Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 5 May 1898, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

r.-...._.. Graig is` Susi; the foundation _ work . . . . Mr. Sol Brysnt l,.-saw.mill on_ ' the 1 M11 concession of Teoumseth, was , destroyedvbytre on'.l.`nesdsy night. The` origin-of' the fe-Ais onknovin; `About 50,000 shingles consumed by the ames. Mr. Bryant had no insnrsnoe and his loss will be . heavy H97 bathe vlylmppthyi of oounmu:iiey.- ' tem and. piping around the building to i. work in connection with the sewerage BEE'l`ON--On Saturday, 23rd ult., Mr. Joseph Whitesides, chairman of < the county property committee, accom- ` panied by county councillors John Ross, James Ross, James Martin and Wm. Kearus were in town on business in.` connection with the House of Refuge - building. Mr. Eustace Bird, of Barrie, the architect, was also here. The con- tract for putting in the sewerage system has been let to Messrs. Bennett "8; Wright, of Toronto, for the sum of $805, and 8525.for the soft water sys- connect with the "tank. The film's foreman, 'Mr.'S. S. Clurk, was with the committee on Saturday and received all the necessary instructions. The system will be commenced shortly; the barn will be moved about the rst of May, but -the house and shed will be left until the first of October. - The committee and- architect were well pleased with the - progress Mr. =-James ,;-s_2".;-.. _:'A.I. LL- l.'......l-A.:._ ads, whose `write up: Miss Guillim,h-om whcm =h;%.*'!!'5`f*.*7n%3i'"' }f .Gvil1im- bury in Xogkz V _.;.`~I':'gl:';"_e"n._ % ~ Simbe aqa". gt qayarn. ,. `l.`___.~'._I`. l\"5r:-;__..'_\ `:_ '.r`1nn ` the passage` to the Northwest will be 1 established there, and the chain of lakes. , ston. He also proposed the construc- moved it to York (Toronto); divided `Upper `Cana';d'a" into and ' ~named.msny-. of. the townships.` He} laid out the Governor's .-(bundasv street) from -London `to D.n__1,ndas`;; also a _ trunk road from Dundas to Toronto and Kingston, and Yonge street_ from a Toronto to Lake Simcoe. was en- thusiastic with `regard to the futureof Canada. `In one of his letters Sec- retary of State Dundas, he proposes a . naval station at Long Point,` on Lake Erie, London for the seat of Govern ment, tells I how he has marked out oxford` (Woodstock) and Chatham for town sites; in another letter to the Lords of Trade (1794) he anticipates that Penetanguishene will be the most considerable town in Upper Canada, a. from Bay Quinte to.Lake Simcoe will give a route to the_ merchants of King- tion` `of the` Murray Canal, from Bay Quinte to Lake Ontario. The townships of Simcoe County are : Matchedash, a name applied to that section of country by-the Indians. It means muskeg, or marshy land. Nottawasnga, from the Algonquin words Nahdoway, (the Iroquois) and Sage. (outlet of river). Noctawuage Bay was called Iroquois Bay u_ntil the beginningot thieoentury. > Tecnmeeth, from the Shawnee chief, born in .1769 upon the [banks of` the Scioto Rive; in Ohio, killed ;_at'the bab- tle of Moraviantown in 1814. The name Tecumseh "or Tecumeeth in the Indian language signies a"a V tiger crouching for hie prey. V Esaa, from a favorite squaw of Te-V oumseth. ' nzlujalu, the uamp of a duughter of Tecumseth. 4 A ~ T Toaaoroutio, from a. Huron word `meaning . beautiful mountain, _'f;:}fI:51, Z 55 Inniafail, a poetical name for Ireland It in to be found in the form Inniatail as aatation on the Calgary and Edmonton Railway. 1'\,1_ :-__'_:|_ Snnnidale, fnom Sunny Dole, desci'ib- ed by the author of- Smith's Canadian the worst township in the oounty.- "He ridicules the name as inappropriate. --"%;;;;'>;'o.v,-.';)_;V)`l;sf\i)'1vA}rV t'g'o;r`; {he Latin veaper, evening, Greek hesperos, `the west. A Oro, the Spanish word for gold, first applied to the Rio del Ore, a river and settlement _ on the northwest coast of Africa, celebrated for its trade in `eleven and gold; and an it was at first intend- ed to set apart this township, or n por- 12n_ _._-L-_I ;i_o:r (It? ma:s'_-ace'leI;; :3} libereted slaves, the Africa /n name of 0:0 vise selected, ' ' uavnvwvwwuu "Shanty Bay was first settled by. Lieut.-Col. Wm. O'Brien, who came to this district some sixty l years ago (this was written twenty years ago) on a philanthropic mission in connection with a proposal, on the part of the British Government, to found a colored colony in the township of Oro. The enthusiasm of the Wilberforce period dying out, the project was never prose- cuted beyond - the stage of giving its African name to the to_wnship.-Pic- tnresque Canada, p. 601. A ' Orillia.--Di`iferent accounts of, ghe origin of the nune have been given. 1. The lesser vehore (Couchiohing, a. Spanish diminutive of Ora); 2. Aute- lia, or Am-lea,` 0. ower. Orillia (pronounced O rill-yeh ) is the Spanish word for border, margin, Inn]: of river, shore `of see, end the town of Orillia overlooks lake Simone. On the latest map of the Railways _and Canola .Dep;rtmen_t, the. name of the townie spelled O1-ills. . ' V ` -q as '. ITL 2-_`1.__._n`4_ Floe, Tiny and '.l`ey-`-It in hard to tell what spirit, if not that `of e mischief, suggested the names of - Flee, Tiny end Tey, ii: emcee Oouvntir; since tlieee were the names of` three `poodle deg: belenging to Oelborhe e `ir'"'it'e`.` V 'l'\:_._ 2.9; 2-... *n'._5--;2.?;:'_ vv-v`----,- u ._ _. - _ - ' 1-go J ohnno; ,7 ]T)6nTiinion Stiatic-_ in}, in J. Outoll Hop_k_i_n_I " Rg - E1i;3yi:iopodu,W ' L9. 204 ; . ;'.1`h jf0119!inR. 'Ainf9n3%n-`ion `bout Simo G9niy!ujn9mi19d`bv Editor H. .pn1;1uhoa in the} ,. I 'Q||Ul luv yluuvw Ivuav vnvuuv vvn gemn!t."GtuoI1'mqiia, ` -lI'..I.`.._._`_- *_iiJi,"F:3n - Virgil, mgoia, Lib. ` vi.,line 483-- ' % Qni ills gfdinojgariinl ` -r ,4. `.'ru'.'_.___'___.`.L; ' 1-1..-J-n:\4`i..A..- II... ` ""`:ai;es:u1z1;s;*} Mdou, a Greek of W I51`. vv_--u ---vuv-- vi - ~ "1 5:- . `,".' and responsibilities of the average skip-y 1 per of a regular linerare as many and ._ sAIt_is_- the general impression anjicng sT%~*~` e -r. e 5.1` " - : .: -. 2` =`: . ', g V .osn;:teroar`~-sitersraeg-iyiveia. ; Stories rs-incod-r.ow wagon Gina _; other Omoers lor onerous Duties--1"u,rb 3 ` ~'l.:.""`H"dV3"_"`"' s ' 9 5 those who do not know that the diities ` onerous as the successful bank president and that in addition his salary is just ' as large. The responsibility of the one _ is about as "great as the other. but when ` it comes to duties the sea dog has as a rule much more to bear, while, unlike the bank president, his salary is- as p small as his duties are large. It may ` surprise some of the regular transat- lantic travelers to learn that their beau ideal of a sea "captain who in faultless gold lace goes about the deck laughing and chatting with the ` tourists, patting the half fare tots on the back and dclng his cap to the rug clad occupants of an easy steamer chair between the time that he spends in his berth, in the chartrcom or on the bridge, gets little more money a month than the detective sergeant or the average steamboat cap- tain. In many instances Mr. Gold Lace `H: M=A,_'S7|'.zE i`4`i OF_:-A 359. ogaeg `..a_ .- -.-'- 3.} 59 US JOBS! . One of the "most successful lines run- ning between this port and Europe pays its commodore, who has been over 20 years in this particularservice, 85 a month,` or about.$175. This is about $40 a. week. The other captains in this line epaid the equivalent of $125 for 30 aye labor. Any number of matter of no fact stories have-been printed with the object of showing that the com- manders of the great-"liners received in some cases sums ranging from $7,000 to $12,000 per year. But such talk is idle. There is not a single captain on the ocean who enjoys such an income. That many of them deserve to is anoth- er matter entirely. '- --` ------- --4-'4-`--5 ----`A- -u-A-3-gnu. UL ll-ICIIIIJJQ \IllUlA\yo~vo _In. an argument` that master mariners are well paid the point isadvanoed that the oicers are fed` while at sea and even alongside the wharf with the best that the market aords and at the ex- p8l18e.0f_` the steamship company. Yet 80 per cent of these well fed gold laoes are married and have big `families that - demand food, clothes and a home either here or abroad, whether or not the ship is in port. This establishment costs as much while the master mariner ' is on the bosom of old Neptune as it does when he is playing dry cob at home for a short period. His going or coming adds or deduots little from the general _% ` Minnie Blaoketcck after an illness _ of about sixteen` years from "spinal ` very patient. The funeral on the fol- . ' News is Here Given in Brief yet Teree Form-A Column for Every Reader. "Tnoiwrou-On the 13th nlt., Mine trouble. She was a great snlferer, -`bu-t "lowing Monday wee largely attended, Reva. Crockett and Oochrane conduct- ing the services. ` A -~- A --___-..____1-..A. ..:--.... n.:... - and capable mariner. UUH Us There are few pursers on the Atlantic ' who command a higher `monthly salary than 10. They must have years of ex- perience, a host of friends and be top sawyers, as they say at sea, to com- mand even this gure. Unlike the stewards, and, in the majority of cases, the ships surgeons, the purser is sel- dom made the recipient of a generous tip. Nobody seems able to explain why it is so, unless it be that the purser, handling all the money of the voyage, `which includes extra passage money, the receipts from the smoker made through the chief steward, the wine bills from the tables, all amounting to a pretty large gure, is recognized as the nancial end of the oating hotel and so treated accordingly. The smoker and its many attachments are luxuries which the captain is not ' permitted to enjoy, or if permitted rare- ly indulges in. Any skipper who would make himself a jolly good fellow in the smoker would lose the condence of those underhis care as fast as a trout taking a May y. Not that his appear- ance there would make him any less the sailor,_but passengers for some reason or another seem to] believe that the . only place for the master of their ship ison .the bridge or in the ohartroom. And ,,if they can picture him on this bridge in oilskins and so wester with the wind. and sleet and ice blustering around him. so much the better to the perfection of their idea of the practical The poorest paid man in an omoial capacity on a great liner is probably the surgeon. Some passengers have the opinion that as the company pays the . ship s doctor; those using him on a trip are not supposed to give nancial recog- nition to his attenton. It is true that none is obliged to, but he should. -The demand of a doctor at sea is in nowise different from that demand on land. - The steamship companies give a passen- ger board, lodging and transportation at` a cost_that could not be equaled on any railroad of the earth, when distance, accommodation and attention `are con- sidered. The luxury of a doctor, while generally forced, is at the same time an , -auxiliary of sea travel for which the T company receives` nothing, and which, -when free imedicines ' are included, as V they fuivariably are. costs quite a good _de_al..._ Experienced ocean travelers sel- . ; dom forget the surgeon when necessity vmalges them call for his attention dur- ' his a. , a trip. Bmhsse siiperienced twir- ists at _,fe_w _b etw`een.`-New, Y9! ` mm: Ban:s73i"a1umore, who visited his countryman. Henry Sienkie- widz. not long` ago. says in the Bait!`-. ____... .._ LI.`-5 il-us; D:-|'I~Ink I`II\I!ll":.: `c WIUD. IIUU GUI! up-v gaun- more Sun that":l`1;A"'5'o'.iiI.l: noyeliatvis . very simple in his mgqnera and is rathez silent when in society. but !:e.,i- a (3006 ligtener ton good story. He is of medi- ,, -1..- In n IIIIUIIUI-' UU' QUUID UIVDJI J-A pin size, ntheraaik and ia"icf{n1wo_ baldnve w*ithlnt 0! era : our the '9!hp.laa2.`,.7I'h.41810. .isprononnbed Omin- A-Ray -velioh. with `th, `accent .on tJ;\_aeo- V aid :ay;11ab1e and` thq oli gsm;nqn`nc:;_ _.u in child. -His home {snow} at Wrjnxv.; thdngh mnoh_o hisjixne is; apeqt in -. ti'alin.8 Ijlfd: t[t'!"8 '!!i!351'f1=3' ahis l.1terar:wmf:,k .6hin;% Wino. mho,ae.h,o: `his: am sure` f1-pnrr6d- when t he: . .y`ygs:: wl1Iinor~.~ .9.`Pa_i " !..' _ `.:."x. V ""' 1 - nuooru d i` up-=~ * 9u?*~19`'d"1;.'3' iP18%s!a<}.:in.,. ; course his reading ran`, IQXbII_:\,. _ e.= fdcial registration a'-."siIieck' iner- I riage. Not knowing` what sort gonna:-V t riage. that was ;-,he.; ~l6,oked. further; andf sot` considerable -lishti ea o,n-tam that prevailed in England a centurysor 1 two .339 and also to some extent in the American colonies. V _l V j, - Smock marriages were weddings where the bride appeared dressed in` a white-sheet or chemise. The reason of i such a garb was the belief that if a man married a woman who was in debt . he could be held liable for her indebted- ` ness if he received her with any of her F property, and also that if a woman mar- ried a man who was in debt his credit- ors could not take her property to satis- fy their claims it he-received nothing from her. In England, says an antiqua- ' rian, there was at least one case where the bride was clothed puris naturalibus .while the ceremony was being per- formed in the great church at Birming- ham. The minister at first refused to perform the ceremony, but nding noth- ing in `the rubric that would excuse him he married the pair. ""4 A---_-- -_L LL- `--- an I-`an I\Al\_ l I ` II IIIGILIUMI Ul-III `JG | To carry out the law fully as the peo- ; ple understood it the ceremony should always have ..been performed as it was in the Birmingham church. But modes- ty. forbidding, various expedient: were used to accomplish the desired purpose and yet avoid the undesirable features. Sometimes the bride stood in a -closet and put her hand through a hole in the 1 door. Sometimes she stood behind a cloth screen and put her hand out at i one side, again she wound about her a white sheet -furnished for the `purpose by the bridegroom, and sometimes she stood in her chemise or smock. Even- tually. in Essex county at least, all im- mcdesty was avoided by the bride- groom s furnishing to the bride all the clothes she wore, retaining ` title to the _ same in himself. This he did in the presence of witnesses, that he might prove the fact in case he was sued for any debts she might have contracted. A marriage of this kind occurred at Brad- ford in 1788, and the following is atru copy of the record of the same: V `II_ .__-__ l'\-- _- 01 I "H .. ...- -----_ -_ -_- _,_-, Blunt-onn. Dec. ye 24, 1788. ` This xney certine whomsoever it may con- oerno that James Bailey of Bradford who will married to the widow Mary Bacon Nov 22 Int ` past by me ye subscriber then deelnred thqt he took the aid person without anything of on- tnte and that Lydia the wife of Eliaur Burbank 6 Mary the wife of Thames Stiokney & Mar aailnt Ithn tffn nl (`Ainh III (I, BPIA` I lllry ull W110 01; luuuzua DIIVLHUJ on gm-at the wire of Caleb Burbank all of Burn-:1: tord were witnesses that the cloth: she than had on were of his providing _& bestowing upon I--- ' '1? wmnnxmncn. Miniatero!yeGolpel. It is noted by the same writer that in ' all cases of smock marriage: that have come to his knowledge the bride: have been widows. ~ I L .9 ___:_,._ LL- _-1__ -1 &-r nmstmr or ..qn-gown nxogguons. ; > UUUII W IIIU W In It is thought that during the reign of George III there were many smock mar~ riagesin Maine, then a part of the prov- ince of Massachusetts Bay, chiey in Lincoln and York counties or in the ter- ritory which is now so` known. There is nothing to show that the jiraotice onto ` lived the Revolution. In Maine up to 1852 a husband was liable for debts of his wife contracted before marriage, and no such subterfuge as the smock marriage could relieve hlm.-New York G.__ Wlnt 3 Healthy Mun Oonanmoo In Soun- ty Years of Llfo. Taken all in all, a healthy manwlth ,3 ___.-L:L- -_.I ...-J-..._L- LLI_-L ---. J-BUM and Ill way, It an.-v-comm; ---u-v v a good appetite and moderate thirst con- sumes in 70 years 96}; tons of solid and liquid foods. It the consumer weighs, say, 150 pounds, he will eat and drink during his lifetime 1,280 times his own weight. Transforming all this foodstuf! into mechanical labor, the strength de- ' rived would be suiiicient to lift 87,600,- 000 tons one foot" from theground or. to raise the Forth bridge at Edinburgh, which weighs 264,600,000 pounds, to a` height of 1,285 feet. 11I_-1...l.l..... Lino. Aunt on cause: A! n Iifn. IIUIQHII UL Aguvv nvuvc Excluding the. rst 20 years of a life- time, the quantity of cigarettes con- eumed by a regular smoker who smoke: ` a dozen every day would in 50 year: ster rolled-cigarette more than 16 feet in length and about 5 feet thick,` beside which the tallestman would resemble a veritable dwarf. A cigar smoker con- suming six of his favorite brand a day would during his lifetime,smoke' a gi- gantic cigar of more than 16 feet long and almost 2% feet thick. . It would weigh 4,410` pounds and would ' take the suction power of a steam engine to pui it. .. Ag I-Inn nvn;uIr3nn hnkd In nnf nnnnnnnwu reach the number of 219,000, or a mom r Asthe smoking habit is not necessary to existence it is easily seen how much money a smoker Wastes in the course oi % years. A pipe smoker consumes in his ` lifetime as half ton of tobacco.--New York Herald, c . The Cave Dweller so on Am. We must remember that there are no such things as lines in nature. Whether we use them to represent a human pro- le, the depth of a shadow. the dark- ` less of a cloak or e thundercloud, they A I are mere donventional symbols. They were invented a long time ago by 9 die; tingniahed` sportsmen whowae also I heaven bornameteur ex-tiet-the John Leech 01 his day-who engraved gar 1:; (from me) the. picture of em-mmoth onvone or its own tucks, And we have accepted them ever since no the oheapelt and ;aimpleet_' wiy ofjlnterpreting in . black and whiiejfor. the jqod engraver; . -<=w~:: _;=- ** at-at _ `l'l.II CHOU Int EIIVCIIII Iuuwu ` ' Tbs other day,A__nid 3 young Lbaoh elm`. I received as I silt a nobktie, Ihirked:acrou' [ ` `one ond`ot`t1i6'1`vh1to' lining gt jihioh Ijtound Q manic; `I don : rad n|'uIib.*my`ulf.:b"ut I; look this to that dual, and. what. smyou _cn1.1;:u;wuur.,'B1q-t 1, use an stands! wreck 4 :,,thduh1t_hIi wan { _I`ho panic that no rennin $`n a `monas- "nr'nh__'-`-.`|v_.3_ .1-.. n . ..`.I.| - _._" ...'.?|.-.I.i sMVo:%k'isr$3zi=tisAe:s. CURIOUS `!'ATlST|CS. AvVENING-'i-lA" correspondent gives this important and instructive item in last week's issue of the Oreemore Star`:- I Andy was delighted with the_ pretty girl he met out north on -Sunday while he was strolling rou_nd to get thenfresh `sir; little did he think pups and baby ` were at home awaiting her return. - - colnsanu caskets of all kinds in stock or made to order. Robes, Urape` and all Funeral Requisites furnishe Orders by Telegraph or otherwise promptly attended to. G. O. DOLMAGE, Manager, Stroud. A Steam Whrks and Show Room." Collier-st., Barrie.I Various Kinds and What They Are Seven- ally Good rot. Nature supplies us with two complete foods, milk and eggs, which contain in the proper proportions all the necessary elements for the sustenance of our bod- ies. As these are the only -complete foods it is necessary in the absence to have mixed foods, and it is in the mix- ing that mistakes occur, because the fat forming, muscle forming and other parts are taken in wrong proportions, some in excess and others the reverse. Left to his own taste primitive man in- variably selects the best food. This in- stinct, "however, is defective at the pres- ent day. For children food rich in bone forming substances is necessary. Among muscle forming foods the following are the best and most common: Oatmeal porridge, with rich milk and whole 3 meal bread buttered; meat is a highly \ condensed food of this class. To men of , sedentary occupation a free use of meat ? is injurious. For men engaged at hard ; manual labor a generous meat diet is ` admirable. ` , _._.L_2__ a___s_ 1:LA.1- _-_...:..I.. `Hill 138 UlUe Vegetables contain but little nourish- ment, but are useful as blood puriers and also supply bulk to the food. which is necessary to give the consumer satis- faction. Mill: should never be taken with meet, because they are both rich in one substance. Tee should not be taken with meet either, because it renders the meat tough and indigesti- ble. Beet ranks rst es s muscle former end -mutton next. Pork mskes a very digestible dish, sad fowl and bacon are e very useful and palatable dish. Cere- I i Eels enter largely into our diet and are 5: much nice, because they supply food w or starch as well as muscle food. Pota- toes provide little nutriment, but with plenty of milk, which supplies the pre- cise ingredients they lack, a. good diet 1.. -_._.-.`I Compliment to Inspector McKee. Rev. Thomas McKee, P.S.I., has long and ably lled the important and honorable position he now occupies, and is known, `esteemed and respected by every teacherand child of school age in the inspeutorate. Unlike the swagger- ing tyrants who `drop into some schools- to air their accomplishments or humili- ate the teacher, he comes as the_ kind friend and counsellor to direct, to en `courage, to advise. Every willing teacher is stimulated to more earnest endeavor by his buoyant, sympathetic nature`; every pupil is imbued with fresh courage to grapple with the many diiculties that beset the path of the student.-'-'l.`ottenham Sentinel. ` V--v --3-vs formed: . Sugar is well worthy of notice, and the child's love of it is a perfectly healthy instinct and should always be gratied in reason. Fruits are good ' blood puriers and should be considered as essentials rather than luxuries. Beef tea contains scarcely any nutriment whatever andis almost purely a stimu- lant. A dog fed on beef tea starved to death, while another fedon refuse meat throve. Tea, injurious if taken in ex- cess, provides, it taken in moderation, I most refreshing drink. Many scientists recommend its use about two hours be- fore our principal meal and without food. Ooee is a stimulant, unlike all 1 others, in fact, that it is followed by no reaction. It stimulates the brain and is % called an intellectual drink. Cocoa de- 1 serves to be classed as a tood.'-Pitts- burg Dispatch. V * often` gain a foothold. 7 After coughs and col_ds the germs of consumption I` I5 1 Scott s Emulsion of Cod- livcr Oil -with Hypophos- phites: will lnldt cure every case; but, if taken in time, `if wlll cure many. -. -I-R I .1 ` Smvmm -Mr. David Craig, er., one of the oldest residents of the town, a died at the home of his son-in-law, Mr. E. 0. Cross, on Thursday, 21st ult., after a long illness. The funeral took place on Saturday afternoon, in- terment being made in the town oeme-5 -tery. Mr. Craig had been aresident of Stayner `for upwards of twenty-eight years and was in "his seventy-second year.`--`Sun. ' ' 1' ,_,__L_,_ 11.'_..!-LL 'I__.I ' J `Even when the dlsease 1s farther advanced, . some re-_ wimarkablc cures are ergctcd. In the most advanced stages %it.p1fOlo.tAig$" life, and makes Athg; days far ,mor`c comfort- ab1_.. Everyone s;,u`eri_ng `'oxn*consux;1ption peed; _this_ THE FOODS WE EAT. V soc. and mac. an dmaliu. ` scorr & nowxa, chemhu, Toronto. BARRIE AND STROUD. PHRENOLINE REMEDIES iTry our~-n . Rheumatic Specific or Kidney and Liver Pills jBEWARE OF SPURIOUS IMITATIONS MANUFACTURED ON HONOR AND SOLD ON MERIT ONLY AT SEAGERS onus s1'on:, FARM, mwu AND mum uuns} run sale A ; At very Low Prices and on Easy Term BARRIE- SIXTH WA RD. Bradford St , S S--Lot 11 and pt. Lot 12 with comfortable frame dwelling. Cumberland St., N S-1 t. of Lot 26. Jacobs Terrace, _S S-Lot.. 7 and 10. Marcus St., E S-Pt Lot 23. J -_._- .. - iALLIs'roN-In_sp_ector Wright had hotel keeper Pattullo, before Squire Kitson on Thursday, the 2lst_ ult., charged with having a light in his bar- room after hours. The Inspector called in the hotel and seeing there was a light in the bar, demanded admittance, though without giving` his name. Mr. Pattullo said he was in the bar alone cleaning up and counting his cash and did not know it was the Inspector who wanted in. The case was dismissed.- BARRIE-- CENTRE NVARDS. Dunlop Street, S S-Large Brick Building. known as The Moore Block. Part of Lot 12, occupied as 9. livery stable. Part of Lot 26. Dunlop Street, N S-Lo_ts 25 (with dwell- ing house) and 26. . Collier Street, S S`-Lots 40 and 41. John Street, N S--Part Lots 5 and 6. BARRIE--WEST VVARD. Bradford Street, W S-Parts Lots 33 and 34. Bradford Street, E S-Lots 22, 23, 31 and3?. Bradford Street, E S--(Thompson s Block! Lot 8. Charles Street, W S-Pt Lot 49. _ Ehzabeth Street, (Boys Block) S S-Lot`. .>. Sanford Street, E S-Parts Lots 21 and `I1 Oliver St, N S- Park Lots 16 and 17 17 Oliver St, S S-Park Lots 13, 14, 15 Bay Shore-2 blocks of land, about 7ac., with saw mill. _._--_ _....._ u`vAw\V\ ? Blake Street: N S-Lots 43 and 49. Blake Street, S S -Lots 37 and 38. Cndrington Street, S S-Lots 23, `37. and pt 26. Amelia Street, N and S S-Lots 5, 6, 7. Eugenia Street, S S-Lot 5. `Theresa Street. NS--Lots4, 5, 6, 7. Pt Lot 11 in 14th Can. This property in- , eludes Minet Point, and has on it a number 0 beautiful building sites. ORO. E Lot 20 in 10th C011. 1 INNISFIL. ' vnspxm. W 24 in 6th Con. This parcel would b` rented on ad improvement lease. P: W Q 25 in 6th Cnn.,` about 90 acres. W Q 5 in 6th Con. E 1 of 10 in 6th Con. Lot_10 in 12th Con. Lot 13 in 11th Con. . . Park Lots 3. 4, 5 and 6 on E 522 in 5 Con, 21 acres. A V > Park Lot 6 on 25 in 7th "Com. 5 acres. STFIATI-IY & ESTEN. Solicitors, &c-,_ L 14-ly. Bame. J ill "THE, IDVANOEII W 4" Wood : hosphodlna. : . v emod - "5:nd.. Z":wT.. m'.E5m` ` ~ Ihrilogglixodloine dlsoove 5 or :51 Worry. - 1| `haooo. Opjnm or Btimnhnu. Mailed 0 `if; vnfnrloo. one nnnhnro 81.31:. 85. On6W`_..... The Great a.};`1`.`:` m 3 n edict: an `saga: `lAInOn` in--I E ..:.;-:*-;;;,%"...,5==i%~::.`'~':-.==?m.,e%..:,;x.-., at ' ' *" ....w:':.. s`:.::';.*:.w.:.%2:, % J. CULVER WELI/S Halrcuttin and Shaving % L % _ arlor ; T x - OPPOSITE BARBIE HOTEL. BARBIE. / and gfonnd and set on `W Z Connmcwoon-The employees of T. Long &`Bro. have given a handsome lamp and briar pipe to R. H._.Roraheck, a retiring employee. . . .Mr. J. R. Peter- man has inyented a band saw setting machine for which he has secured _a patent. . . .On Monday, April 11th, Mr. Fred. Riddell, of "Minneapolis, for- merly of this town, was `married to Miss Bracken, of that city....On' Tuesday, 26th u1t., Mr. James Quick, a resident of Collingwood for nearly twenty years, passed away after being ill for over a year. Lot 12, S S 7th Street. Lots 41 and 42 in 6th Con. , Nottawva-W!-1* SUNNIDALE. Pt E 12 in 10th, W S R, about 85 acres- M pnwgnw 1'I':;:'i:;1 a `#3073 :3 33353`,- Iln Wood Oompbaio W 35 . Qsold in Barrie at Sunsets` Drug St0|'- / Taking the lead everywhere. We are working day and night to sup. ply the demand. Our correspondence shows that hand. reds upon hundreds of poor suem. are being restored to health and happi. ness daily. They are absolutely pure and healthfu Guaranteed to cure Rheumatism, Sciat ica, Neuralgia. Lumbago, and all forms of Kidney and Liver troubles. -C5i)p. Post. Oice, Barrie. BARBIE--EAST WARD. COLLIN GWOOD. _ p`m, 5, 1898, ELMVALE--Ml'. Richard Herlahan died on Friday, April 22nd, at the age of 84 years. During his eighteen months of connement he showed nothing but a Christian spirit of resign- ment. For about six years the deceas- ed had been complaining of failing health. He was one of the oldest in- habitants of Flos and.` was much re- spected by all classes. Through his honest dealings and "kindly spirit he won many lasting friends. . . aMr. Gal-. loway, con. 6 Flos, died on Wednesday, 27th nlt. He leaves a wife and sever- al children.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy