Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 4 May 1916, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

)unlop `Sn.-ea; 9. tvhPl`0- _ >eVeI'y V ORQ TOWNSHIP A COUNCIL j` `$1.-V:I."-{1`V.U_15'}'1'c>'1'>Ia, Clerk. !BARRlE AND VICINITY man; |Who Belong to the 76th 3.1.] V --._`_.._., From ` Barrie Sergrt.-Major A. J. Plint; Se1'_ ,'t. F. J. Noble Corp. `Cat.te1'n'1ole` . Corp. J. Hyslop Lc.-Corn. C`. V". McCann Lc.-Corp. F. W. Scarlett . - Pyte. T R. McCabe V. H. Miller B. H. Moore W . R. Smith (I I ' . I Le.--Corp. Baldwln E. Laurin 11 vvu-1-Wu: lFrom Barrio _Lc.-Corp. E. Hobson J. F. Hill Pto. G. Brnnton \V. J. Bayliss R. Cole L. Conowarf VV. S..Coopcr l V G. A. Cheer i J. Dosourdie / XV. Fraser- "` A. Fraser J. H. Gilchrist F. A. Kelsey B. Owens C. _K01so_V' ,Shanfr}mossy .`.` Robf. Sllllvfll . E. N. Taylor Edgvar Taylor. C. \Vison1an> W . A. Zoihr `-` C. Ash-i(lEe' T. Foster J. . Foster From Cookstown` ' Lc.-Corp. A. Couse ' G. C. Duff Pte. A. R. Arnold (K. ;T. A. Baker `f H. ABas.si11L*t.h'waito C. P. L. Banting Geo. Copeland A C. Chantlel" - ".` WV. Draper ' . E. Dutton H. Harvey - A W. N. Hopper E. E. Kidd C. K011 T. A. Lawrence ' _ M. Marling: L L. ;\Ionkman ' G. McDonald, A 5 J. Prince 5 ' F. G. Rankin - A.`RoWe . . .D. Slight ` F. G. Sutl1o1'land , . R. \Valsl1 I J. squtllorland ,lFrom Newton , Robinson, 5 Fildcy. ' fo. (1 The problem of reconstructing the dyest11ffs industry in this country, to .insu1'e a regular supply for the tex- tile trade, is near solution according ; to. speakers at the National Assoq.- iation of Cotton Manufacturers con- . .vention in Boston last week. V. -wa`i'd_-Sn`. Chapin, of ,}.?_os_ton,-. cym- i ixnissioned ` L ` by; [the t ` associations .,`._to. |, _ O"}:FI'CJ TO MAKE OWN DYBSTUITS \.|\. u Men In Details R._ A. Bigrgs `. G. C0193" ` .-\.. Cooper . N. Hrnxaold . Ma(=Neil . . H. Selkirk . , L. \Vobb H. \\"onds XV. Lainf: L.;S. Thomas . A. Chapman G. VV. Severn H. Carter A. M. Balliston M. F. Breff S. Bremner J. A. Ci'awf ord D. G. Deacon- J.v Ha1'tt WV. H. Heaioy (710 1!. `13T" . Irish McCormick A. Morin James Harvey \ Goncau ' J . [Armstrong Zeihr H. Brooks J. Weaymouth J ._ `Cowan Clutterham Cunnington . Walton . H. Dart '. J . Milson . Rumney ' 1'1"!` '. Healey C. V. Hcarndon P. Irwin Latimor .' Kelsey 1\I:1cNoil Macliay . L. Hillel` V H. Selkirk F. Elliott ". J. Nixon . A. A. Looc `_`D company i Pte; . study the condition-seaused by the war, reported his belief that the situation could be Worked out here so as to satisfy all "demands. The great needs of the past year, he stated, have been responsible for bringring to ligsht many studies on the use of mordants and dyestuffs that would otherwise `probabl_\' nev- er have been tried out. The erec-` tion of a comprehensive coal tar in- dustry insuring` the eountry_fo1'ever asrzlinst another such calamitous happening as the present, is a thor- oughly sound and desirable propo- sition.. Who would suspect that for our unique decoration, AFor Valor- a few pennyworth of bronze as [to intrinsic worth-has a saleroom val- ue of `50 or more, when one comes into the market`! asks a Londong weekly. Where and how is the fam- ous eross made-that sovereign sym- bol of the superman, singling him out from the rest in sheer self-sac- rice, and bl`_8,Vi[1f_ .' the imminent deathin truly terrifying` sur1'o11nd- inyzs? ' 117 II :1 . 1 I 1 1 [Some Early Aevards of the Famous Decora.tion-Naval Man the First Recipient. If v'-i`c>~r:>I'1t- (Opposite t Church.) l 4lll_`.>3 5 . VVe11, the most grlorious and demo- cratic of badges is made in New Bond street--of all aristocratic. plaecs-an(l not at the Royal Mint,- at all, as . is probably Xsupposed. There ai'e a few ancient and histor- ic jexvellerso in this quarter of Lon- don, who for ecnvturies have spec- ialized in the makiur_" of" orders and chivalrie 1'e;'alia of all sorts. Crown Q'oldsmiths like Ga1'1'a1'd s. who sup- ply the _:o1' Star of the Gar- ter---one in a blue moon! 1:" T1 1 0 f1 1 AI, ;I.\.|\Iu\: Ill (4 llLl.l\ unuuu. Messrs Haneoeks & Co. make the and have hitherto been supplied with scraps of bronze from Russian L`uns. But this year the Russian metal is withheld, and 1 archaic '_C'hinese pieces are drawn uponvfor the making of this famous decora- tion. Strange as it may seem, the soverei~_"n pitch of human eourasre was once without its re<."ular b{l(i`_"(`. [The Cross bears Queen 'Victoria s names and owes its origin to that 11i2:h-spirited lady, who bestrode her own ehar.2'e1`. decked in martial sear- let and gold, for the ina11 eere- mony on the Horse Guards Parade. This was in 1857." 11' 1 A1 1 " -1 ,,A ,0 'iet0ria Cross to \V_'ar Office orders,. J. Ill-3 `V (.13 All .l.\Jl}l - Prior to that year signal acts of heroism either went unrecorrled, or else `_"O'C :1 crude medal, of which ex- anmles are iinw extrmnelv rare. and hiu`l1ly prized by the numismatist, The Crimean \\'ar drew to a close with mam` a rccor of stoic en(ln.r- ance. General W'int.er V was the worst foe our men faced in that 'drear_\` 'campair:n. And then it was that Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort decided on the Cross as the highest" possible tribute to naval or 1nilitar_v heroes who should per- form, in the presence of the enemy, a supreme act at` valor or devotion to their country. 7111 n A ,,- f__!__.L ___._ .._ V The very first recinion-`_. was a naval man-_\'oun2"C. D. Lucas, who rose to an admiral. He Was on board the Hocla in the Baltic when a live shell crashed on board amid a g1'oup of terried tars. Without _a moment ; hositait0n.~ Lucas (lashed upon the te1'1'iblc'- thin_1` and hurled it 0\'e1:boa1'd. ' n-vn 1"t`1 L `VLA4 1- _ ..`- ll; \'\L'l|J\Jl.1l\lo _ _` Perhaps 650 V.C. s 1121'. been 11Wa1`(l(`d to men of all ranks and o1'i2`ins. Some families have more than one. Thus the famous Gongrhs ( (llS`tl11L`lIlSll(?(l also in this war) have gas niay as three. . Admiral Sir `Geo112'e- Sartorius won the V; C., so `lid -b_oth his sons. Generals Regin- ald rand Eustace Sartorius. BUYING AWAY FROM HOME: The following article was repro-j (luced from the Bargain Counter News, and may apply to other coun-n tries. 1 . u V In a` recent issue we printed the folloxnng about the Southc-1'n far- mer; ` l rnv r. .. A . ....; ._ . . . 5 The a\`o1'ag'e_ Soutlwrn farmer gets up at the alarm of a Conn0ctic11t l clock. 1- nn-` 1 i Butfons his Chiago suspenders to Detmit overalls. . _ Y\'ashes his face with Cincinnati lsoap, in a Peniisylvania pan, Sits down to' `a Grand Rapids table. A `nu-` . 1 7,15-.- th, 1916. -21-121 I1 :1 CI',l1S31.llIl. ] . V 1'a'-vls under a blanket made in` Ne/\`E!Jersey, to be kept_ awake by a hon _g1og-_- ~t}1e ` only home ,p1_`o`ductf LLLUIC. Eafs C11icas_-:0 meat and Indian ho1nin_v, fried in Kansas lard on 9. St. Louis st__ove. - Puts` :1 New York bridle on a Kentucky mule, fed with Iowa corp. Plows a farm cove1'ed.b_v on 01110 mortgage with`an.- Illinios plow. I 1 1', 11V1 . , __ ___\..-V. Ln -nnor"c InOIT}Ig'C \\'1IH 2111/ Luuuua luun. ` \\'hen bed tunes comes l}e rea(_lS a chapter from a Blble prmtefl In Bo`ton and says 3. P1`a.V9Tv'mt9n i`Ql'1Jer,usalem. , , I 1 ,.,1_,_ _ LI..;1I'n\l- vnnn 111.; HISTORY or BRITISH v.c. How It Is Made on the place. And then-'- , He Wonders why make money raising ( 'l"l.n ..1........ 11441.. ..--4. .L\Jll\l H 1115 u She gets up from her slumbers on a Cincinnati made mattress; stands before a French made niirror; quick- ly adjusts her Connecticut made hair fastened with a Rhode Island bar- rett: arranges her New York com- plexion, adjusts her Baltimore `or Cincinati made gown; puts on New Jersey made hose, buckled with Philadelphia supporters; buttons her Boston made shoes and sits down on an Ohio made chair; looks up her household necessities through a mail order catalogue; picks up her Can- adian madefurs which resemble Old Tom, a Charleston house cat, the .only home product on the place, then ; wonders to hubby why business and iemployment are not better in our town. T1 11 - l(`I'!| 1 a cotton. V The above little extract was `wide- ly read and we had many requests from Southern business men for cop- ies of it. Now one of our subscrib- . ers who lives in the middle \Vest thinks that all of this buying` away from home is not conned to the Southern farmer and f1`u'nishes the following : A l(I`1*l : n - - - Ir\.I vv 1;- Hubby answers: If you buy out- of town, and we buy out of town, and our neighbors all buy out of town, and the jobbers sell all the the `so-called good people their family supplies at wholesale prices for cashwllat in thunder will be- come of our town and business? An Excellent Means of Reducing the Cost of Living and Se- curing Vegetables FRIBEXIS Organizaon work for the promo- tion of vacant lot g'a1`denin: should be taken up at once. Good Work was done in many places last sea- son aml this year should show a lame increase. Many months may be fed by this means; fresh veget- ables, the most healthful food avail- able, may be obtained with very lit- tle effort. In every city and town many vacant lots can be made avail- able for gardens, requiring only the initiative of public-spirited citizens to start the `movement. n 1 uv uLuLu |.u\ u|uv\,nu\,A|u. Among the sue_cesses_of last sea- son. the results from vacant lot {rar- dens in Ottawa may be cited. The enterprise consisted of 128 plots, fty by one hundred feet, for which no fewer than 180 applications Were received. No eliarze was made for the plots. ' The gardeners supplied their own tools and seeds, and, to minimize failres, were given until May 25th to begin work. If no work was done on a_ plot by that date, it was given to some one else. In this way several plots changed hands. June 15th was set as a sec- ond time limit when at least two- thirds of the plot must have been planted. Again a number of plots changed hands` as several gardeners failed to do suicient work or show- ed a lack of interest.- Of the one hundred and twenty-eight only twenty were weeded out for failure to do justice to their plots. VFLA nt\v\n L~nnI111l\t1 -pvonvn :-nvnn fl`? IIU \lU Juabuils DU I/IICIL lll.IJIlo The crops secured from some of these plots were as folloWs:-- D1n`- KT:-. 19 1`) Lnnrlic tr? nnfo`-nac- IAICGU lixvuo vv\.Ap _ J V\.II.L\I nu -\ Plot N 0. 13-12 bags of potatoes; a. liberal supp1y.-o.,eo1'.n,. pumpkins and squash. 0119,,-pquash measured 80 inches ar_o}1nd~ aLn'& weighed 125 lbs. -.4./.:';,; `J-Z ` . 1' n1 -IA1 ` D , A,1-___ lot potatoes ; 300 ears of corn; 1,200_ cucumbers and 300 tomatoes. `I"nI . \ nn r\ 1, , ,0 _,-L_L-.....- IJJILI IJUU UUIIICLLUL7-7: Plot No. 20.-9 bags of potatoes; avlarge crop of tomatoes, cucumbers and beets. 1- :-\v -I-1n 11 n D ,, D L__`_'L..l,.. 'dJl\l UUC|ab- I P1otiNo. 110-Potatoes, 6 bushels; carrots, `1 bushel; turnips, 11/2 bushels; beets, 2'bushe1s; cabbage, 36 heads; green beans, 16 23110113; peas, shelled, 10 quarts: onions, 2 ga1lons;,eorn, 13 doz. cobs; tonna- toes, 314 1b., ripe: 2 bushels, green. Plot No. l2l-Fo1' a family of` seven, _a constant supply of green beans, July 15th to October 1st, po- `tatoes, 6 bags and s'u`icient carrots turnips, parsnips, onions and cab- bage for the summer, fall and winter su1r)F131y. nn:~+ AP Hvinrr nnnfinnnc ff)" 'The cost of livinq continues to soar 111' Canada. entailing` an added, hardship on the head of the family in supplying: food. The cultivation of the vacant lot }.Z'{1l`(1Cl1 of."'ers healthful and pleasant rec1'eation and an effective n10:1ns_.of augment- i11}_vtl1c faunily income. T auu uu u nu,- under '15, ` ing 30. ` A mammoth ' oil-dri`\'en harvester that is l:-eing tried on Anstrahan whc-at fields strips about 60 acres :1 (lay. . A rat ,_I 1.. r\I`\r\ A4` Hun Ian-(rpgf (?UH:1'1uj_; no ;uuu.-.. . 'Ireland has 84,869 land holders having plots not exceeding an acre, _61,730 who hold more than one acre ' and not more Ithanlve acres; 153,299 In '1: --A" 1-25: man not exceed. lav. The coal in one of the largest new mines. in China lies so near the surface of the ground that it will be mined with steam shovels after the covering is removed . `- `I I nu nnn I-.- .1 `l-..`Jr.uoa sI.oo PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE SINGLE comes THREE CENT! VACANT LOTT GARBENS )1 e Inau HVU KCIUB, .LUu,uuu and 136,058 not exceed- he cannot LL__, bN, 122 .0, ivill be ie, every x A `D..- E: S. Glasgow u\.UL , uuuu , IJO. 8 loan. 1'_\' "Public, .\[onc_v _to :1` i_ntc-rest. I YS-ICIAN, Q 13,13... lisher . ......w... fh prem- _v the` Bank ico, Elm- %o_\'s, K.C., I.,_ Surg_ery .n espec1aI- St. Phone L 'k_'4L`\'JL.J..l.L`. S., Edin... fce and .. Barrio; lsmznnz. in... no as nesmenl u-mm m ;'Member oi ONE dex-taken. _ Morgan 11. Bar- x; x)I.|L5UUl..lu 1. Burton 10110 661. 3. Ed as 8 `IJ uuyuvu-It %f V Ontario, mveyancerl, pfce, Real l Bell, K.C. rB.ARR.I-s- 6 Suprem B {\..L....:- BARRISG innate Se , `Egg: nsulta.tion ,_._`I If T_*\'.*-_ ATE OF ;_dio't.he nib HIGHER Oplith In` as Ran den Li AA.\lI\.L Do door west ' r;;u I.uA'v~UA\lA.I 1., and b hree months annum. ' BAl{RIS- JLUOUI-I J - of To- will 5! "65- Cres- _ ,J u.Lu Lu. \./VLLALL5 Iv Uuuu From 1872 to 1876 Mr. Moberly was Mayor of the town. In 1886 he was appointed by Sir John A. .Macdonald a member of the Royal Commission to `inquire - and report "as to the advisability of the insti- "tution of a Court of Railway Com- missioners, After touring" the coun- 'try `the; Connnissioners presented a 1'ep`ort but were divided on some points, and with M1`. Burpee Mr. 1\Iobe1-1}" presented a minority report. "Nothing' then came out of the in- vestigation, and it was not imtil some fteen or sixteen years later, `When Sir \Vilf1'id Laurier was in ofee, that a Board of :Connn1ss1o1i- hers was appointed." 'nr-. nr,a.....1.. .....,. my A.....I:....n in ' Geo. Moberly. Oollingwood _ VM1`. George Moberly passed away at "the" General and Marine -Hospital, Co llingwood, on Tuesday of last week, at the advanced age of eighty- siic. He was born c in lSowerby,' Yorkshire, Eng. He attended school - in Barrie, and upon being `graduated `who in law `entered in partneifship with the 1 e Hon. James- Patton, with y he was artieled, opening an oice in Collingwvood in March, 1855. Since then Mr. Moberly has resided in Collingwood, andhad been prom- Winently identied not only with pub~ l lic life of the town but also with that of -the county. Laterthe enter- ed into a pnrtxlership with the late Charles Gamon, which continued until the death of the latter, a few years ago. In__.addition. to his law practice, Mr. Moberly was at var ious times interested in several industrial ventures.` I1 1 '11 Lil`- Juawu 111 111: ucauu. Mr. Moberly married Miss ;Fanny O Brien, d=aughter of Col. E. G. O Brien of Shanty Bay, and a sis- ter .of Col. W. E. O Brien, ex-M.P., of Muskoka. With one daughter, ' Miss Muriel Moberly, she survives. `Ir 'r\,,___1_ 'nl'...1......1-. D'nwIu\:n in .o FORMER BARRIE RESIDENTS] ,i af Toronto an, at low- , auuu>JvLAu| V\;l|'I1lALUDn Later, and among others, built the barge Messenger, which ` sailed the upper lakes for some time, and he was one of the rst to advocate the Aconstruction of a drydock and ship- .-yard in Collingwood. 'm....... 1070 1.. 107:: mm. 1ur,.1.....1.. VOL. LX: THE Death of Three Men, Prominent in Their Various Walks of Life, A Who Resided Here in Their * Earlier Days; ` `LLB `WILD a`lF1I\J4|Ll|/\a\.ln _ M1`. Moborly was an A11 in Ie1ig'ion, and a Co11s c1-vativo. Re- cently ho was appointed Clerk of the Fourth Division Court. He was al- so trustoe of the General and Marine ' Hospital. 1\l'.. 1\l'.-.Ln..1n uvnn nos nmnnav `in nnn J_lUb[U.l/'dal- Mr. Moberly was an ofcer in one of the rst rie companies formed in Simcoe County, this was in 1856. In 1846 he went to the front in con-` nection with the St. A1ban s raid. In 1866 he again _saw service in the Fenian Raid with the Collingrwood `rie company. \Vhen the Simcoe Foresters were formed i11 Sept. 1866 he received a commission as one of the regiments first majors. A`-.r-I :I- van 11?]1. n 04" `C110 1'cg1nu:uL5 HIBL um.Ju.|.a. And it was While at Collingwood station watching the 76th Bn. en- trainthat he caught cold which ter- inated in his death. -nr `nr_L__.I-. ..-....-.:...'J ]':an 'E`nnnt1 JVLISS J.VJ.U.1'.|Cl. iu.UUC1l_y , any aux. v n v vu: Mr. Frank Moberly, Barrie is .-a brother of the deceased. : `11 xv. V No. 1-.3 i vh-(1ZoL: No. 42371 THOMPSON cnzw. PUBLISHER I `Bank of tie. Money 3 daughter, , Annie, and two sons, James, of Brantfo1"d, and Vvilliam `J., of Toronto. Interment took place at `Bradford. ( UL L.L1C1.l\.LDo Mr. Fennell was born in Toronto, May`7, 1869. When a mere infant he came to Barrie with his parents, where he received his early educa- tion`. *Returning to Toronto when about seventeen, he became connect- ed with the Dominion Express Com- pany, Where he was a bill clerk for a great number of -years. Some years ago he founded and incorpor- ated `The Expanded Metal` Special- -ties Co., Limited, of whiclrhe was Managing Director, and was engag- ed -in i several important undertak- ings in welding and cutting of metals for the Canadian Northern Railway and the Canadian "Pacific Railway, The Toronto` Works De- partment and other concerns. ` At the time of hi_s death he was man- agzer of the Arena Ice. Company, which suppliedarticial ice to many `Toronto rms fromfthe Arena Gar- dens. rMr. Fennell `leaves a ividow, Idonia Romilly Fennell. -_,_ _-._ -1.` `ll'_. .]l' . `_Mr. J. Edward Fennell, a popu-_ flar busi11esS -man, died suddenly `at his residence, 610 Parliament street, Toronto, 0ZnT VVednesday of last Week, a`ffe1'~al1 illness of less than three weeks. He had a wide.-circle of friends. 1r w II I,,, ',, rl`l__,_A_L- LIIUIIIU. 1\IUlll1l.l._V J.` Ullllullo The deceased was `:1 son of Mr. `M. J. Fennell, who was a" locomotive engineer on the old Northern Rail- road. and who now resides- in .To- ronto at _542, Richmond street, VV. A brother, Frank Fennell is agerit for the Dominion Express Company at Truro, Nova Scotia; another brother, Fred.; and a sister, Miss `May, reside in Toronto. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has `curative powers of vHall s, _ Catarrh .to cure. Send for list `of testimon- bee11 able to cure in all its stages, and that is eatarrh. Catarrh being` '1'Catl_V-l1'1fl11Cl1C0(l by constitutional treatment. I-Iall s Catarrh'Cure is- taken internally and acts. thru the Blood on the Hueous Surfaeefs of the System thereby destro_\'in___j; the foundation of the disease, giv- ing the patient St1`C11_f.~1`tll by building` up the constitution and assisting` na- ture in doing` its work. The pro- prietors have so much faith in" the Cure that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails ials. . 11 V -n 1- P1TTTnXT1T117' 9. nn ruuutsaa. .1`. u. \J.l..|..LJJ.\.LJ.L w u\.;., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by "all Drug- gists, .75c. MAJOR RAIKES }a_r'g:_g Cleahing| We ca1.1 hel w>itl'1Vthe,heavyi ' ` house-cleam let us have BLAN&ETS` TO w 51-1 My Public,` Iixpert. ' Jan lnunn We have thee I handle this class first-c_las,s shape, `an is right " ip m'enteto- work, in `he. price ; [snows % uzddressf _F. J. CHENEY & Co, (`1_I.1 I.-- -..II `r\.....~. $10.0 REWARD $100 J. Edward Fennel] THE INTERESTS OF BARRIE, THE COUN'fY OF SIMCOE ANDITHEI DOMINION OF CANADA OUR CRITERION. coUR`AG1:oUs' WORK _i-ARRIE, _COUNTY..OF S-IMCOE, ONTARIO,MAY 4m. 1916 uuu U-Ulllll. .lll.U[Lo T Mr. Jno. Pearson appeared and made request that fence across road on line con. 13 `and 14 at lot 22 be.ren1ove d' and that ditch on same road be ,completed- .so as to carry] water to Lake instead of being: dam_-' n1ed [back on his property. Clerk to notify owner to remo_ve` ' fence Within 15 days from date of notice, or it will be removed at his expense. Ditch -Inatter to be considered later. 1'! , _ _,, J _ fl ,_ _L!L!_,. -2 1,.;.L-_.L A" LJLLUII .lll1l4LK3_1 LU IJU LUlh31\|\/L\.\l Llhllblo Presented petition of Egrbert Av- ison and four other ratepayers of- .Oro asking for the transfer of the property of Geo. Raikes and Col. Peuchen in S. S. No. 1, Oro and the- E. 1/Q 2l,'Con.v3, from` S. S. No. 1, Vespra, to N; S.S. No. 19, Oro and No.- 16, Vespra. `On. motion of Crawford and Scott 1-aid over till next meeting in order to `consult solicitor as to requirements of Schools Act in such cases. 0 1'1` 1'1 I`1,-l_.. I Town Hall, Oro,4April 26, 1916 . All the members` were present at `ea meeting of Council held here to- day. The Reeve in the chair. The and conrmed. 1r _____1 ____`| minutes of last met.-`ti`ng were read" IJUIIUULD 1.00 All Dllull Lu-Swan Presented petition` of H. H. Cooke and 11 others asking to have wire fences erected on line con. 3, north of Barrie road. No action as the bonus now oered for the erection .oi'wire fence will remedy this if they choose to take advantage of the offer. ` 1:--n 1: 1*1'?9n:._..._ -_1r___._'.`I mnnn ulc uucr. V - Milton E. Williams offered $2.00] for trees on road'opposit'e his prop- erty. On motion of Mahoney and McKinley, _the Reeve [to dispose of request as he thinks best. A an D::J1IvI\ vI91~n~"n oe].';nn` kn .l'l5l.[LlC.`Jh db `Ht: laluuna ucau. Geo. Bidwell wrote askin: if he built 3. nine wire fence with wooden upri_;`hts would he ` get the bonus. Clerk to reply that he would if the lfenee when completed eomp1i_ed in other respects with the provisions of the by-law. He. also asked for the remo\'al of a pine stump on his road division. J. Luck was in the ,,,1,n_ __.:n_ - ~L..'....` n l/HUI 1'C.31ll:l.'Lb \\1I.u UIIU llxuv ;._uuu.. same trouble with a stump. A011 motion of. C1'awfo1'd and McKinley the Reeve to son to both 1'(-quests. 71" 1 1'11, ,L,,,, `l`).-1I....... .`:V.~ 'n I I I u\ an-.u IJKILII ll L11!` 1'|l'L'\L' LU art.` l'\' Hydro E1ootri_o F.-ailway AAss'n. 1'0 Annual '1\Icct1n;:', (=to.,`no achonl taken. 1r'r,,., ___ l'd.KUll. D. McLean, isoo.-trons S. S. No. .5,-as.kin2 that the faxes paid by Alex. Biaek for 1915 be 1'o{'undodl and the Section will refund his School rates. On motion of ;\Iahon- 03* and C1'aWfo1'd gr1'a11fo(I. The R-eiexc presented statomenf from Union Bank, Barrio showing -amount to credit of township acct. on 31st March last. which was _found correct. a 1-,_,1_ ;__.1--.`l L`--. ,;..1..n..,- nu? L'U1'{l.'\.'U`L- _ G. S. Luck asked for e'u1ve1`ts on] his road division., The Reeve to` consider 1'eques't and take such ac- tion as be found necessary. ' ,,_ 112.--... .\-.J (.1...-\n+ nu-n-\n-11-_! lvlU1l E1/D UK`: Luluuc Ln\.x.\.uuu;_y. , V Messrs, Moore and Grant appear- ed and asked for a money grrant to improve a portion of line con. 12 andv13, northjof Ridge, as it was in an . almost impassible condition. Laid .over until road grants are made. ' & Brown, obtaining nship and era] Soli- ncer, eta. `KT .. 0 maqe. . On motion of Scott and Crawi'o1' the several` bills before the Council .fo1-work on roads were laid over until next 11xeetiu9."i11 order to have all such bills considered at the same time as a number had not yet been sent 1n. "TL **` ``&'``-'\r1 `A nr\\ns\`n5(\ Dean sclxy 111. . . V . E. Thompson offered to complc-to Work on S. R. 15 and 1G..cOn. 3, for the sum of $10. The Reeve to accept when satisfacto1f_\' a1-1't111g_ro- ments have been completed. ,, _L:__, -1: 1\r..1.........- .....J I...-nv_ IIIEIILS lld\ U uucu \:uu11u.cu;u. On motion of Mahoney` and Craw- ford vaccollnts now before the Coun- cil amounting` to $69.35 we1'e'ord0r- ed paid. A _ T A - an -v\\`I\`-:r\r| n-p r`1vnu*`Pn1`1:` 91111 `T0- CU [)H.1U.. 7 On m`otion of ,Crawford and Me- Kinley, Council adjourned to meet at the call of the Reeve. A /VI I Q The building` of St. Paul s Cath- edral, London, required 36 years..- n1...-.1.\.. T Lnil in `via 1-n`H1n1n n Wash Away \ kin Sores! U\l1al, Jquxxuvnn ;\.\lu;;wu. uv _/y....-.-.. g Charles I. had in _his 1'etiin_1e a `dwarf `only 18 inches tall. - most delicate skin, 4 To the In 13' sufferers of skin] `A disease D.D. ,.t_he liquid wash, has `become a h sehold wiord- They .know-it istrel ble and they can de- pend on it, th V` do not hesitate to` 1'eeommend it t their neighbors, It hasproved itsel a remarkable rem- edy for, all form of Eczema. ` It is: a gerniicide that " l1ar111less to the! but still it is em feetixfe andquick `action. If you are a suerer from kins diseases, in- cludin_g~ ulcers, pimp s, sca1es_. crust` or Eczema in any ft) 11, this remedy will notdisappoint ` u. l _ It has stood thettest and to- '3' is "the mas- ter p1`epa1f'atiQn for all kin (liseases. t....u~. in 4-n_.-"lav nnfl l: ~nl\nn`l n`.1`.' .D.D.D. Soap, that keep LU]. lllcllaxatluu .LUJ. cu; J A x A x . \ . ; u \ . ..,,-... Come in to-day and k `about our guarantee :on D.D.D. Also about the skin luealthy. A . ` F0 15} Years` ,-.."* `b 4 AStand.ar.d_` SI: Demodv 4 ) Hf `. 9. Rohgnsson, .- Dr Court of MC, COD- the Bank Money to rates. , G.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy