ll Scott's Bookstore, Barrie] %orrEN THE CHEAPEST ALWAYS THE BEST f % ALL SCHOOL SUPPLIES AT THE LowEsT PRICE MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION house on Beverley street as a gift to the n. has presented 91,000 esoh to o Woqking,Boys y -Home and the Old Mr. Goldwin Smith has presented 0 1 Nnrsi'ng-st`-Home Mission, Toronto, I. l\I'l'BIl'U. $672 286 18 61 UIJV 14 79 12 69 12 68 7 67 10 29 3.11 311 311 It'll! \JC\I I0 68 T|-IE OLD RELIABLE SCOTT S BOOKSTORE 14 63 16 03 3 l0 l)l'II\ vgoooooooooooooooooooooooog .. 1- tnnmnrnn A .. 81$, 15 13 2 _o1 2 97 (`I118 `E? 218 I I'll 432 (dill .23 n`nn IO oooo oooooooo oooodoooc Z51 I-`G83. ` $1 65 1 75 165 -vv '---v- cw: -wviwvv \ T ' ' `Sixty question: nub an hour. , Presto! Why. `when in Ned! Ala. be : gone and in hlsplcco A question point instead! ` __DrInnII'In '.A-lllll` In (`Dull yltfeachgmlsimcne Bounty People. I185` 106 107 103 104 105 ` 108 109 113 114 115 The-Adjourned Sale will take place on Tvxsnn, 1m:2.'mi DAY or Novnmnnn, at one o'clock p.m., in the Treasurer a office. `_ lit: q1hutiou:uko.`u| tow. . Audutoronply The wliut nu would stand llhld At Noddy : um-chin; "Why?" Sixty quutlou make us hour. .And_childliood hours no bad; V .' lo Noddy has no timo to waste. No pause: to: relict. .l.nvunuuuvn. van-, V Barrie. August 14th, 1902. First publication in B43311: ADVANCE August 14:11, 1902. 33- 155 101 116 111 112 61 62 69 70' 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 CA 31' 82 (Ill 5.3. '7 "s . 1' .M"' T Q9 our our: minute, FOB ADVERTISING ;..:."' oeeeloe en`. I e o e J e - ea V. Part between lljyer & Lake 9 l - - L " " waeun nmcn. W63 St., NW0 39. ;4o 59 R H Qnunllo ,, WK` lllliag Liv-0 u, 3:, v 6, 7. a 0nd 9 .......... .3 West. Spence 815., Not. 1. 2, ' 3, 4, 6, '6, 7. :8; 8,10 11 & 12 Eat Spence St.,NoI.~ 1, 2,3, A K R '1 R R_l0l1&. 12 W 5% LIIZI J g,u 5. 4, 5, 7. 8,10 11 & 12 West Cedar - 5.,` Nos. 6, 7. 8, 9,10 and 11` . . . . . . . . . . Eat Cedar 80., Nos. 5, 6, 7, 8. 9. 10 and 11 . . . . . . . . . . West Elm Sn, Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,9, 10nd-ll . . . . . . .. Eula Elm Sm, Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5,6,7,8snd9 . . . . . . . . .. Broken . . . . . . . . . . Brokem. DIIITI LEVI I-U r------v---v,,,,,, No. 24,vt.......`......... Broken Ordnsnce.................. ? _ ..... -4 L` [U o - o o o O u o - :- %pfIs;.E_.. . 7...... North Back St_. plan 122 A N 1} . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . s n`l:?1'.'5i; """ '. 1o'7 N " 56 ..... 126 BELLE EWART (INNISFIL); L'ou 670 and 671, plan 96. . .. Pork Lots Arnold : plan No. 8 n IA--..J'I'I 1.! g YHurd St. plan 56 . . . . . . . n u AA IBIS IJUIAI Qsuvau nu rlwucu ..w. . 9, 10 and 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Front St., Lot No. .. . . . . . . . . . . 3 PBELPSTON (FLos). s Main su.w*1z*a ......... 7 T 3 0 VILLAGE OF SUDBURY (N0'I'1`AWASAGA). Geo. St ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 12 5 " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 17 5 " " E pt .............. .. 21 3; V}LLAGE OF WYEVALE (Tnw). E 37 E Lzucfri or me. W andNptE `TTHIQ 1` 90:13 Inn y . . . . . . . . ... -- s2oE;:... 13 828N55E ............ .. 22 szowg... ............ .. 7 Sl6E65S ............. .. 14 W}a.ndN52aE . . . . . .. 16 15 12 13 14 14 :1 - 20 28 20 16 152 VILLAGE OF BEETON. West Handrie St . . . . . . . . . . 119 BRADFORD. Matilda St . . . . . . . . East Muukoka St. . . . . . . . . . . . . IN B A RRTI%E ilda ............... 4 19 53 VILLAGE OF WASHAGO (N. ORILLIA). THEY USE ch.'d mggith of Centralll, II D an himoglf. . M W _l'ho;ro in aimonm in m;,c., den-r=~ "mu-d lIGH'l`SHIP fl. 52 '.rossoRo N'r1o. A St31NIDALE. - ARTHUR" CRAIG, VESPRA. TAY. 111 111 Ill ,1}! III 111 111 111 111 111 , 10 10 ~10` IIUUIIJUII will In` _ IIIIIEIU I --Pri|cilln Leonard in churciunun; 10 10 Treasurer. County Simcoe. J10 I6 11 12 10 17 um` _k "3 23. 1902 19 19 18 19 BY U`do , 21 ll 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 12 14 20 Centnlia, 11008 1% TEE 1t 11 43 10 . \nn 60 40 $6 Z5 `IV 70 EA `6 4 31 1s 43 443 37? 3 63, 7 32 14 12 12 71 .20 66 10 69 2 27 9 32 5 98 8 91 nan ' `There was no more sleep for any one aboard"`No.` 4 thatnight. and next day when the gale broke and the tender came alongside all demanded to be put `ashore at i once. The captain was as badly rattled as any of the others. They were guyed and ridiculed, of . course. but they stood so firm that the tender brought of! another crew. and they were relieved from duty. They were no sooner ashore than they got the bounce. Trinity board wanted no ' old women` or children in its service. The story got into the papers, and the men were a laughing stock for a week. .- At the end of that time there was an- other gale. {and the man and the boat appeared to the new crew twice in the - same_ night and `drove. them ashore. as I i ` er was passed -bottom up more than . 800 miles away. The same storm broke I I they had -the old. i _ a A third crew went out, and for two weeks the weather was tine, and the board began `to. prepare to remove the wrecks. Some progress had been made when a three days? gale set in from the north. and there were more wrecks than had been`known for ten years be- fore. For two days the lightship hung ` to her anchors. though having a signal. of distress out after the rst day, but when the gale abated she had - disap- ' peared. She; had been swept down channel and out to sea and a week lat- up and removed the wrecks, and there was no longer need of a light at the spot. -Trinity board would ` have none of the men back. though there were . eight or them to tell. the same grew- some story. but none or them repined overmuch. They had_ been driven ashore by a'specter.' but it had been a warning to save them from the rate that took the last quartet. T i He knows the smell of hydromel ' ' A8111 two and two were live: And hides it away for a year and a day In `his own hexagonal hive. out in the day, haphazard, alone. Booms the old vagrant hummer, With only his whim to pilot him `Through the splendid `vast of summer. He steers and steers on the slant or tlu ' `a co Like the end oft Vanderdecken: And there's never an unknown course sail But his crasy log can reckon. ` tn He drones along. with his rough sea-song, And the throat of a salty tar. A _ V This devil-may-care, till he makes his lali By the light of a yellow star. He looks like a gentleman, lives like a lord And works like-a Trojan hero; Then loafs all winter upon his hoard, With the mercury at zero; --In Songs from Vagabondla." A Sketch of Bliss Car-nan. Mr.- German belongs `to that smali group of Canadian poets whose wo_rlI has been recognized by the most `in- telligent critics to posess V_erY 13181 qualities both of form and imagina- ve rapge. He was born` at Freder- icton. N.B.. in 1361. End Was ed?-t` ed under Dr. Parkin at~the'Collcg1at `Institute, from which he entered thc University of New Drunswick..' HI gra.du=at.ed as an alumni gold medal- ist in 1884, and afterwards pursue(. his s'~tu-`dies at Edinburgh and 1181" van! Universities. He Studied lit for two years, but found more Con genial` work in journalism. In 189( he became a member of the stat! 01 The New York Independent, anc formed connections with the leading American magazines. He was. alsc associated in a. unique venture in Per- iodical literature in establishing the Chap Book. which had a brief bu1 brilliant existence. His first _V01- n ivnllnnfn `nnnrn was 0nt.lt18( 1:1-vslx UUV 21 83 414 E nn "25 128 890 403 485 546 On 305 138 33 5 36 `IPA 2'36 Illllly vl IV IDVVIDJ `OI-Havana n-cg --no-3-av On the afternoon or the. next day when we were charging the tort and Just as we came" under fire at about ` 800 yards I saw Flannigan reel out to one side and drop. the rst man hit. ` with a bullet through, himheart. I step- ped quickly to his side and asked it he were badly hurt. " The only reply was 'a_ smile `as he.iooked- up into my face and rolled over dead. The box was de-_ liverod as hjerequested." ` 5` ; ' i I- I nn 165 A suuom Premonition. _ In his autobiography. A sailor's Log. Rear Admiral Robley'D. `Evans relates a strange instance of [premoni- tion which atellow sailor had the night before the, attack A on Fort Fisher, in January. 1865. He says: -44111- I._.`l -.. I.--...I LL- 'l'I--I._L-_ _ 165 1&5 165 vuooouuq-g cnwvvu --up ` We had on board the Powhatan a ne young seaman named Flannigan. 2 who came from Philadelphia. . On the { night of the 14th of January he came to 4 my room with a small box in his hand I and said to me, `Mr. Evans. will you be ' kind enough to take charge of this box for me-it has some little trinkets` in it I --and give it to my sister in Phiiadel- i phia?' -1 asked him why he did not de- liver it himself. to which he replied, `I am going ashore with you_ tomorrow; and will be killed. I told him how] many bullets it required to kill a man in actionand in other ways tried to shake his convictions, but it was no use-`-he stuck to it. He showed no nerv- ousness over it. hut- seemed to regard . it` as `a matter of course. . I took the box and,atter making a proper memoran- ; dum. put it away among my things. 'ut\.. 4.1.- .JL............ .0 5|... ms;-4 plan 70 tax 1- C nlvv vwld In The captain s wonld;h'av`e given the f man a good dressing down for his silly e notions only that the boat had actually been heading to windward in the teeth 1 of a gale which ., no - ship could have made an inch of. way _again_st. Being positive of this-and not being able to explain it.- he couldsay little or noth- ing. It was agreed between=them..how- ever. that nothingshould be said to the other watch when it turned out. and they went on duty without- knowing that anything out or the `way had hap- pened. While carrying the aair out with pretended indifference. Captain Crox was. as a matter of fact. pretty thoroughly upset over it, and on turn- ing-in he found that he could not go to sleep. He had been lying in his bunk` and turning the. matter over in `his mind for an hour or `so and the gals was still bowling and the lightship bouncing about when he realized from the movements of the watch that they had been hailed. He was out of bed and on deck just as onewot them had lighted a port tire. and you can judge or his teelings when he saw the former 'scene reacted. There were the yawl and the man, and the boat `slowly forged past and disappeared to wind- ward. Three pairs of eyes saw her this time, saw the bound victim and the terror and despair on his face, and it was absurd to think it a delusion. The lightship had been hailed. as before, and one oi thewatch had thrown a rope which landed fairly. across the yawl. ffVI_-..- -.-.. _- ...-..- _I--.. A-.. _;_._ ___ now. I .It s nothing that`: hapnened AS5013; sir. Did you take `notice that the craft \ was driving right in the. teeth or the gale? It wasn't alive man in that boat. She was going to windward with :1 ghost. `and I'd give the bit I have in the bank if I'd not seen her." ` an n, a ,,, 41.- thut` manner and otplty for tho victim J when his mate touched him on th am ' and` shouted "In his ear; I 11-; n , _AA-.l_ _II LI.- "It _I `win ashore, captggln. all the money in England would not bx-the me to set foot on this deck again." ` I What's the mattenwith you? wan called in reply. "It's only a bit of shore vtllainy that we must report to the text- .I._ II . ` TC!` Bonny . 7 ` helped A small stlnglen bee is found In `the which (tate of Slnaloo. andin Topic. The hon- name V ey otthese been In not great In qua.nt1- er ob: ty, J: darkcolored, vqry liquid and In ` nectio ,so.ld -not to crystallize. . Another . po-, 1`- cnllarity of tho? honey 1|` thnt 1t.hu no; decidedly tour or ..t_nrt tute.j-and on .` this account It_1o much sought u_ v'1`hO_ `$.h"99' L . . w -' -omww `O15 annuals ` The` awuthy b ee is a bnccaneet. A burly velveted rover. ._ ` I Who loves the booming wind In his en` ' As {to all: the seas of clover. i the _, 3 ; Through 3 - 1 the , there : to ` drones 1 makes` ialrl . I lord, ! like -a I nun. M... mornnrv at zero; } . ` I that small ! whose work I the. in-. possess very high`: qualities imagine.-1 tive He Freder-Q 1861, and educat.- ; Parkin atthegcollegiate 1 which the Brunswick- He-1 alumni gold medal-5 ist afterwards pursuedi at and n'ar-it studied law! two more con-i journalism. 1890 the of 3 and? loading was also venture in per- . establishing. the; brief buti vol-i ume of collected poem was cntitledi `;`Low Title on Grand Pre," `and up-,l peared in .1893. Since then he has; published, "Behind the Arras," al vfurth-er collect-ion; Songs from Vag- a.bon~dia.," in collaboration with Richard Hovey, and .``More Songs, From Vagabondia," Mr. Carman-'s verse is -rema.rkab_le for its lyrical; quality, and it` breathes the broad optimism of a. spirit -`disciplined hol stoicism,`-but in close fellowship with g L nature: of one who loves to face keen 1 --- --3-bl-I .--`.3-I QIIB rain flvf`. \f_hg I .-TA [wait-or the gohnd, pirate. crew, - J - With 1101: .a- `soul to deplore him, He steers for the open verge of blue ` with the tumy world before mm. d ` His imsy sails abroad on the wind Are shlvered with fairy thunder; On a line that sings to the ght 6! his 1 \ wings ` ` ` '1`here s not a soul In the` garden `world T But wishes, the day were shorter ` When Mariner B puts out to sea With the wind In the proper quarter.- ac {rues uue nqxuswneuc putcuea; Then hattenshis st re or pelt galore _ Under the tautest hatches. He woos the Poppy and weds the Peach, Invelgles Datfodllly, And then like a tramp abandons each For a gorgeou8....Canada. Lily. . _0r; so,Vthey say! B-uVt I .'have my donbtl, For the owers ai'e only human, And the valor and gold of a vagrant bold Were always dear to woman. ' And that is why, when he comes to die, He'll have an easleregentence Than some one I know who thinks just no. And then leaves room for repentance. ve: hexagonal He= names the pom of the" nonynocka. `And-levies on poor sweetbrler; He drinks tho whitest wine of Phlox, And. the Rose in his desire . 71-Ie hahgs in the Willows a night and I * day: i . He rie the Buckwheat patches; Than hnffnnn hi: fnro of no]! oninrn He dares to boast. along the coast, . V The `beapty of Highland, Heather; How he and she, with night on the sea. Lay out onothe `hills together.` His morals are mixed. but his will is xed: He prospers after his kind, , And follows an instinct compass-sure. I The philosop_hers call blind. ` i He never could box the compass round: He doesn't know port from starboard; ` But he knows the gates of the Sundown Straits. T Where the choicest goods are harbored. He never could see the Rule of Three, ' But he knows -a rule of thumb ` I Bette:-than Euclid s, better than yours, 3 Or the teachers yet to come. ` I He -pllfers from every port of the wind, From A rll to golden autumn; But the moving ways of his mortal dun Are those his mother taught him. . I WHO IUVU3 DU IQVU nut i see. winds and sea rain, and watchi racing tides`, notes the sunlight on: hills and all that vagrant beauties op- I en to the wayfarer, but above as}! loves the good-fellowship of his own 1. 3.. .`l kin-d. The London Chronic!-e Zsays:- Sir! .Sandford Fleming. C.E., ranks as one ' of Canada's grand old men, al-` though his acquaintance with the Do- ` minion only dates from 1845. He- was born at Kirkcaldy, in Fifeshire, in 1827, and there learnt the business- of surveying and - engineering before going to.Canada to join the engineer- -ing staff-of the Northern Railway. -He was chief engineer of the Inter- colonial Railwayuring its construc- tion, and his name is intimately con- nected with the great Canadian rail- way system that branches `in air dir- ections from ocean to `ocean. In 1880 Fleming. as he then was, netired from the service of the Dominion Government. In 1879-he submitted 9, report to the Canadian Government, advocating the construction 0! the Pacic all-British cable to Australia, and New Zqaland. and at the Colon- ial , Confer -ences "of ` 1887 an'<!-.-1894 helped `largely the great project} xwhich in now` nearing completion; The 3 name of 'Sir4~S_o.ntord'='F;`leming. will ev- % or occiipy an 7 honored place in] `com ` ne__t:t_ion'with(.the~;i,ncepVtion of the-Pa "Phi `inscription in {he Canafdiani arch in London in "Canada, Britain ; VGra.nn.ry. God Save Our King anda Queen)" Wpich the tofks over. home.` will fno? doubt regard as a. beautlml *ax1mplo,~.0.!f.Ca;t1Edlan .th'r.m% and .19y-f1 : -.a:.i.~.~`.-.. .;.'a.1a.x.a;s.i~_;._.1s;1a...a1uin.u:an. . - l gun a. uuc Lulu mugs I0 Elle 1-3115, C \ wings He` makestor the land `of wonder. `in spa: Auyeuf mmuan. II I? `II $1IIII\II1II _UlIl II V CY` _ C iombmaa;-nolxovmo Ontgxjp avcuqn - .19.`;-*u`n.&q-_--nun 6, an cgiodn 'l_`h1-VII : and Loyalty.- . '#'\rv9' Sir lsadfdrd Flaming, 0.3. By Bus: Carmnn. 'rim nomnV %;nvmm COUNTY OF SIMCOE, By virtue ol I ivsrrsnt issued by " '10 W _ - the Warden of thecounliv of Sim 1! ' . - ooe, hearing date the Fifth dsy of August, in the year of our rd Nineteen Hundred snd Two, and to me directed, commanding me to levy upon the several lends mentioned and described. being in the County of Simooe, for or resre respectively due thereon, together with my costs, I hereby givenotice pursuant to the Assessment -Act end Amendments tllmleto, that unless the said erreers end costs be sooner paid, I on ` Tuesday, l8th dayef November, I 902 7 cou1i:*rir"`o"r9Lsmcom j, Treasurer's ox Lands V IN ARREARS FOR TAXES. an ins wmnour me! on ;sun on own. HF IIIZIU IIUIIF OI one 0 0100` III one DlIiUl.'llUUl.Ig Db IIIIU \IVlIIU savanna, in the Town of` Barrie, proceed to cell by Public `Auction so tnpch of the said loud: as may A be sutcient to dlacharsle '9 taxes and all lawful charges incurred in and about that sale and [collection of the name. ` m|_- :-n_._:__ 1-..- -__ __..-._.___1 1-..---` ..I...-.. -91.---Ann _at the hour of one o olock in t.he'uftex-noon. at the Court House, -.. .|_,_ m-_.. -: u-.._._ ____ --.1 .- _-II I... `D..l.l:... Annnn an 1301150510!) OI F119 name. 7 , The following lots are patented (except where otherwise htataed) : | `FLOS ('1-uni: & A Truly Remarkable Dog. One of M. Renan's dogs, called 00- rah, was known as the guardian angel- for. miles around. Were there a Mont- yon prize for canine kindness Corah would have deserved it. Her particu- lar mission was to amuse sick child- ren, Whenever a. child was ill V at Treguer Corah was sent for. Know- ing on what mission she was called, she. went bounding tothe house where the Tittle sufferer lay and gum- boled about its bed until she caused. hearty laugliter. V Annf-`man 11114-1; u-155`. w--L2nL ...L- ..__ aAcu,I 1, land ' II UCJ - ` J b Another duty with which she was; charged was to prevent _the young, children of. the fa.mily,- of which she- looked on herself as a member, going: near the re in their mother's ab-' sence. She was `a; sweet tempered. creature, .but as soon as a, child she -was left to watch ran near the fi-re she became a, v_ixen. She `was sent also with children living` near the quay to see that they kept from the wa-ter s edge. No child _conde d to her guardianship. ever came. to harm. When I read, as I often 'd`o, I of infants bein bizdly burned! or burned to dent, . I think it a. pity that the breed of Corah was; not carefully perpetuated. The master, in memory of her, called a. churning little pup after "her. - (`|....-.L nu.-- --L_L 1- _....."9A. 21- V, I LIWUIV KIUCI I161. Corah was what is rarein "dogs-- very discreet. She `was always-. a,3k-. ing. leave "(with her eyes) to 'do such things as, when M. Renan was _ suf- fering from illness,` jumping into his , bed and crouching down at the back to warm it. -She was wont to sit for hours motionless on a. '(Sha.iJ` look- ing, at him waiting for him to tell her to jump into bed.--Lon'don Truth. ` Puurh Sponge` and llnu-brush. V Cats large and small make the most careful toilet of any class or animals, wxceptlnx some or the opoesums. Ll- ons and tigers wash themselves in ex- actly the same manner as the cat, wet- ting the dark. India-rubber-like ball of the fore foot and the inner toe, -and _pase1_ng it over thence and hehlndthe ears. The tooth: thus it the some time. 3 race mouse and brush, and the rough: "tongue combo thereet of the body. 51 52 change was made in the crew, He was called a. reliable. steady going man. and his men were steady. sensible tel- lows; The change was not one to re- :ioice'over. No. 4 was a stout bulk of about 800 ton burden, with a "comfort- able berth for a crew, but out there the water was in constant motion, and the danger of collision at night or during a fog was something to harass the mind. It happened to be tairish weather for the rst three days. but on the fourth a gale sprang up. and the'hulk was set` bouncing in a terrible way. It wasn't that the sea was so. heavy; but thattha waves swirled. around the old wrecks in such a way as to produce a cross sea and a terric jumble, and the groan- ing. straining hulk seemed to be bob- bing about on a bed or yeast. II-IL- _...&AI-as twang lwintl an lrIuI 53 38 I'll` Ti 42 10 ll -12 13 14 15 16 17 118 19 n 01 .vv tjiy The Oonnteu-L-You've no Idea how. embarrassed the count was whemho pt-oposed,tome._ . _ M _ . The Deu-_ Friend-I heard It took con. olderabje ot_ your father`: meme: to my .. . . _ _- . vvcj it D 163% ILIC .2-3.1: v:r1ton-Yes, But I thought I never sxould succeed In convlncmg herthst I waeL%wrons-~Brr!vn was ` let lloro than Halt W37. - Dashaway-Well. old man, did V you make up with your best girl?` - " l'Vl.'.....-`An ;\74mi' `In-.5 f. 4.1.`-..._|.A. Q'- _=".`_-- V One day 30 years agoit `was reported to the Trinity board. which has charge of all the lights on the coast of Great Britain, that a shoal had madein the English channel about nine miles due east of the Lizard. At the spot indi- cated there had been 30 fathoms of wa- ter ever since a British ship went to sea.` and the board of course argued that there had been a mistake. It was a ilshingcraft which reported the shoal and found only 14 feet of water over- it. and a craft was sent out at once to make an oicial investigation. What a had happened was this: It was a bowl- der strewn bottom. and two or three old wrecks had drifted together and piled up on each other until a danger- - ous obstruction had been formed. It was as if a great rock had suddenly been heaved up from the bottom. and the board must guard against the dan- ger without delay. IIII.n_A_ _-_.._ -..- 41.- .:n_-..e- '.n____ &` III Ell JJIIIIICVVVWIII VCl I-`\Il 6,7a.nd8ptE . . . . . 8 part Broken . . . . . . . . . . N Harviesm, No. 43 Uonceaaion line part W .. . NLavincours St., No. 119 pb N Lavincourt St., No. 224.. N Lavinconrt 83., No. 107.. N Lavincourt Sm. No. 132 . Con. line No. 38 pt . . . . . . . N Mary Sn, plan 406 No. 5 0 part W 4} . . . . . . . . . . . . Q e e Q Q e e I e U Q o Q e I e I e -e E;,.... .... ...... Not Patented............ . 1'v'$ '1>}.`:2ai.:2aE1'.'.'.'.'.'. '.'. .". .".".'." Not Patented....'..'... ' E.....`. ...... 14% E ................... .. P Q . . 1-5 Not Patented . . . . . . . , . . . . . 19 Not Patented . .. . . . . . . . . . . . Not Patented . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21' Not Patented . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23' Not Patented. .' . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Not Patented . . . . . . . . . . .. 19 Not -Patented . . . . 20 Not Patented...... . . . . .... 2? N at Patented . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Not Patented . . . . . . . . . . . . . o - a . u an u I Q c C I O U O I on Not Patented . . . . . . . . . . . . . Not Patented . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Nmwg .............. H Island "A or Clan-is. . . .. 50 50 100- 200 200. 200 80 100 100. 200 .a Patented. . . Patented . -Patented. . . . . . . . . Not Patented Not E`.....A........ ... . . . . .. Rat Island pt. . .` . . . . . . . . . . N 20 W i . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "A" E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noirth Homewood Ave Nos. A__.IE `Dose:-iptibn. W ofEununpocvoooooc E9 . . . . . . Weu60N . . . . . . . 'TDl.lllU - o o o c - n u o o U u o on No1;th_Homewood Ave. Non. __-_In__LI'I1 Broken ..... . . II `II J-IVIIIC IV IIV\C V4-and5 .. ___-l_ `l"I'___ ___- -1 -w- vv -v-vw-- -----V v Thirty years ago the diver : dress was not what it is now. nor could men handle explosives under water as to- day. After two or three vain attempts to clear away the "wreck: the work was lett tor a storm to Vaccompllsh, and meanwhile llghtshlp No. 4 was moved around from Mount : bay and anchor-' ed near the spot and noticelglven _to mariners. `Captain Crox had been In command of No. 4 for two" years. hav- ing three men under" him, and no nag the waning. I-..-.L.__ f-_I..._ _ - IL ORILLIA Nomngx (D1v1sIoN). soummm mvxsmx. IOIIIOOIOOI 2 -3 A..- `T-.. NOTTAWASAGA. MATCHEDASH. UM-I BUUUB VI-I It Uvu vs gunning The watches were divided so that two men were on duty for four hours while the other two slept. `That night it was the captain's watch from 8 till midnight. There .was but little to be done after the lights were displayed. ".5. lookout was kept. and port res and rockets were at hand to warn vessels away and signal the shore. The gale had piped up strong. with a drizzle of rain and` a dark night. and one could not have been more uncomfortable oil the cape in a winter's gale. It had ' come 10 o'clock when a sudden hail ' reached the lightship. The captain was art and his mate forward. but he knew. at once that the bail cameetrom sea-A ward. It was not so dark but that one could have seen a ship 300 feet away. even though she had no lights aboard. As soon as port tire was ignited the sec- lighted -up for hundreds of feet around in a ghastly way. and both men." looked. for the craft they supposed to be near by. They looked in vain until - the signal` was nearly nished. Then a--. -ship's: yawl. driving right up"-in the " teeth of the gale. have into` view. She. " ._ was without mast or. sail or ears. and the only gure in her`satvin_.th,e<.__ster'n.`,i sheets. and. 'his arms` and; legs 1 were L . `bound. around. with ropes. ~p,'1.`he an ., `j;ws_s bareheaded` and s`sj`a`*"-lis`n' and as\_ he droro_.;past;svithin #9)?! the rtil=th.er 4l.0k:,. is-hllisres. -and; the` ago a` 4 ` "Ins. d'etlIe!n';sbiI_ _ ..... . ,