"Don‘t you think we‘ll get anyâ€" thing?""‘ By accident he turned to Ethel. She smiled meaninglessly and said for the first time with any real note of conviction: "Nothing!" Alaric sat down gloomily beside his mother, ' The Hamilton Provident and Loan Society "It‘s bankrupt!" wailed Mrs, Chi chester. "Failed!" suggested Ethel cheerfully, "We‘re beggars," continued the mothâ€" er. "I must live on charity for the rest of my life, the guest of relations I‘ve hated the sight of and who have hated me. It‘s dreadfulâ€"dreadful!" All Alaric‘s first glow of manly en thusiasm began to cool. Alaric rose and, drawing himself up to his full five feet six inches of manâ€" hood, glared malignantly at some imagâ€" fmnary bank officials. His whole nature was roused. The future of the family depended on him.‘ They would not deâ€" pend in vain.. He looked at Ethel, who was trying to make the best of the business by smiling agreeably on them both. ‘ I think of ‘em. They can‘t play the fool with me. I should think not, inâ€" deed. Listen, mater. You‘ve got a son, thank God, and one no bank can take any liberties with. What we put in there we‘ve got to have out. That‘s all I can say. We‘ve simply got to have it out. There! I‘ve said it." f CHAPTER X1. 5 The Chichesters. LARIO sat on the edge of her A chair and put his arm around her shoulder and tried to comâ€" fort her. "Don‘t you worry, mater," he said. "Don‘t worry. IT‘ll go down and tell ‘em what I think of ‘emâ€"exactly what Deposit in our Savings Deâ€" partment, 3%»% interest paid, half yearly. Four per cent. paid on deâ€" posits running for one year or longer Cor King and Hughson ®ts HAMILTON â€" _ MONEY TO LOAN "I always thought bank directors |‘n' mied ur-':-.: vet :, e St, Sauveur, Quebec City, ‘*For a long time, I had beea suffering from the Kidneys and Pains in my Back and Limbs,. I have tried several remedies without success. â€"After using Gin Pills I was soon relieved of my pains and now I am perfectly cured, and due entirely to Gin Pills", Mrs. Ve. J. GUY. Gin. Pills are "Made in Canada" and sold by all dealers at 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50. Sold in U.S. under the name "GINO‘‘ Pills. Write us for free trial treatment. National Drug and Chemical of Canada, Limited. Tor that are making ‘you feel so badly. If so, you can easily tell. If your head feels dull and achyâ€"if your back hurts nearly all the timeâ€"if your appetite is poorly and your tongue is coatedâ€"if the urine burns, is highly colored and offenâ€" sive in odorâ€"if you notice a brick dust deposit or mucus in the urine after standing over niglhtâ€"then you certainly have something the matter with your Kidneys. Get PERHAPS IT‘S THE KIDNEYS in Dilfs €. FERRIE, Treasurer Toronto, 263 Alaric picked it up and glanced st it. He gave an expression of disgust and fiung the card back on the salver. "Christian Brent." For the first time Ethel showed more than a passing gleam of interâ€" est. She stopped strumming the piano and stood up, very erect and very still Jarvis, a white haired, dignified but ler, who had served the family man and boy, came in at this juncture with a visiting card on a salver. 4 ed at the date ‘"What‘s todayâ€"the 1st? Yes, so it isâ€"June the, ist. Jerry‘s coming todayâ€"all his family too, They‘ve taken ‘Noel‘s Folly,‘ on the hill. *He‘s sure to look in here. Couldn‘t be better. He‘s the cove to turn to in a case like this." Alaric Drew Himself to â€" Height. ‘"Please don‘t laugh in that cheerless way, Ethel. It goes all down my spine. Jerry‘s always telling me 1 ought to do somethingâ€"that the world is for the workerâ€"and all that. He‘s right, and I‘m going to show him.". He suddenly picked up the paper and lookâ€" Again came that Gdeadly, cold unâ€" sympathetic "Ha"‘ from Ethel. . â€" "*Not at ail," said Alaric. "I‘m just tingling all over at the thought of it. The only reason I bhaven‘t so far is because I‘ve never had to. But now that 1 hbhave I‘ll just buckle on my armor, so to speak, and astonish you aH." "Very well," said Alaric determinedâ€" ly, "T‘ll work too." Mrs. Chichester looked up pleadingly. Alaric went on: "I‘ll put my hand to the plow. ‘The more l think of it the keener I/am to begin. From today l‘ll be a workingman." At this Ethel laughed a queer, little, odd, su,ercilious note, summed up in a single word, "Ha!"" There was nothâ€" ing mirthful in it. There was no reâ€" proach in it. It was just an expresâ€" sion of her honest feeling at the bare suggestion of her brother working. Alaric turned quickly to her. "And may 1 ask why that ‘HaF Why, I ask you? There‘s nothing I couldn‘t do if 1 were really put to it â€"not a single thing. Is there, mater? His mother looked up proudly at him. "I know that, dear. But it‘s dreadâ€" ful to think of youâ€"working." *"*Teach? Who in the wide world caa you teach?" 2 **Children." Alaric laughed mirthlessly. "Oh, come, that‘s rich! â€" Eh, mater? Fancy Ethel teaching grubby little brats their A B C‘sit Tush!" "Must!"‘ said Ethel, quite unmoved. "A Chichester teach?‘ said Alaric, in disgust. "*Settled!" from Ethel, and she swept ber fingers slowly across the piano. shuddered. "What will you do, Ethel? "Work." "At what?" f "‘Fefch.‘" Alaric looked at Ethel, and a feeling of pity came over him. it was digâ€" tinctly to his credit since his own wrongs occupied most of his attention. But, after all, he could buffet the world and wring a living out of it. All he had to do was to make up his mind which walk in life to choose.. He was fortunate. were blighters. Good heavens, what & mess!" He looked the picture of misâ€" ery. â€""What‘s to become of Ethel, mater?" "*Whoever shelters me« must shelter Ethe] as well," replied the mother sadâ€" ly. "But it‘s hardâ€"at my ageâ€"to beâ€" sheltered." His Full )9v l "Lying down," answered Ethel truth | fully and without any feeling. "And Alaric?" "In the garden." "Then we have a moment or twoâ€" alone?" Brent put a world of mean ing into the suggestion. | .*"*Very likely," said Ethel, picking up ’a score of "Boheme" and looking at it as if she saw it for the first time, all |the while watching him through her ' haif closed eyes. Th3 Brent went to her. "Glad> to see me?" he asked. "Why not?" "I am glad to see you"â€"he bent over | bherâ€"*"more than glad." "Really ?" He sat beside her.â€" "Ethel," be whisâ€" pered intensely, "I am at the crossâ€" roads." â€"*"make love to you straightforwardâ€" ly." He felt the supreme moment had almost arrived. Now, he thought, he would be rewarded for the long waitâ€" ingâ€"the endess siege to this marvelous woman who concealed her real nature berneath that marble casing of an asgâ€" sumed indifference. He waited eagerly for her answer. When it came it shocked and revolted She met his took quite frankly and astonished him with the question. "Well, aren‘t you?" He rose anxiously. . "Ethel!" "Don‘t you always?‘"‘persisted Ethel "Has it seemed like that to you‘?‘ "Yes," she answered candidly; "by insinuation, never straightforwardly." "Has it offended you?‘ "Then you admit it?" "Oh," he cried passionately, "I wish 1 had the right toâ€"to"â€" Again bhe wavered. "Yes?" And Ethel looked straight at him, x "Oh!" commenced Ethel, without any interest. "It came last night." "Did it?" "This is the endâ€"between Sibyl and myself." 5 "Is it?" ‘ *"Yesâ€"the end. It‘s been horrible from the firstâ€"horrible. There‘s not a word of mineâ€"not an actionâ€"she Gdoesn‘t misunderstand." "How boring!" said Ethel blanAly. "She would see harm even in th‘s!" uwhy?n "She‘d think I was here toâ€"it0o"â€" BHy stopped. "What?" innocently inquired Ethet. "Make love to you." And he Jookted earnestly into her eyes. «"Where is your mother?" suggesting that much depended on the answer. "How are you?" bhe asked, and there was a note of subdued passion in his tone. s "Fair," replied Ethel without even looking at him. Ethel showed neither like nor dislike â€"Jjust a form of toleration. Brent acâ€" cepted this, as a dog a â€"crumb, in the hope of something more substantial to follow. He had come that morn ing with a fixed resolve. His man ner was determined. His voice wooed as‘ a caress. He went tenderly to Ethel the moment the door closed on Jarvis. Just at this period Ethel Chichester was the especial object of his adora: tion. Her beauty appealed to him. Her absolute indifference to him stung him as a lasu. 1t seemed to be little his powers of attraction. Conse qguently be redoubled his efforts. Christian Brent was a dark. tense. eager, scholarly looking man of twen tyâ€"eight years of age. His career as a diplomatist was halted at its outset by an early marriage with the only daughâ€" ter of a prosperous manufacturer. Brent was moderately independent in his own right, but the addition of his wife‘s dowry seemed to destroy all amâ€" bition. He no longer found interest in carrying messages to the various legaâ€" tions or embassies of Europe or in fillâ€" ing a routine position as some one‘s secretary. From being an intensely eager man of affairs bhe drifted into a social loungerâ€"the lapdog of the dra wâ€" ing roomâ€"where the close breath of some rare perfume meant more than the clash of interests and the conquest of a woman greater than that of a na tion. They begin by deceiving others; they end by deceiving themselves. The door opened, and Jarvis entered and usbered in "Mr. Brent"â€" Alaric burried into the garden. A few words of description of Chrisâ€" tian Brent might be of interest since bhe represents a type that society alâ€" ways bas with it "Jolly good of you to let him bore you. 1 hate the sight of the beggar myself. Always tlooks to me like the first conspirator at a play." Ethei made a motion toward the gdoor as thougb to stop any further converâ€" sation. s "Mr. Brent‘s coming." she said, ailâ€" most impatientily. Alaric started for the window leadâ€" ing into the garden. o As Mrs. Chichester disappeared Alar ic turned ‘to his calm sister, who, strangely enough, was showing some signs of life and interest. "Really going to teach?" *"*Yes," "Right! I‘ll find something, tooâ€" very iikely ‘a doctor. We‘ll pull through somehow." "Don‘t you worry., mater," consoled Alaric. "Leave everything to me. I‘l] thrash the whole thing out" As Jarvis ‘went in search of Mr Breut Mrs. Chicbhester ‘went up the great stairs. "My head is throbbing I‘ll go to my room." Mrs. Chichester rose too. "IL can‘t see any one," she said imperatively. ‘"‘Nor I," added Alaric. "I‘m all strung up." He turned to Jarvis. "Tell Mr. Brenut we‘re very sorry, but"â€" "T‘ll see bhim," interrupted Ethel, ai most animatedly. "Bring Mr. Brent bhere, Jarvis." (To be continued) THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO disappeared Alarâ€" ilim sister, ~who, is showing some "THOSE DOMINION DEVILS" (By Horatia Bottomby in "Sunday Pictorial" England) But not so wonderful as that last achievement, when the YÂ¥ser having been forced by the Germans, our left wingâ€"composed of Canada‘s gloriou: sonsâ€"was left exposed to peril of anâ€" nihilation. Reluctantly, sullenly, they were forced to retreat, leaving their cherished guns behind them. How the Huns howled with joy! The news was flashed to the Kaiser‘s dinnerâ€"table that the Allies‘ line was broken; the Particulars from J. H. Culp, Agent, Grimsby, or write M. G. Murphy, D. P. A., Toronto. _ Adrian, Mich. â€" "I suffered terribly with female weakness and backache and SE 5§5§i,5§\§;\;§-§335§§55 got so weak that J h e es work." When I es WS):;| washed my dishes I 3§§A had to sit down and hi t &9 when I would sweep s ’ the floor I would get {:!!| so weak that I would & iz"“ have to get a drink * * 2Â¥ S every few minutes, w/ l!’ and before I did my / 3 dusting I would have * to lie down. I got so poorly that my folks thought I was going into consumption. One day I found a piece of paper blowing around the yard and I picked it up and read it. It said ‘Saved from the Grave,‘ and told what Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetaâ€" ble Compound has done for women. I showed it to my huskand and he said, *Why don‘t you try it?‘ So I did, and after I had taken two bottles I felt better and I said to my husband, ‘I don‘t need any more,‘ and he said ‘You had better take it d little longer anyway.‘ So I took it for three months and got well and strong." â€"Mrs, AronNzo E. BAKER, 9 Tecumseh St., Adrian, Mich. Not Well Enough to Work. In these words is hidden the tragedy of many a woman, housekeeper or wage earner who supports herself and is often helping to sup%ort a family, on meagre wages. Whether in house, office, facâ€" tory, shop, store or kitchen, woman should remember that there is one tried and true remedy for the ills to which all women are prone, and that is Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Q’egetable Compound. It promotes that vigor which makes work easy. The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. . The steamer ‘"Manitoba," sailing from Port McNicoll on . Wednesdays, will call at Owen Sound, leaving that point 10.30 p.m. STEAMSHIP EXPRESS leaves Toronto 12.45 p.m. daily, exâ€" cept Friday, making direct connection with steamers at Port McNicoll on cept Friday,, m with steamers sailing days. Steamers leave Port McNicoll Tuesâ€" days, â€" Wednesdays, Thursdays .and Saturdays for SAULT STE MARIE, EOR“;'T ARTHUR and FORT WILâ€" 1A M. GREAT LAKES STFAMSHIP SERVICE Phone az;f?i;?’l%ï¬ R s Ssd s x"g $3 d es s j ...k=_>==; T t # l yA us i8 s & ax ‘~‘"‘ t $s Fe mc Nok m PM :-k..lu. p 85 g _\‘\\,‘,,_ ~::::::;::5\. $A \\\-‘ 4 ““‘"‘::SS’E iss 8 4 tC ';::::u..:. B §7 Cz -:::::::::: fess: pq % '::::::::: ds s ym P :::::::: Resiint ko o ::::::: iss 5 = td { 3@ â€" 18 ;~:p< 2 t snt f i BA :,n. 6 ...... ES ‘3: E‘E‘EE“ $ ..~:= ; -5:5::55 $ss ~ESEE§EEE y < .I:::::::: // :é:::::::;;g i 4 f :E&EEEEEE::: iJ =ssss$ssssss T .:::-:::::::: & R ::'::::::: . ’==sssss? e F * Pumps, Oxfords, Sandels, Lacrosse Shoes and Polish of al!l kinds For Men, Women asd Children Mrs. Baker So Weakâ€"Could ’ Not Do Her Workâ€"Found | Relief In Novel Way. | GOULD NOT _ STAND ON FEEFT Adim@ fast at. Popular Prices. It will pay every thrifty man or women to give me a call. M. B U L L The Season‘s Best Stylish Shoes Next door to new Post office BOOT REPAIRING A Specialty. 313 I Yser was crossed and above all, the Canadian contingent was in full reâ€" treatâ€"except that portion of it which had been asphyxiated with the murder ous chemical fumes concocted in the laboratories of the land of "culture" and now for the the first time in the history of the world, requisitioned as munitions of war. Poor Huns! Poor Kaisor! How little they knew the boys of the builâ€"dog breed. Those guns are now back in our possession â€"most of the lost ground regained, and, inspired by the example of that handful of Dominion devils, the Alâ€" lieg have set their teeth and steps for the great forward movement, which TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing is a synopsis of a proposed Byâ€"Law which has been taken into consideration and will be passed by the Council in the event of the assent of the electors being obtained, after one month from the first publication in the Grimsby Independent newspaper, the first publication being June 2, 1915. A leaseholder who is entitled to vote on the proposed Byâ€"Law is one who has a lease of property in the Police Village of Smithville, which extends over the time within which the money to be raised by the Byâ€"Law is made payable and who has covenanted to pay all municipal taxes in respect of the property (except local imâ€" proveéement taxes), provided, however, that every leaseholder who desires to vote on the Byâ€"Law must file at the office of the Clerk at least ten days prior to the date of voting a statutory declaration stating that his or her lease meets the _ above requirements. The names of the leaseholders neglecting to file such declaration will not be placed on the Voters‘ List for such voting. on the .. Execution IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties hereto have and seals by their duly authorized representatives. i U o s ne o s Cla w e c 1 1 C h e Ae d e se 1 Me URAAA tAAAE EECUCTSCATUG agreement, are hereby abrogated and withdrawn, and this agreement, when duly executed by both of the parties hereto, constitutes the agreement between them, and no modification of this contract shall be binding upon the‘ parties hereto or either of them, unless such modification shall be in writing and duly executed by the parties hereto. 19. This conti parties hereto, until i of both parties hereto 15, . . All motors, transformers, wiring and appliances using current supplied under this agreement shall be installed in a manner satisfactory to the Electrical Inspection Department of the Province of Ontario. Measurement of Capacity and Energy 16. For the measurement of electrical capacity of apparatus and the maxiâ€" mum rate of consumption of power hereunder a horse power shall be defined as seven hundred and fortyâ€"six {(746) volt amperes, and for all measurements of energy supplied, a horse power shall be defined as seven hundred and fortvâ€"si%Â¥ C742\ auaifl mTuEll LHe BalU meLer or melers are defective the Village agree Company agrees to accept payment pro rata to the amount due during the month next preceding that in which the deficiency curred, in full settlement for service during period of such def Changes in Customer‘s Plant _ 14. Changes in the capacity of the said Municipal Plant of the Company‘s service shall be brought to the Company‘s noti ficient time in advance of such change to enable the Company tc tions in its service as may be necssary or desirable in avoiding Ic to either party hereto. aihredA davipe on o eatoil te. l o unng HSnl NAE w0 EOLDY. chie. Company. sired increase of the use of current, then, and not until then, correction of measuring instruments, shall constitute a bindi to receive and pay for the additional power for the remaind agreement, and it shall thereafter, during the term of this : by the Company and received and paid for by the Village at t as the original amounts supplied hereunder, (so long as it doe dred and. twentyâ€"four (224) kilovolt amperes). » Apparatus Destroyed i12, The Village shall reâ€"imburse the Company for a injured by its failure to conform to the stipulations of this a; In Event of Defective Meters . 13. Should the meter or meters used to measure the under become at any time defective in any particular,, then which the said meter or meters are defective the Village ag Company agrees to accept payment .pro rata to the amount . during the month next preceding that in which the deficie curred, in full settlement for service during neriod af snnh . befnaP thor .0. afrentatsinnierinataid en manide ds vritice td i 2 2e c oreanaichcare 22 . 2 i0 ie on 10 dn . 3 B 8 3 3+ 3 1 34 6 ol 9 4 1 2 it 0 90 0B Thne Vil privilege of cancellation of this agreement if wholly deprived of pov of the Company for two consecutive weeks. f 5e Abatement of Minimum Charge 10. In case the supply of electric current should be discon or more hours consecutively, the Village shall be entitled to a pro r: the MINIMUM charge for power (if any such minimum charge s ma(lile) 1d}n‘ing such period, upon sending written notification to the such claim. ) Responsibility for Damages 9. The Company is to provide such reserve machinery as will insure as nearly as is practicable a continuous supply of power and undertakes to exercise all due precautions, and such means as prudent administrators should employ, to guard against interruptions or failure in the supply of current, but shallâ€"not be liable for damages nor be in default for nonâ€"commencement or otherwise, on account of interruptions of supply due to accidents to machinery, wires or other appliances used in the generation or distribution of electric current, or other cause, provided reasonable diligence is used to promptly restore such supply, nor shall the Company be liable for any damages resulting from the use of electric current, nor in respect of appliances used for the supply or utilization thereof. . The Village to have the privilege of cancellation of this agreement if wholly deprived of power through fault of the Company for two consecutive weeks. 8. The power herein provided for is to be exclusively use a municipal electric lighting and power system within the presen Police Village of Smithville or any extensions thereof. The motors or supplied with power by the said Municipal electric lighting and shall be suitable to the system in use by the Company and shall be approval before being connected and the Village is to make use of only for the purpose of driving such machinery and for such lightit connected with the Company‘s approval, and the Village shall not bute, rent or sell or make any other use thereof except as herein pI the written consent of the Company. T. The said service, which is to be Three Phase alternating at pressure of Twenty Three Hundred (2,300) volts and a nominal frequency cycle‘s, is tqcbe §upp}ied ar}d measured on the main supply cirecuit at the supply specified in Clause 1 or before the fourteenth day of each month at the C Hamilton for the calendar month immediately prece power and service shall commence from the time the posal of the Village. 6.3 within one Tests e 4. The Company shall have the privilege of making tests periodically and at its option may install the necessary circuit breakers Oor other automatic appliances that will limit the amount of power used by the Village to the maximum specified. Payments 3 ‘5. “All fpay‘men‘t‘s fpr current consumed or service rendered to be made on 2. The maximum amount of electric current to be furnished by the Company under this agreement (excepting as provided in Clause 11 hereof), shall be as folâ€" lows:â€" 75 Kilovolt Amperes during the first year, 100 Kilovolt Amperes during the second year, 112 Kilovolt Amperes during the third year, and thereafter until the ,taermination of this agreement. ates . 3. The Village agrees to use and pay for the said current threeâ€"quarters of a cent (%c) for each kilowatt hour consumed as shown by integrating electric watt hour meters placed by the Company in the power supply circuit and guarantees that the minimum payment for each and every month shall not be less than ons dollar ($1.00 per month per kilovolt Ampere of the amount contracted for viz: During the first year $75.00 per month f ' During the second year 100.00 per month ‘ During the third year and thereafter $112.00 peér month. Provided, however, that should the maximunt. realirements snemBasA in Mianaais be 3: So long as the said Village shall faithfully agreement, the Company will, upon the conditions, for limits hereinafter stated, develop and supply to anc to be mutually agreed upon by the parties hereto on th near the Village of Smithville in theTownship of South coln, for a term of ten (10) years beginning on the date tract, such current to be available for use by the Villa being reserved to the Company to shut off the currer comes necessary to make alterations for repairs to the WITNES conditions h« thereof, the ; covenant and the : the P hours To approve a proposed agrec and marked Schedule A.), betwee the trustees of the Police Village To authorize the issue of del $6,000 for the purpose of obtaini of Smithville, to provide for the instalments of $815.16, ‘payable: a vear. y THIS AGREEM BETWEE] ‘rovided, however, that e at any time exceeded, orresponding amount. Ratified by the Municipal Electors as provided by 1 e _ day of 1915. 1 To provide rateable p To provide Police Vill of 9 n‘cloc} Synopsis of Byâ€"Law n This contract shall not take effect nor be binding upon either of the o, until it has been duly executed by the properly authorized officials na Hhanaknx Customer to Begin Use The Village agrees to begin the use of and mal year from the date of this agreement. yÂ¥X d _ Service and Measurement ide the levying of ‘the sum of s _ property in the Police Village « ide for the submission of the B "illage of Smithville on Saturday ‘clock a.m. and 5 o‘clock n m elnaft rties igree Of the Municipality of South Grimsby. Purpose of the the Byâ€"Law. that in col er contain« hereto have as follows: made tnira year and thereafter $112.00 péer mon hould the maximum requirements specif the minimum paymemnt shall thereafter THE HAMILTON CATARACT POWER AND TRACTION COMPANY, LIMITED. PRESIDENT SECRETARY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF THE VILLAGE OF f SMITHVILLE. TRUSTEES. CLERK. il Electors as provided by law at a legal election held 1915. ATTEST, q Binding When Executed agreemée etween t tainin A H Purpose of Service mut C 41 §# A ( O ntures of the Municipality of Soutl z electric light and power for the payment of the debentures in ten the Union Bank,. Smithville, on De Inspection 10wnshnip of South Grimsby, in the County of Lin ginning on the date of first supply under this con or use by the Village each day of the year, right shut off the current without notice when it beâ€" s for repairs to their lines. Amount ‘electric current to be furnished by the Companyv f Smith itures 0o ompany illage.") Preamble tion of t A ( use, without : l M T IO N surely as the sun will dawn tomorâ€" row morning will ere long accomplish its objectiveâ€"of hurling the hellish hosts of Prussia out of France, out of Flanders and out of Belgium, and across the Rhineâ€"whose fortresses, as I told the Clyde workers a few weeks ago, will offer a futile resisâ€" tance to the boom of British guns, and will soon crumble to the earth, as did the walls of ancient Jericho. Clerk of MUNIC F OF co n it tify the stipulate onal powe volt amp use more $815.16 by me of Smithville. 3yâ€"Law for t v. the 3rd ‘da> oN °OM Municipal Plant or in the usual use e Company‘s notice in writing a sufâ€" e the Company to make such alteraâ€" ible in avoiding loss or inconvenience ict X1 Additional Power n WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1915 F. W. ROBERTS, South Grimsby Township. is to make use of the said power ind for such lighting as has been Village shall not disturb, distriâ€" except as herein provided without AL CO MITHVII mutu copy o ower, 1 age at the â€"same f)'rc; rat is it does not exceed tw pov otifyin 211915 }2 CO * MitrcrotA C 1 _ the power supplied hereâ€" then for the period during e agrees to make, and the unt due for similar service ficiency. has begun or ocâ€" uch deficiency. hereunto set their hands €Câ€" covenant ‘formance these pre: (e] OI e discontinued for n neasurements of energy d fortyâ€"six (746) watts. T which LDDat 1SSeI ful 191 n the ly used for operating present limits of the motors or lamps used ng and power system hall be subject to its 1( B Of A ( )1 writing of such deâ€" h notice, subject to call on the Village of the term of this eement, be supplied payment CLERK rat the atus destroyed or ient. h rita mJ he Police ten equal Decsi81: ill have ‘omnpany be imu provisoes anc ind observance ts do mutually Pro rata rates eed two hunâ€" 11 AC at a nominal ney of 66 2â€"3 the point of nereinbe nount t eâ€"quarters of electric watt d guarantees ess than one QIGHT AND lafter called iched hereto tion :Co. and itement n Clause icreased for poweIr U (@): imsby for e Village al annual , of each in been of any more shall ors of n the cal fore ienâ€" upon THE