Ontario Community Newspapers

Lindsay Weekly Free Press (1908), 14 Jan 1909, p. 6

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Many visitors were present from outside points, and all speak in high. est terms of the success of the event. Visitors were present from Burketon, Millbrook, Blackstock. ’ Cavanville, Cadmns, Pontypool, Yelverton, Orono and Lindsay. out passed off very pleasantly and everything was conducted on thor- oughly up-to-(late plans. The music for the occasion was furnished by Roem'gk’s Orchestra, Lindsay, and that musical organization certainly lived up to its high reputation apd gave a magnificent programme of specially prepared music. JanetviIIejBaIIz-3Was __ Most:5uccessful Event Over one hundred couples were present at the elegant “At. Home” given last week in the C.0.F. hall at Janetville by the Amusement. Club of that. place. The event was a‘decided success and most. enjoyable to all in every way. The proceedings through- OVER IOO COUPLES PRESENT ROE.NIGK ORCHESTRA FUR- NISHES MUSIC. m. train to carry all the freight and run through to Haliburton while the train that leaves Haliburton in the morning should be a fast passenger train. To these suggestions and a complaint as to the bad condition of a pasengér coach, he has received an acknowledgment and as assurance that the matter would be inquired in- to and such action taken as will avoid cause for similar complaint. fl Minden Echo: Mr. A. Palmer, has written to the general manager of the G.T.R. system, setting forth the in- conveniences and consequent discom- forts of pasengers on the Haliburton Division. He recommends the 11 a. DISCOMFORTS TO PASSENGERS ON THE HALIBURTON TRAIN OBJECTED TO. Inconveniencesfof the When Bengough returned to Kin- mount the picture was repeated at the entertainment in that place and the brakesman never heard the last of it. Perhaps it’s the memory of this pleasant episode that makes Conductor Gall so invariably genial and happy natured. Many of the pictures given by the talented artist brought loudest ap- plause, but the one that showed the brakesman in his. smock and overalls and real as life itself, with the girl most comfortably close and his train most uncomfortably far away, and the trainman’s face struggling between appreciation of the closeness of the one and dismay at the fatness of the otherâ€"well this picture convulsed the house. The applause fairly warped the shingles on the roof, and the1 laughter shook the rafters. l And the poor brakesman had to stand it all. He was up in the gal- leryâ€"â€"with another girl. Arriving at Haliburton, “Dinny” let it be generally known that there was something special to be doing. The result was a packed house. be too bad to give his nameâ€"but, anyway, he was in the habit of drop- ping away from his train at Kinmount in the evenings, and while shunting and st0ppages were going on there, he would have a pleasant time in social chat with a pretty young miss who lived near the station. The night be- fore, the brakesman was so interested in his delightful occupation thatâ€"â€" his train went off without him. On some excuse or another “Dinny,” after telling the story, enticed the brakesman into the car, Bengough got a good look at himâ€"and the rest was easy. 1 Mr. Moore, Bengough and “Dinny” got their heads together. The brakes- man on the train wasâ€"well it would Local Story About the Cartoonist Bengough “Is that Mr. Bengough?” asked “Dinny” of his companion. “Yes,” was the reply. “Then,” said the genial conductor, “I’ve got a great subject for him to- night. Let’s get together.” It was some years ago, and Mr. Ben~ gough was on his way to Haliburton with Mr. R. J. Moore, then of Fenelon Falls. The conductor on the train was the popular Mr. Hunter Gall. In view of the expected visit of Mr. J. W.~ Bengough, entertainer and elo- cutionist, to Lindsay on Fr‘day, Jan. 22nd, when he will hold forth in the Academy of Music, under the auspices of the Ladles’ Aid, a story of a little happening in connection with a for gner visit of the cartoonist and enter- tainer may be of interest. .Xmm>> .PXMZ ><moz .4 2â€" mm Oh. hm_200hm<0'mm3h .OE NIP m><0 7.03002le tmd P00 013 z<5muÂ¥<mm mIP PAGE EIGHT. North :‘Trfiin Service men make a business of sport they shouldq shbw business regard for their obligations, and expect to pay busi- ness penalties for disregarding them. PROSECUTE CONTRACT BREAK- BREAKERS. There is now talk in hockey circles of prosecuting players for breaking their contracts. It might be welld‘if talk was followed by action. When éilverâ€"teapot for best lot of‘dress- ed birdsâ€"D. Condon, Douro, 27 birds. weighing 357 pounds. - Sugar bowl and spoon holder for the best flock between twenty and thirty â€"â€"M. Ryan, Peterboro, 29 birds, weigh- ing 463 pounds. Silk umbrella for the‘ beEt flock of turkeys over thirty in numberâ€" -D Sullivan, Douro, 31 birds, weighing 378 pounds. I PRIZES AWARDED FOR TURKEY [ SHIPMENTS. ‘ Announcement has been made of the vinners of the prizes Offered for the aest lots of turkeys shipped from .Qakefield to Dundas Flavelle’s at Lindsay, on November 26th, says the Peterboro Review. Four prizes were )ffered for the above firm the turkeys being purchased by Mr. P. G. Towns, of Douro. The prizes were awarded as follows: Silk umbrella for .the largest flock 1f live turkeysâ€"Wm. Fitzgerald, of‘ Cottesloe, 53 birds. Editorial in Montreal Gazette. Mr. Bell is an old Bobcaygeon resi- dent, having only come here a. few months ago to take care of the (20m- merce and Farmers’ Banks. The Free Press joins in wishing Mr. Bell a very speedy recovery. Dr. Nesbitt, before going to the in- jured man, summoned Dr. Collison, who, on arrival, summoned the Ross Memorial HOSpital ambulance and had Mr. Bell removed to the hospital in a critical condition, the doctor only having the thigh temporarily bandag- ed for the short drive to the hospital. Mr. Bell’s daughter, who had been about the building with him, ran to Mrs. Bell, who was engaged in getting tea prepared in their rented rooms in the second floor, and then to Dr. Nes- bitt in the front of the building. The injured townsman was engaged, about five o‘clock, in cleaning win- dows in the third flat of the Bank of Commerce building and in some un- known manner the ladder t0ppled from under him, causing him to fall about ten feet to the floor below, strik- ing the ladder edge in his downward course and breaking his thigh. Mr. Geo. Bell, caretaker of the local branches of the Bank of Commerce and the Farmers’ Bank, Wednesday fell and broke his left' thigh. Bank Caretaker Breaks His Thigh in a Fall MR. GEO. BELL FALLS FROM LADDER AT THE BANK OF COMMERCE BUILDING WITH SERIOUS RESULTS. “As I said, if the hotelmen readily acquiesce to our wishes then all will be well. I shall take the local in- spectorx along with me, and inform the prOprietor of the hotel as to the changes he will have to make. Then “Of course, a man may kéep a per- fectly clean hotel, and still have un- sanitary conditions in his stables or yard. Iintend to see that not only the hotel. but everything around it is perfectly clean and healthy.” 3 will not take long, but if they refuse ito fall in with our suggestions, the time will be greatly lengthened. But in any case it is my intention to push ‘ the work as vigorously and with as much speed as I possibly can. Hotels, Yards, Stables. “My work will consist solely in see ing that every hotel is a hotel, and not merely a saloon. They will have to provide the creature comforts for their travelers, or I will not be satisfied. I propose to look into the accommoâ€"j dation and bedding provided for tra-g velers, inspect the fire escapes, and; see that proper precautions are tak en in regard to light, ventilation,. and sanitation. ' “Of course, the rapidity with which the work is accomplished 'will depend altogether upon the way in which the hotel-keepers meet us. If they are willing to meet us half way, the work “I don’t expect .to have to hold this position very long,” said Mr. Snider, “about a year in all probability, but not more than eighteen months at the outside. There are 2,000 hotels in the Province, and I am going to call on every one of them within the next year. I hope. ' ' Toronto Star: Mr. W. K. .Snider, the newly-appointed'chief inspector of hotels for Ontario outlined to The Star this morning his duties qnd the way in which he intended to carry them out. Chief Hotel Inspector ' ’ Given Very Wide Powers NEW OFFICER APPOINTED-WILL SEE THAT' THE HOTELS ARE PROPERLY KEPT m ONTAR lOâ€"Hls own VIEW OF HIS DUTIES. b might. be well *3 by action. When less of sport they pa meal Gazette; p11 Lthem, as The Free- Press has no spe- Time. 2.23. 2.25, 237. 3-30. 339- cial interest in the question. The 2.16 trot or paceâ€" Free’ Press gladly publishes Mr. Gracie Pointer J. Noble. Coates’ reply and trusts indeed that Toronto. .. 3 l l 1 he will be allowed to continue doing Patterson. Jones a; Stor- his duty without molestation. In ey. Peterboro .. .. 1 3 8 3 view of the fact that some kind ont- Sweetheart. H.‘ Lsidlsw. sider sent Mr.Costes s eopy‘oi the Cookstown .. .. .. 8 2 3 3 paper containing the item Ee objects Time, 3.37. 3.25. 2.1!). 2.21 3"- to, The Free Press is taking the lib- - , --â€" erty of sending him also 1 copy of Port Pony} Ont. Jan. 9.â€"Following this issue in which his 0 one :- ammumwwm presented.~.-â€"Editor Free Pleas. "“ yesterday: Press was unaware of Mr. Coates’ address, and only knew of his exist- ence from the item in The Minder: Echo. The remainder of the letter, of course, is a matter between The Echo’s correspondent and Mr. Castes. They will have to fight it out between â€"â€" CUATE. In reply to the last sentence in the above The Free Press would point out that NO marked copy was sent from THIS office to Mr. Coates or anyone else, and that no request or suggestion was made here by anyone as to such sending. The Free Press trusts that Mr. Coates is nearer facts in the rest of his suspicions than he is in this particular one. ’Until the receipt of the above letter The Free: Thanking you for your considera- tion, and trusting you will have this copy of your valuable paper sent as freely to the individual who request- ed you to send me the copy just re- ceived, I remainâ€"Yours truly. in my eyes, will not prevent me from doing the same in the future. It is people of this ilk who encour- age the disregard of our laws and!I make it necessary to have them more] rigidly enforced. I I expect to return to Dorset, not- withstanding threats. 1 only did my duty as an officer in this instance, as I have done in all others, and any dust which The Echo’s quill shooter may imagine he or she is throwing If I were to'take legal proceedings against the party who threatened to take my life if I retirned to Dorset (which by the way, I did not take se- riously). I imagine there would be one anxious seat in that little burg. CAUSED. (To the Editor of The Free Press.) Dear Sir,â€"A copy of your valuable paper, dated Dec. 19th, ’08, just re- ceived under office cover in which a pencil marked article quoted from The Minden Echo appears, referring to the confiscation of illegal raw furs in Dorset. It does not require very great events ‘to stir up a riot in Dorset if The Echo’s correspondent’s report is true; I deny the insinuation contained in the above mentioned article that I “solicited not only legal furs” but I . will say, that I have a very impres- sive .idea that the Echo’s correspond- ent has an uneasy conscience from the fact that a quantity of illegal furs was seen in that luminary’ s (or at least) in the possession of a very near friend. I can assure the Dorset friends that I haven’t lost any sleep at nights over the incident. Mr. Snider has already entered up- on his new duties, and when seen this morning was busy planning out his lines of travel so as to cover the ground in the quickest possible way. So that Mr. Snider steps out of one position .into another. The new one will not last more than two years, and by that time the Conservative forces will feel the call to battle in preparation for the next Ontario and Dominion elections. As Mr. Snider will then be out of a job, it is quite likely he will fall into his old berth, as the Conservative party feel satis- fied with his work as organizer at the last elections. 3 “Not at all,” replied Mr. Snider. “At least, there is no need of my re signation, as the organizers’ omces are to be closed.” “For good P” “Only temporarily. At present, you see, we have nothing to do.” I shall tell him that either I or the local inspector will call on him. and if he has’come up to the mark, all right; but if not, the matter will have to be put into some other person’s hands, as I have nothing whatever to do with the enforcement of my lduties of the imposing of fines. I don’t know just what the department will do in case a man refuses to fixfl up his place; it will in all probabil- ity take his license away from him., Travelers Complained. ‘[ "This move has been made because ‘the travelers have been complaining to Mr. Hanna about the hotel accom- modation for the past six months, and also because of the way in which the temperance vote has been piled' up in the past week.” Will He Remain Organizer? “Your appointment as inspector means that you will resign from the posfition of Ontario organizer for the Conservative party ?” enquired the newspaper man. I AN ECHO THAT “THE ECHO" COMMUNICATIONS UH: 2.35 trot. or pace (unfinished)â€" Lou Keswick, A J Ash- more, Lindsay ...... 5 2 1 1 Minnie 6., Geo. Ditt- Port Perry; Jan. 8.â€"The 40th an- nual meeting of the Port Perry Trot- ting Asa ciation opened yesterday. The track was in fine shape, the sport was good and large crowds attended. Following is the summary: Local Winners at Port Perry Ice Races GOOD CROWD AND SUCCESSFUL RACES LAST WEEK. In Ireland the Marquis of Clanri- carde is absolutely unknown, for in nearly fifty years he has only once visited the country, and that was when he went to the funeral of his father thirty-four years ago. In Eng- land he is almost as mysterious and elusive a figure. The public do not know him, and when he made a sud- den and dramatic visit to the House of Lords eighteen months ago, and ac- tually took part in a debate. members ‘ of both Houses scrambled into the Peers’ Chamber with as much curios- ity as if it had been the Sultan of Turkey or the Kaiser who was “up.” Yet the man who addressed “My lords” is the most execrated man in all Ireland, and throughout the United Kingdom those of his own order regard him as its greatest enemy. lies camped in winter weather out- side the holdings from which the troops had evicted them. So the long record of crime and violence. of suf- fering and death, went on. and still goes on and this last action of the Land Commission bids fair to end it forever. Men who took the agency for the estates and survived the ordeal, re signed; one of them sued the Mar- quis, the widow of another gave dam- ning evidence against his Lordship be- [fore the Parnell Commission. Where all the agitators and his own tenantry and agents failed, so keen an uphold- er of the sacred rights of property as the Lord St. Aldwyn tried to succeed. When, as Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, he was Secretary for Ireland, he wrote a letter calling upon Lord Clanricarde to behave as other landlords and to make some abatements to his starv-i ing tenantry. Failing this he threat-f :ened to leave him without police assistance in the collection of his rents. All in vain; deaf to appeals- and entreaties, deaf to the voice of‘ starvation and misery, he was deaf ’ also to threats, whether they came, from his enemies or from the heads! of the Government. Unbending, inn-l heeding, he went on the fearful tenor] of his way and gave as little heed to the threats of the Government as he did to the spectacle of starving fami-l t [ Some of the incidents of the Mar- 1 quis’s career as a landlord would not be believed were they not simple matters of cold history. Even his own agents have pleaded with him in vain to make some abatement of his rents in Ireland during times of acute famine and distress. There was al- ways one replyâ€"when there was a re- ply at all. Simple refusal. One of these agents, his request ignored, was murdered in cold blood by the out-l raged tenantry, who did not know of his pleas in their behalf Bailifls, policemen and those who took the places of evicted tenants have been murdered on these Galway farms. I For fifty years the name of this peer has been the foremost in all the long agony of Irish land agitation, with its annals of crime and misery. and its slowly evolved imprisonment and solu- tion. He is not only an absentee landlord, drawing rents from vast - tates without returning it in any ex- penditure thereon. but absolutely deal to all appeals from the impoverished districts which yield him golden tri-' bute. ‘ Lord Clanriearde, the most execrat- ed man in Ireland. is about to lose his property there. His enormous estate of 80,000 acres is to be taken from him by the Irish Land Commissioners and distributed among the Galway peasantryâ€"of course at a fair valua- tion. THE WEEKLY FREE M588 LORD CLANRICARDE’S PROPERTY TO BE ACQUIRED AND DISTRI- BUTED TO GALWAY PEASANTRYâ€"EVEN THE ,NAHE W'U- BECOME EXTINCT SHORTLY. Most Executed Man in? ~ ”j Ireland *0 Lose Estates ing a big fellow with 1 deep voice asked it she did not wishéshe was a pm...“ man. "No, do you P” In mppod Min c backfikeafluh. It was lightning nuttee.but itdoesnotreooncflothe “gm-n- sterner-extotheiduthuitand- “w tordtondmitthetmletomobthe ”fig-g ammofpolitied controversy. '18weethean. H. Laidlaw. ° Cookstown ............. 2 2 Doctor Mack. Dr. Broad. (Detroit Free Preu.) gene quick on the trig“; In ‘ London audience whi-le ch. 7.. w. ' Unfinished 2.35 pace or I Wawa. H. Laidlaw. Cookat {Lou Keswick. A. Ashmo: Time. 2.27. 230. 2.23 1-2. Consolation raceâ€" Prinoe Medium. J. Noble. Toronto ................ 2.!) trot or pace-â€" Patterson. Jones and Storey. Peterboro ........ will be “merged”, as the terms of the peerage has it. In other words, the name of all others which has been the curse of Ireland for the last half- century will be no more known am- head, a long, thin face with promin. ent cheek bones and a wispish kind {of faded brown beard. seventy-five years _old and looking more. it was an extraordinary apparation. A man of mystery indeed Lord Clanricarde is the fifteenth lEarl and the second Marquis of the Fthird creation of 1825. As for the ‘Marquisate, it will become extinct with his death, for he has no chilâ€" dren. The Earldom passes by spe-‘ cial remainder to the sons of female members of the family, in order of priority. In these cases, as the pos . sible successors are holders of Earl- doms still more ancient, the hatred and sinister name of Clanricardeâ€"the Marquis always spells it With a 'k‘-â€" He made an extraordinary figure in that address. when. moved by curiosity, the House was full of auditors from both Chambers. Stand ing rather below the medium height dressed in his shabby clothes of an- cient cut, wearing a tall, old-fash- ioned hat as napeless as that of the London bus driver and ten times as old-fashioned, with long, thin hair sticking out from the back of his Since his accession to the peerage, Lord Clanricarde has mainly lived, despite his vast wealth, in the dingy [atmosphere of a few rooms in the Al- ‘bany ,and has occupied himself with ;the collection of priceless pictures for he is recognized by art dealers eVery- .where as the greatest living amateur gauthority on the Old Masters. He never entertains or goes into any kind ‘ of society other than his club.. It was from such surroundings that this wifeless and childless man emeged last session to denounce in Lords the Evicted Tenants Bill, that was accepted by the Peers almost without amendment. It was his last card. For thirty-four years the storms had burst over his head, and he had never moved a muscle or turned a hair; now he fights in the ditch for the bill was one to empower the com- missioners compulsory to expropri? ate him. ‘ His private life is a mysterY- Some stories there are of an early love dis- appointment, and its result in a heart grown cold and cynical 'past belief of human kind. Yet some things are necessarily known of him. He is of a familyâ€"that of the De Burghsâ€"which traces its direct descent. from the Norman Conquest, and even beyond it. His father, who was a promin ent dipldmatist and Minister in Bria tish governments, married a daughr ter of Canning, and looked likely to go to the highest position in the land, when a terrible. scandal cut short his public life. His elder bro- ther, Lord Dunkelin, lived life at a great pace and died a broken man at forty. This paved the way for the succession to the marquisate of the present peer, but before he came thus expectedly into his great estates he had succeeded to a great fortune as the son of Canning‘s daughter. to the‘rule of time aeigneurs in the days before the revolution in France. Whatever else any be said about this strange figure, that act and speech were the signs either of c 11385 and dauntless courage 0! 0f ‘9 u- tounding insensibility to the opinion of his own class, his active enemies and the world in general. Perfectly to appreciate the type Of lmdlord here represented you have to 3° 5391‘ leo'n Full. c; M In 0.0,". An. Linda! oflcas "at Bohéun'oon amoeba.“ w “'1‘: onto every]! human“ McLAUGHLm. OH. R. A. WILSON. ‘ Physician. Surgeon and Acciucheur. u. 3.. M. c P. a: s: Onmno. Ofllce nnd Residence. Colhorne SL. Fenelon Fans. DR. SHARPE, DENTIST, Toronto. Will be at the Mansion House Wed- nesday and Thursday every alternate week. Specialist in Plate. Crown and Bridge Work. CANADIAN PETER KENNEDY, MONEY TO LOAN. fire and Plate Glass Insurance. BAKER. DR UGGIST. BOBCAYGEON DR. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenolon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. All Bunche- «9931’er Eel-formed ‘m‘n- .. A Dr. Shoop’s? Night Curei DR. WALTERS. DENTIST, Lindsay. All Branches of Deanna-y Carefully Performed. Chums Moderate. Undnv onceâ€"Over Gregory? Drug Store, The “filth: Cum". u m neme lmpliee. does “I work While you sleep. It lootheuone end mum. ed mucous surfaces. heels locel weekneeeee end while the Barman. eases nervous excitement. gives renewex :- end unbldou. builds up vested tissues. b nbout renewed strength. vigor. and enemy. hke Dr. Shoop'e Restorative-“hue“ or Liquidâ€"use general tonic ”them Formiuveloulhelpmseuwell To want ad gum women. there is st least on. my to help. But with that my. two munch“. must be combined. One I: local. one ls constitu- flonsl. but both an lmpomnt. both wanna“. Dr. Shoop's Night Ogre is the tool. Dr. Shoop‘s Restorative. the maidml. The former-Dr. Shoop's N lchc Gar-inn topic-l nuomu membrane suppository remedy. while 1):. Shoop'a Waive is wholly In lnteml went.- “4-4 -__A,, , , RUSSELL-ST" NEXT CREAMF.RY Repairs of all kinds on hand. Est mates on windmills and all pumping outfits. I have no agentsâ€"save thei commissions by dealing direct with me. Orders may be left at Creamery. Weak Women Really the only Force Pump on the market. Built. for any depth of wel’ New Improved Double Action PUMPS. JOHN DENNIS BLAIR SON, I; we an overcoat you need. the price and make will be on the same pleasing basis. We are making a record for good clothing. In order to keep our std! employed. we are prepared to uprifloe profit and will turn you out a STYLISH, HIGH-CLASS SUIT FOR LI'ITLE MONEY. We have a magnificent range of cloths to choose from. and we gusto antee to turn you out the most sat.- istactory suit you have ever worn. REMEMBER, IT IS YOUR DUTY TO BE WELL DRESSED DUR- ING JANUARY. BUSINESS CARDS. ladies' and Gents' Tailors “’4 NUFACTURER OP Lindsay: Public Mum.- in The PM I’m-n 9‘” In 0'“ 90¢ hundred years of nor “do hm experience this Com' m 5“ plid out in fire losses to it! ”Kw-holders over sm,ooo,ooo.oo. I.meass,Age-t, - 4W“ The Ingmnce Co’y of North Ammca, Founded 1792 WM. HOLTORF. Price we quote. NOW that the holidays 3-0 over W0 “‘79 ‘ number of pio‘CvF which We are Willing to dispose of at most rea- unable prices. They may be just what you have been wishing for. We invite a call. Don’t tempof‘ be or someone else may swure the “tide you covet at the low 068k Furniture Bargains . . Tangney Block, Lindsay-St- FIRE INSURANCE THURSDAY, JAUARY sa great problem in this nmih countryz-VVE SOLVE IT FOR YOU Heating the Hamel“ Opposite Campbell's China Hall. William-st, Plumbers and Steamfitters. OR PLACE OF BUSINESS Morrison Bros. \ THE BUSY MOTHER OF THE HOUSEHOLD who perhaps does not 1r The guy cmsideration she zm-riuâ€"what for her? Let us suggest mm of our ngu- Class Sewing Machines. ' SPECIAL PRICES DURING MONTH OF JANUARY. are instruments of W11- tation, and thousands uf be found in the rciixml I tario, including Lindmy What more suitablu gm the: or father nlake-â€"-:11\-.': able “set, always Ll dog owner, and contributing sure of others. ASK US FOR ESTIMA'I'ES une or other of those should find. place in every home, mm, 11 isn’t 13v fault that they do um. I make 1h; price low enough, gummy” knows, BELL PIANos AND ORGANs AND THE KARN PIANO Organs Pianos Sewing Machines T. C. MA TCHETT AGENT FOR Canadian Pacific Railway and CPR, Steamship Lines also Allan. Dominion and Donaldson. White Star and Cunard Lines. T. C. MATCH ETT Railway and Ocean Tickets One or other of thtse All Illumination Maps. etc. Iur. alshed on application to .. St. Andrew’s Church, William-st. 60 KENT-ST. . LI NDSAY ”ALI. OR “'RITE . W'arren mm‘rs 1” whom we have installed 11939 in: systems- «mm thnds. work- m:un.~hip and system we in stall are the best Imay hf wadily lemma by Asking any of th» maul? satisfied CllSYr welLk That our of Don- Nth should 5M ‘ U. it isn’t my 1 make the 9‘s knous. “"m The in “I Council o'clock, i mu- whats Hl‘k' kg! 18' f1 .l' ~.. the same Council; the , themselves quarrelix town aflair: ’ ifllyor Begg, be fi order of bu. « _ - of the chair: a he was plea: 4 flees; he Wis} ‘ their 011 a t position an - y welcome m to the L (I mention and The M ay: m. lat Dell-I‘M fl Den-mew V tut-men Geo. Cal 1. Campbell, R #5:. Lewis and .1 ‘ e Geo. Jordan 081k KDOVA‘lrul “meat of file flhe inaugural 1 Neil was hvld M, in the Col when pretax-m ”VCR BEGG ECONOMY Mating what 4‘ dot, struck an i put down 11* 'un mmonly kmmn “sly, we th wk, w item out and file, that Whilst it public utilnm hit compenaauuu ”Hy invested, m *. interest on “w “ht this d! ( h' u igâ€"even bewm. U. S “.hdtt \1 v 8. institutiom m fixed that had neond to Ylullv. an Ike, “ill caxrv To localize~~ ' in our ~ fifties. 1’ ~ .1 I only »t1r < hrges :m: Lu: ‘ whensibh. As hm, p11! 11 11H 0 utter man bemu u could not ml and do i,” everyone mm .m and read th ”fighting for :pany, Secure “I monopoly, m it, puttin 5 "“Wnation:b . . or socialism, U pungent rem ‘ ‘ friend “Bill A. mod readi The relau} year with e. pleasant and VAld [wan Editor ’ KNOW that. s the little bins to for s. The 0th: whi le‘ )3

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