IJ. I`. llswxax.-u-Inst, I-Inrlo Successor to Crenwiche & Bell BARRSISTIR soucmon, E I`C.; Molhnr mo LOAN Am--. n.-- hl...l. Rn.-.3. nanny W Lauuu Mauodc Temple Bldg, Barrie. ' medium CHIROPBAO'I`0% and DRUGLI`.`.S.s THERAEIBVDS 60 Eihabolh 5!. Phone 405 The opportunity of doing gran . deeds may never come to us. bu` the opportunity for doing good dove}. in nvnr urii nl. UN]! 1 1 U LUALV E Masonic Tonph Bldg., Barrie rain. Ofcd: 1st Floor Masonic Temple Bhh" Barrie. 1 LI Wminh M. H. Esta` I'LL. Money to Loan at Lowest Rates nf In-Inunnt vvylnqnr, en. MONEY `PO LOAN Ofcn: Muconio Temple Bldg. STEWART & STEVVART .5-svru-nu:-nn Ar vrrrrnrxnrv \ You needn t hurry to spend it GEO. R. AND E. A. BURNS v :_-.__.._I uistanee, don t fake the first 1nxz_1t,iAvo hat comes to mild. Take one the drug- oan assume you is made With CARA. Just as effective as using `ores, and it`: good for the m. In- leul. it helps make cod 1. For nun:-a is nothinu the bnrk of a THE CANADIAN BANK ||| or COMMERCE ot In-lamest OFFICE: 18 OWEN ST. \n ynmwuinag Ivmmnrlv nnr-nnie ALEXANDER COWAN BLRRISTER _..-`L- Business Directory BOYS & BOYS .._-..-. nnr\-v v.r1 LII! `EU L:UtL.lV Ross `och. Barrio. mo Bldg. Alli u nuaugu-uvr ' vw.-....v_-av-u-v iiuen. Fund . . so Million non.- Capital PnidUp . aommonnonu: D_-.._.- `I3......I In II lTIl.... T\..`I`I._. `E. I M. H. Estenl \ Su;)e'r1'1`;tHel:%1'odyne Radio You may have to hustle to make money . . . most of us do . . . but you nccdn t hurry to get rid of it. There are thousands of tempt- ing ways to spend your hard- earned cash . . .some of them good . . . some of them a manner of taste . . . some of them sheer waste. Don t be stampeded . . . take your time. And while you are deliberat- ing on the best way to use your money, make it work for you in an interest-bearing savings account. Ofce, 6 Owen St. Nur Post Office. Barrio. VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES Burris Branch / NURSE RAILTON 401,5 Clapperton St. Phone 467w l`HURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1932. rnxm<.;1Ar4 Amy aunumuu Special attention Obstetrics Associate Coroner for Simeon County Ofcll and Rociduno 50 Mary St. Phone 101 Office Hours: 8-9.30, 11-2.80, 6-8.80 Graduate of McGill Univonity, Montreal. Office and Residence--Corner Blin- betzh and Bradford Sts., Bazrrigv . Phone 105 ` lOfce Hours: 9-10 a.m., 1-8 p.m., 7-R nm iB(ARRlE REAL ESTATE OFFICE $67.50` UIHCC I'1OL1I`SZ 2-3 p.m., 7-9 p.m., or by agpointmant A. '1`. Little, M. . W. C. Little, M.B., Associate Coroner (`.nn'nfv nf Qimrnn. Associate Coroner, Couny of Simcoe Phone 61. Of<:o-58 Collier St. nm.-A 1nnva- -at Assoclate boroner, uouny ox cameo: Office Hours: I8-9 a.m., 12.30-2 p.m., 6.90 pa! E DR. R. w. HUGHIS j DENTAL summon \24 Dunlo Ovor Arnold ; I g13T T4`,`DI-Il\T\]'W '!"IQ 2 Post: Office Square Telephone 586 | Above Express Ofce F. E. MAXVVBLL Bachelor Veterinary Sionul Graduate Ontario Veterinary Ooiloge and Toronto Unhulliw Day and Night Cdh Nwondod 1-`roxnph. ..Ofce & Rooidenom IX Bcrlon AVO. Ava: a. "nu; us can u.-V HOMES, BUSINESS, FARMS, STORE PROPERTIES DRS. LITTLE & LITTLE PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS ;.,;...u....... ...\,....._v.. ` Phone 347. 9 nan.`-Q _p.! Busineas College EntIunec-"' DR. w. A. LE9}: Z SURGERY AND DISEASES OF wnwmm TOMORROW- WIOXI` Al1Il!IlOO I Open dew and ruht Ghnpel in all! WM-nhYhIad DR. N. \V. ROGERS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Evan:-121 uH-nn nn ('\'Hnl'aC`Hnn Phone 82.` HM B ALMER (Nan Day and Night -87 Elizabeth 5?. Ph --- ..,A\...--u..; Phone 21 3 Mn G. G. 3311'` & C0. FUNERAL Um Motor Ambulance H W1 A..- .4... ..n.! `dad-I Il~n-$- gm DR. E. G. TURNBlJTJ. Mrs. May Croswicko .ITT|C` DTYOTXTITOO GAD DR. LEO COUGHLIN DENTAL SURGEON n.-. 5 DR. A. F. PERKINS DE.\ITAL SURGEON Be sure to see and hear it tomorrow! .Lt.Le, l\1.D., Anaocuaw \ County of Sxmcoo. UVOY YDOIC 8 ELEPHONE 3 7 8 q I map 410 Office Hours: ,0-nv-n nv kw: nape: m can! F`.a('n buhcd xxnu nu;-way... 47 Maple AVG. . T-Tn1'n-:- Phone 21 I Mu-kn Ont. Phone 1250 56 Elizabeth St. SONORA DEMONSTRATING CENTRE CONSTIPATION Complete with 7 Tubes This amazingly low-price is possible only by Sonora s "Factory-to-Home plan that cuts out waste methods of selling. There is no sacrice of quality. This "SIMCOE Mantel model is Super- heterodyne Radio at its best. Competition is so keen among mt=_1- aaurts em:er1ng.n1s store. AS a re- chants in Vancouver that 8- 6113111 sult customers have to be served in store rst o`ered_free bread to all shifts with the door locked. Com- adults W110 P3-'C1'0mZd_ the 5t1`9- A petition may be the life of trade, private merchant retaalated by offer- but it may also be the death of ing free bread and butter to all traders_ BERT TAYLOR SPECIAL TERMS Balance in 10 monthly installments of $6.95 [RESPONSES Northern Advance 123 Dunlop St. tin ycvw-msonrizo r will function AL DA . One more ....A um-harm nmnllnr NO JOB TOO LARGE NONE TOO SMALL PHONE 53 cvlivneal. -, hat hnp no the bowels? e F well for SEVE L ( nlnno-nn lnranr. and perhaps need of any aid of any sort for weeks- on-ond. O 1-. .- 1 u u p. _-__ _-A 1--.. ...... Ull`illl\:|- - So, the only habit you get from cas- mm is that of natural and normal -......1-.uv tr... .:m'.mm+. fmm things is that of natural ana normal regularity. How different from things one must usually repeat on the mor- mw! Cascara in the ideal laxative; and the familiar little candy cascuret is doubtless its ideal form. Children b fo these tut tablet and many 1:511 arid women wuldlft ggfk of talu- ln ANYTHING 1 1 A54 nvnmz aruga:2r.l... KM $375 DOWN MUNICIPALITIES MUST GUARD EXPENDITURES The policy of retrenchment in municipal a`airs has been subjected to a certain amount of criticism. It has been said, without much justica- tion, that it is inconsistent with the earlier policy under which large commitment-s were made for unem- ployment relief and extensive build- ing programs were launched, some times with federal assistance, for the express purpose of providing em- ployment. Rut nf. H-m host mmh nrom~a.ms nr0- pioyment. But at the best such programs pro- vide only a palliative and not a cure. It is impossible for any mun- icipalty to pull itself up by its own bootstraps out of the slough of business depression. . H i: 9 +'nnrlmnr=tal in-inr-innl that business uepression. It is a fundametal principal that unless a protable effect is to be se- ' cured by public expenditures the : conditions which it is sought to cor- _ rect is likely to be ultimately made more acute. Such nancing, while ` excusable as an emergency measure, is unsound, since it mortgages the future. The same problem of un- employment will re.turn as soon as the temoprary work has been com- pleted. All such expedients are simply deferring the real solution of the problem. 'l`l-an nrnl-mm will have D'('IT|n snmel me promem. The probem will have gone some distance towards providing its own solution when the redajustment of commodity values and price levels is complete. There has been a violent disturbance of relative values. Re- lativity can only be restored by a levelling process, and at the present time the levelling is downward. uruv, uuu. nu: 5-tvu Ava --u -........ _._ ieul. End. pgstta is nothing . The Indiana n this bark, and vs to an old ago without! 5 days Iickneal. 0, What hnnnann rhn nu uuenrizo CANADA'S BUDGET OF FIFTY YEARS AGO A Total Receipts $31,710.00, and Ex- E pendituves are $27,250.00. 1 `For the year ending June 30th, ` 1881, the receipts from all sources 1 amounted to $29,635,297, and the 1 expenditures to $25,502,354, show- ing a surplus of $4,132,743. The revenue exceeded the estimate for - that year by over $1,500,000. Of 1 this amount the nance minister says - over $778,000 was paid voluntarily, . an H urn: rpvnmm -frnm diitias rm :p'Hzs,uuu was as it was revenue -from duties on and satins, but $400,000 of it was obtained from duties on woollen goods alone, and $300,000 on cot- tons. The surplus of $4,000,000, to- gether with $4,750,0'00 deposited in the savings bank was used by the Government to meet the -increased expenditure on public works of that year, amounting to $1,150,000, chargeable to capital account. The large increase in the `expenditure of that year over former years was ow- ing to increased subsidies to Indians, increased government railway ex- penses and increased interest on the public debt. The receipts for the current year, that is, the scal year ending June 30th, 1882, are now estimated at ($31,710,000, or nearly $2,000,000 more than those of the preceding year. The expenditure is estimated at $27,250,000. The sur- plus for the current year is estimated therefore at $4,460,000. This amount, together with deposits in government savings banks, $4,500,- 000; deposits in the banks of Can- ada at the call of the Receiver- General, $5,300,000, will be used to meet rlhe eng:1.geinent~;, falling klu this year, namely, redemption of the debt, $2,758,880; railways and canals, $9,500,000; land surveys, $400,000. The estimate for the next scal year ending June 30th, 1883. upon which we have not entered yet, are given. The receipts are estimated at $30,600,000, or less than those of this year by over $1,100,000. The cause of the reduction is the changes in the tariil` which have been intro- duced. The principal of these changes are the abolition of the duty bars, pigs and sheets, and a reduc-' tion upon `wrought iron tubing, and upon umnilled rice. The list of changes is quite a long one, but those mentioned are the most radi- cal changes. If these changes had not been made Sir Leonard estimates paiu VU1ullvlat1luy, va. C01 luxuries such as wines, spirits, silks he on teas and coffee and tin in blor:l<.<..t 2 1 i i that cu:~'toms would have yielded $21,- ( 000,000, or an increase of $500,000 = as compared with the present ye:1r,';1 but involving a.-: they do a reduction - of $l.f`00,000, the customs will yield i $1$)..'00,000. (,`liz\11ge.< in tin; a:.('i. \*.li;'(:h will l"`llil(,`U the 1'(".'I`ZJlII" l'1`mn iiuit ;nL12'f`r- by .".5250,< 000 in .~"`3T.').000. The duty on to- l;:n-rn E in he 1n~lw.u-rd from l'ourtwn n`.-` pm` prmml to f'l_'1`l1L rent.-' for iliv n:);t two yL`l`.i`E' :li`(l 1'41 vent.-' for the 'l'ollo\\'i ' }.'~:u'~-' and tin` 1 v\ lulu rut` r-lV'|n\'x'1 :ll\'l I are pro posed I LHU 1UHU\\ IH` stamp duty notes, otc., on bL1.~'iT1(`.~`.-, cou1`.~'e, but ' f\ L lnnnwunvx 1.5` U.`~LlH|ilLl`u, _vl\'xu -,1-1,-n about $100,000 ]r~.'<.< than 11ot`.'.'i1.iMzmding that the : estimated at $150,000 1 cxpcmliure for that your i M R97 (:00 000'. m` nlml IHUFU LII} The iter tuure xvi as t.ho. of the r su1`plu.< 1 152251 i.- nu -`.~z.:,uuu,uuu. m more than that of items upon w will be incre: which inv present yea for the yea 1883. is therefore $3,000,000. Economic awakened ou ... .nuni..n~.nl HF ITIUH lL'lpill expenthtures `[Jl.`H(llLll :"* "T - is keen among me}` adults entering-his store. As hmmz in Vancouver customers to in` Published @112 Nnrthern Ahuanrv .XUl`U H)!` I ,G00,000'. H... +1n4 shed at 123 Dunlap St., Barrie, every Thursday M. D. MORRISON, Editor and Publisher conditions have I) governments, 11! bodies. to the fac have born 1`.ig`Iw1 EDETURIAL `yearw 'nrn nef y 01' EIIJU L the p n which t n(`rea.s(*(l u involved unrno nun: VUlV('(l LIN.` lI|l'll'4 ear over last. '1 ar ending June estimated at ab` The Northern Advance_ 1= y;wogk Q1iie.aYou sggpj'!:;_ your 18 esvunmu-'1 about $350,000 kn nu-nunnf won 1', present 1 tho exp \ ..-,~n 6-kn 2l.i'l.' M the 1 `na 1`(`(1uCLlUn 1.< moro. The ' is CSU|n:\t("l n..+ wan nnn SCHIL yL'2H`. 1 e.\'pm1(l1- tho sznnv 1-. in n\Ir\vI on IN.` AU: ; about I rcallv It as well 1 ct that 1 Hr than (By R. M. Pike, Montreal) I do not suppose that anyone would imagine that a sinister thing like the Riel Rebellion could possibly have been the deciding factor in turning the tide of Canada s affairs from deep depression to great prosperity. Yet the late Sir William Van Horne once said that the Riel Rebellion had so much to do with the success of the plan for Canadz1 s first trans- icontinenital railway that the C.1`.R. ought to erect a monument to Rielis memory, just, perhaps, as later on we may feel like erecting a monu- ment to the memory of the present rinnrnccinh THE TYPE OF OPTIMISM THAT CANADA NEEDS depression. To a friend, Sir William Van Horne told the following story: The C.P.R., as you know, was conceived and built during a depression. Pub- lic faith in the enterprise ebbed lo\ver and lower until there came a time when funds were exhausted and no more loans could be obtained. The principals, who had pledged their personal fortunes, were at their \vif. pnrl. Part of the mad had been Photo I8 I way of overcoming the undency to count! tiqn. And here is now you an PRO E it. The next time our bowel: need any ...:.+nnm Ann +. Aka the laxative l'l'U\(' Thu .\ OH tneir personal Iortunes, were -.1: Lucu` wits end. Part of the road had been built in the east, part in the west. There remained a gap in the diicult country north of Lake Superior, de- scribed then as a thousand miles of engineering impossibilities. Van Horne, who never lost faith in the \ enterprise, wondered how he could . bridge the gap without enough funds anywhere in sight to see the work .through. Winter was coming on. I-In r-nm-pivprl the nlan of shinning tnrougn. VVIIIEUT W145 lZUHllllg 011. He conceived the plan of shipping material, provisions and an army of workmen by water to the north shore of Lake Superior. I gured," he said, that if I got the men and supplies in, then with the close of navigation the men would have to . stay there, because there would be nn manna n'F transnlnrfartinn hv whirh stay mere, oecause mere woum oe no means of transportaotion by which they could get out. And if they could not get out, for the same rea- lson the paymaster could not get in. : l'``h-ng hp sn1v9d-fpmnnrarilv--th:= [5011 'me paymamer COUIU. HOE get. 111. Thus he so1ved-temporarily--the problem of getting an army of men to work without wages, because there was nothing for them to do but fn wnrle nav nr not hnv, I-To knnw mere WES IlODI1lIlg 101' I/H8111 L0 (10 DUB to work, pay or not pay. He knew, of course, that the reckoning would come with the spring break-up, but he proposed to jump that ditch only when he came to it. WIICII ne Ciillz` L0 ID. The work went on and when the Riel Rebellion broke out in late w1n- I ter the line had progressed so far that it was possible to lay temporary rails to more or less ll up the gap between the easter and western por- ; tions of the line. `Finn unqynunnanut I-nan {n n nnnnrlmy nous 01 the line. I The government was in a quandry. It could not transport troops from Eastern Canada to the Northwest u through United States territory. There appeared no other way, for marching hundred of miles through V the forests in zero weather was out ` of the question. I went to the ~ government, said Van Horne, and ` oflered to transport troops and sup- v plies over the Canadian Pacific to the , Northwest. They didn t believe it : could be done. I showed them that . it could, and did it. From that mo- ment the problem of financing the ~ C.P.R. \\'a.s solved. The value of the C.P.R. from a military standpoint . was a tremendous advertisement for . the road. The whole public .~:emi- ment was changed, and that change also changed our outlook from banl;~ ruptcy and ruin to success and pros- perity." 'l`hm-u \'i.n lmvn .-u \'l"}`l`>\'l11U` in- penny. There you have a . in- stance Lo show how suddenly and how d1':1mz1ticz1l1y events can cllaxlge public sentiment, and public semi- ment in its turn change the outlook for the better. Qnn uvk-.+ urn H].-n nknn4- Hun nnIIt~r\.' .l.Ul' l/[H3 UBLLU1`. Say what we like about the causes of the present depression, fear and doubt as to the future are back of i it. At any moment some event whose `potentialities, like that of the Riel Rebellion, we cannot see may be the _,thing that will elmnge the outlook, .'g'ive men new courage, re-establish 1 faith and condence, and bring` drain- ' atic and sudden changc from despair E to hope, from depression to prosper- ity. 1 Don-p.< mm no nmv thimr in WW yuu uuu xnuvu w. mistanee, e 1nxz_1t,iAve u-.6 nnmn: fn Tnka th dl"LlE- iuy. Depressions are no new thing in 1 Canada or in the world. We, with our short experiences, think that since the crash of 1929 we have lgauged the ultimate in depressions. a `As a matter of fact, our experience since 1929 has been nothing com- pared with the black despair that has , descended again and again upon the world and upon this country in tinies .Ipast, and every time this despair has , been but the prelude to another long; step 1'or\vard in the march of nations and of mankind. :1I1otl1<:1'.~t:1:.:e ix. the , journey to\\'ard.~: a .',`1't`:lL\`l' . n1" 1 pro. and well In-1111, ; :un>n_:: Hm people :11 h1|';;'v.--~(.'o1ntrmt I. ~~t-orrl. IU :11! ilp[H:il1'ilIlL'l'.\ LIN` pLI.'m.'I|L Hy1l1`u-Ju'lccL1`1c Commission i11\'estiga.- txon lms nothing; behind it but thn hopv thut thv (u\'vrInm'n1 m;-.1. bu L"111l;:1tr1*;x.l<.~T-I li_u sonlxc way. Itlils git)- Hlf-:' 0 In 1-1` vrc, m\\'c\'01', \\'1 1 L10 Iv:.;'iti1n:m- wm-k of the commission and thu -unun1.~.~ 1m1'.~: cll}. ,`il1(`(`l`> to u }L`)'l.`:\L L`.\'tUnt. l)i-pLit_\'-Ilia-vu Bluir gives the on- (-m11`;1_<.:'i11_:: iiuws that the tax rate for li:irri- will be lower this your, as the county mlo will in.` :1 mill, or possibly u mill and :1 half, i('.\`S. If the town can cut down mm or two mills more, it` will hi-lp to ri-licve the burden of taxation ('Ol\.~1i(i(`l'l1biy. With the co- ()])l'l'lLi0l1 of the Board of `Education, this ought. to be possible. they ;~:houlLl have been in the past. Now there is 21 tendency to go to the 0.\:t1`cmc in retrenchment. If we are to get back to normal, business must go on as usual, and governments and muni(`ipnlitir*s should not be afraid I to speml :~'anc1_\' zmd wi.'~tclV. ____________V V___ x)\J|z an L1\JI-I all :1ppu:\1':|1u-vs ihu pl`:-su11L`Bx\.RR.I8T.BRS, SOLICITORS, NOT `.l`.lm-lv-in l".nmm1',< inv1\st'.in':L-IAPTFXQ TWTYJTJC. (}ON'VEYANCERS. THO8. A. MJIARTHY BARHUPIR, SCIDIOITOR, NOTARY O0NVlIYA;%ER, ETC. lA._-.A.\l.-n noncy Io you-A Phonn 501. Khq Block, Barrie. Oval lune: Ofce KDIIXJII I. POSTER BAJRRISTVEIB, SOLIGITOR, NOT-` ARV `I`.'T`("., II, A4-h\Il HONEY TO LO (hvon St, Barrio. Phone 69. GONE LDNGMAN B , SOLJCITOR, NOTARY Well SEVERAL JJAXB. Uie more oae-no larger, and perhaps smaller an the rsb-and the bowels fun- on of their own 8.(`COI'd for 9. still nger time. Until you don't feel the cuu-zaon a. CAMERON BARRISTIIRS, somcrnons, ETC. l 5 om. sz., amae. Phone 406. 1l'l'\`LY`H'V '\(\ TDAKY lJ\.rlVJ.naI4 p. .---V BARRISTEB, SOI..ICIT6-Ii: MONEY TO LOAN 1uI..-..._:.. 1`._.....l. RH" RnVr:n RADENHURST & HAMMOND BARRIJSTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC. Money to Lana at Lowest Rates Office, First Floor Masonic Tswnmlo Rldcr. Ql$oVVIIJ\l us uJ|A4vvrn|\A BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOT-V ARIES PUBLIC & CONVEYANCERS M....... .. 1.... :.. 5.... aunvu: .2 ! IVIOCIIV I0 Nil In any nunwo nu. lowest ouncnt rates. 18 Owen St., Bank. D. M. Stewart. EBTIN &_ ESTEN BARRIBTERS Soliitom in ' 31 Cnurt of Justice Notation P 1c, Conveyancers Money to loan at lowest current` gain` . L)rLlvnIM.\.J 2. ;.a.u. V Solicitor for obtaining: probate 011 will, gluwdin and mLn1inist1`ati0n.. and General 8 tor, Not:11'y, Con-; wyucu, etc. | M.ON'l!T `PO LOAN i DONALD F. MACLAREN, B. . __-.-.......` any -v/1-vr-r1r\'r\ I71. | l-h\.K I(.b3'1`.EKs`.5, UULAIUJ nu ma, NU 1-- `ARIES PUBLLCI CONVEYANGERS, I UFE1-um: us uwmv 51. In the pnenndne-s formerly occupied by the Bank ocl Toronto. Branch 0500, Elmvale, Ont. W. A. Boys, K.C. J. R. Boys. WHAT A DOCTOR KNOWS