ' DON'T` MISS FIIIIl\un u can. --- A uAKMEL NO ADV!-`=NC'_l`:Z_ mi PRICES! .. QL-_-__ - ADOLPI-I ZUIOI 5 I355! L'|ASKY. nIItl`! : L . d\\ mm \;1Ul:Kel'y or cmders in tl -. drainage. If W1 - available, put in : K and then fill up 3 garden Select stocky p aibefbre putting them in the - bloom and bds. To : growing quickly, dissolve I nitrate of soda in : ' can, and sprinkle the latter is arc : foot If shorter, less 3} used. After this, sa1 v soil another, can or two four.more applicatio ~i tllizer at fan Ann x-~--~ - day, as the evaporation from window ' front box put in trailing nastur- tiums, German ivy, _and similar trail- ing plants, while farther back petunias. ageraniums, alyssum, lobelia, agoratum. ferns and other types esp_e- .cla.lly_Muita.ble hould go in. - xe- when full it weighs about holes and a. layer of bro- or cinders the bottom well rotted is available 1) ' ` . ocky plants and before the box ro- get them groWin.f;- _qu_ickly. dissolve Q annul- uuuuu 4.60 p.m. The softball season is in fullswingv `and five games were played during the past week, two in the senior group and three in the junior series.` In the senior group Essa S_t. defeated St. George's 19-11 and Burton Ave. also` buried St. George's beneaJth a score 01 24-0. In the junior group St. George's trimmed urton Ave. 14-3, while Essa St. with wins tn +hnh- "mm ,a,. porfed, a crnnlenmr nn m -.-1~ Two Shows--7.l5 - 9.15 Regular Prices-1 Oc - 25c Sat. Mat. 2.3o-V-5c- 15. THE DEVIL-WDOES`. kly. 8. scant ate a. fair siz-- n, this over e around four fertilizer . saturate the Ler. twn M *="~*" I1 (1 . LI. Phl \\ \\ R uusy were accompanied by Harold Park. The Muskoka train makes its-first trip north on Saturday and- will return on Monday. Northbound the train ar- rives at Barrie at 12.05 and south- bound 2.30 pm. Th9 nn1 +hnll unacsnn In.` I. n--1I ..._IN V --.-.,..-av-. um vuI on year` 111 meuicme. Rev. Mr. Harrington, a. representa- tive of the Bible Society, will speak in `St. George's Church on Sunday morn- ng. . ' Miss Rita Spearn, Mrs. John Sutton and Cecil Sutton motored to Toronto` `and visited for a few days with Mr. \ and oMrs. Edgerton. '\ T Harry Hill and W. McKee motored from Batavia, N.Y., and spent the week-end in Ailandale. On their return they were accompanied

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