Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 26 Aug 1915, p. 7

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ting \ ".1- Mall 1 _ad- ght F r."%Bosanko ro--ooI 0l-oo-Q 0 Oogtonl 0'0 -A I `L} J. 4I.4L .E\sJtab1ished Open day and chapel i: `rie, Ontario. Oo`0O200: ` `oO-OO200--OO O -O 0110 O I-- .L' L VAL]. J-LI.lAll_Ll~L UULL (AL A at `Barrie .. %.."10.35 a.m.' From Collingwood and Meaford, . . . . .. 12.30 pm.` \ l.'......... 1J.....-.J......,.. _ CRAIIGHURST, ONT. FOR RY; )"i*~1"<')`11`1".A.I" ` "" " and Midland via | short line 12.30 p.m. -_\ 131..-..- `n--- ..4...--,_ I TIMI`. TABLE THOSE who use Printing as a sales force have thous- ands of salesmen. Printed Salesmen work faith- fully all day, and often far into the night. They are enthusiastic-loyal-persevering, They go `where an ordinary salesman could never nd his way. Yet, they sometimes fail to make good. They are not given a fair chance. They are poorly printed, perhaps ; or listless in argument ; or they do not properly display the. goods they are trying to sell. 11 Give your Printed Sa1esrr_1an the appearance which commandsahearing; prime therh with arguments and logic;equip them with" illustrations _that describe their goods to the best advantage. ` * UNDERTAKERS 11 _ We are anxious to get you interested in the quality of the work we turn out. Every order from The Advance Job Department receives personal attention, no order is too `small to. receive careful attention. Let us `prove this to you.` ll THE ADVANCE Newspaper goes into the best homes of Barrie and vicinity. It has been doing this for over sixty years, and will continue to serve its readers, as in the ast, with the news in a reliable and efficient man- ner. herefore The Advance is of especial value to the advertiser wishing to reach the better class of readers. Phone 53 and a representative will `call. Our expert ser- vice is at your disposal. THE ADVANCE I23 Dunlop Sti A \ll \/\J0, AVLJ Llldl 1869. ncsrtakers. and night. Morgue in connection. Bar RING 263 DU AV U1. VIA . . . . . . 4.20 am. my __ to To- - i . 5.10 a.m. pronto .. 7.45 am. {If to To- ` `. 6.30 a.n1. PRINTING The SKILFUL SALESM AN "1230 -pm. ' 7.45 IO 0-0 0110 0:10 O`0 0110 0IfO 01j0O ' :00nOOI}OO00--OOX100X100&0 IO 0:0 0110 0120 0110 0110 0110 0110 0.0 L A-A Tglephonc 53- ]TheNewFoun(l[y| % NEXT noon TO THE 1'ANNzn'v| heir _ `W. C. Andrew F MA VUFACTURER or Buggies, Carriages. Wagons Sleighs and Cutter Cmnxrvm Duijann an I. I I IJAS. ARNOLD i2`N'T o%S::::ao Horseshoeina END. 55 BAYFIELD ST. ` OPPOSITE R055 51 JOHN BABES O-LD STAND (Successor to the late R. L. Barwick Fire and Life Insurance Real Estate Agency Money to Loan [number at good Farms and Town Pro- perlle: tor sale on easy terms. Bank of Toronto Buildings, mrrio I. w SI-_-I9 N % TRY { Kennedy Special Rye 'W}1isky $1.10 A QUART, W. H. Kennedy PHONE 833 BARIII OWN YOUR OWN `HOME Cease wasting your money rent. "A ` `.1 I\vIlIrO I have" $200,000.00 wdrth of houses and property in Barrie and Allandalc. . Small cash payments. Balance % as rent. F_arms for Sale. Real Estatae and Insunance Phone 536. Bosanko Block-. Barrie Is ofen for all orders in CASTINGS. M] L REPAIRS, &c. g u `Ina 1__j alnaaaaa -.-..a-- songs, up`. w Boilers. Engines and all kinds of farm and stationary machinery made `and repaired on shoxtest notice and moderate prices. 7 I__ --,_,._L ...__I.l- --v-can uuvv --...--1. Al work done by expert machin- Aist and guaranteed that class. G.S.RANK|N Repairs of all kinds Residence. I64 Baygld Street Phone 627. um THOMAS WARD IIVL Expert Machinist Contractor & Builder -100110 OIZO OjOI IO 0.0 Iol Barrie. vvv ' man: luuua. * pl?oIFo1';_"i\'(`. me, your Excellenoyz 'I` would call out to these ufllhng momhm-5; `Your Yes _w1ll rob that mother of her only cluld; yours put out the eyes of some, poor wrctoh: _\'ours sets in a blaze a fear- ful (o~11f1z1:_v'1'z1tio11; yours `stamps out the brain of a poet who would have . , l.....,... Ln L;ornn11n4-1-Ir 1211+ Ulrillll Ill Ll Irxlbu vv .|A\I vv\Iun\. Al been an honor to his oVco11ntry.l But you have all voted Yes in order {O ]n'o\'(- that you are not `cowards- as if one had only oneself to con- shlorj .~\.1'o you not there .to repre- sent the \\'isl1(~s- of the people`? And`; the people wish protable labor, \\'is'h 1'(-liot , wish peace. ' ..Y I....... Jnnan 11nn+nu , 101)`-g1|')-13175311 I VIM! l\'lll'L, H1-an lrpuuuo I llopo, loan doctor, renlarkedi the Cololwl b1ttorl_V, that you may- 11(-vor be a nlonlber; the Whole -}:ou.-o would spit upon you. ..1 ,,,_;_1] I 1AA`. :\\nI\1Vl'\ Jr1\n`- T n-rsn 11` th5 nof_ ,;U.m- ..,.,.. _,.,... . "I \mu1 soon prove that I am no! c0\\'zmI.- To swim against the . m111i1'os nerves of steel. ..n,L IA-.. .... ..`l.1 SJ. Ln .'-I-` n nnu .`Hl'dI11 I\\ll|l1\.>`1 xn\.;. vvu ug. uvuunu "But lmw would it be ifa ser- in~.1.< uttaok wmjo made and found us 1111p1'opa1'0d? ' ......l .L\\' ].nuvn '.u ;;;; 4:4-nus: AL` `:11c1_ I llulu \lIu1\.\.x 6 "\\<- must have a system of Jus-' ll('(` \`.`l1l<'l1 will make an` attack ~ll11}u `ll>l(*. But `when the t11ne for anion (loos vome, and these t1'eme11- lllllls :1l'lIll(`S wltll thou` fea1'f_'ul newl 12-:(~2il1.~' ml 'wa1rl`m'(-. are b1'011;:l1t 1nt0 `llu-. ll('l(l. it `will be _a. ` serious, a -:i:zmI'ir ('zll'21.\'T'l`()])ll(`. Help and care will lw an impotssibility.-V The e11- 1l('2i\'(H': of the Sanitary or Red Crn.<.< .mw;.<. the means of provis- inn. will 1n'0\'(* a me1'ee-i1'ony. The next war 01` whic-l1 people so glibly and inalim-rm1tl_\* speak will 11ot be". a \`i<-1m'_\' for the one and a loss for The mlu-1-. -but for all. Wlm :1mm1-1 us, this? "I. -mainly not, said the min- l.~'f('!'. "You. of course not, dear Dm-rm-. but men in g'e11e1'al. "Our `.'0`-'('2'lI'I:l(`lIl . possibly Snot, but other smt<<." u . 1 . V `I ' I ham \\'ith what 1'i_;'ht do you_ dee1_n_ other people worse and less 1nte1l}- sent than _mu1'sclf and 1110! _I _Wl`11 toll yo_u 21 1it tl(~_st01'y: numnsmn ] NUT HELP HER But Lydia E. Pinkham s Vneg-` etable Compound Restored Mrs. Bradley : Health-_ Her Own Statement Winnipeg, Canada. -- "` Eleven" years 380 I went to the Victoria Hospital, Montreal, suffering with a. growth. The doctors said it was 9, tumor and could not be removed as it would cause instant : death. They found that my organs were \ ected. and said I couldnot live more than sixmonths in the condition I was in. j Ata.-_-r V __ A J---- "--- -MA uluu L113 III we COHUIUUH .I. wise in. _ `After I came home'I saw your adver-. tleement in the paper, and commenced | king Lydia. E. Pinkham s Vegetable l C0mpound. `I took it constantly for two 7981?. and still take it at times, and ! th my husband and myself claim that R. was the means of saving my life. 1 I hgmy recommend .it to suffering` women.--Mrs. ORILLA "BRADLEY, 284 J Johnson Ave. , Winnipeg, Manitoba; C3- Why will women takechances or drag 9t8S1ck1y,half-heartedexistence,miss- "18 three-fourths of the joy. Of IMDE. W. L they can v-nd health in Lydiayn. male 1]] *1 with such air men {*8 displacements, inatnmntidn, `Won. tumors, irregularities,'.Vet&`{-. ` Want sp_ec`ia;l advle. {E}: *0 I-yam E. Pinkham` M; (V... l--__;3.n'_- -z`p-u'.-. :55..-` .._L \ u {, nxna-Ill 1'-`'_ idin '63? (2;.x'.z3nua1) 14'9" 11888. Your letter W1 1 read and gndhelatn Under the Title Disarm this _ % Novel won A for its guthor the Nobel `Peace Prize. A Famous Stlory AUGUST, gm, Once upon .a time a thousand and one men stood` before- the gate Iof a` beautiful _ garden, longingly `looking ovler .the wall, "desiring to enter. The`_ gate-keeper had been ordered to admit the people, provid- -ed the majority wished admittance. He called one man up: `Tell - me honestly, do` you Want to come in? `Certainly, he ` replied, `abut the other thousand do not care about l1t',,.... By th.e - ._ ` [ BARONESS VoN~SUTTNE1; ` The shrewd custodian wrote this answer in his note-book.` He` then called asecond. He mQle' the same reply. . Again the wise man wrote under the word "Yes the `gure one, and under the word `N the gure one thousand. So he went on to the very last man. Then he added up the columns. The result was: One thousand and one Yeas but over a million` `Noes. So the gate remained shut because the `Noes had an immense majority. `And that came about because each one not only answered for himself,` `but felt himself - obliged to answer ,for all the others. ` ` ' I 111 : I1 1 ,...u; uanl. uuu uuucxn. It would be a noble thing, re- plied the minister reectively, "`if by general ' consent disarmainent could be effected. But what govern- ment would dare to begin? There .is nothing upon the Whole, more de-. `sirable than peace; but, on the `, other hand, how can`we maintain it;_ how can We look for durable peace so long as human passions and di-l verse interests exist? T; ] IIIII .dolf. Forty 1ni_llion inhab_itants form a state. Why not one hundred millions`?. One could prove logically Ia-nd mathematically that/so long as forty millions, 11otWithstanding'di- verse interests and human passions, Ican restrain themselves from War- !ring with one a11other--as the three states, the Triple Alliance, or ve` } I . Allow me, said, my son Rm` states, the `form a. league of peace- one hundred millions can do the same! But, in truth, the wo_rl_d {nowadays -calls itself` immensely ;wise, and ridicules .tl1e barbarians-; and yet in many things We cannot count ve. _ ` I ' `I IITIYI Jl \/\IlLJ.lU "JI ` L Sevjeral voices exc1ain1ed:VVhat!s' jba1'bar1ans-_-W1th' our rened c1v1l1- izatloll? And the close of the mne-` *teenth -ce1'1tu1'y? ` \ 1)-_.1_1.c ,.;-,`,1 .._. uvm 1.....L..... I LCCLLUII `DULIUULJ 3 Rudolf stood up. ' ( ` ` Yes, barbar- 1 ians-I will not take back the name. I -And "so long as we cling to the past we shall remain "barbarians. But we stand upon the lnew era-a1-l eyes are looking for- ward, everything drives us on to- ward a higher civilization. Bar- ancient idols and N its to a nobler development Ithan many dare even hope. sibly the prince or the `statesman is now alive who will gure in all future history as the -most famous, the most enlightened, because he will have brought about this gener- lal laying down of arms. , Even now the insane idea is dying out, not- withstanding that diplomatic ego- tism attempts `to justify itself by its asserti`1n-the insane that the `destruction of one person is the se- I I | also nearer eurity of , another. "Already the realization that justice must be the foundation of all social life is glim- mering` upon the world, and from an acknowledgment of this truth Ihumanity must gain a nobler stature l-i-.that development of humanity for Iwhieh ' Frederick. Tilling labored. Mother, `I celebrate the memory of your devoted husband, to whom I i also owe that I am what I am. Out of this glass no other toast" shall ----_ 1.... ,:...m1,H__'_nm1 he threw It threshold -of a ` Pos- ' i 1 1 l 4 barism is already casting away its f A antiquated '. weapons. Even though `we stand 1 nearer to barbaric ideas than many - are willing to acknowledge we are f By Special Arrangement ii U UDIIUL I/Utacbav unnum- lever be` drunk.-and he threw. it 3 against the wall, where it fell shat- VI tered to pieces; at this baptismal _ feast of the V rst-born no other - toast shall be oiferedi but `Hail. to l the Future_! We must not show ourselves worthy rather of our `fathers fathers--as the old phrase went---no;` but of our grandsons |grandsons.~ Mother--w,hat is it? he stopped suddenly, You are weeping. , What do you see here? ` My glance` had fallen on the `open door, The rays of the .setting `sun fell on at rose-bush, covering it with its golden shimmer; and `there stodd -the gure of my dreams. I saw th hite f hair, the glitter of the gar en shears.` _ I J ` . | " It is true, is not,? he smiled. to. me.;_ we_.__ are ' a happy old To heep color of catsup,` put whole cloves and allspice into a new, soap shaker; use as ,a spoon in stirring the catsup. T In this way the avor of the spices is gained without sacri-' |.cing the color of the catsup. 1:114-2-1 en- 300. 3 If 30 per cent. more` vegetables (varied in kind and `well ` cooked) and 30 per cent. less meat are ser-T dly anyone will -notice .the;; % h9% %nsek66per; THE END Fmce saveaby net nan. \ mail Men army of General Manoury that rout- ed the Germans. This army .was. hastily concentrated at Rhiems, thanks to the railroads, and` `so rapidly collected that the German _spy and information system did not know of its existence. ' I u H `Consider the conditions. Every: day, 0 `. `I V-"amt 0` Hvrailroad ei- ciency of the early part of the war by what I saw in my travels through France lately - or of what I saw at _ I the: big. Paris terminals, where the trains are now moving as quietly and smoothly as in_ peace times. Not only` old railroad men but dis- interested travelers during the mobilization period of early August tell me the work was inspiring. beginning with July ` 26, when the war. cloud began to blacken, tourists began to rush to and fro, some to seaports, some inland to ` their homes, and each day their panic grew. During this first week the trains were` doubled, then tripled. No less than 500,000 extrarpassen-_ gers came to or passed through Paris, the railway centre of France, and no less than 200,000. of the foreign population left Paris.-_ On July 31 the -older soldiers `of the re- serve armv. then as now assigned to the guarding of roads and railroads, began to `arrive at railroad depots and add to the crowds. The next day at 5 o clock `all the railroads, which had so far done their work I 1 a as civil instruments, came under military law. ' ` J-`Ln -.n:"uAn1J -vv\t\\4 `Inna 111111 DCLLJ IIIIVV a I Did the railroad men lose theirl heads when this mobilization was declared`! When hundreds of thous- ands of troops began to move {from every city and town and farm of `France to their appointed place to |joi11 -their regiments, when other hundreds of thousands of civilians began to y hither and tl1ltll01',` the railroad men quietly put on their] brassards and continued at work. E struggling on the 'crowde- Parisl ' platform of the Paris-L_vons-Medi- terranean, `waiting to get a tra`in for Toulon in the far south, -a11d there say good-bye to her son join-` ing his regiment, lately told me she] saw the" railroad men moving huge; trucks of ries along the platform, in going about their business throughi that excited crowd in the matter-of-_ fact way of railroad men in emer- gency the world over. Yet these men had `perhaps been without sleep: for several; nights. _It is truelthatl 3 An old lady who was at that hour i (it took this lady sixty hours tol [reach Toulon instead of~the usual `sixteen,_but she got there. The won- ider is that any civilian trains were `permitted. As it was they were only side-tracked while the niilitary trains passed, moving at an ave1'age- rate of forty miles an hour. a l One of the amazing feats of the i` railroad men was the changing,` over-night, of the time tables on 0 every one ofthe six systems. "These time tables were changed to anew schedule accommodating - from 140 to` 160: trains_ a day. - Every station master was notied by telegraph when trains were due _at his station. No less than 200,000 messages of this import _ were sent` in a single `l\.--.I--,.. J-....-.J-n IA... Ln4- ~yn..~..z]n.. l have to join his .\l(laJu During twenty long, hot ,murder- ous days, ten thousand trains were kept V in _motion throughout France. _ of these trains Happily, not all moved towards the frontier at the same time. of the general men `I to their regimental depots. Neither a regiment nor a division is moved all in a piece, like an excur- sion party. A, soldier` - living in-"' Paris may have to go first to some relatively distant station:-. i11 the country Where he joins his regiment, is armed a11d equipped, and then moved with his regiment -to the headquarters of its army corps in another place; and nally the army corps is moved to a point on a main" line and thence to some place at the front, either in the north or the east; A man Working in Riems may. regiment at Toua ' lousein the south, thence to a mili- -tary camp, and nally to Verdun in ; -the - east. D ' for the shifting of armies to 3 battle regions. What these 10,000 trains beganxto do in August r they have been doing ever since, for the other millions of newly recruited men, or new nogannm l\._.- .....--.-L Lncvn `annn '+1an Yet, to the_ comp1exit.y~ forward - movement , p was added that of rst carrying the` uuuuc .1 cgxuun. One must have seen `the handling 4 of an army corps to get an idea of what work these inoifensive-looking French trains have accomplished and are still` accomplishing. Let railroad oicers who have sweated over as 100-car circus movement con- siaer that any heavy movement of troops is made by `army. corps, and A that an. army corps consists of no` less than 39,000 men, all told; and that to boot there _` are can_non, IITI 1--wv-7w T11 --h, ever receive the proper balance of food to suciently nourish both body and brain during the growing period when nature's demands are greater than in matnrelife. This is shown in so many -4- 1.-.... 1-2." hndis-g. freauent colds. not move" I;I!!uI_I3.E.!! matutelite. 11118 15 anuwn Lu av Juan, , ` pale faces, lean bodies, frequent odlds, ` A and lack of ambition. V . ` v _I_:1.I...... on; an 1n|'f11 uuu Java V; w... ____ _- For all such children we say with nnmistalugble earnesness: They need Seot.t s"Etnnlsion`, and need it now. It cases in concentrated form the very elegnfents toenrich their blood. It tosfren V ; it; makes stiuzdy an If Qhnmlbg d.-sttox_::g_,A -h __ j (-Continued from page ,3) THE NORTHERN ADVANCE ,_;u (nouns no--v re-=>==*I=.-=*-T V `feiqnipmentzsni ngvin-p eer_s -equipment, wagons, aero- planes, ammunition boxes, `provis- ions-enough things to make the moving of a train-load of Wild animals seem tame in comparison. I TL 1...`I..... a..... A.....:.,... -9 nm.-. ......- krlic I.~AAsA.I.lIrl.w. UVVALJ. UIlILaIA\.l ALL VVAAA sun-Lwvctu each to transport the men` [of an__in- fantry regiment. This regiment, is 1,000 men each, and each battalion into four companies. The military end of the aifair is '_e'asy."'G.et your. cars there .and the soldiers, com- panv by company, hop in quickly, Without any confusion. Your cars ` for - the infantry regiments are `easily gotten rid of. But you need I an 1\`v`\A1\ 1n.qv.J-nnz] nmn I-A nnvwnnr . subdivided into three battalions of. It takes two trains _A of firfty 4 cars! l ` \aI.-n.:AaJ bvvuwu &l\.L v.A.o nanny I _, . , _ . -.. _an extra hundred cars. tt) ea-rry; nothing but the immediate infantry"? equipment---mitr'ai1leuse guns, .regi-! ment wagons and odds and ends of} rm...... --...- .......1 ......n.....' ....4....` "bb""b' ' - Then you need another extral twenty trains -for the artillery of this army corps. Only one cannon can be set on a at-car, including! :1... '|:_-,L___ AL-_-J. ($.01.-- ,........ ...... " """ V V V "" "" """"7 `"`"" I lits limber. About fty cars are' necessary ' for each regiment s can- non. Next there must be cars for the horses that drag the _/cannon, ears for the artillerymen, and all the other equipment that goes" With cannon. A ' . milllilutlhe cavalry regiments. travel` with the army corps, the job is still worse, as no less than 6 trains of cars are necessary for one cavalry regiment, Add to these trains the` ones required by the commissary, the hospitals, the heavy artillery,` the trench ` diggers, the bridge: builders, and no less than 70 trains .2 tin ........ .. .;l......4. `Q-{.'+`n' Id.-.. .-.:.. Aiuxluxzxo, uuu ..., Luau ._...... IV A........ of 50 cars, or about fty" big cir- cuses, are necessary to move an army corps. And the French rail- roads, if you please, had to move `no less than 42 army `corps in! twenty days. V I DIIAFNESS dANNo'1' 31: cUR1:D' I 1 `by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the. ear. There is only one way to cure} deafness, and` that is by constitu-I tional remedies. Deafness is caused `by an `inamed condition of the `mucous linings - of T the Eustachian `Tube. \Vhen .this tube` is inamed` `you have a rumblino" sound or im~ `perfect hea1ing:, andbwhen it is en- tirely closed, Deafness `is the result,. and unless.__the inammation can be` l taken out andthis tube restored to its `normal condition, hearing` will be !destroyed forever; nine cases out of !.ten are caused by Catarrh, which is {nothin_7: but an inamed condition of the mucous surfaces._ . Weyiwill give One Hundred Dol- Ilars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be icured by Ha1l s Catarrh Cure. Send --for circulars free, I`. J. Cheney 8: 00., Toledo, 0. Sold` by D1'11g'g'ists, 75c. Take Ha1l s Family Pills for con- istipation. ' !`H(_)W THEY TALK IN BUITALO} | _ . ;-Inspired by Conditions as they Ex-I 1 isted Qn.Dun1op Street last week les! Said a man in Bualo, To 9. friend iwhere he was stopping A few short weeks. ago. I was indeed, . the friend replied, ` I m sorry I must say, That things look_ simply awful Around that lovely bay. Have you ever been in Barrie, I i w l I do11 t like to {blame the "council- lors, . ` They may be decent men; But, I really blame the citizens, L That voted such men in. I Went out to walk one evening, 9 To exercise my` feet; `I came down from the Vespra lxonse l And over Dunlop street." `v` I was passing by a drug store, Where stood a motor car, There "Were four children in it, I And all besmeared with tar. T I asked a man What hapepned, ' He was standing by the Way, l He ;'simply laughed, and said .to me, You -must have no rates to pay. . `I went a little further- T'hen.I met a. maiden fair, She was dressed in white from head ` to foot _ .VVith lovely Wavy hair; I saw that she. was crying, With terror much depressed; She couldn t cross o er for the mail Lest she d destroy her dress. Then I met a little kiddie With his small artillery van, He was taking home some berries \To papa and his` mam . His little car, it quivered, And out the kiddie fell; . I saw him roll on the tarry street With a loud `and, piercing yell. .I returned to my lodgings, V d To read the latest news. a .When the landlady reproached me - For having dirty shoes- I said don t chide me` good lady, ' ' Or on me cast a frown,` But, pity those `poor creatures That {walk `through Barrie- toivn. . _ -Bill Kamionkastrumilowa Barrie, Aug. 17th, 1915. . ' `T Paint bfdsiing Wvith kialdmmum paint % and you will have no trouble with rust on your sheets, The watermelon when ripe is con- sidered excellent for liver, kidney or bladder aections. . Among " the peasants of Russia and "Turkey, fresh 'w`atermelon juice is` held` in ` '__este,e_m , for iptestigml` Veetafgh .' In eifect June 2-8th, 1915;: Except those T designated, all ltrains run daily except Sunday. I .D, daily; M, daily except Mon- day; S, daily except Saturday; X, Mondays only; XX, except Sun- day and Monday. No . |53-(D) Toronto to North `D--- A on n w. (Iv &n\IA\lDCV\-I vv .-vv-v Bay . . . . `.420 am. 46-;-V(M) North Bay__ ronto . . . . . . ,42---Midland to Toronto g Muskoka Wharf ._ ~ ronto .'. ..`. i41-Toronto to Huntsville 10.35 am. 40-North Bay to Toronto _ V .._ . . . . . .. 12.30 p.m. l 55--Toronto to North Bay ' ~ I 12.30 pm.` -5-. " SUMMER TRAVEL !585-Algonquin Park to To- ronto 2.05 pm. 57-'_I`oronto to Algonquin T Park .. 2.20 p.m. 43-Toronto' to Graven- hurst .. 3.50 p.m. 44-Huntsvi1le to Toronto 5.20 p.m. q45--Toronto to Midland ..8.35 pm. 48_-(D) North Bay to To- .......L.. 0 `)Q `A w. 1\J_ d.1\I.I. UL; LIIIIJ vv -I-1.! ron_to .. . . `. . . . 9.28 p.m. Bay 11.00 pm. 647-(S) Toronto to North I I 60-Meaford & Penetang to Hamilton .. 7.50 am. 397-Barrie to Penetang and Meaford .L 10.10 am. From Hamilton arrive -unnw K \IA CJ&l\I O C I C I -l-ii\l\-I IIOIIAU (xx) From Penetang ' 4 and .M1dlandA v1a short lme .. 2.20 pm. i L I [395-Barrie to Collingwood t and Meaford 1.55 pm. I For Penetang and Mid- A 1 land via` short [ line . . .. I ` Leave A11andaL1'e' .'.I 11" t\I\ 62-From _ Meaford and 1 4 Penetang for Ham- } V ilton . . . . . . . . . . 5. i i63-From Hamilton ' for ' u Meaford and Pene- tangg. .. 1. EJOHN JENNETT LICENSED AUcT1oN:ER IJl\l.l.'.1lV\J.I'.IlJ J1v\d I l\JlVJ;.a.'J1\ FOR THE COUNTY OF SIM OE. i iMost rea'sonab1e terms given on al `Stock Sales G. G. `SMITH & 00., PHONE 82. `l.W_L-`L1_`_'I_-J -IODA TT_.J..._J.-1--._.. ice.` V ap'

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