Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 6 Jan 1910, p. 7

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[r On motion Touse Bateman was lpaid [$4 for wood supplied VVm. `Mains, and Mrs. Joseph Dunn got |$S. both being in needy circumstan- ces. f\, ,.,..e... ____,, n_,__1_ __.__ LCD- On motion, George Barclay was refunded $19, there being an .error in assessment. The Reeve and the Treasurer were instructed to `duplicate cheques Nos. Sdand 94"in favorof David Barclay, original cheques having been lost. TL- 'D....-... -...-`I LI... (`L-u-1. ....-u-.. on IISIIKCII \aII\a\lIaI\rJ 11371555 LI\r\-ll l\lDLn he Reeve and the Clerk were au- thorized 'to consult the To. `Solicitor with regard to'the Big Bay Point |Drain levy. A I Council adjourned sine die. D T- UIT T T.` f`Tn.~f- IIJ. 1111, I-IDC {)1 I\J\Jlll l.\ll \4\J|.lll\.|l, 3411:. On motion the commutation tax of Albert Rainey, $2.50, Richard Pear- Son. $3, John Coulter, $1.50, John Hubbert, $6. Wm. Young, $2.25. and James Herrell, $3,. was refunded and Georire Stewart s com. tax, $3. was `remitted, work having been perform- .1 lllm USE DUSTBAIIB Dustbane is a green colored powder. It comes packed in cans- ready for use._ When you use Dustbane the `dust does not y around the room and fall on the carpet and furniture. Dustbane `absorbs the dust, leaving the carpet or oor clean artd bright. umcesana School Use rackeuan bblsi.-`bbl$,&1-bhls |In `Ever; Barrie grocers have been auth- orized by the manufacturers of ebustbane to send you 3. 35 can of on a week's free You want it. Dust is a .general nuisance in the home, the ofe, the school- room, in fact anywhere where it gathers it is a nuisance, and it causes sickness and disease. Dustbane for Stores. Don t have another dusty sweep- It will "cost you `nothing to tfy. INNISFLIL COUNCIL. '1i'. J'-."H1'fLL,3. cm-L-. -rnE BEVERAGE FOR. ALL ~| means Excellence A ofE 7'" '-;beak_sasv'v Ta" ' T Gfltaful youfpor hourlgs 3-say snippet i:eve:afg?1siainisb:; t?;;`ts. `em'u" ,';i:::;: E PPS S MARKETING TELEPHONE 6 ` di- - Lois M 3.1 mce f of 1 I always at your elbow, steadii1y':i,ne ;eases usefulness. It does a score of errands while a. messenger is doing one. 7 You come to accept te1e- phone service as a matter of course, like the air you breathe or the `R/ater you drink. Your Bell Telephone performs these`daily..ser- vices of neighborhood communication, and it does more-it is a unit in theuniversal system and enables` you to A reach any one any timewlthin the range of the Long Distance Servxce. A % I SAVINGS DEPT; Oi1e'._Dollar` opens` an ` account. and interest is~' added` j % yearly; % sssssss? ssps :0 UR %faithfu`lBe_1lA v \.ull. the oel bel at, on; es the ian rth-[ Every Bell Tdlephona is the} Oenter of th.oV8ystor'n.' ~ 137 me am TELEPHHNEGUMPMIY % nrcmnn. : '._iher e~ .s . `Q. il`e,'a;!ing_;i` lgo-ahead? _ paper-V--a janapr` bo`t_h. _-'h}!vrtiis;s:5'air; ` want. H . Vigscribers ...Qeneral :.13.ax;kt3ix...!3.;i%m.c;j Liana V . -- 97',` H ` M3 is, ;: ` ~TVun.ia%A L.` - ` arrie Branch %- 1{P;ojnts: A snc+mwMs+q:A%%` cagiiar %. . . % L Reserve-Fund . . . . +._ _ * 1`13f{9`59?$;*i35`Ei ?2** '7 General-1 = Mana-ger a~-'~~.0te;-Toroitto; To . r Mg; ` _Th Books and Statemnts 'of. thisV B,ank~ age: gmgually ;Msubmit`t_ed to a " "s'tr`1c'tlyj n;(lepe.ndnt* audi_t. tjji Vx,ie vv -and ' iS ii; :5`o:5ula-1?" BarxfiV v4i t4 s. AD- VANCE, /It sho_w.s_a .q1;a'fi ty of . irc1.: 1atiA<> 1_i,L'_ c -_th;e_ 'rqux;d'1-`for % .ho'xr`ier-I ` ' V} ` 3 Ineaisuiatezi `&*3~` and ail- e'r- ~ as ' Ten Advantages of Silo. Missouri State Experiment Station `summarizes `the value of the silo as foTlows_ : . ,-- ,. c . 00. *3 Sm'Systa.1iof ventitatiom V Fresh air is most essentialjto 1:`; V. , shealtl1`i:~of.- stock`.and'* to. the ..puri_t)' lief i `1nilk`while_it is exposedwo the V '_ during; theemilking .Dl'0C"C5$a. .T f_' I a alt! -'?;i3:!'I1e1ssy-.;="8netial1Y those sum` ns9ld;,;;etions;.`v'.thtoiigh.;ta false. _ _ e_.,r;vx1ent_ .9.fliumanit.;. hesitate to xpQse- t`heii'~;.it_:`6*ivr toe tli'e*"`q::<`>l<`l,`i'lf">fre_stx outsie ` It" is;1"h6*6Ve1?ier;""a""7more llumaiie act to allow -them plenty of" oxygen`, . which,.will.- help them to sustain their bodily heat, than to injure their vit- ality bv forcing them to breathe `over and "over again the foul, vitiated air of. an ill_-`ventilated stable. aha cmnnqv an`|nc-vino `tn- ..A`.. Another excellent and cheaper` sys- tem is that recommended by Prof. King. The freshqair is admitted near the ceiling from ducts which open to the outer, air near _the floor` of the stable on all sides of the building, so that wind from any direction will nd entrance therein. The foul air `.is drawn out by ventilators, opening near the floor and leading to the tilators sho__uld be. provided with slid-V ing ' trap doors near the ceiling, through which the foul air may be drawn off. The intake pipes may easily be supplied with dampers, or partially stuffed with hay, when the wind is too severe from any one di- rection.--G. H. Blair, in Farm and roof. For warm weather these ven! l3airy. i xuau u_Iu qpuu. us Luc .I.uu\.u. . 0 0- 0 . ' The increase in agricultural opera- tions and .:the employment of _ more horses on old improved farms to op- erate agricultural machinery ihave broadened the demand for horses. and competition among farmers has lhrmed prices `in the countrysand made is difficult for shippers to buy horses at` values to meet the.require- ments of the city trade. Farmers have paid'f$5oo to $600 per pair for horses to work on the-farm, and the high cost has stimulated many farm- ers to buy` mares tb raise future home supplies. It takes the aggre- gate sales of many minor products. of `the farm to realize the price of a pair of good horses, and farmers will nd it economy to raise their horses in the future, as indications warrant the expectation that demand will ex- ce`eL supply for several years. ' o lunn`l\ ngbuvnnts qonqnoqovacn More Horses - Needed. Never have farmers` experienc d more diicultv in-' nding suita e horses for agricultural use. or paid higher prices for their su plies than the current season, says he Horse`- man and Spirit `of the Times. TL- :.-A-Ann- can an-u-unn`Lu-sin` Anna:-Ln,` The A `shortage of the sunplv as cornoared with the demand is not in- duced by decreased production. The horses of the United `States increased in 1908 no less than 648,000 and in- creased in value upward of $103,000,- 000. vet the surplus is limited owing to `the broader demand for agricult- ural and `industrial use. Horses wear out rapidly under severe conlmercial service, and demand is ever ready: to utilize the new `supply and dealers never found it more di$cult to ll the orders ofcustomers.` The horse `industry offers exceptional oonortun ities to the intelligent breeder to re- alize attractive prots in raisins: wood V mafket classes to suoply the demand. LU auuply \uu3I.UllICI Du T11!-..`l`ll`;l`VC|IIvllil~\ll l'dUlCn _""H.Ie`re:=-fare manyr_sc_hemes `for ave}:- txlatmg stables, opening doors atld windows. amongst them, but the cited ` that-t_'1east exposes -the animals to 'draft. and extreme cold is that which 3.41- mits the air into the barn by means ofehutes, and liberates it from small holes in front of or near the heads` of the cattle.` The foal air is best `drawn? out by ducts leading" from the ceilingto the ventilators on the .rog$f, which will always insurean upward draft of air owing to the expansion of the heated air. - ~ A..-u_-_ _____-.._A -44 -1.-.-A~-,,- A I. 'SilaI?e'kegos young stock thriftv and gm-owAin_g_a1l winter. ` ' I P `, _ be next. to impossible.- N - --.v- w -v-- v ---.--- --' ha?_id1e?i'"ti3En dry` fodder. . e, The silo prevents `waste of corn stalks in the manurewhen sil- age is fed.> ' ' A 7. The silo `will make palatable food of rstuffi th_at would-`not other- wise be eaten. v 7` - ` 8.` It` enables the farmer to pre- serve food which. matures at a rainy time of`the.year,-when drying would 9 9., It i's~..th_e most economical me- thod: oitsuppllying food for; the stock during '/the `hot, dry periods ,in,'sum- rmeg-,,..:when__the `gpasture is` short. " __ ,. _potato'e_s at.-the price,-,tli;.e'.3?` . gp tion and the stock greatly improved. Boys growing` up, one of them in- spect.ed the Western Provinces for "an opening, but came bac`,k.i Soon af- ter `another ne" hundred acres, on which are good outbuildings and a $3,000 brick house, were purchased, and all 1s_paid for. That has- been accomplished by a `man starting out in life minus a hand, but with a stout heart and good management. To-day the farms and equipment would total up to $20,000. .Another acquaintance started life: as a worker on a farm, married ,.the_u_ helper in .the home, worked7for'wages_' for a time. rented. one farm. and then. another. The next. move was to aa` _ two-hu`ndr.edg_acre.. `farm `purchased, a, 5jo.nd later two V-more farms Jwere. add,-_ ` ='- ed : and, lastly, another , ,ioo_ acres Aware ,secu'red .;for.-~.`_the. `coldest X5 : `When. he . _died?-rec'ently_, V lie ; could be `cl! fated-..dat $23.~o'o_o, clea1 ,.=o`verfand` ~ `arlv Eastern Canada, ` we `have the` he son sf properit ..breeding' of stock which result ` sales of single animals for hundreds. i ~m!d_iiOjIT:8d we, have .t e .women 8 51 We do not stop to consider that greater possibilities, from a nancial standpoint. are opened to the skillful young man on the farm of to-dav. Who was not heard, butrperhans considered little, of the doings in the m and at times thousands of dollars." Further, we have` seen breeders make. . not a `hundred or" two - hundred. but up. to a thousand dollars a day. and that `in a foreign country, when Canadians -f4Easterners-,-have gone across the lines to World's Fairs. and gathered the.cream of the magnicent -plums satisfaction"..go to the}; heart of the. `man whois in such close touch with nature and`-natu'ne s_ Creator, when he tills the-soil,` sows the `seeds, breeds the stoc and-feeds and fits to .a n- ish such animals as Show to the wide world that . here -in Canada- particul- iad (the. `men; who; all toget er `_'l3l(` of'et'.ed.: .'What thrills of `pleasure and! \.ccu'un; auppxy IUI auvblax _y\;aI.a. Horses go !into service younger than a score of years ago, .and are soon disabled on the hard paved) streets of cities. The services of citv horses being shorter increases the demand. andif motor vehicles were not largely used it would be difficult "to suooly customers. `FL- ~-L__L-_4 A: A.`--n -naa\a\`-- an ms. I "Z. "I? "`$}ZdEEes""" beef more cheaply than does dry .feed.- 3. In enables cows to produce .miTk ade bittterv more eccinomicaliy. `haigdled than dtjrfodder. ` A ,4 4.. Sivlage is ` more conveniently P -B7`. "'I`~l:ae`"siIo rwill palatable that would>not4 ` `hie next in1po`ssible.L . .. -.-V -v vu-u` 8. It enagies the fafmer -to n_re- gt a fanny of-theyear, when drymg .----v v- ----r---_--.-- `--'9.- . It is the most thod of supplying/food for during`/the `hot, dry _in_ sum- mer, _when_ the T ` With potatoes at the price they are bringin eat.countryTpoi: 1ts it will pay. much; etter to ,_f.eed.ther_n to stoek than to sellthgm. VoBo1l._ed pot.a.to`tes make an admirable addition to hog feed `and ma;/`hm adva:ita geou`slyf dsed :1[vith' vntilk .oows._r' Th_e f'T1s'5` no feed gth_at`*wi he r_elishedn1`o'r e-lafy cows t]1au=- boiled o'ota`t`oes:' with`~~~'?a:,\little meal: added. Potatoes -L contain about L same-vszcomostion as eom;_s i1age. 3. j .Ke..>. . te gs-ijt,~? '.sh[_e!1 and ,` : charcoal 1%bxe:ai %1.1,.`ed.a% Ta`nd% :611 g the wate:'J,:%oun- "%8in % `F rdaLA%;i!!:%.w:nt:ra A ` int me; Rec- 3! Y8.M* 99"! i. A schoolmate, who went clerking` in -our county town, .secured for me'._ a position behind a counter. The. news fairly made the future `life ap- pear a thing of beauty and a jov for- ever. The considerat_e advice of par- ents, however, prevailed, and-the old farm`. was given a fair trial._ Consid- erable latitude being allowed, im- provement of live stock and different system of tillage were introduced, making a decided change in the as- pect of conditions. From that day to this. gratitude tova wise father and mother for their "successful persua-` sions, and the subsequent permission of changes in operations. have been deeply felt, and why? Because in a few short- years the advantages, the possibilities and unending pleasures of life on the farm were clearly in sight. ltfwas. good to feel `the ac- complishing of something worth_the having. to help in some small meas- ure the uplifting of the standard of agriculture in our excellent country. Now, recalling\the boys at the time- some older, -`others youn`ger--scarce- ly one who took to trade or business but has dropped largely out of sight. while the great majority of those who stayed with the farm are in com- ,fortable circumstances. The old com- parison always holds good, viz., that inf those who farm in the Eastern Provinces not more than ve per cent. prove failures; while of all oth- er classes in business, in the leading cities of_ America, ninety-ve per cent. fail some time _in their career. - v -c.-, ' -`Why s'h'ouid`~ young men stay on the` farm? A't"_rst `thought the ques- tion} may appear simple and . easily answered; but, judging by the ap- parent tendency of _ bung men born in the country .an reared on the farm to seek some opening `to. launch out in town or city to earn their liv- ing and rnaketheir way in life, `it may not be so very easy to solve the problem. That,-the -aim is to` nd an easier way to "live, and to secure-o a compe ence--or, perhaps, a.fortune-- "IS rea ily discovered in conversation with the shifting crowd- D `_ - .. A "Personal Experience`. Such were the attractions .to the writer` during .:the- latter ,days at school, in the old) log building at the corner of our, farm. Life on the farm apoeared tobe, and certainly was then, exceedingly distasteful, because` at the time there was an over-abun- dance of hard work. and notimuch of anythi1_1g'_else plentiful. There was not then_ goodstock, nor intelligent methods of management, nor the comforts in farm homes so compara- tively common now. The necessaries- of life were frequently very scarce indeed. and as to luxuries," they were scmetimes dreamed of. ' But hear someone whisper, you got a farm to start with, and so you had it `easy-going. The reply is this, that with conscientious parents and a large family it was simply a mat-- ter of paying of shares, and sup-i porting parents in a separate home for many years,'which in return for a hundred acres of land, badly ex- hausted by over-cropping. just meant paying for the land in full, in easv payments. Although we have added another hundred acres, by purchase of rough swamp land, having good` soil. and expended more than its first cost in clearing and draining, yet the net income from the business has not been, .on the average, the past twenty years, less than a thousand dollars annually. besides the paying of all household` expenses. It is not neces- sarv to state how_'much more it has been; ` Looking around, a man is seen with one hand gone. Unfortunate, is the thought` which immediately comes to mind, but wait and note the results. Losing it when quite a young man, he toiled away, always in connection with farm work. After a time 50 acres were purchased. \That sold, a hundred-acre farm was next secured. As years passed, barns_ and othe outbuildings were built, "and an ex~ cellent brick home erected, the land brought intoa goodstate of cultiva- tion and the stock greatly improved. growing" `one of _the ug-. 4;-mg --ggng is--L -no-- I..-.;!- - Cg`; -1 (John Campbll, inT I`.>inds:ay,W:.a1r'der.) IIVLIIVI O A II`! II\rJ\L * III\} 7 Q ` V` II UNI `In. R two-hundred acre farm purchased, .ud'later` more farms were add- Cd: and, lastly, another too acres were secured for the oldest sorf When. he died recently he _could be safely rated at $23,000 cleaiu- over and above the_on s property. V Other Examples; .3510 this FarmJ vva We" must. however", never forget that such successes as the above- mentioncd were not secured by young` `men hiring and getting part of their wages in the keep of adriving horse, .011 sporting a `top buggy, or anew suit. to`be paid in six months or next year. "Ac-u bun ngb on QOQOO V---_ 7-...------_, - Just" one instance more, out of the `scores known a_nd heard of. A voung mam, who worked for years `in the '-nvleihborhood of others, saved little unt Ifnarried. not in very early man- ghood.-Zl The `pair worked `away for a few! years on a rented farm, doing fairlv` well, then moved to a larszer oneof 150 acres. There mixed farm- ing." with the bacon hog a leader, was carried on. Results now in their prime? of life`, with a half-grown fam-I ,ily`;.,a` comfortable home, large barn and-` stablings, situated on a wood hundred acres of land, fully and well stocked,` to which they moved two years`ago,. not -vowing any person a dollar, and `all made practically in .a fewyears on rented lands. The rat- ing now may be put at $10,000, all told. ` ;_y,'_q.A._--unnu BBGIDIGVEIUII Ill. |albVC3o : ?,.Meiting an". Iznstitutve officer in 7Wae`-loo. two Vrothers w o indel` art of their? fstarztin life in his employment on the lfindingtthem `always steady, trust)? fellows",-. led`*"him -to be inter- e`std.in gtlfleir Avgelflare. Meeting one, of them, `it wasgathered that mixed farming was` their aim from .tl1_e-out- set ion each `of theinpurchased 1:0- ars"3li`i -told-me,-,1 of; - acre . farms,.,_ The ofeer 'rnentioned- _infdrfned me ghat, by the brothers steady ap't)l iea"t1on* iaiid` good manage- 1nent, thg mortgages were melting away}; one at the rate ofi$8oo and in- terest`, and throther $900 and inter- est annually. x ).c Never before in Canada s history, `was it so easy as now -for a willing; ` lad of fteen to make a start in se-, . ..curi'ng' capital, with the aim of own-, in: a jfarm in the future in the East-1 l ern Provinces. Wages paid on the! farm are the highest on record, and `the work is "so `largely done by the use of labor-saving machinery and appliance that there is practically no|5 hard manual work compared with. the long ago. `It is Quite possiblel for aelad of fteen. starting out for himself, to live comfortably, so.far asl clothes go, and have $600 saved when -the age of twenty. VV hen twenty-ve he may have, if careful, $1,600 to $I,- I 800. to make a good start on a rent- ed farm of I00 to 150 acres, accord-_ ins: `to the lines of mixed farming `taken up. ' 11>?-.1 I 1 1 I ,`-.ajnd `last 'ye`arfbo_u?ght a farm 2'w11.:; L . ,,. _ _ "ai,n ffull at ghe rate 'Il";,:%i going. ' hn'his belongmgs, not pggtggg any vpmeg On his .a:=t $"Ourl" 130,5, or gzp ;__tc1}_$1d?.; 'i_1e;iha33if}:3:ime. `giv- `gnar h1m}the f_t!rH._`6pp -Jovtng` the sattsfaction of success. -5': ~. in}: o_f`.1,_00_ acre;s,. igrwigggch xhe. . bile still a young`-,: ` an; havgp "his most helpf Q ; be_tt.eI?v.N,_-ha.1_\;;;%,;5:I__lEi"tally 7 twin: -at Some Prizes in Agriculture. _ Sometimes we hear it said, Whv. Just see what a doctor of szreat skill ;`zets.for performing a critical opera-_ tiont or note the fee a clever lawver secures for -brinszlng a complicated case to asuccessful issue! We,.hear! of a hundred or two hundred dollars being paid the former. and. perhaps. ve hundred to the lattei--that is. if the costs-taxing oicer does not cut it down! ` --v- .. u... v-....._ '-., If the present-dav young men of` the Eastern Provinces were willing to undergo such hardships, live so sparingly, and be content with shacks for many years, as thousands of those who go west are obliged to out up with, verily many sections` in the East now cultivated _not half. and that done in a half-hearted and most exoensive manner, would soon be- gome`Mi_dlothi'ans and Midlands in Within my knowledge is a voting` man, who, by his steady work for! another onethe farm, taking deep in- terest in the doings, and considerable I pride in the successful carrying out the same, has made at least $7,000 in hard cash; besides. he has travel- edgenough to see `much of the outside world. Onythe. `other hand, a school- mate leaving. Ontario for the Cana-I dian West many years ago. with $7,-; ooo.`a share of his deceased father s property. accumulated on the farm, returned to visit friends vears after. To go back to wife and family.this brother. on the old homestead. had to advance the needful, as the visitor was"without funds. It is not to cast anv reections on our great and good Western country mention is made of the instance, but to point out as clearlyand strongly as possible. by comparison, ' that success deoends. more--immensely more---on the man! than on the Province in which onera- tions are carried on, 9 \a\IlIl\y LVL Cana_da. {iogv to AGet_:-1 Sar_t. jRIIlK_\I\JIIl GMVAHB ii. wluc IICIU IOT I\_` Alt `e 7st; !'0lu't " d ori to realize how ,_,,et,;st tgquht and study, and leadi ' d`uch"<:an"b*e`h' is Being done in th. hne of igxprovemgnt, by` ,obrvig and practgcmg glonl tr; gigfgf meth- . ods pnocedurjt. lllann on 51'`. 'a \l-..-..L.... `Ai ...".QI. .. 1:12- L .5 Pw=9w- ' .}Wl1"n _to the ;leasu;c;bf_ 5 ch 2. 1if_e eis**`ad1`edr'he~>-o `er imipinf':'ta' g- consid- eration, that a more certam success can be secm;ed_on the we?!-managed -..-nu LL-.. 2.. -..__ _LL -- - - -~ V... Ir`; uwuunwu VA: on vv\.IA`IIIl.laVC\l t _ .,ix;., at;3r,J.,,othe,r occupation, Zfn `?toi1>'suiniti1ng 119- the reason why the`young man of to-day should; remain on the farm, if peace, pleas- ure, progress and prosperity are among the desires of his ambition. `We 'nd.- atleast in Ontario. ten anuuugy Luc ucsgrcs Ul_; nls aglulnon. '~We -'nd;"at'Ieast in Ontarib, ten farmers, _.who; have retire ac- tive"`life`,i while yet strong and sturdy, with sufficient. means to end their days in` peace and comfort, for each one retired from all other kinds of business and professions combined. `III... 41.... -L.-I! LI... __------ ---.A IJUIDIIIDEIG GIIIJ VIUICDUIIJIID LLJIIIUIIICKL _ Why. then, should the young man not st_ay, where success is nearly an absolute certainty. where failures are few and far between, where his op- portunities are envied by the toilers in the towns, by the occasional well- doer in the city, by the odd million"- aire in our land, and seized by rnany of_ the British and other lands aris-- tocracy, as was done, and done well. by our late noble Queen Victoria, and also for many years-past and nresent--bv our greatly-admired and peace-loving King Edward. kingdom aoids a wide eld for n.4,; `Inn:-inn` Lin:-u.A"n`.L -...I ..A....I-- _..J -1--.!` The sixteenth meeting .of the In- nisl Council-.for, the year 1909 was at Craigvale on the 15th ult. All members present. (`...................4._...... ..-..._- _--J r_-..- au\.IIII.l\,l pncacut. I Communications were read from VV. Ault and A. E.'H. Creswicke on Id`:;ainage matters. TI-In nnnnuqnl-n vuvllvn l\-t`n- vu_.ura.:ua5c u1|'.tc;a. The following accounts were. order- ed to be paid: W. G. Faris, Treas- urer of West Gwillimbury, Innisl s share of digging ditch` on South Townline, $32.50; Thomas Turner, bonus on 254 rods wire fence, $38.10; W. 7. Davidson, repairs to bridge on 4th Con., $4.35; Hy. Armstrong, 45 loads gravel, $4.50; James Hubbard-=, work on 1st sidcroad, $30.75; W. J. Allen, repairing culvert on 1st side- line, $5.00; R. M. McConkey, 171 loads gravel, $17.10; VV m. Copeland, repairing culvert on 2nd Con., $2.00; R. J. Hill, Clerk s %; yr. salary. $93.- 75. reg. B. M. D., $14.60, express and postage, $6.30; James Black, Treas- urer s V, yr. salary, $43.75, postage, $10.00, preparing nancial statement, i$5: Henry Grose, V2 yr. salary, $24, `Com. work; $18, preparing financial st`atement., $5, postage, $2; E. T. Mc- Conkey, % yr. salary, $24, Com., $16; George Leslie, % `yr. salary, $24, Com.. $15; Eben Todd, % vr. salary, $24, Com., $12; Ashford Warnica. V2 yr. salary, $24, Com., $6; Municipal World, election supplies, $27.23; Wm- Latimer, Collector,_ salary, $100; Mrs. .- D. Hill, use of room for Council, $2. I (3.. ......a:.-.... 4.1.... ...-..-.-..-n'..4o.4Z.~... 5... AF `of

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