Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 20 Jun 1929, p. 14

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Entirely Herbal Workswonclers on ?eevish Stomach: and Lazy Bowels 79 Feelsi 25 I1;ave35'0z;nc 2 New Life" 1!1I....J. A--- ...... -.._L. __-._ _. t_..u..... _....._... l.6TU$E.5lBa37; amnir :4. smtrn. mm W. E. Wnllwln. Alla.n_da.le Phannuf `Good" Health for 1`-h'lf'-a~Ccnt I M Dru: and Dent. Store: n '15:. n hnnln. ~ Azholl. Richmond and York ve set new cabin-ship stan- dards in size . . . speed . . .deslgn. 20.000 gross tons each . . . the big- teh1peoutofMontreal... et g with the ever-pop at -Mon and .M- cabin ships the intimate. Canadian atmos- pherewhichrecommendethistype of travel to many of the Damm- ion'e veteran travellers. Several cabin sailings each week. from gntreal and Quebec to Great main. Ireland and the Conti- nent. Better secure accommoda- tionearly! Seeyourlocalagentor J. B. MACKAY, General Agent, Canadian Pacic Bldg" Toronto. NADIAN P.4cnuc's four new A Ducheuaes-of Bedford. Ltlnnll `Rial.-na.-A and Vnmh `NJ IJuUUIUH""Ol Dillliillp ho l.Richmond and York mun nab nan! nnln':n.aL`n sign- f tyyw "pacic" 3!'!'P'_ 18 Your Horse 5W"92_Is12s!99:? A`-.-Ll-A -.aI..... -. Kill IIBIIIII III! I1III'I"\vIuI I IJIVI *"'* .....'.`:`i eslillllvx-a:rnB1(on.. Ld. zrdmnm w cauaauan puma mum ;`raulln' um . ._. aooduu Worldour" Cgnadiau Lye. -4v1uuum do U] U. Orlglnal mm on me for inspection. ` Iunnur in--Uuonvilv G U Hi The huge foyer itself is subdued and splendid. The scheme of decoration has a northern Italian feeling. It is luxurious and comfortable. The rugs are thick and soft. It is a lounge and a rest room, a meeting place and a museum of specially-designed furn- ishings. On the left, as you enter, wide stone steps lead to a lounge and writing room and, on through, to the main dining room, where waiters move noiselessly among marble pillars and lass and silver glisten against hang- ngs of heavy brocade in soft "colors. At the other end is the Venetian Grill, a say and rather vivacious room where the general eifect is of carved stone.. The chairs are Venetian, upholstered ` in leather or dull green. The individ- ual lamps on each table, are Venetian. The color scheme is Venetian. The entire atmosphere is Venetian and the service is Canadian Pacic, making it a happy combination of Old World background and ultra-modern elici- ency. This in 1-`Inn annflnn. A: 4.1.... n......1 vuvy . This is the section or the Royal York which greets the incoming tra- veller and the visiting sightseer furs-t. Overlooking it is the main mezzanine where the library, the five private din- ing rooms, the children's playroom vuqov av--no -vw vwynvwo you; can run vovunuv Perhaps you walk through the slop- ing marble hallway which leads you un-der the street level from the Union Station to the ground floor foyer. Or perhaps you come through one of its trio of marble entrances with their simple plaques of bronze, merely a crest and a name but impressive in their very- simplicity. In any case, you go to the main lobby. On the one side is business and on all sides, beauty. The hotel offices are efficiency made inconspicuous. Marble and bronze grilles house speed -and service. It is the nerve centre of the institution, linked by telephone and pneumatic tubes with every corner of the mighty establishment. a great transportation company in the future of the Dominion and of On- tario and its capital city in particular. unit`-|nV\n u-any nun: I-Ionnauunnl-. `ha -Jau- vvuvuu-ur vvnnwona IIIIV av WU IIVU UIIIDUQ What can be written now is little more than a catalogue--a sketchy outline of the focal point around which great traditions are. most un- mistakeably, destined to grow up. i . Monument to C.P.R. You approach Toronto at night. from any direction or any angle. Up above its bevy of skyscrapers is a glow- ing tower of light, copper and cut stone etched against the deep blue skyline. You approach Toronto in the daytime. A mammoth edice, white in the sunlight, almost medieval in appearance, with an ivory plume of smoke from its chimney-peak looms over the lakefront. Both are the Royal York. It changes with the hour and the point of vantage. But it is alwa s immense, magnicent and superb beautiful, a monument to the faith of Eighteen period suites, furnished to special design with each piece in the character of the period and draperies and hangings blending with the gen- eral scheme of decoration, are an unusual feature of the guest rooms at the Royal York; They include Russian, Italian, William and Mary, Colon- ial, Chinese, Dutch and many others. Photo shows a corner of the sitting room in the William and Mary suite. It is not possible to describe the towering new Royal York Hotel which the Canadian Pacic Railway has ust opened in Toronto. It-is the map s greatest hotel, or course, and it isthe Empire's tallest building but it is also so man other things that, within the sco o a single article, they will nev- er covered. Descriptive articles will be written about it by several generations of newspa ermen. But the descriptions will stil be incomplete. It is a very living and vital affair. Architecturally and structurally, the Royal York may be complete. Otherwise, it has Just begun. It becomes a civic, a national and an international centre which cannot, for purposes of clarity be compared with some existing edice because others like it do not exist. `Kiln;-L .4... L- -.....lLA.--_ __ II Immense. Magi-nicent and *=..!=r_.!:P"*1v A sxnrcuv OU'l'l..lNEI It Is a Civic, National] and ggteynutioml ' | nom. vonx, EMl'|llE S ensm HOTEL I8 MOHIIMENT T0 FAITII or team TlIA|lSPO|l1'AT|0ll _ co. The Luxurious Foyer nun-n r\Iv1\Ia .'a.....1c 1.. ....I..1-. '.Wl'VUB- VIUIII up Ililll [OX1 Eczema. Builds you u nl'."IAlI rinnnahnv-'1 Ark: A Charming Sitting Room CLu The Vice-Regal Suite It is not till the visitor passes through all these striking public spaces that he reaches.the rst floor of guest bedrooms. These occupy the next seventeen floors, ranging from the Vice-Regal Suite of fteen rooms; to the comparatively modest single] room which, judging from a typicall example, only contains such items as i a separate radio outlet, bath and, shower of -white glazed tile, specially woven carpets utilising historic de- signs from the Wars of the Roses, ink stands and xtures of hammered cop- per and wrought iron, silk-upholster- ed easy chairs, amethyst blinds and curtains, also of silk, blending with: the color scheme. of the upholstery. Remembering how recently it was, as such things go, that a water pitcher with a spray of roses painted on the `side was considered the dernier cri in elegance and a coil of rope beside the window indicated a hotel where every thought was `taken for the guest's comfort and safet , the comparison is almost stunning. t "TV!-uaun an-.. ..l_:..._. _.H V -- uwu ucuruuuw. aavery 131808 01' rural- ture in these rooms was specially de- signed and fabricated. All of it, more- over, was made in Canada. There is a. colonial Suite, 9. Dutch, a.Russio.n, a. Chinese, an Art Moderne, a William .....-v-u uuwunmusac `There are sixteen period suites, two to each of eight oors and each con- sisting ot a sitting room flanked by two bedrooms. Every piece of furni- ture in these rooms urns ahnniallu A..- -vagymy `Ill uuu psauuc. Galleries link this trio of mighty meeting places and there are also lounges, committee rooms, check rooms and provision for a. telegraph room where 21 operators can le to their various newspapers, the running stories of more than a score of report- ` 625. uvvvauu U1. DLIC sxcuu HUUUI. '.l.Ill5 Pu address system, radio engineers de- clare, constitutes the largest installa- tion of its sort ever put into opera- tion anywhere on the globe. I1.nIIou-3.... 1l._1- A.1_.x_ 4.4, A ,7 I U I 0110 ' speakers so that an orator in one room may address audiences in all three, thus bringing. nearly 5,000 people within the range of his voice in one section of the great hotel. This public svstem. radiin pnainnm-e An- I -..-u uuou uzmgv nun; uuc Dam: U1. 3 lead pencil to le` tubes thir feet] long. Over 300 mi es of insulat cop- per wire were used in its mechanism and a 20-horsepower. electric motor is needed to operate the blower. Speaker lvlay Address 5.000_ Opposite the convention hall is the banquet hall and, at the front or the building, the ballroom with huge chandeliers which are masses of cry- ' stal, glowing against tall amethyst hangings. The -three rooms are link- ed by the most ultra-modern of loud- i{`In5eii'a. "i31Ii'ldE' y'c7u_ u" T` that 'Ga.lla.gher l Herbs Sane} tea Are, by ---- --u--r-vac VAOIUGD HIV lV|iGUCUu Two for convention It is on the two floors immediately `above these that the great halls of the Royal York are located, the two stor- eys set aside entirely for conventions, banquets and concerts. Nowhere else can an establishment or this type boast such tacilities. On the east, there is the convention hall proper with its completely equipped stage and mighty organ. The organ alone deserves columns. Crowning achieve- ment or Oasavant Freres or st. Hya- clnthe, Canada's great organ builders. it is the Dominion s finest. It is e- quipped with live manuals and has six organ units. Pipes run to the thous- and: and rnman frnm tn. ulna no .. vagina Iuuvn. rtpca run 00 M18 P110113` ends and range from the size or a sin feet ' 1%!` IIHIVA IIYAIOA anal In Ian ...--1.-..J..... H and additional offices are located. "Hun: 'un.--__ J-.. Au-_.;_-,_AA_.___ According to statistics recentg ly issued by the Department of Highways, simcoe County has more automobiles registered than any other county in On- tm-ln with tho aw...-.n...... -4 vvnva VUUHVJ {Ll VII` E35"-1'6, "m the exceptions of York and Essex. York has over ' 15,000 cars, Essex 14.000 and simooe over 13,000. The others are far behind. If the possession of cars is any indication of prosperity, then simcoe must be one of the most prosperous dis- trict: in Canada. smcos coumv HAS 0 13,000 MAO`!/`OR CARS Jug. The kitchens are modern, motorized to the last degree and make use of every mechanical device now made commercially practical. Potatoes are peeled by machinery. Dish-washing calls for the services of a mechanic for, in the main kitchen alone, there nu -a-Isuaylm I am 70 years of age, and for several years I suffered from lack of appetite, sickness day and night, faintness and lddiness. For about four weeks I have een taking our Kruschen Salts every morning. I eel now exactly as if I were 20 years of age, with a good appetite for every meal, joie de vi vre, such energy as I have never had before in all my existence, physical agility. I could run against any person 20 years of a e; in fact, it is exactly as if in one mont I had found a new life."-Madam S. of D. inspection. I yucca, us: lb cuureiy unaware 01 it. Even the air he breathes goes through a manufacturing process. It is washed, warmed and humidified ac- cording to the requirements of the , season. It is changed every few min- ] utes, brought down from intakes three 1 hundred feet above the streets and ex- thausted into a plenum chamber in `the peak of the upper tower. The steam which heats his room in winter passes through a subterranean oil bath and muffler before it reaches his radiator. In the suib-abasement pow- er plant, huge batteries of engine and motor driven generators produce di- .rect electric current instead of the alternating current supplied from hy- dro sub-stations so that all possibility of even a symptom of a icker may be eliminated. ' Mechanical Kitchen Equipment Ice, to most people, is ice, but to the Royal York engineers, there are dif- ferent grades of it. The refrigerating equipment is geared to prod-uce the finest that can be manufactured. Ev- en the water is filtered before freez- `Ina GL1 ing. and Mary, an Italian, a Flower Suite, a Spanish Suite and a Louis XVI in the group. Color schemes and gener- al decorations are all characteristic of the period or nationality and the rooms themselves, absolutely unique. I Remarkable Ventilation System But the most amazing thing which the layman discovers by a complete trip through this new and noteworthy link in the Canadian Pacic chain is -the fact that it is a surprising centre of manufacture. What the guest sees are exquisitely furnished rooms and halls and awless service. What he does not see` is the elaborate and painstaking way in which the task of making him comfortable and entirely at home has been undertaken. In most cases, he is entirely unaware of it. EVFY1 thn air ho 'hv-no!-ham nnna BRYSON & MORLEY V... uuuvvavvnuo auu DLU 4 l.Clll1ll\d.UlC Ulblay I. V motor car color design--a variety so wide as to give almost individual distinction, at no extra cost. It is anew industrial achievement! More than 225 different color combinations on various models were delivered last month by the Hudson Motor Car Co. That is why, although nearly 200,000 Essex the Challengers are in service ; there is a sparkling vari- $ ety and individuality about each car, instead of the monotonous sameness expected in big production. The tremendous buying swing to Essex the Challenger--with nearly 200,000 in service a7 in five months-is the popular` answer to no,` 3\ ` 7ISIT our showrooms and see a remarkable display in in N0 extra cost 311 the oodneae and healing virtual of urbs, atura s own medicmo, an in hia tonic. No mineral drup. Beta story or in working 100 .. Britta`: buck theodjoy of livmg. oodfor nerves. Clean up akin trouble:-own ialilnfhl Rnilrln unn nn nah` :- v__...`v- ac` a.vn4\aasaa.A|L IIIJL By the passing of a new Act to be known as the Investigation of Titles Act, the _Ontario Legislature has faci- litated the procedure of investigating titles of real estate, etc. Section three of this Act, makes it necessary for a person in dealing with land to be re- quired to show that he is lawfully en- titled to such land as owner thereof through a sufficient claim or title, save during the period of forty years im- mediately preceding the date of such dealing. No claim which has been in existence longer than forty years shall effect such land unless such claim has been duly registered within the period of forty years. By the same Act the uucu` Wlul 1116331. ' There are six kitchens altogether, the greatest array of establishments in any hotel. They range from the com- pact basement kitchen where the em- ployees are cared for in separate to the airy one above the roof garden. To a mere man, they are intriguing. A seasoned housewife would spend a week in investigations. Has 1,200 Employees To sta the hotel requires an army of 1,200 people. Divided into ten sep- arate divisions, each operates under I its own department head. The head waiter has 300 aides. The housekeeper marshals a group almost as large. The head chef directs 175 skilled assistants. H11`- 1_..A.-'l .c..-11__ .-_ .-----. wonvo ma... vwvu 4 Iv onAALD\4 aaowualxha. | The hotel, nally, is everything ne that has yet been said of it. To see it in operation, is to witness something approaching a spectacular perform- ance. But it is, unfortunately, not possible to see it all unless one has days to devote to it. are two mammoth machines with a capacity of 25,000 pieces of china an hour apiece. With equal aplomb, the regiment of chefs, cooks and assistants can produce an elaborate dinner for 1,500 persons or an order of two med- ium-boiled eggs. There are automatic juice extractors, sausage stuers, mo- tor-driven dicers, slicers and: parers. Tables are stainless steel, monel metal or marble. Pots are of gleaming copper lined with nickel. Thnra nun nvlu 'lp~'&..L....... _1L__-Lv,,___ CHANGE IN REGISTRY ACT `Du LL- ._-__.:_-__ , .splay s a new ; Iar $965 XJ how it upholds its sweeping challenge to motordom. Hydraulic shock absorbers and new type double-action 4- wheel brakes are standard-they do not cost one cent extra. The same with radiator shutters, air cleaner, windshield wiper, safety lock, chromium-plated bright parts. All valu- able features-all features you want. Add up for yourself the extras Essex oers atno added cost and items alone. _ Your present car will nrnhahlv rnvnr you will see above $100 in extra value in those and up F.O.B. Barrie W W//97'g"r fees for making search in the vaults of the Registry Office have been in- creased, especially in Section 92, re- ferring to deeds and leases. The cld fee for this was $2.00 and is now $2.10, and in Clause P of the same section I III AJGIV L1 The Ball Planing Mill Co. Ltd. - Barrie, Ont. The Sarjeant Co., Ltd. - ' Barrie, Ont. Greater Structural Strength G F1r_eproof7`Wallboar.d 3-'5 THE NEW IMPROVED GYPROC present car Will probably eover the entire first payment. The H. M. C. Purchase Plan oers the lowest terms available on the balance. pr<>_9f7_"V`V-'5>o E 'Ff1'_ e nxsmnnurons and DEALER! Bradford St., mum Phone us For Sale B .lI'II 15 I _ The old, rcliavble Gallagher's Tonic and System Builder Tell your well through The Examiner and it will bring results. referring to discharge of mortgages the fee will be $1.50 instead of $1.00, 2: fnrmm-1v I/11C 1CC W111 as formerly. _ l_hIraday, June 20, 1929` V Impfova gEdge_ 210 ----v V - ------ ---.-.. .-vJv What does age matter if you re feelin youn 1 You'll never M-I old till you feel 1. Ta. 9 Krusohen and laugh at the calendar. Here In an example: II ' _... HR _.-A.._ -1` _..- -._J I-.. --_._.__l

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