Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 6 Jul 1905, p. 6

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wou havq son-1 of-amt ques of t the ta mi .fec_tFJ sa E d J6 lie ve an you ` und not {gain Irigh te-r-i gagi ,cd a ,Of a the prec ~.-I V011 ` D083 -st r-01* )1 `tutu lyulyuwv -- __V_ ` vsuttio'.e|n`t Iquantities wtaas * at shell. _The -ground tib- iooanut shell wvltlhl a small .0`! the original '3*ib.rs the cellulose ` out com- 5 wonderful matetial-pong `pr;-tg4 tinv turn have mayi ve` {elf zed .W as I110!) posi to and f imtuo ooloriung dyes. and other pro- perties have been discovered which imake it one Of the most useful sub- ` sbaunces the earth pr\`odu=oe`e.' `It will add thiouisanuds at delivers `to the crop receipts of I-a.rme.1js. Whl-Osh is almust "emu-elyTcleo.r gain. since the pnoduot 1 utilized is only "that wvhiolh was calm j sldered wonthl-es=s.-8oie-mtifio Ameri- * ' M `"-`--"'>" . ` was nmuovm. or CANADA 3301! was acamnu Ln: 5 1-nonemz. Uaamo L The House of Commons Committee of. Agridulture has" adopted without 3 d.sai:uLing voice the tollowiu. Tre- solutuot an the subject of the: em-` baxgc. now_maintained on Canada? `cattle trade with the UnitedK'mg- \ (`D111 0 V V K ' LL- -_!_!_.. -8 .25 Ann,` ' Sud . plgi I mo `'3 Jfulmogclu. Flu rm. Flo, In Tackle and Go: S Good . M npffdn on 5.1%: HULL! - ."That in the opinion of his com- mittee the embargo on Car iian oat- tie entering the United 1' .gdo'm is most unfair and unjust. ` it is a. publication to the world at large that the Board of Agriculture con- ; siders it unsafe to permit Canadian ` cattle to come into contact with. the t herds of the United _ Kingdom whereas it is a well known `fact that in no country other "than Canada can herds be found so free, from disease. __.I_ `L_ Sport! nfun offoul dollars or man. % Comalks; 3 I-I\4C\D*3 IIV &\I\QDl\Q hi`! .9. . 3 but tugs-vv:-- "That the scheduling 0} Canada the Imperial Government is consider- ed from a financial point of yiew. a. serious loss to the Canadian cattle` trade. the farmers and `the s'book* raiaers of the Dominion. ,._4-_9_.| (1-; CQIKWVCW UOI U50 umI.QI&QI ` That action of the Imperial Gov-_ ernment is not justified by, .~che. facts of the case. it having been "clearly proved `that the disease of pleura-pneumonia has never existed in Canadian herds. ` ` n 1 ,;,__:9L9_.._' `I Y'|IV|l%$lIQOl dawn ~.-1! That in view of -such conditions ? the removal of Canada `from the schedule would be but an act at justice and should be strenuously- pressed. A . "That as the Dominion is astock- raising country and capable of pro- ducing a large and constant supply [of beef cattle. it is considered impor- , tantj to the Empire that no obstruc- u tions nor difficulties should be p1ao~ [ed -in the way of Canadian cattle` Vbreedersy which would tend to . de- Icrease the food supply within the . I`-nnuon .. UUUHBU LII Empire." CATTLE EMBARGO . would notice little `v'.1utV.the quiet w.a.- ` ter and the odd-looking column of .. _ 2..-.,5_r?.' .,Z3,J_1.!5\`.`~`J_8_:?1s'l..:;,i; R740:--p.v.f_ liuntlijgd i_{1j_lgs__ or-;n;'loz;___ea ma:-sec.ey crya di_reci;o'n iron the Jca:ta_`ract`" is: a i'ro_ugh`=" ' and fibi'1oken,j`pla;teau. covered -Withvlow. forush and stunted" trees. `with`he_r;e' `and `there can out;-crop Off :som"ore' bia-Sal-tic` mick all` `f`:ho`rou_ghly uninter- "esti-n'g. _The7herFoage ispbut `faintly blue. It is a" hazy . ,half-`tone land- scape. ,wanti*ng'r_.V_in olelaroutl lines in every * dirjec'ti-on.` and` lacking ' ' an`.)ovc- ` everywthingelse that element we_al- V w.ay,s unconsciously seek in -`a naturepw picture-lite. The, absence of` `this produces in the mindx a. feeling of Inn-limess and often of i%er.'Across this solemn scene appears a river that in .t,lo'cd-time is perhaps halta . mile wide. It a detail man were fol- lowings down one of its banks `he smoke ahead."-As this column was . appnoachedl he would expect to see` ` the river banks bending and the wa- cnwtlagration. and might glance to the right and left to demote the direction taken.- But the panorama chnannges as `he gazes. The river is no more. And there. where it should be is -only the brown plain. as lonely. =3-rush-covered and monotonous as ever. One mu-st go -twenty miles farther ibe-fore the vanished water . and the surface of the land again c-ommingle. `before it will be possible t-o walk along the: bank in company with the river. So sudden and startl- ing is the -transformation._ . Ir-__.A.._.... LL- ...!II.L.u n avnnslpm Eng ter flowing away to one sideof the '1 [LIB Iii! loll`! uhinn uuuu ongqv---wu--_ Meantime the pillar of -smoke has resolved itself into .a dense mist forced upward in terrible puffs from a yawning gash stretching, directly across the` bed of the` river. '1\he tearful_~a'.)yss is every`. second aw-al-. slowing ithousajnds of tons of .green and white water, and belching up blasts of mists that rise hundreds of feet into the air and hurty_ away` with `the -wind as if rejoicing ~at their escape. from the inferno be- hundred feet below. this entrapped river is fighting its way. between sheer walls of -black rock toward a. marrow cleft in the eastern wall whence it escapes,.eoaming and boil- ing. through the zig-zags and curv- es of a deep gorge leading off to this delivering _chasm and looking down upon. the tossing waters. ever pressed from behind by other floods gateway. and perhaps the most pm- minent mental sensati-on is that of thanktulness. tha't'eve,n in such a grim and ghastly w-ray nature has provided a means by_ which the fear- ful slit of a throat `above that .has swallowed the stream can disgorge p it again without causing an over- whelming catastrophe. ' IIIL- 1'7-_L-,_ __LA___;_ _`_A__|1 low. And -somewhere. nearly four" struggling out of the narrow folackp , . . The North`-West has saved the i- tnaotrion inane or two previous years. and it looks as it was '-to do so` again. The srospeots appear to 'be 611 that cool he deixfea. Rains and a warm weather have stimulated ood growth. and at`present the m ioa-1 uons point to anaearly and heavy,` lln :CInIds f\`Vm-l%l s Wheat ' X % Supply. u;5\l KINIBCIQIIQI-IA\JI9D vv o -w---w-- tonnd to bontaim not o.nl'y`eellu1o's'e( to be used for protecting iromlaid ve.ase*l*s. -arnd preventing them tuom - -sinking in ciase there. shall is'*punc-e tiured below the wiate-rline. but also` a. material Lor ismokeiessp _poIW-A 'de'r. dyuaunite. and other high `ex-I piiosaives. tine -art paper. varnish. ko- A dak `films. oar-(ooox packing. ller. Mwterproof_ cloth. linoleum. imitation 7- silk. -patent leather `finish. face pow- der, ssilioete packing. and. a hunidrehil t ' other 'by_-products the despised oom-' stalkewas never `dreamed t'o contain. ` T-he ounter lining. that which 0011- l ""`it-aims. the pith. is made into. 9, V a'u.'b- - stance which `is used to adultetmte our, also as -a oat-tle food. 0. ipbultry I mhteiner. and egg ipnodusoer. Some at it will be imade up -into` `oand.y.I "pb.r`t l The Viotoria_ohatvaraot should. be visited at least twice before one ip competent to pass an opinion upon it.` When the river is in `flood, July. the scene is simply terrible. One sees `nothing but an enormous sheet of water disappearing into .the bowels -1 L1... ..._..1.1. .-.:A.I. .. ........... Al! .-_8 vv Iolvvn. I-I-Ilartlvvnno Acne Iouvwr ,--v .-7.. --... of the earth. with a noise as out mount-aims telling upon one another. while from the awful gash comes back in tierce gusts and swirls the foaming breath of tortured. element `below. But in December, -when-. the water is low. the edge ot the ca- taract shows as `a long._ creamy film of lovely lace; the rising mists flow- ing soitly a.way_ throughthe little rain forest below the cave:-n s lip; the gigantic vault itself "coco-mes a w.onde_r'lulspectacle. a `dream of neu-A tral tints. a cave of r'oea.u"ty. Far down in its daxkwdepths the wateirs, gliding along the rocky- walls and, bending gracefully "around the cor- ners toward the narrow_outlet. pass. gaily and laughingly ,to' freedom. For a time the demon of the catar- act is sleeping.-'1`he June Century. I-LIV ULGUILUUB IJ1 Up DHHULHI 951-1.` mates the wheat ,-area of -the -.Pro- vinoe at .2i648.588 acres. oats.-1.D31- 235. and -barley. 432.29z54,_uaor.es. The increased araa. uznder crop over last year` is: Wlieat; 281.153 acres; oats 87,666 acres. barley, 71,294. acres. The total inoroagq in allgrauns mid.- e: vorop, ia,884,.z98_:. aorgs. _ .norr_ep- pondents are un-ammous 1n.:repo1'.tm_ than nrnn nrnnnnnfn an fhci Enrichi- 3Imd'zI"sf ;e"d71;3-2{ivm;\; Hi t1"eF)'1-'.i&_ the crop pyospoots as qhe Fo_rightA ever ex rionoed at the date. ' 'Iu4\ - I J.-`inc-n `ll.`-:'C... An 0 cf...` .--. v`.-`a \".-`- ' 17-" Tge Manitoba Crop Bulletin eati- rnni-nn O-ha .u.vI-nnnf Japan A`? #114: TD-n. over tax nuuuluu an 'I.uu: 'mu.u. 7. ` -'1`he- "adieu Paoitzo has. credited with a. statement that. item present 9. earanoes, .he yz-eld_. of wheat in a, Oanadathis year mllebe one hundred and `twenty -five mil- lionlbuahels. The largest oropt hereto- fore reached .in Oannadugwaa `in. 1903. when a crop of about ninety-five -million bushels was gathered. T` nman Tnnl nrnllnhn vfhn Aron . ry was xiv * c i. Q QLVQUIVBVH, WU BLIGLI LIE V0 VG JIVI-`ll WIIUIIID equal to that of one-sixth at the United States, more than - double that: of Great Britain. and exceeding. that o4Argentina._1`he only countr- ies that will lead us in/wheat. out- side; of the United States. will be Russia. France. India. Italy. and Hungary. It. anticipations arc. rea- liaed Oanadh".s..whea-t crc this your V -will equal` that of the nited `Sta- tea` in the , sixties. (when `the p<;ula.- tictn ot,'thI_I:t- 0 mm f 4.7 'IIlllllUlI UIIDIIUII YVCIB 'G%l.lUl\la } VI! Canada `does roduoe `the grog pr,e_diote.d_vve shall ave ua yield a!` nun-nl nihnf nf unnA-|ivl'h- nf Ihhn '1`h.eM (1liuii ber.~o-`4 Oommo`ri_:IT ` a '.x"'. .` I Spots Before the Eyes--Drop: sy Indicated-_-"Cured by` V. ` "Bu-ju, The Kidney ` Pill. Drorptey is the entect: of `had blood. `and bad bkodd is oa-usedjby 'dera'nS_"5 kidneys. The sewers -of the foody be-T dome clogged, and uric acid and other toreigm elements are t thrown; from the system. Bu-J e , Kidney Pill. the bestikidney muly on the market. -heals and strenigthens the kidneys; enabling" them to per- form their important .func.tio}ns. Read what a_ resident hf Ihamesville J says: 4 HI 1.-.... 4...1.`..... 4.1.--- Tsnvna nf Irn.I1l' aaya . V "I have taken three boxes of your Bu-Ju Pills and feel greatly bene- tited by their use. %'l,`hey ihave en- tirely removed the pains from my; back. and the spots` before my eyes have entirely disappeared. My ankles were l'.aa.dly_ awpllen. but I now .feel 'q*u.i-to well. ' - urmr 1u'-vIl'1\T'lI". 7 ` Thamesville, Ont)`; Smoh speedy relief and cure are` within the reach of all similarly 9.1- ` tlioted. Bu-Jn, The" Kidney Pill. is sold by druggists generally. Ask for it. and do not be put off with sub- stitutes. Nothing else is as good as- Bu-Ju. mm or muons CASE Utica Herald-Despatch. One of the most interesting cases in -legal history `is the attempt of Ar- thur Orton to grove himself t.he missing Sir Roger Charles Tichbome and heir to the familytitle and es-' tates. Orton had partisans who be- lieved in him to the end. and an- other claimantedied recently in an Australian insane asylum. of which he-had been an inmate since 1869 under the name ofWm. Creswell. Philip Sidney,` an Australian bar- rister, wbotried in 1895-6 to prove that Creswell was Tichborne. in-the Westminster Review. gives_conclus- ive reasons for `believing he wasnot, and that the decision of the Austral: ian courts against him , in 1_897 was entirely correct. Incidentally he of- fers what seems areasonable goin- tion of the Tichborne puzzle! It was that Sir Roger Tichb-orne_owvas not lost in the schooner Bella. .'1\hat vessel, with her name changed to the Osprey. as the result .of a mu- tiny ot the crew. reached MelI`oourne_ * in July. 1854. Tichlborrm became ac,- quainted with Oreswell, and possibly with Orton. and told one or both, but more probably Cresswell, about is ftnmily and affairs. Tichborne-died in 1860. and his papers and efectspass- ed to Cresswell. Orton and Cresswell were chums" at Waggaywagga in 1864-5. In -1865 Cresswell was so) riously ill in a-hospitai and was re- ported. dead.` Them Orton a`pspeare'.d D as the Ticha`aorne,.elaima.nt. -----A-- --___-..-P.I.. ` jjj Figure: taken. tnom _the__late.at of- tioialcgpaup . ot Ruaska. ;the population .9_t then, Oza.r'su dognainj. `tip '38 135,640,921. ;Thi..s totat oompris 37 _tr1v'aea_a'nd -na.tiaraljtiea.. The Bus- aians oomprisq `two-thrrds of `the po- pulation of the empire,` but an some outlying districts are m_ the minor-' ity. In the,Ca.uoa.aua there are only '01 `Au. `numb Dunnhnvn-0 nIl\nl\iIlI fh glans. J.xnUl.`U_Lluuu uuu unlugzuu.-Luann are 50 per oent. of Russians: in Gene`. tral Ama. 8.9. The smallest - ce_m:t- - agent: Russians is found in `t e gov- ernments pm ,-_the Vistula. Poland. where. there are but 6.`? spar cent. of I `Russians. _ A >T "I|A .i>nIv-cl nnvrn-71!` (If inhnhitnnt GD ELI`! A-Lvnnwvnam V v . w AAJQUHOQ-c The inference" seems reasonable that Orton obtained much of this knowledge either directly from `Fich- borne or through Cresswell. His.h-a- Toitual drunkenness, ending in` in- curafole insanity by 1869, kefyt Cress- well from `expos`ing*0rton effectively. althought the mention of Orton's name years afterward roused him/to angry denunciation of Orton ass. ,9. scanmdrel, and `brought from his clouded ='ora.in- other abusive remarks about Orton and his doin -at Wagga [Waga. , A A. _ No other Tichborne claimant `is likely to appear. Nome could pos- sibly be under 76 years of age now, With the death ot_-the lunatic.` Wil- liam Gresswell; iii athe Paramatta asylum. the record in the Tfohif)-ome case seems to have been -finally. chosed._. - :..u-.;, `rapidly that only three: `gallon-s oil `the consvtruicution oi`. ships in, Hussite. Moo ismall to furnish the cellulose `trying he `find ha. substance thsa-t lpidely when wet o.-nu 13. Viva; ......-. It is p!'B`.0ftiO>&ny free iron: dens`:-gem!` ot lire. very sloiwlly. a , Withi ' greet ditticu-lty when c4ompressed..In. France experiments made by firing a. 10-inch shot through a_ mattress out a cellulose demonstrated `that the )!-i"o- ers came t'061th81' gsnd swelled no water passed through the aperture. and in a -short `time the` shale cvns closed entirely. cellulose was first :used in shi.p'bu~il'ding in 1884. but it obtained iavor so mpidly that -in 1890 the French introduced it into some :!or=ty vessels of `their navy. and in `the suns year its use was or- dered as a miewns ad! protection in Holland. Japan and Greece. as :'w.el1 as in our `American navy. It -Wasp soon demonstrated that the supply. of C00-Oalnillit in -the world was mar demanded for warships -alone. and) search` was;-made not more plenti- ful and cheaper vm:a:t.e:r-i.a~l. The Clamp Shiplbuilding Company s-pent years in" would serve the same purpose. and at last discovered it in such, e"oun d- ance that the qjuestion of supply was horever settled. Gor.nstv-alk. which `the 1ar~Iner~ has been thrioiwingt awa-y Ito _wva:e`te. was bound to contain in its `Pith the very `lies-t m-a.terial~ in the world tor melting cellulose. Al- most immediately derangeanents were made -tocbuuild large factories` indiffereint ports at the .country where corn was the staple --crop. Three such tactories have already` been `established in this country. and ` two in. Europe. This -corn pith. for 1 B8848 ccornsid-cred worthless. has ibeem` -tounnd only cellulose ___...1 A-.. .......M-.e.&-Inn irnnlnlnkl LI Luc,uu.uuuuuu uuvxu uxu uung :l3`4y'per cent- Russians; among the tgi-toes of Armenians. 'I`e}z-.t-a.rs.,~Geo_r- gzana.Imeretia'ns and Mnngrelsthere ai-A um um hut- of Rnmiimns: in Cans: nusszans. _ The total number of inhabitants classified as .Russians, is 83,933,561, The remaining ipopulagion is divided into nationalities and tribes varying in size from 7.000-.000 Poles dorm to. a ver few. hundreds of other use `ti it'ies.' _'_~; .' Further , intormp.-t-iqni -- oonee rn-nf W V #3415 .4.ann|.n n\C- `Ruin-in, sit Lbvuallhlvua _ _ _ Further intorma.-t~i_qn -- oonoernfa the. ple of Russxa. .as. glean `trom n: census. has `been sent the late. dapartlgant ECO! Qn5u119N_I~ (}g;q;;g_the32% at` r_6.;;3;Iqrt.. .111 131: com: .mun_roa;t:om\. ' ; f I .=ul?\.6Iu: Dnnni'a*nc,~."".` A mu.moa.uonwne says; A . - t ` 3'01 ,-the Russians.` 30.6 per cent. '01 the :m.h-le8:. and 9-3 `ml ~.nt- :01-the -~ can B34$dthWrg%`: ?hI V :,9;,.-.`.3 `nal wpaaw tows}; 2 -: I ` "Ox.thp3i _x_. %.i23;q4f - 5147 fa.i.'th-*_&nB._ '`orth9 oj 3204 pnmrnxoma Z?ro THE 'rrrx.n: AND ESTATES or ucaaonum. Swollen %Aukles`. Latest Census of Ru:/sis. VVM. 4MoKENZIE. WJomeh's Headaches le s. 'DT9i|: lby`. .d Lerarnged oody be- id re at .-J\; T` e: rumoy mgthens per- rns. LIDOSYHIE ly banq- nnlill 2|`- 9.?-AM ; mmsnv e . Gofns and |skofs of all kinds in stock or mad toorder. Robes, Grape and all Funeral Requisites furnished Orders by Telegraph or otherwise promply attended to. a..,o.' DOLMAGE, Mwnager, smud. lslaam Works andslmv Room. Gollier-sl..Barrie E Scot\t s Bookstore, Barrie. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAADOI v. -. _ v , _ommomooo 3 7Roi'na{n, `A athgtins; `1%1i$oq.8o9 :_ P: rotest- % %:L-a::1_t:..3_,_2.*!`_5_6fv-Ail` "nfan Grqgorfans F " - orc- L____xftfha:f '|G"'v I" due- G. G. SMITH U ND E RTAKER, . No. % A QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOON : If %y`o_1i vihnV.._rfg;Qney-makiag"" fahine this is your opp ortunig It` may never come again. , . ' 7' . . Remethber "we sell ftihev genuine machine. Do not let a e t deceive you by telling yo u they {have an imitation just as roof at; 8 4' . , ' V A V ."'"" s -_ . ,. I `K , `If you contmplabe, using {ire fencing of any kind this season yo_u wgll sayevmoney cqnsultmg us. i , ouse leaninjgjme has cpme once more. We have 9. good sum,1y of A Our stock of, Builders Hardware and Mechanics` 131013 is the largest and best we have ever had. ' We keep a fulletock of Bee supplies. _ - Highest market price paid for Bees Wax. I1`_Vni I r~'..1-r~.. SEE SCOTT S NEW DESIGNS. Spring Housecleaning --Late hours and anxious pursuits, with immoderate eating, weakness, nervousness, and overwork or worry, is responsible for the alarming increase of headache. Women` are more subject to this ailment. than men. _ Their delicate` con- stitution and nervous temperament induces acondition of the system thatsooner or later brings on the periodical attacks of headache. Psveamn 'isthe} remedy of all others, for the complete cure of headache. It builds upthe nervous*syst`em- restores vitality, cleanses the stomach from all bile,` settles the nerves, starts the blood into thefp'ro' er channel-{and inmost cases the attacks can be warded o (`by careful .attention" in following directions. Don t1,destroy. thesystem` by frequent use of dangerous powders, that give only temporary relief.". Begin the Psvcuma p treatment _r_i_o_}_v_, `and fortify the system against attacks. fThis` is the only wayto; `perrnangerit1y di_sposeqi ~ of periodical r _ y PREPARE r-`or-2,---r hlixed Paihts, Alahestine and Kalsomine, Paint and Whitewash Brushes. And get your papering done before the rush. We make a specialty of Medium Price Papers. Best value obtainable . . . . . BARBIE AND s'rnoun. "` -- VAT REDUCED PRICES '...+ ramkidf ifmhine is ortunity, F? hers, ` man: 1 <=nIA'I%IT%<?%'% AI-I- ice 51V..'.:.3VV~`T-``.`V-.13";5.3"6.392 ; . rsosal hereditary morale- mfoleunen eoolesiastios. peratma lio- E'!"4,'1": `menu! ' _1jeig_g1e rs. 605.500,, `No.0 4. $50.00. JJULY 6th., 73? one,` 9; 4 won 011

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