uuu Utzcu auuu vuuv uvunzsuv lnvvvsnncv "ed for all that he received from others in the shape of respect and {consideration. `He was prone to dis-. 'count 9. efriendly attitude for the simple reason that in his -experience all friendships were marred .hy the fact .th`at their sincerity rested en- tirely upon the generosity of the man wh_o paid for'them-hisofather. No one had loved him for himself; no one had given `him an unselsh thought in all the years oflhis boy- hood. I V 1 n '. 1 - 1-_1:| 1-:.....-u.' -1..--0 IIOUU. At rst he held himself aloof from the Desmonds; he was slow to f surrender. He suspected them of the same motives that had been the basis of all previous attachments.` When at last he realized that they were not like the others, his cup_ of joy, long I an empty vessel, was {ill- ed to the brim and his happiness was without bounds. They were amazed by the transformation. The rather sullen, unapproachable A lad i became at once so friendly, so `in- : dependent, that had `-they not been ` acquainted with the causes behind the old state of reticence, his very joy might have made a nuisance of l him. He followed Mrs. Desmond In about in very much the same spirit `that, inspires a hungry "dog; `he i watched ' her `with eager, half-fam-l ~_ ished eyes; he was on her heels. ' ilfour-fths of the time. As for Lydia, pretty little. Lydia, he adored her. His healgtl for the first time V uto sing`. with e `joy Aoflyouth, and the; ,se_nsation was a enovel "one, It : `had, seemed to him, that he ' c0.\11d ` .:nverbe.vi anythingissbut `an <>1. mem- e It;, was his custblap, 911' ,.Om1`.I1g ' ' ' he` ~nfight,n01. matter What. have ;been**:to . pause 1-8 ' 1-3 , 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1+10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-10 . 1-10 1-10 1-10 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 Barrie, House, j $2500. ` THE NORTHERN ADVANCE` = that icture The ut we simig gested` TIL- .. 173 Plari 553 T 174 . 175 176 1) . v_17s " ' "IH'l\ ` 3) `.150 ' 179 180 101 No. 225 Plan 555 226 )1 227 nno )1 J-UV I81 183 Plan T 55} `I04 3 I.i 03 233 G611 553 237 238 nnn ETU 241 DA`! 33% all Z`7 `1115 Asia 249 250 251 02` 116! 253 (`IE1 261 262 263 2% 265 266 267 268 269' 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 ' 277 278 together. Thai she was hisVfather s secretary was of no moment. To him she was Lydia-his. Lydia. _ LL- _......J- Ll.-nan vv\r\v\+1\Q A1` 111111 but: was .I.JJ\..ll.(ll nun.) 4-. u..." For the past three more he had been privileged to hold her close in his arms and to kiss her good-night at parting! were lovers now. The slow fuse of passion hadsreached its end and the ame was alive and shining with a radiance that enveloped both of them. _ " 1 . A u . an ,1: ch` L. `L ___---..-. The) ' |.vllCJJ..|u On this night", however, he pass-l ed her door without knocking. His dark, handsome face was ushed,i and his teeth were set in sullen an- ger. With his hand on the knob- .of his own -door, he suddenly re- membered that he had failed Lydia for the first time and stopped. A pang _ of shame. shot through him. For a moment he hesitated and then started guiltily toward the. forgot-` ten door.. Even as he raised his hand to sound the loving signal, the door was opened. and -Lydia,` fully dressed, confronted him.- For a moment they regarded each other in silence, she intently, he with aston- ishment not_ quite free from con- vfusion. e ` `H M J---.--; n 1-.." Lumuu. . o 4 I m--'-I m sorry, dearest- he `began, hls rst deslre bemg to ac- count for his oversight. I 1:111 11 1-1 1-3` 1___.__,..._-,`,]0 T]. cos. ' on al uuuuu LU1` lua UVC1.B15uu. Tell me What ha` happened? It can t be'that your father is il1--or in`. danger. You are angry, Fred- -.. 2;. ...-...N- I". I-`n n+ TMn+ {Q1 eric; kit? 11,1 He looked away sullenly. e Oh, iit s really nothing, I suppose. Just an unexpected jolt, that s all. I was angry for a moment-- ' ll`T--- ...... n$:]` nnrvwtv ',, aha was 2l.ll`b'.l'_y LUJ. a xuuuu/nu ` -You are still angry, she said, `laying her_ hand on his ` arm. Shel lwas a tall, slender girl. Her.e_ves'. |were almost on 3; level with his own. Don t you want to tell me, ldear? ; 4111- , , _,3___ _--- .. LL-.-._L& 7 ! ` I V, He never gives me a thought,.I :he said, compressing` his lips.` He! thinks of no onebut himself. God,` what a 1_i1'ather1 ! . ,,l T7--- .....;-..4l. .. AL wnap (I `LGVIAUL - Freddy, dear! You` `must not 'speak- 1 Clnnuunn 74- T annnn n]o;rvI +11 11;G nnn- Havenft I some claim to his con-i %sidera.tionI Is it fair that I should \be ignored in everything, in every 'WayI I won t put up with it, Lydia! I m not a. child. I m a inan and I.am his son.- Gad, "Iii might. as _well be a dog. in the street forTa'l1_the thought he givesto -me. he;:p11_1._= her rfger to, her, lips,: 13.` aolmstalingi .szintoi;'-he'_1j ' d.i`k1J fv1LLAGE o1'1$oRi* McNTCHOLv-V-(Connued) M1501. .:..uu nu. uuh.J, --.,... so it can t be that} What is; Part ' Lot Acres . 211 1-8 . 212 1-8 . 215 1-8 . 217 , }- 133 109 118 'I\(\ 160 140 -142 145 146 . 158 159 161 173 174 185 186 187 . 188 $92 537' 213 Y O00 10 11 `21 .nn. 86 SS 91 semi Arrars Costs . Total old men_to their roomeon the floor below. A door closed softly. The voices died away. l(TT- :_ - ..L.....,.,.... M-.. 7 51.,` g.,;,] tele- Eng-- VU1(_:b'.5 _u1cu away 4 He is a strange man, y she said. He is a good man, Frederic. To everyone else, yes. But to -me? Why, Lydia, I-I believe he hates me. You know what- Hush! A man does not hate his son-. I ve tried `for years to drive that silly notion out of your mind. You'- 1'0 - n 1 17 ______j_` llllllllo ..I. Ull VO, I. know I m a fool to speakl` of it, but I--I can t help feeling asl I do. You ve seen enough to knowi. that I m not to blame for it either. What do you think he has done? Can you guess What he has done to all of us? She did not answer. Well,I ll tell you justwhat he said in that Wireless. It was from the Lusitania twelve hundred miles off | Sandy Hook---relayed, I.supp,ose, so that the whole World might know- sent at four this afternoon. I re-ml men1ber every word of the cursed thing, although I mere1_V.g'lanced at} it. `Send the car to meet Mrs.` Brood and me at the Cunard pier Thursday. Have Mrs. Desmond put thelhouse in order for its new mis- ;'tress. By the way,_ you might in- - form her that I was married last VVednesday in Paris. It was sign- : ed `James Brood, not even `father. .- What do you think of that for a - thul11'_d_erbolt`?;_ _ `u -I //17 l IIIIKC.C\.I\/A IIYLU I- : ` ` Marrled `I she I father marr1ed? _ 11/vx . .- | .l.I~v|A\.a4 JLIIJIJ Lava 6 `Put the house inorder for its lnew mistress, he almost snarled. sult to me`, Lydia-a nasty, rotten slap in the face. I mean the way it was worded. Just as if it wasn t enough" that he has gone and n1ar- ried some cheap show girl or a mis- erable foreigner or heaven ,knov_v_'s- * 1.1 I Q? 1 -1 That message was a deliberate in-. IALJU VVD I Freddy! You _are beside your-` !self. Your father would not marry `a cheap show girl. You know that. And you must not forget that your mother was a foreigner. TT _ . . _ _. 3.11 ((1')--- --_.____ T. -423} ,;;`e;.;;f;11. I m 1 that, he exclaimed hoarsely. I.......J...... I `I --,1:.. -...n- ..-. 1.. A.v.L vnbsnu; o Illll U, Lydia: _leaning rather heavyl l.4n1\Jll.lAAlll\J\L IIIIIJ/L out`, n `against the door, spoke to him in a low, cautious voice. ' u'n::..._-__ .:..11 `If... -n-____- -_,.1 l\I vv vunuvavuu V vsvvn .` Didyou tell Mr. . Dawes and Riggs? ..4............1 ..1......a. \T..I A--.2lI 4.... -..bb.,. _ . He stopped short. No! And` they waited`up. tosee if they could 'be_of `any assistance to him in an |hotn:,,of_:pe_1`il! What ]a joke! -, Poor I,ol&,__h are; I, `uN_I; foj _A_V_1`1?vg31v-, '_ `felt? sorry A ST. 4 16 4 16 4 16_ 4 16 3 98 5 28 5 253 _: -xv 528 528 42;, (JED 528 E00 U50 4 16 4 >16 6 28 279 Plan 555 00!! 75 531' 282 nan N 0. 285 286 00". - EUU 287 288 289 QUU .1 00`! JII7- l 293 294 nn: &UT 2955 5103 00 222 lJ\7\I 301 nnn 337' one UUU 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 330 U-BU 3.31 Mnil. [ crop ; 1 house U48 323 324 325 326 327 328 J\I 331 041.1 337 338 nnn 1.13`! 341 GAG 5'43 o o o o o 4 T No. _ Par *\357 Pt E 1-2 (as de nzo 117 1 0 0&0 VV .I.'a `.... 349E 1-2 -V C5JU.LV 351E 0 en `T No. 358W 1.3". 359 N 34 E 360 s 24 E 358' 1'2 .... .... V... .. U_ 0 LUV .90 U0 359N34E1-2 . . . . . . . . .. 15 9`341149 360S24E1-2 . . . . .. 19 14 24 595 The adjourned Sale will take place on THURSDAY, the 16th day of DECEMBER, at two o'clock p.m., in the [Court House; 661:3. 007 I` Barrie, August 31st, 1915. -: First publication in Ontario Gazette, Sept. 4th, 1915. gasmd. Your ,a.nvA sorry I said `I...-.........\'|... I W 3:4 Acre 10 N 1-2 .. 28 S 1-2 A TIT `I E p\U\IlV iinasmv, um-zmnnk 7TH, 1915 Part Part A TOWNSHIP OF TOSSORONTIO 'es'c'13i'be1' 'i'n TOVVNSHIP '1`0WNSHIP or TINY Lot Cdn.Ac s Arrears Costs T ...297 1-8 328 200 528 . .. 311 1-8 4 94 2 00 6 94' 318 1-8 3 28 2 00 5 28 . 319 1-8 3 28 2 00 5 28 TOWNSHIP OF TAY . Lot Con.Ac s Arrears Costs Total . . . . . . . .. 18 4 50$3l67 $200$3367 |. 20 6'28 692 200 892 A1n1nnn0O: onnozqt; for them before, but, on my soul, I do now. What will shc.do to the poor `old chaps`! I shudder to think of it. And she H make short work of everything else she doesn t like around here, too. Your mother, Lydia-why, God help us, you know what [will just have to happen in `her case._"It s- , ,,L!_-,_-J\ MBMAN woum 1 NOT awe up Though Sickand Suffering; At Lost Found Help in Lydia I 1 | E. Pinkhun s Vegeta- | ble Compound. 110111` bf t\V0 0, . clock in the. aft. ernoon . at the at `the ` }I(`)L'_gp in N OF IE: proceed to. C01 R. 11 by Public iuet. - Ion so muc _ h of th e Said. Ian (15 as . may be s11ffi' t .\ curred (if1nz1:1(:1d:::`age the tax j ' u .e _ The 1~u1lo\\.ing 1. the sale san"g1dc0*1 lawful. 11 M59 sta\ted)- }0ts are ` ectio 0 arg , . ~ 11 of es 1n_ - (exce e Sam ' . pt wher e. e Qthexu. Richmond, Pa. - When I started taking Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable n I l __ ,_ _, Compound Iwas ina `.,...`f` ` dreadfully rundown `Q, d I W, state of health, -`~ ; had internal trou- I `_ ' bles, and was so ex- ; tremely nervous and prostrated that if I had given in to my feelings I would have been in bed. As it was I had hardly strength at \ . in __E_/ V: ..,,R_1 5`; i I ` times to be on my feet and what I did do was by a great eort. I could not sleep at night and Bu IJGU B DIIUCUJ lJFIuuevuve ` After taking the second bottle I no- ticed that the headache was not so bad, I rested better, and my nerves were_ stronger. I continued its use until it made a new woman of me, and now I can hardly realize that I am able to do so much as I do. ' Whenever I know any woman in need of a good medicine I highly praise Lydia E. Pinkham s Veg- `etable Compound. -- Mrs. FRANK l CLARK, 3146 N. Tulip St., Richmond,Pa. I Women Have Been Telling Women for forty years how Lydia E. Pinkhanfs Vegetable Compound has restored their health when suffering with female ills. This accountafor the enormous demand . for it from coast to coast. If you are troubled with any ailment peculiar to women why don't you try Lydia E." -Pinkham"s Vegetable Compound? _ It w"__'.lp_ay you to do so. ._ Lydia E. Phl- ;'I!."! * .. 261 .. 271 .. 272 .. 274 .. 275 .. 276 ..277 .. 278 .. 279 .. 230 .281 00-`) ES 10f\ LIU 180 181 19 192 . 194 195 202 nno BU!) 204 205 216 .226 '\t\"l 160 245 ` run 10 257 258 ci zn .~\,y.,v...\,..---_ Lot Con.Ac s Ax'rears[Costs Total 19 6 48 6904 -200 890 19 6 50 4 04 - 2 00 6 0:. .. 19 7__14 371 200 571 [IP OF VESPRA Lot Con.Ac s Arrears Costs Total .. 3 5 1-2 1047' -200 1247 registered deed No. 491) 9. 5 100 2559 200 2759 .cu 11 An 6) nn 19.10 293 294 295 LDANIEL Q('IXLA.\*, ` 1-8 143 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 r-..`-v;44-4 Treasurer, County Simcoe. \-A 10 10 11 13 c0UN'rv or sIMCoE Treasurer sSale of Lands % IN ARREARS FOR TAXES. .l.|4 D? . (To be continued) 153 \E!\ 100 100 _ 35-47 Various Ways of Receiving. a Blow .l'am<-.< B1'oo(l s home was a 1'e_- 1'I1=11'k:xhl(- mm. That portion of t e housv x\'hi<-I1 rightly may be descri __-. `1.oas."11x}>1ic in order to distin- L~"l1Islnit from other parts Where 1j1'i\':1-_\' \\'21.\` o11f01'ccd, was not un- Mn. ..r n,._ _.:_1.1.. .......:aLn}l 9 10 Plan 533 11 N 2 Plan .540 AU 26 '27 28 1;'_\ \\il.\' UIH0l'(5C(l, WES HUI: U11` llke any ml the richly furnished M i"21.~'l1i places in the lower` part of the oitv, where there are Still 11'2_1<-(-.~' 1oft'o`f the Knickerbock-` lhlu `.. I :1 ' .- ,_ P111` -_ ---L 53 32 40 41 A0 ``H` \ -` 1l'|b (II LIIU 1LlAAux\uLuvv-- ` 01's and their times. This` was notl Hf home `of men Who had been +"1< I'('1_\' rivh: it was not wealth alone Int J 1 1- . o 1 .1 : I A 1A, ' ' 43 44 45 46 47: A0 25;" 49 In Bi K-7 U: 53 54 55 "El! . uLU" . ~- - 10]: W0 -` ...\.n_ non. It db 1 j v. 1 1" that stood behind these Statey I \`(*.~'I1n(-nt.~s. , -eAtl9 At the top of the 1xot1t5`:,e3 :3xcept rooms which no 0310 on ` ;he master.- h_\' tlw __-'ru('iV011s W111 Ofd St01.e'd- the He1'<~J:1111(*s Brood ha reg of his quaint. 1n'i00l0SS[ t"eaCSuuis'ite, Our- own ]n0('11lia1' fa11cy"c,)`q Sue. East, ions tI1in:'s`f1'0111 the my be bought thinu'.< that are not tot the hand? and sold but come 011;}, 1onds Where of him who sea_1'ches In 3 , peril is the prlce. 1' and Wo1'ldS 51"'atd the uppe ' I---~ . 1 Plan 5'29 77 60 61 62 DH` wgw You AnNnvousE The nervous hysteh; thevalarm system` f the human body. ' , T . 1 Perfect health we hardly realize that" we havf` 9 "`Q+Il1I\I`1' A` 0-{nvurnn > w-H pm we: nealtn we nanny reauzc Luau." h;1have a network of nerves; but. when mgfh is ebbing, when strength is decline the same nervous system gives the , alarm in headaches, tiredness,.dream.ful 5138!). in-;+..:..-1:... .....: ....1...`..r ............+'.. .1_. Blackls White um I _ edness U11 `I:l_l.U {:4 sleep, ;1rr1i1t:bi1itye:;1c`l-Jrunless ,c01 1'tdr foot; `Of t-he:1v8 1.lB-A leads straight to a breakdown. ' _ V , fu"p1.t0v the P ;:s.(":n~ = . ocorrect nervousness, S_ootIf. s"_EIn_\11' V .~ v . -.!n is exactly what yo 5h1<..1`t8k ` - ' " j `Eh nutriment gets info `N . . V ch blood feeds the " 112 the 8 - `Quiet By George Barr 1\'IcCtcheoh Copizhf. 1314. by Dodd` Mead and Co. I ' Plan r I v_ \`i1'tu_e of ,3.` iv of Simcoe, _\'ezu' of our 3 directed. con mentioned an .e,. for arrezu ~~-~45 T. 1. irtue Au warrjant Issued by the Warden" of -the ,1` Simcoe. bearm _date the 18th day of August _ `ml. Lord _; meteen Hundred and Fifteen,-an ' . irec-ted. commandmg me to_1evy_ upon the several entioned and descr1b_ed,A bemg 1n the County of` arrears 1-e_spe_ct1ve1y _due thereon, together costs. I hereby glve notwe pursuant to ;the-As- Act and Amendments, thereuntq, that unless m-1-em-s'and costs be sooner pa1d,V I shall on 544 C()L`.\"].`Y OF sIM00xE,' T0 `WIT; VILLAGE OF PORT McNIO}_IQL P:11't ('1 {AFTER 11. SEPT. 9th; i9`1ts_.i?: _ Lot Acres .. 23 1-8 .24 V 2- orrors ondon, lace In 90 103 104 105 106 :16`)! GU11 236 ll 12 16 18 A11 5% V 210 252 255 130 spring V II barn. ad well d his is it bought - 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 Arrears Costs Total 0 W 12 91' 12 91 An! | lower regions of that fine old house; : a single step took one from the se- ` date` Occident into the very heart of the Orient;' a narrow. threshold was the line betwee_n- the, rugged West and the soft, languorous, se- ` ductive East. In t-his part of the" house, James Brood, when at home for one of his brief stays, spent [many of his hours in seclusion, shut} off from the rest of the establish- ment as completely as if he were the inhabitant of another World. Attended by his Hindu servant, a _silent man named Ranjab, and ong occasions by his secretary, he saW_ but little` of -the remaining members of a his rather extensive household. I For several years he had been en-E gaged in the task of writing, his W 'n1en1oirs-so called--in so far as :they related to his experiences and 8' 'researches of the past-tw_enty'.years. 10 I . """' -L___. ._...J n-nnn~n11n`nQ`| IXTQQ` 000 751 11 an` J.\zu\.u~-v.-y.., -, His, secretary and amanuensis was Lydia Desmond, the nineteen-year- old daughter of his one-timer com- panion and friend,` the late John Desmond, ~ whose `death occurred zwhenv -the girl was `barely ten years of age. ' A _ 7 ` , Brood, on hearing of the man- s udeath,, immediately ._made; inquiries `concerning the condition in which he had left his vnife and child, with ------J ucvn-`(V l concerning UL wave man death, , immediately made, condition he wife and the result that Mrs. Desmond was installed as housekeeper in the New 1 i 1 1 York house and the `daughter given , f Brood s-` -adventures, ' the widow, `I M l I.__ spect. with}. every advantage in the W y cation. Desmond had le of 'edu- 4 nothing ' in` the shape of riches eizcept un- I diminished love for his wife and a 3 diary kept during those perilous days before he met and married her.` This diary was being incor- porated in the history of James by consent of and was to speak` for Brood in words, he could not with modesty utter for himself.` In these pages Joh_n Desmond, was` to tell his own story,_ in his` `own way, _for_ rm his friend was _ h even to admit of that. He was;to"sh33.re his life in retro- Dslond and the two Old` as_4he. had; shared it with them in ' reality. _ 1 Lydia s room, adjoining her moth- er s was on the third. oor at the `foot of the__ small stairway leading up to the pinscribed 'retreat_ at [the top` of _ -the `house. _There was a; '1 small sittingrqom1o,i f t A "atE benet forth- adame y amanuensls |lll\.t Il`~"'i " " ." '5] .11 |` 'n_-_- -.,..1 Han n~ina+om1-vn9.1'- No.` 1` 66 Plan 544 R7 93 133 172 9! 7): -101 _ . W 102 )7 103 9, 1M 9 105 " 106 "' 107 108 Plan 1552 . 7 110 111 112 113 Plan 553 114- 115 116 117 _ 118 . 119 " - 120 7 J) 122 "- 123 .124 1'25 1: 127 1 128 , 129 ' 7! 130 H 131 132 133 134 3! , 77 _ 136 " 137 138 9) 139 . 140 . M 142 H 143 144 V H 145 J) )1 147-I 148 149 7! .151 152 9) 154 )7 155 7! _ 97 157 . 158 79 . 159 ' ` ` $3 161 1 162 )3 _ H 1 H . )9 1% 9! 167 168 169 170 1 171 "`_v1'LL./IGE 1% of u'dullUU1o Lil` Frede1j1c; Bmodj i`i*C)1iT. V MI~ii'1iQL-3-(Conti:ed) - " 'Lot _Acrs Arrears` Costs Total 81' '1-370400 $200 $600 3:3 1- 400 399 099 lspent many a quiet, . happy hour. The Desmonds, mother and daugh- ter, understood and pitied the lone- ly boy who came to the big house soon after they were themselves in- stalled. His. heart, which had many ` sores, expanded ,and glowed in the `warmth of their kindness and effec- tion; the plague of unfriendliness that was his ' by absorption ` gave Way before this unexpected kind- ness, not immediately, -it is true, but lcompletely in the end. By nature he `was slow to respond lto the advances of others; his life had been such` that `avarice account- - . 0 .. _. AI,L `L- ' ....... -,. .'.......-. ixon;