t ios viee May 12 June 9 July : 14 Aug. 11 Sept. ‘ 8 A w Youns, for â€"R: D. %I, 2 and 8 ...}>..s.l.l..%..... ‘ Councift fees‘;.ll... .ls Asii. ie Ciy ceato ie 2e ies n Oct:>: 230 } Thods. Pearson, fees attending Div. Court, year 1913 ; and 1914 ;s id l n i iA N Cc aarl e aa la ns an t ahaikie alal y _| _ A. D. Lacey, fees attending Div. Court year 1913 â€" on 19LE o. ?.r .l .o Li a sn cin id actoaa en h0o cane io n e / MA npragae, R. D. No.: 10 ......;................ ) Anson Merritt, 59 hours weed inspector ......... | t <f Canadian Ingot Iron Co., five culverts ........... f F. W. Roberts, Revision of Voters‘ List ........... F3 D. W. Shrum, 50 per cent bonus on sidewalk _ o County rate for 1914....;..... .i . n..ikuidd. High School ..>/.:.....aas. cti.. i vri iA d« «i4 c th Union Bank Bills payable .....,. .....}...0...0s.. Balance due County from 1912 and interest ... Two debentures U. S. S. No. 8, at $148 98..;..... EKight debentures local improvements at $749.77 Balance. on hand" ; .. ... iirceviresi asiinckadksr.s 22 .+ .n bpalance of takes to be collected ;:........&k ... ......... Due from North Grimsby on Townline bridge .......... Dué from North Grimsby re debenture U. §.S. No. 8 ... Due from T‘ship Caistor re hall rent Divisional Court ... Due from T‘ship Gainsboro re hall rent Divisional Court Two road machines: ;..i?;l.}}.;s/.e sA i i iesns a e r . .o . One grading plow ¢2../ .xlivaa sls n a1arrhaaas hss n ns his n nrg Dec e hi 30 11 15 Pedlar Peoples Ltd., 3 corrugated pipes ....... Mary B. Adams, rent for fire engine house ... A. Spragsuge, R. D. 10 ..."".~........ saa.ldey. D. Z. Jacobs, dynamite and labor on road ... Mrs. M. Travis, 710 ft. oak plank at $385 ...... Th "Hucther, â€"R. D.:5:..;..0.7/........ i. de..le s A. E. St. John, drawing lumber, Wilcox bridge m.â€"C. Packham,.‘ R:= D. 4 and 8 :.......8%.... ... w. _/H. ‘Trembly, R. °D: 9 °.............222..0.. w. HHTrembly R. 10. 0 .. .;.".... 0..l40..fl Â¥. M. Nelson;s=R:> D. ["~2.....sal.ls. .l 129 s coain‘ . . M. . Walker, K. D. 2%¢....084:0.01. .i 0s va .. D. W. Shrum, 240 sacks cement, Oliver bridge i Asgaacâ€"Pyetft, laborâ€"R. D. 4. ...:..,..}..:.M0....%. Wnhr. :O‘Confell; labor R.: D.""4+ .;:..;.......}m~ Ccouncil fees ....... }n}>>>>cccccc: cccctcrttffctul‘ vcs?.uï¬. M rembply. . D. 9:................0.. 0 ........ Ti Huether R. D. 5 .............}....6...f.a0}} J. M. Martin, collector postage account ............ WWaliter Young, R. D. 1 ................ ..........}. D. Z. Jacobs, R. D. 2 ......................}}}..n+} . M. Walker, R. D. 2 ................0....eV. s .e.. ‘A. Sprague, R. D. 10.)...............s.6.....}. 05 k m C. Packham,‘R. D. 4 and 8 ;.................... K. . M. _Nelson, R. D. T. ;.........0%..0..0l0.0%«cÂ¥6liss Tohn Souter, keeping indigent.:........~............ Board of Health meeting .......... .............. Council Afeesâ€" ...... 1 usls iiulh 6 us sao en rlay n s iqh ie n i o N. P. Henning, M. D., attending Provincial Board of fHealth ; ... ?!3 M e rer sn ie o raw ds s a Wm. Kellum, assessor, salary and postage A. Ppraguo, : D. 10 ~@...s.l..i%..2 f2aigalde A; M. Nelson,‘ R.â€":D."T..".k,. i}...&¢isim1ink.. N. A.. Bartlett, R. D: 6 Sawyer Massey Co., 2 grader blades ......... A. Sprague, freight on culverts ...."....s...... Walter Young,/RK. D. L ;,.....«1a2%is.¢¢lrx}.ss Walter ‘Young, 1237 ft. oak plank‘".:...... :.. To Horseman, damage toâ€" buggy ..........r.. Council fees ... i?e srs id i e PX on e s n in n ns n is sn WwWH. Trembly;.‘R. D. 0 .l.@....ssia l is sler .k C ialk Caistor Township, balance due on Paire bridge W B: Shrum, 15120 Ibs coal .....«....¢@.;%. R. E. Book, lumber Wilcox building bridge ........ Chas. North, part payment Wilcox bridge contract Councit 16eS ... s.is.s.e..rro ‘.iraeisenin‘s n f sn e 9 n# a alik Waiter :Young, R.â€"D.~1,:2 and 83 .........2..:% w.r+in R. M. Vance for drawing 14 loads of sand‘and cost of same *.2s.. 02c . +. in ns o alnos n sieik en d We en ats 4 % W. B. Shrum, 14 loads of sand and drawing same.. A. Sprague, freight on sewer. pipeâ€"......../2...... 3. A / LAivingston, on printing account : .:.......... W. B. Shrum, for 2 loads of sand for North Creek Dridge us .... i . 1i keas s Ar noath o a s alain‘ s aieig e ale .. Walter Young, bridge building R. D. I1â€"......;..... x.. * Bprague, R..â€"D.â€"10" .2s2.i.t. .cs kss . i t siaie ae‘ i n k .: C. Packham,. . D. 4 and 8....:.;.....s..*.... A. M. Nelson, filling approach to Wilcox bridge .. Board of Health meéting :.......,;....%.....%+..... Counci1 â€"Nees .....l..i¢) L.glllli s i id ks t o calea . +s > Moertfitt, 387 ft.‘oak plank. ........!.l..s..vi..... Corrugated Pipe Co., Stratford, for pipes ‘.......... K« M.: â€"Nelson, R/ D. T i1 ... .V.2... / ori<aksd vale‘s a 4 al s Chas. North, on Wilcox bridge contract .......:.. ‘Thos. Murphy, bridge construction, North Grimsby M. Nelson, tfownline":.....ss.. s;..l.l.l..el.. s nsl k.4 44e £ w. . Trembly, / R. D.:9 ;.:...:... 220. .v.silss esnt as Carl Juhlike, repairing bridge N. Grimsby t‘nline.. s Aprague, R. D. 10.....1.;..00...2sisieki‘cX i viaie aa‘e I. E. Nelson, for D. Z. Jacobs, repairing bridge it‘ K. Book, on lumber account ......;........../... ti. Hucther,; RioD. 5.%.1.....l.... nsl esns ol T. H. &. B. R‘y Co., two cars of gravel ............ Civant to Agricultural Society .:.. .......... .;.... Crant: to Public: Library....... .......l....01l..l.., Grant to S. Grimsby Ploughing Society .... ...... Selecting Furors .;.......s....MA....lnn is Councilt fegs‘ .¢............liX.li.l.iMini.cs nan t .. Chas. North re account McDougall bridge ........ T. Trembly, 1aDb0or on R.: D. 9‘°.......;...:..}5;0...., fiarley Moerritt $00 ft. Ogk plank ... ;.:;....;:.." Thos. Nelson, treas. S. S. No. 9 from Gov. grant .... D‘Arcy Merritt, treas.‘S. S. No. 10, from Gov. grant John Martin, treas. S. S. No. 11, from Gov. grant .. Wm. Hunter, treas. S. S. No. 12, from Gov. grant.. Agron Mclick, U.. 8: 8. No: T ‘from Gov. grant ..,.... J.M.Book, U.)S. 8. No.‘8, from Gov. grant...... .: A.; M. â€"Nelson, U. 8. 8. No. 2, from Gov. grant ...... Union Banrk to retire note 2‘;...;...:.......%2.}02..1 Vnion Bank to retire note ...:../.l....}.}%.}}22, A. M. Nelson, U. S.‘S. No. 2, Grant and Asst......... Secretary and Treas. U. S. S. No. 3, Grant and Asst. Secretary and Treas. U. S. S. No. 5, Grant and Asst. Aaron Melick, U. S. S.No. 7, Grant and Asst. .. .. J. M. Book, U. S$. 8. No. 8 Grant and. Asst.!.. Thos. Nelson, §. §. No. 9, Grant and Asst....... ... D‘Arcy Merritt, S. 8. No. 10, Grant and Asst. ...... John Martin, 8. S..No. 11, Grant and Asst..;....... Win. Hunter, S. 8: .No. 12, Grant and Asst. ...... Bank of Hamilton, Grimsby re Debenture S. S. No. 8 T‘ship of N. Grimsby, re debenture S. S. No. 5 ...... Helen Roberts, re local improvement deb. No. 2 ... . A.. M. Nelson, R. D. T s2 oi i. ake i nb e C . ids y s . N. A,. Bartlett, R. D. 6:. ...X ie iss . cullll.., D. 7. Jacobs,; RD. 2 xn ra uiess io i8 sw . ies aak s d por l . w.: Youns, R. . D. 1 s s es t i i ns o se V o lls., A. Sptague; R:. D.: 10::} .0 00.:.%.. ... use .ais s l i. T. Wilcox, damage to sheep by.dogs. ;........... M. : Vanderburg, 100 6â€"inch glazed tile .............. J.. A: Schnick, hall rent ..}:i.2s.. .....2....... [ J. A. Livingston, on printing account ... ......... Chas. Grassie, repairs to grader and plow .......... N.‘ P. Henning, M. D., services M. H. 0. ......:..... I":. W.. Roberts, clerk‘s salatry .................... Anson Merritt, sanitary inspector.. ..;............. J. : B. Brant, treasurer‘s. salary .........}........1.. E. Durham, 64 hours scraping, rdad .............. G.â€"M. Hicks, burtal, Abram Smith, a pauper ..... ... E.: ‘Hays,. I6â€"inech ‘spikes ..;......}.. <;.....ul........ C. Page for grading plow.:......}s... ..l....0:..0ls Board of Health mecting L .........s.....}..0...1.. . Huether,; K. D Sâ€"and 5......1;.:......}....2.... J. M. Book, refund of.dog tax â€".......... ...}.:0..8;2. John Hill, refund of dog tax .. .. ....;.....:;s..... J. W. Plewelling, refund â€"of dog tax‘................ 9. Fisher, refund ‘of dog tax.::..... .../".........;, J.â€"S. Goitden, refund offdog tax ...;.. .... :........ wW. H. Trembply, Ro D9 a in y .. . . . 3. o c is e is Ho o Commission fees for council .,........;.;......{, T‘wo sessions of Conncil :.;. ....... ...l....... .. Balance on hand .. s3 .i .4 s ce dn dn e eï¬ aOobse K. NMt. Nelgon, â€"R.: .D. 7"..........,.0......f..{gi.p 1_&. S_prggm_a, teaming culverts to N. Grimsby t‘nline soTTH GRIMSBY MINUTES (Continued from page 7) A. D. No. i ........... LIABILITIES ASSETS s 5e ce ie n se n ul n e C n enc « k k e e ow k k ow w e e e k k a0k s e e e e e e e e e w e es s ue w ce ce un sle h9 c 940000 «s s e e e e e e e e e ce e s es «ow k k s e e e e e e e e e 0c L mpneiop hy i 54 0 un Te t werle 25 ie on 83 27 10, 00 44 00 19 00 162 24 40 16 00 13 00 44 79 46 50 23 30 2 00 8 00 10 00 $16382 24 16 13 44 46 23 18 80 70 65 || 42. T9 47 85 | 23 30 19 50 1 19 25 10 43 30 3 00 10 00 5 50 23 98 42 87 24 85 17 96 2 50 171 10 19 60 41 65 18 57 $7764 87 8 20 99 00 18 40 4 00 26 22 100 00 10 00 139 15 24 12 25 24 17 2808 36 1600 00 1300 00 1050 00 297 96 5998 16 4319 27 81 y 87 48 101 33 500 00 300 00 359 78 58 57 459 35 441 00 329 54 577 20 656 59 539 74 1495 15 148 98 2104 64 15 2104 95 89‘ 35 66 51 50 13 80 8 00 10 00 13 55 194 00 6 40 150 00 76 76 35 10 104 06 319 71 27 50 81 94 8 33 8 33 200 00 15 00 18 TT 10 117 11 336 749 10 35 10 40 61 12 97 61 64 188 90 19 55 28 16 5 60 19 69 11; 49 38 68 10 00 18 48 20 52 36 90 48 00 50 00 3000 15 00 8 00 10 00 60 00 8 00 12 00 97 69 61 78 64 89 88 31 90 15 87 48 50 00 20 00 6 00 25 00 2 60 28 15 27 10 ig I have ridden horseback almost daily for the last forty years. And I â€" By Peter McArthur q | enJoy horseback riding today more than ever before. Why is thex:e‘ no Hoxl‘tlcultura,l Hall 0 I have never been sick a day in my life and I have never lost a meal exâ€"|of Fame? Wihile loqklng through a 00 cept through inability of «access. ; § ; fruit book this morning. I was struck 00 The man Who_ keeps his strength and good chéer in this country will| by the number of apples that have ; p | never be out of a job. And of work I have always had aâ€"plenty. . been named after people, and I beâ€" 98 God has certainly been good to me. I think I haveâ€"had as much fun and| gan to wonder vaguely. what those gg |as many laughs as any man of my years in the wide world. ; . e people looked like. _ It has been 3 00 "I know what pleasure is, for I have done good work," said Louis Stevenâ€" pleasing custom with humanity to pp | son. the well beloved. j i Stat to "th wh iA 30 Onre of the principal reasons why I have been able to do good work is eretqu svatues o â€"those. who c MaYs, 77 | because I have always kept on close, chummy terms with at least one good‘a'c' 1eve.d much but the men who horse. ; lhave given us wonderful apples have 35 * o % *# % o# o# { been allowed to pass into oblivion. 58 Alfred Russel Wallace says that civilization had its rise in the domestiâ€"| It is just possible that we might be 9¢ leation of animals: that where men domesticated the horse, the ox, the camel, ‘ apple to secure portraitsâ€"mellow 00 00 Collector‘s Salary 0O ITHAMER E. NELSON, Reeve Smithville, Dec. 17, 1914. More Horse Sense-.--and Some Sucâ€" cess Hints ‘ (By Elbert Hubbard) 00 To take care of myself and then produce a little surplus for the benefit of the world, is my ambition. ‘ s "We are strong," says Emerson," only as we ally ourselves with nature." I find that when I go in partnership with a good horse I keep my nerves from getting outside of my clothes. A horse helps you to "forget it."" A horse has no troubles of his own. He does not pour into your ear a sad tale of woe. says Walt Whitman: "I think I could turn and live with animals." 00 68 32 40 09 20 59 T4 15 98 70 95 36 67 00 00 00 U0 50 00 00 60 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 06 40 97!canoe and Henry replied: "I just carry‘the idea in my mind t 10 lturn, and the canoe goes just where I want it to." ; 00 | The fellow tried the trick and very naturally upset in some 716 Alfred Russel Wallace says that civilization had its rise in the domestiâ€"| cation of animals; that where men domesticated the horse, the ox, the camel,‘ the elephant, civilization thrived and man evolved; put : that‘ in countries‘i where men had nothing in the way of domestic animals except a tame wolfâ€" that is, the dogâ€"there was no evolution. The centaur, that fabled combination of a man and a horse, had its rise in the dim ages when man first tamed a wild horse. | Some boobâ€"for boobs have always aboundedâ€"saw a man on horseback ‘and he was so amazed that he told the whole boob family that he had seen a ‘man with the body of a horse. And, being boobs, they believed it. ; | A man on horseback was pretty nearly invincible until the invention of lgunpowder; and the first use of gunpowder was to scare horses. The idea |\of the explosion having a rock or an iron ball was a later idea. 16 ‘ Aristotle was the tutor of Alexander the Great. He taught Alexander to ride the wild horse, Bucephalus and Aristotle sat on the top rail of the corral and watched his pupil turn the trick. Aristotle wrote a book of a thousand pages on the horse. He said all there was to say on the subject and no man can ever write at length about lthe horse without quoting Aristotle. My opinion now is that if we are going to reserve our vigor, our courage, our enjoyment, we will have to be on good terms with Mother Earth and close up to Equus caballus. The two greatest men the world has ever seen were horsemen, both.; Aristotle was the world‘s first schoolmaster and the world‘s first scientist.\ He taught school out of doors and all of his pupils were taught to ride horse-‘ back. Aristotle dissected the dead body of a horse. He then fastened the skeleâ€" ton together, preserving all of its articulations. The native villagers stood around and watched him; and when the skeleâ€" ton was all fastened together with the aid of things the villagers chuckled and gurgled in glee and said: ‘"We knew they could never do it!" The merry village‘s thought that Aristotle and Alexander were endeavorâ€"i ing to make a horse, and they were overjoyed to see that Aristotle was not|i able to clothe the bones with flesh, put the skin on the horse, saddle him and | ride him down the street.. That was one on Aristotle. \| The next man to write a book on the horse was Leonardo da Vinci. Among other things Leonardo did was to paint a picture of his lady love, the Mona Lisa, which picture was stolen from the Louvre. Leonardo got the trifling sum of $80,000 for the picture. It is now worth a million. But the fellow who stole it offered it for a hundred â€" dollars _ and got "pinched" for attempting to sell a "snide" painting. Leonardo attributed much of his‘ bubbling, perennial joy in life to his close association with the horse. He was a horseback rider from childhood until his 84th year, when death, through accident, claimed him, and he went out with a smile and a wave of the h,fand, first insinuating with broken breath that if there were no horses in Paraj‘.ise he did not care to there. _A__.§9_l;.n C w T " e (e] eau lla 1le di.'.d m aa x: ‘_‘vnn#nfl 4 mOATk uandlaie Chicken thieving is being carried on to such an extent in this â€"section that the authorities will be asked to take the matter in hand. C € ABINGDON On Monday evening, Dec. 21, at the Ker Methodist church, the Rev. C. L. McIrvin of Berlin, will give a Patrioâ€" tic lecture in aid of â€" the / Belgian Relief Fund, the subject will be the Union Jack and Germany, illustrated with one hundred lantern slides; al~ so several numbers. It is to be hoped that there will be a large .â€"turnout and a good sum realized. ~ On Tuesday evening the conservaâ€" tive Association for the Township held their annual meeting. Routine business and election of officers took place. Our Methodist friends intend holdâ€" ing their annual Xmas entertainment on Tuesday evening, . Dec. «22. A good program is being prepared. Miss Eliza Honsberger, of Beamsâ€" ville, called on old friends on Monâ€" day. The Rev. Mr. Kitching of Binâ€" brook gave a very interesting and able discourse in . the Methodist church on Sunday evening in aid of Temperance and Moral Reform. (Miss Edith Davidson went to Ham ilton omm Thursday. Mr., W. . Pigherâ€"fell off a load of baled straw one day last week and was badly hurt, but is getting better again. } The Township Council met in the hall on Tuesday for the last time for this yvear. â€" Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crosby went to Hamilton on Saturday. Mrsg. Ernest Wilcox, of GRIMSBY, visited her parents a few days last week. (Mr. Albert Kennedy, of ~Niagara Falls, COiat. visited _ old friends and acquaintances in this place a feow days last week. Mrs. George Snyder is recovering from anmn attack of Tonsilitis: Misses Mary and Theresa Harcourt went to Hamilton om Staurday. Mr. John Burch made a business trip to Hamilton on Saturday. f think Of the sweetest kind of music, and she doesn‘t smoke or drink; Oh! I can‘t begin to tell you of the poems she can quote; She knows more than half the lawyers doâ€" j f but ma can‘t vote. § Ma‘s a graduate of college, and she reads most everything; She can talk French and Gerâ€" man, she can paint and she can sing. ’ Beautiful? She‘s like a picture! When she talks she makes you THE INDEPENDENT,. GRIMSBY, ONT. BUT MA CAXN‘T VOTE SIT. ANNS Wn he wanted to turn his just carry‘the idea in my mind that I wish to JOHN B. BRANT, Treasurer "Button, Button, Who Makes the Button ?" Ordinarily, a button is looked upon as an article of minor importance. But sometimes a great deal: depends upon just one button. Its importance is not fully realized until it has been lo t. There is no reason why these buttons can‘t be «*«Made in Canada‘"‘ just as well as anywhere else; in fact, some $400,000 worth are every yearâ€"â€"â€"the other $800,000 worth will be, if you will only «‘"play the game‘‘ andâ€" $12604 48 Canada spends about a million and a quarter dollars every year for buttonsâ€"yes just buttons. If these buttons were produced in Canad», fourteen factories, employing over nine bundred Canadians, would be kept busy to turn them out. Andâ€"â€"â€"more than twoâ€"thirds of these buttons are imported, more than $800,000 is sent to forâ€" eign countries which could just as well be kept here. s y very â€" damp 50 00 ‘ waterâ€"this because he did not have the canoe instinct. j Sya: w_nznzlz._A4 Any man with the horse instinct soon comes to a perfect understanding 04 48\with one of these highâ€"bred horses, and the horse knows where to go and § how fast. Say, "Made in Canada." It is a great thing to feel that you are bigger than the elements. And a horse of the right kind helps you to hypnotize yourself into the belief that you are a part of all you see and hear and feel. No man can have melancholia who loves a horse and is understood â€" by |one.. You shake off your troubles and send your cares flying into the wanâ€" \ton winds when you ride horseback. I have ridden horses since I wore trousers buttoned to a calico waist. In my childhood I could go out to the barn in the night and find saddle and bridle any particular horse that my father wanted. My father was a country doctor and used to ride much nights. Someâ€" times I rode with himâ€"first behind him, then in front of himâ€"and then _ I got a horse of my own. £ The other day a man came along from New York city and asked Ali Babi this question: "Is Mr. Hubbard giving any more lectures this year? And the old man replied: "Good Lord! How can he go off giving lecâ€" tures? Don‘t you know that his best saddle mare has a colt?" And it is soâ€"I have to stay home and look after the baby. iold daugerotypes, in red _ plush frames, of Mclntosh who gave us the \Mol\n-tosh Red and of Colonel Swayâ€" | z1 who ~\developed the, Swayzic \Pom-me Gris, but beyond these two |everything seems blank. Baxter, Gidâ€" eon, Mann, Patten, Porter, Scott, Tol man, Wagener and Whitneyall have excellent apples named after them ! but they tnemselves are not even ‘‘Names in a remembered thyme." | ‘Poets, painters and sculptors have | meglected to preserve their features‘ and good qualities with imperishable art, and yet their names may prove1 imperishable on account of the apples they igave us. Then again, who â€"can ‘ tell me anything of. Fanny, Martha and Louigse? The latter we know was lPrince-ss Louise as the apple was inâ€" lt'roduced auring the time she occuâ€" |pied Rideau Hall, but Fanny and Martha must ever remain mysterious | heroices of Horticulture. Loved they \were and admired beyond a doubt, or i they would never have had apples ‘ramed after them. I have purposely. omitted two{ names from the above list because the prominence still given to the apples named after them led me to speculate about thenm at greater length and more fancifully. There is Ben Davis. What kind of a man was he? I imagine he was a shrewd Yan kee of the class that invented wood en nutmegsâ€"a bluffer and a good bhorse trader. A true picture of him would ~probably skhow him with his tonigue in his cheek and a suspicion of ~a wink hovering on his evelid. ‘The rascal must have known what a ioke he was nlavingz on posterity in mnAL U l ANDRLRLL introducing his beautifully coloured. s 3 beautifully formed. tempting _ and 17, 18, 19 20‘ MARKET SQUARE disappointing apple. As a practical @00006060009000080400004646046¢ THE APPLE MEN WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1914 joker Ben deserves a niche in the humourous corn _ of our Hall. of Fame. But the man who kindles my imagination is Baldwin. He deserves a ‘better fate than to be merely a name for his apple is still about our most serviceable ~winter variety. It js handsome, finely flavored, a good keeper, and equal to the best. Perâ€" haps because the only Baldwins I ever knew were clergymen I think of him as a fine upright man, of sterling quality. Moreover, we have Milton‘s authority for thinking well of him. "Nene but such as are good men can give good gifts," and Baldâ€" \win’s gift to humanity â€" was of the t best. According to the apple book he must have lived in â€" Massachusetts ‘and I like to think that he was of good Puritan stock, and probably â€"a ‘pasr::enggr on the Mayflower, for the | BaldwinF apple is packed from core 1 to skin with sterling qualities. I am glad to know that many Bald wins have been placed in »storage this season, and along in January and February they will appear on lt‘he market in prime condition. If you try them thein I am sure you will tjoin me in extolling the virtues of ‘the‘ unknown Baldwin who gave the | world this excellent apple. j c mt ap : anvvny ce rarmniinrnren ommmscemsconmnparm sns 2w