class music. everyone is cordially invited to en« j4 «n evening «* aplendid dancing on the best floor in the District t first Gur last dance wes a hu:omerâ€"â€" make the next one a bigwur suceess than ever. It will be held on Priâ€" day evening, December 5, 1919 and The next regular meeting of the Branch will be held on Tuescay evenâ€" let ‘Weick." ‘The â€" Brecuuve" Comâ€" teen o‘cl e mittee will moet ut M&R’. A full attendanve of members is urged. of aur service men is cordlally invitâ€" ed to be present and enrol as a memâ€" ber. The activites of the AuxiHary will cover a wide rande and be of inâ€" estimable benefit to _ the _ Locai Branchâ€"besides keaping alive the splendid spirit the ladies of the Disâ€" trict showed in their work durâ€" ing the nerlod of the war, The Ladies‘ Auxiliary will mect in the Clubrooms for further and permanent organization "on ‘Thursâ€" day evening of this week, November 27, 1919, at eight o‘clock and every lady who is interested in the welfare The*Clubrooms are beginning to fil1 up these cool nights. What about the organization of a series of whist drives and other social entertainâ€" ments? tioneer "MICKEY®" CoNEs To GRINSBY FOR TWO NIGHTS Representatives of the Hydro Radâ€"| hh'-mhflllm'uu.: day stated that the plans for the n-muumunmuml the Town Counci! in a very short time. | From the lines being struck altl and staked by the Engineers, now working cast and west out of GRIMSâ€" | BY the _ line will . run through | GRIMSBY North of the G. T. R. tracks as far East as the GRIMSBY brick yards. At m-umu-u-‘ tance between the lake and the Mountain commences to get wider | and the G. T. R. veers to the North. The Hydro continues straight on and uu-mln-"lll.n.uhtl a short distance North of Jas, Hewâ€" itt‘s planing mills. it is expected. Rightâ€"ofâ€"way buyery will be in this district shortly after New Year‘s HYDRO PLANS WILL BE FALED SO0N 6. W. V. A. CORNER THIRTYâ€"PIFTH YEAR. Creating interest unprecedented in ‘] THE INDEPENDENT | @0000000000000000 THERE IS A They say that proven time and ag going to tell you a history is a repeater T wentyâ€"cight § cents a dozen and ; ’ Albright was the hi of GPIMSBY and s an apprentice to hel @ learn the painting t GRIMSBY needs this gas and should the citizens be asked to again grant the ’:;:my a franchise we feol sure that the bylaw will carry by a huge ma At present time they have fortyâ€"two flowing wells and hold options on ten thousand acres of gas lines. All the gas irom these wells is now being turned over to the Dominion Gas Co., at wholesale prices, and instead of doing that they wish to bring it to the "Biggest Little Town in Lincoin County" and retall it. The Company will appear before th@council this week and wfll ask that they again be granted a franchise and in all probability the bylaw for the same will be voted on at the January election, uP Panit â€"aendP velior o uts se M .. t °* C are ting him for the “' ® ERAPEECCCC, ERITCCWN MERNY i 1917. «on Ald, \ray positively and absolutely refures to again be n candidate: i momsbipnt machinness aprin roog tends cannot spare from his business to on t matters and refuses to run at all. ue Wray :"""‘“‘:" c': ï¬â€˜;-:‘“, _ , _ If whea! does not run for the Reeveship and Marsh and Randall do, appointed by a 1:. Jimmy®" will be the only old councilior left in next year‘s council, for, it over the beach at pump sure that he would again be reâ€"elected. This would mean that three and decided that they could cles would have to be filled. ) afford to allow any person to So far no new aspirants have announced themselves as candidates sand off the beach, and recomâ€" office, but it is hard to tell what will happen in the next four weeks. fu‘:‘.n. :-«“ ;uMu nemuniorienemeeeeivesmmeamenticomttraremernsecmecnereateg â€" with a e stop people driving down and takâ€" HE MARRIED HIS WIDOW‘S SISTER. _ cerstift9s us (hink M to know who owned the beach w rmmmmommmmmmmmmmme P if the town owned it he would Deging to simmer a Mitle harder. At the present time it is hard to tell what will happen between now and election day, From all indications it looks very much as if ARIMSBY would hnnuwlmnuunummmuu.mmmï¬lflflr: of one man next year, 4 e * mmmnu-muzmmnumnu.-numumq that he will uot be. As the matter stands there is a slight possibility of his hnmw-ruummmuzumuuun.phu“‘ chief magistrate of the town. M If Farrell does not run it is a sure, safe bet that Ald. Marsh will be mnummnm'-euumm-umnuumumuu will be opposed by the old municipal warrior Ald. Mitchell. What stand Thea! wili take on this matter is still all conjecture, although many of ® friends are boosting him for the job, ai ummau-mmmmnmmmmï¬l begins to simmer a Hitle harder. That adveriisement was answered by a small broth of a lad lately arrived in ‘ais country from England and working on a farm on the lke shore, north of Beamsvilie. The boy learned4 his trade 0d worked for different painters in the disâ€" trict and finally branched out for himself, ‘That young lad was William Farrow, now the Fruit Belt‘s leading paints> and paperbanger and dealer in his store of all kinds of wail papers, raints, ofls, varnishes and glass. His trade mark "Biy the Glassman" is know: ti.coughout the who‘e district. Last week, or just twentyâ€"cight yeurs later, Torrow inâ€" serted an advertisement in THE INLEPENDENT is a young lag to learn the painting trade ‘Twentyâ€"four hours after the paper was off the press he had secur>4 a boy who he thinks will be a dandy. He picked him out from a long list of applicants. _ The lucky boy was Wm. Furler, Jr., of Winona. They say that history repeats itself. And it has been proven time and again that such was the case. We are going to tell you a little story here to prove further that history is a repeater. _ * Twentyâ€"cight years ago The INDEPENDENT secus=d Albright an apprentice and last week it secured that apprenâ€" tice another apprentice. Twentyâ€"cight years ago when eg@s were selling at ten cents a dozen anda pork was cight cents a pound, Jacob Albright was the shie{ painter an «> rhanger of the Village of GPIMSBY and surroun4ing «_ .. Feeling the need of an apprentice to help im in his basiness and incidentally to learn the painting trade he inserted an advertisement in the columns of THE INDEPENDENT for a young boy to learn the painting trade. ® MORAL â€" INDEPENDENT ADVERTISEMENTS BRING RESULTS. MUNICIPAL POLITICAL POT SIMMERING THERE IS A MORAL IN THIS STORY GRIMSBY, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26th, 1919 " bois, BuiL_ B a brought on is s T es 0 \ t The _ Nuvew GRIMsBy Un A $ {nome of Mrs r.bu d , delogutes â€" I"-':.h' coliecting an« |!!"-_"z~ Schoot and new brick,, f1 school, there frame school 'l.m-lyc type in the cc the stone scl The old sct a barn. The |to William 8 |the seate to . % |_ EX»REEY xâ€"Reeve | ‘wome on Sun | B. C., where Exâ€"Reeve E. 8. Johnson returned Home on Sunday night from Kelowna, |B. C., where he has been for the past eight months on his fruit ranch. | The "Little $seeve reports all the |\GRIMNSDYITES in <he Okumagan ‘mmm,-umu.hmmn Iul well. Harry Wetherrall in now the munazor of the Dominion |Cannars factâ€"ry at Kelowna and also | manager of as ap>le evaporator for arother big. Jrm. We Perguson, -â€"ly-nuwhflth GKkIMSBY COnuning Faciory is now wansging a ifactory in that district. R. 2. Denâ€" nison is connected with a large froit firm there and doing well. ï¬sl.:.!.:mh much l‘:-. prov Realth since to '.Oal-urynunnm.w- ering from the eifects of uis iliness brought on is the grea. war. During the past forty years some uodmrku best citizens receilved first lessons in the "Three R‘s" wWithin its walls but in a very few weeks it will be no more. Like all other things it has served its usefulâ€" ness and must pass on to make room for»4 more sanitary, more . commudâ€" tous hall of learning for the coming comecting and packing the annual |~mry box. ‘The meetng proâ€" «mises to be of unusmal intervst and ll Pill asatd.sce of \he members . is hoped for. Ali friends of the Union \&te cordially: Invited to atteâ€"d; . and ‘are astured of r worm welcome. The old school will be turned into a barn. The old woodshed was sold _ With the passing of the Thirty Schoo! and the erection of the fine new brick,, fire proof, steam heated schoo!, there also passes the last frame school in the township and leaves only one school of the old type in the community, that one bel~g the stone school at Always. to William Shelton, for $1709 and the seate to John Milts, for $2.00. The . Nuvember _ meeting of the ORIMSDY Union wiil be held at the Home of Mrs. J, W. VanDyke, on kï¬y.buluu: wan. sharp. delogutes to the Provinct«) Sonâ€" ventlon will give their report and arrangzments will be.completed for A speciar meeting of ‘the Town was held on Monday right representatives from the Hyaro Commission appeared tefore Council and asked them to pass bylaw authortzing the torning over the Hydro certain debertures of of bonds, which were pasâ€" SPEOIAL MEETING â€" _ OF TOWN COUNCHIL EXâ€"REEVE JOMNSON MOME vote of electors on ‘Januury & . V. \ Away up in the Coppermine region of the Arctic coast two Eskimos, Uluksuk and Sinnisiak, who were down to Edmonton and Cal,ary in the summer of 1917, are now telling their fellowâ€"countrymen such thiigs as were never heard before in the north. They are. the pair of northâ€" erners, it will be remembered, who were sentenced to life imprisonment for tha murder of two priests. Now, after serving nearly two years of their time at Fort Resolution, they have been released, on orders from Ottawa, and hav« been taken tack home to Coronation Gulf, where preâ€" sumably they are now talking about the sights thye saw down in the white man‘s country, and will conâ€" tinue to talk about them for many \Amle-u-. GRIMSBY MAN COM&ANDS THE WorLS‘S MOST NORTneRLY POLIGE OUTPOST ï¬hmnfl-:kdodw(\o-hllflwhcl‘ Taen thi rald ore. Develontment Pullouud doy '.m...'"““‘:'.... +4 wer with y u‘:l‘ul w;llnu.‘.lo'u'u' g. progress aflc'ï¬'m Synthetie n \ ln.l?l‘u:l::m:vdn:‘:. oum ‘Were of Canadian ofigin., Cur product‘=. of acetone was equally phenomeal. ___ 1t is no wonder, therefore, that Canada occupied such an impo :tion at hu-hncumuhpdummtw.ufl Mnï¬ ts by the gieatest Andustriat event In abe hisioly of That cay ___ in addition to the large attendancse from Chicago, over twenty thousand n-l:u d'vuknu:n'lfln -xflk:l":l:'illfl, -:::mm and othere interested in commercial aad wrisnaifie dev attended inioned wiionnonied Prar ho it Radacn Rekutnd Netadtrient, Engincers, _ Amatfcam i lecteathenicnt Boclety, ‘Tee Canada at the National Chemical Exposition, Chicago. in $1.30 PL& YEAR, 4: PER COVY _ _Fathers Leroux ang Rouviere, of the Roman Catholic mission at Fort Norman, went on a tour of investigaâ€" tion between the Arctic circhk . and Coronation Guif in the autumn of 1913 and did not return. A search party was sent to the Arctic wilds by the mounted police, and rumors that the priests had been done to death by two Eskimos were picked up along the way. There followed an 18â€" months‘ manâ€"hunt which went as far ms Victoria Land, out in the Arctic Ocean, and which finally resulted in the location and capture of the murâ€" derers. Such a manâ€"hunt there had never been before, but the polica did it like they do all their work. _ Eskimos thereabouts ara and talking a lot abou« m’mm ways of Dritisi justice and white men‘s cities. ‘The sentence imposed upon Ulukâ€" suk and Sinnisiak has been lifted by an orderâ€"inâ€"council, but on certain conditions and in view chiefly of their good behnvior. ‘They have had their lesson, it is believed, and the ends of justice have been sufficientâ€" ly serve‘. Their offence was an unâ€" usua} one, and it is still difficult to say exactly how it came about. ALL HOME PRINT