Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 24 Jan 1917, p. 6

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vaptain V tion Army | tralian forcd Cross by +h For niding her son under the floor of her h« ma Boys, of Wimbledon, In this way the young 1 ed the noliecn frnr anma + A beigian refugee died at Bath ra cently who had effected his escape from Antwerp after the German ocâ€" cupation by hiding in a piano which was taken across the Dutch border. o bour d C en oo n oo ol s s ECAE Infbtants niPocsimiatetretmiact Tt .. MR + ing Court for having a bright light in Was found on a stre his house on a Zeppelin raid night &n .exhausted and st after being ordcred by the police to 0d Was admitted to extinguish it. Infirmary, where he Rev. Huntley Wilkinson, of st. Petâ€" ",““’ bereolt £80 in ‘Ir 3 & found. er‘s, Wortvester, committed svicide by shooting L:imself while suffering from §‘ nervous prostration, caused from the,' use of morphia, . wU e d t Ki wWHAT‘Ss NEW 3, of Wimbledon, was n}led £â€"] way the young man had evad olice for some time. William McKenzie, Salvaâ€" Chaplain, with the Ausâ€" ‘es, was given the Military he King at , Buckingham reward for enngninnans th H JOHN S. HENDRIE, Pre Other Current Loans and 1 rebate of interest) ..... .. Real Estate other than Bank Overdue Debts, estimated lo: Bank Premises, at not more Wwritten ‘off :!.s..sisss4r:. .. Other Assets not included i Liabilities of Custaomere unA Call t 8 Dominion and Provincial Covernment Securities, not exceeding market value .... savana t essbewsearerssy Canadian Municipal Securities, and British, Foreign, and Colonial Public Securities, other than Canadian Railway and other Bonds, Debentures and Stocks, not exceeding market value . __ _ _ â€"____ Deposit with the Minister of Finance f of the Circulation Fund .. i x axÂ¥k xÂ¥ Notes of other Banks â€" Cheques on other Banks Â¥ras¥¥¥arvak«g, Balances due by other Banks in Canada Balances due by Banks and Banking C elsewhere than in Canada...... % Deposit in the Central Gold Current Coin Dominion G¢ Dividend No. 110, payable 1st December, 1916 Former Dividends unclaimed.........222,2.0. To the Shareholders: Capital Stock paid in .............. Reserve Fund ravaks ramassiaaaÂ¥ y i ks gllplnnce of Profits carried forward .. Balances due to other Banks in Canada To the Public: Notes of the Bank in Circulation Deposits not bearing interest ... Deposits bearing interest, inclue to date of Statement......... Balances due to Banks and Banking in Canada and the United King Acceptances under Letters of Credit In contra Balance at Cre Profits for the cxceeding market value l and Short loans (not . Canada, on Bonds. Deb« C, C. DALTON I. PITBLADO, K.C As submitted to the Shareholders at the Annual Meeting held at the Head Office of the Bank at Hamilton, on Monday, January 15th, 1917. Bank of Hamilton ilance ur qu pI Head Office, Hamilton. U her house, Mrs PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNT n Cur oubtf 1a x ENE RA L.) s T AXTEMEN T s not included in £.Customers under TiE Government Notes on Bank N IN ENGLAND r 45th ANNUAL STATEMENT xA dislp _ _Btralton, and off Spurn, reâ€" life of some of ofits carrie ly d em 1t li a â€" deserter Annu l West Rid 11 MTS. .0 fined £1 SIR JOHN HENDRIE, K.C CYRUS A. BIRGE. Vi. ial Cont 10t exceeding thirty days) in Debentures and Stocks .. _ viewt the Year Ending November BOARD OF DIRECTORS n resident J. P..E AUDITORS‘ REPORT 1¢ n SS Discounts in Canada (less i Banking Correspondents elsewhere than hifed Kingdoi..;.}.8.0i0.;. ./ A 2C es Circulati C n the foregoing......... r Letters of Credit as per sident T ssessment including interest accrued remuses ... provided fo than cost. l« Reserves sinkâ€" 18 L1 LIABILITIES anada ... BEL1 W. M. Stewart Grimsby, Ont. Also gists in all Ontario ASSETS _ 72Z, ~~, A@1UNCG TOP 1t,"â€"J a) Vinol is a constitutional all weak, nervous and runâ€" tlons ‘of men. woman anX" . +« *« »~$ 3,300,000.00 a...s 209,556.57 Vinol Restored Mr. Ma Wapakoneta, Ohio.â€"" by occupation, and the with a bad cough and in a runâ€"down condition, an seem to get anything to « until I took Vinol, whic and my cough and nerv gone, and I can truly s; that is claiman faw is i1 . BIRGE, Viceâ€"President ROBT. HOBSON J. TURNBULL All the Tommies and were made happy whan terâ€"General issued a not army and navy allowane on either Christmas Day Day, would be paid in a em John Martin, rrespondents the purposes seneral Manager 860,142.93 4,462,261.00 unt, 30th amounts U 1916 [ 277C VmO.â€" i am a farmer tion, and the Grippe left me cough and in a nervous, weak, condition, and I could not t anything to do me any good )k Vinol, which built me up, ugh and nervousness are all I can truly say Vinol is all 8, 190 10.000 sCOTT READ AFTER GRIPPE n « M.G., President id ha women Nov., 1915 % 3,509,556.57 90,000.00 597.00 10.31 $10,927.818.79 6,635.336 3,844,635.08 ered 641982 $4 .470 h a native of Duplin street in London in id starving condition ed to the Whitechapel e he died next day. On in Treasury notes wasg 569,458.46 499 157,000,00 487,655.00 119 30th, 1916 500,000.00 337 0,000.00 0 .000 .00 « Martin‘s Strength 953.66 Drug Co. at the best towns. 085.36 409.74 ucting rebate 1 and 0 ( 88 ral M 10 $ 57,163.344 countants iug@ lhe Jackios ion the Postmasâ€" notice that all ances falling dve Day or Boxing n advance. U 1 nuiit me up, usness are all iy Vinol is all JamEs Martmn. $22,004,366.18 $ 57.163;344.46 $ 50.563.190.89 $ ©3,000,000.09 3$1,995,961.60 485,605.86 178,194.68 2,042,595.55 386,889 76 W, E. PHIN W. A. WOOD 119.730 45,398,174.06 31,799.58 anager 3,600,153.57 remedy for own condiâ€" ildren, and 4,409,351.00 #5 P06 $4 604, 185. 42 119,730.83 442 525.69 18 4( Ltd, drug 6 Unp4im1i, [3 | {r80TL to those rathâ€" er ungainly knitted bands known ‘"as wristbands. It is a good point to reâ€" member. If you want to fight the cold with the least bulk of ammunition see | that your coat sleeves or your gloveâ€" tops sit well around the wrists, In general if our arms are warm we have the feeling or being. warm through the body. _ For this reason many women who spend a good deal of time outâ€"doors have bought the new knitted jacketsâ€"if they can be called jacketsâ€"that consist of two sleeves joined by a knitted section that, when in places, stretchest across the widest and most exposed section of the back from shouider to shouldâ€" er. Almost as much warmth do these iminutive little Jackets give as a real sweater, and yet they do not give the additional bulk that that garment would. No oneâ€"that is. AaAlmnASgt® na‘‘rmai ns [ If you have ever experi different sorts of . coat; ' their warming qualities y, | covered that the coat tha around the wrists and the ‘ twice as satisfactory ag t doesn‘t, although tae lat ' considerably heavier, It is ing, that if the wrists are we do not feel the cold. 0 ciple woodsmen . ana hunte and lumbermen, resort to er ungainly knitted bands wristbands. It is a good q ‘ member. If you want to fig | with the least bulk of ammn | that your coat sleeves or ; , tops sit well around tne w ’ In general if our arms we hava tha ‘enuyil io m hoit | days and in spite of that fact, we man | age to keep warmâ€"that is if we keep our eyes open to the new warm things | that many of the ‘shops are showing. ' Perhaps you remember the effort in | the French army to utilize paper as a | means of protecting the soldiers | from the effect of the cold ‘in winter. | Chest protectors that fitted down well | over the lungs at the back as well as f over the chest have been utilized with great satisfaction, both with regard to their warming qualities and to their great economy. . Anga many . of . the shops show these little Jackets made a species of crinkled brown paper, neatly bound: with tape. They are most inexpensive and may be discardâ€" ed when soiled, though used as a lining under the coat they stay in con dition for a season at east. No motorâ€" ist ought ever to be. without one foldâ€"â€" ed in the pocket of her car. Often the chances. of lower tem ture are so . sutght that 1t woul &ffi. aggdm 8. burden oneself ~with an addition T _ coat and yet there is the bare possibil _ ity. So a little undercoat of this sort, ; takes up practically no room, solves | the problem. | No one would ever n | comfortable with the co tion were simplly one more coats, more bl wraps and more furs. object to this added we we _did not mind goin Esquimaux, shapeless, ded individuals, we too : a healthy circulation w mometer dropped unre: But we do want. to reta ' blance of figure, and w move freely and gracefu things we can‘t do with ioned of idea of winter So to a certain extent carded c tHe heavy uirmn A pork famine is threaten, land owing to the, farmers litters of young pigs on ac the high cost of feeding â€" sti Agricultural War Committee en the matter up and will en ‘stop further slausthter Eric Pearsall, of Tipton, â€"Sta shire, aged 17, has beenâ€"missing Sept. 23dr last. Previous to that he had been employed as a clerh the munition factory at that pl A coroner‘s jury brought in a dict of "Wilful murder" againgt Alexig Latainok, chargeq with ing Corporal William Palmer, of Canadian Infantry, by stabbing after an altercation. j In addressing the Boy Scout Wigan, Lancashire, General â€" B; Powel} said the increase in juy crime was g#larming and that the chief reasons were playing in streets and attending moving pic shows. Lertrude Parker was ch fore the magistrates of A; Zouch with stealing money ous other articles from â€" a Whitwick who lhad befrie She was Sixteen years of was sentenced to the girls‘ two years. Ssome Things That Keep you Without Discomfort, WARMTH WITHOT JOMINION OF CANADA DegeNturE stock 20 w ZP HMC that the coat that fits he wrists and the ne, satisfactory as the 0; although the latian _ dropped unreasonably low; do want. to retain some semâ€" f figure, and we do want to ely and gracefully, and these e can‘t do with the oldâ€"fashâ€" idea of winter clothes., i certain extent we have disâ€" he heavy woollens of other 7. 2 AHiLILlEG: _‘ section laces, stretchest across 1 most exposed section om shouider to shouldâ€" much warmth do these wuouid ever nee > with the cold simplly one o 8, more blar ~ver experimented with _ _Oof . coats regarding qualities_ you have disâ€" added weight, and if nind going about _ like apeless, tublike, padâ€" . we too might keep up ulation when the therâ€" almost no aU 17770 DGCHIMISSIT@ â€" Previous to that mployed as a cler} factory at that pl jury brought in a y as the one that 1e la:tter may be it is an old say 1d. On this prinâ€" hunters, soldiers ie Cold if the quesâ€" one of piling on re blankets, more furs. If we did not ed weight, and if n THE { 2 i Oe d£Ce, |angd ie girls‘ refuge for DEPARTME» to recognized respect of any Interest able halfâ€"yearly, 1st April and 1st cheque (free I())?;axchange at any chartered Bank in C the rate of five per cent per annum from the date of ] Holders of this stock will have the privilege of su at par and accrued interest, as the equivalent of ca ment of any allotment made under any future war lo Canada other than an issue of Treasury Bills or other date security. o CuNarged hbeâ€" of Ashbyâ€"deâ€"laâ€" oney and variâ€" m a lady «at befriended â€" hepr. ;4 0r applic nancte. O+#+aâ€" IN SUMS OF $500, OR need to be unâ€" 10y Scouts at seneral Badje*g."' ase in j'HVeuue ind that the two playing in the moving picture THOSE WHO FUNDS T WEIGHT TO_INVESTORS INDPEPENDEXT, GRIMSBY uts _ well neck,. / ig one of roceeds rincipal repayable 1st October, 191« commi ; killing of account of stuffs. The e hasg akâ€" ndeavor to Mc 61â€" °ie d CU DOQ ipplies «NT OF FINANCE, OTTAWA CTOBER 7th, 1916. Warm Stafl’o,-d n Eno Place LW a of this stocl VHO, FROM TIME To TIME, HAVE DS REQUIRING INVESTMENT MAY PURCHASE AT PAR ", _ S°vuve ngures serve to show that in almost every case the cost of production of milk and butterfat was considerably higher when ensilage formed the sole ration. This is one point made in favour of ensilage. However, we have not taken into conâ€" sideration the cost of putting these feeds before the cows. In the case of ensilage the silo is filled the fall beâ€" fore at a comparatively low cost per ton and the matter of throwing out the day‘s feed and giving «it to the cows is a small item. On the other hand the preparation of a suitable roâ€" tation of green feed crops to ensure having such at all times and the cutâ€" ting and hauling df the same to the | bar]l or foofine wnaAfAnamiigcs2e 4 1dsc lon 0 yA e q ,,_~_â€"_â€",_,â€"â€"_____§B @ Succulents for the Supplementary ): : Feeding of Dairy Cattle on Pasture‘ ® 11 ~*woke, Slne the him. Pteo kiy. date Yep. * 72e and expensive land, it prfible to follow the old p of depending on pastures alone ; summer feeding of dairy cows hot dry summers and cons burAtâ€"up grass, the ~hordes of a?gthe realization of the fact much more feed can b2 grown the same lang if culitivated, hay been factors forcing the above clusion. The question tren is ho overcome these ohstacles to the i tabicness & w.l ais C.0 P °2. Sucuulent Ration Fed t10n ‘H view of the fact that this is the time to plan the farm work for 1917, this subject deserves atiention. Many of Our best dairymen in Eastern as well as in Woestern Canada have reach ed the concluion that, especially on valu é Cnn aÂ¥nansiva lank 1 sc _ _ n n Lyoun biaCk, the lazie: iAftown, made a‘ pusine selleville yesterday. _ William Sykes, our gro doing poor business. â€" 9 dirty and dusty. People y a dirty store. ‘Rev. Braun preached | 0T ‘¢barity. . The sermon Jalf of the congregation the ehoir slept thronch i+ Ye _It is not pleasant and profitable always to tell the truth in a newsâ€" p ir. Editors who have tried it have generally come to grief. A few weeks n editor, grew tired of being callâ€" € a liar and announced that â€" he would tell the truth in the future. The next issue of his paper said: s M nlank tha lamimule LX 00y Do | _ 9, oo yate AFEO CLCLOPL TCO .CNSUure ’ yo g such at all times and the cutâ€" ne and hauling of the same to the| sil or feeding paddock take much’ an ible time at busy seasons of the: m« 3 I _ And best of all these stockings can _be slipped off and on without any great inconvenience as the wearer alâ€" ready has her usual silk or lisle stock _ings on beneath. é hy women have discovered that the â€" soâ€"called fabric â€" glovesâ€"those _made of linen or cotton to look like o Jn +ou + & & doeskin, chamois or suede kidâ€"are warmer than those of kid. And they are ery bit as neat and smart in apâ€" pearance. In fact, although in the naâ€" ture of an imitation, they are about as1 expensive as the gloves they imitate. Their greater wearing qualtities and better adaptability in washing have f : mended them â€" to manyâ€"and now that they seem to be much warm er on cold days they have another argument in their favor. In oneâ€"quarter of one per ce ind stock brokers on all is for this stock whirh La. Younger Seneration is freer from colds than the generation preceeding. Still the girl that skates and skis and toboggans does need a little more protection than that afforded by thin silk stockings. For her there is a wonderful variety of heavy woollen stockings in all sorts of bright colors ?qd, interesting designs. Most convenâ€" ent are those that have no feet. hnt ar 4 sfoo} ) "3 â€" uC 2er tent will be allowed d stock brokers on allotments made in for this stock which bear their stamp. rms apply to the Deputy Minister of Wrimental Farms Note) & are for war HE ‘FOT bor business. _ fHis store ;’s"along the side. The carbhon bisuiphid a dusty. People won‘t buy in|MAY also be sprayed over the grair store. with a pump though a sinal} openin: Braun preached last Sunday’in the side of the bin. The formation ty. _ The sermon was punk. Oof a gas, which is heavier than ail the congregation and four of and settles down through the grain f: slept through it all. { kills all the weevils within 36 hours. â€"â€" AUesStion cden is how to hese ohstacles to the proâ€" of our dairy industry. . ONTAR1IO tu _ announced that _ h truth in the future. The his paper said: ithe lariest marrhan can bs grown from purposes only April and 1st October by MULTIPLE THEREOF ivated, have all the above conâ€" R_VMege of surrendering ivalent of cash, in payâ€" t;l’l.t;gre war loan issue in it sroceryman is 8. His store is ople won‘t buy in Ensilâ€" _ Green Ensilâ€" age feed age c hay (peas & Hay â€" & oats) 67.8 68.2 31.5 2E TRUTH iziest merchant ank in Canada) date of purchase d, it is unâ€" d practice one for the cows. The consequent fact that 1915 17.3 trip 30.7 flieg, like short All the evidence then would seem to prove that the most profitable form of succulence to use to supplement the pastures ford airy cattle is corn ensilage of the previous _ year‘s growth. Now is the time, therfore, to begin to prepare by all the means at your disposal, for a large crop of corn next year and either fill your present silo to its utmost capacity or build another small one especially for sum-‘ mer feeding. of the ensilage. Still another point in its favour is that it is always uniform in quality wheras the quality of â€" a green feed crop is uncertain, particuâ€" larly in a season such as we have just experienced. I to ve {â€" During the past two simmers, the |experimental dairy herd at the Cenâ€" i tral Experimental Farm, Ottawa, has Ibeen working to â€" solve just such a ‘probléem. This herd is stabled â€" during ; the entire summer, imaking it possible {to carry on, a fairly conclusive test of ;the comparative value of corn, enâ€" | silage, green clover, ang green peus _and oats, for the purpose above menâ€" tioned. Ensilage 30 pounds, and hay 6 pounds, form â€" the dairy ‘ roughage 'r.%f;;,gtor,tgms hord at al: times for a period in 1915, ensilage and hay wore ;g_gqueq by 60 pounds of green peas and oats, and for one period in 1916, all the alfalfa, while during & second period a repetition of the 1915 experiâ€" ment was carried on. ‘lhe results are given in the following table: f 1916 A 101¢6 P 1 16.2 63.3 26.7 ’ Carbon bisulphide useda at the rate of five to eight pounds to 1,000 cubic feet o fspace is recommiended by the Ohiio Exporiment Station for the deâ€" struction of all insects in stored grain. The grain bins should 98 air tight and the temperature above 70 degrees. Burlap sacks or cotton waste saturatâ€" ed with the liquid may be thrust inâ€" to the grain, or the material may be poured into a short section of pipe plugged at one end angd perforated along the side. The carbon bisuiphid» may also be sprayed over the grain with a pump though a sinal} opening in the side of the bin. The formation HOW TO KILL INSECTS INâ€" THI 2s GRAINX BIN loafer and has lived off the old folks all his life. The match is one that will amount only to expense to the taxâ€" payers to care for another batch oi feebleâ€"minded. The morning after the paper was printed the editor was found hanging to a telephone pole. Miss Susie Hatt, of Pipinville, sang in the village choir Sunday , night. Her voice is not unlike the whistle at the \basket factory. ‘The fellow who told Susie she could sing, ought to be vaccinated and then burned at the stake. Marriedâ€"Miss Sytvan Rhodes to Mr. Jas. Conlen, Saturday, in the Baptist Parsonage. The bride is a very ordinary town girl, who does not know any more about cooking than a jack rabbit, ana never helped her mother three days in her life. She is not a beauty, and has a gait like a | duck. The groom is an upâ€"toâ€"date { loafer and has lived off the old folks | all his life. The match is one that will s amount only to expense to the taxâ€" payers to care for another batch of Harry Brown is moving his family away to Harperville. Hisg neighbors presented Hank with a razor and hig wife with a carving set. It is hopea they will start quarrelling and use their presents to the nest advantageâ€" of the community. making another a.m. The failure, but would booze David Dawson diea Gr Ensilâ€" 67.4 26 The doctors &9 point in favour died at his home this Ts say it was heart all know how Dave 69.9 S immers, the _ at the Cenâ€" , Ottawa, has »just such a abled â€" during 1916 B 103 .$ Nuts _are oughly mas properly m meal. A dash of nutmeg or an improvement in bak pecially if the annine a. Printed notices cont;: information as to condi posed Contract may be 5 forms of Tender may b the Post Offices of St. the office of the Post Off Toronto.: C OSt The Road Superi his entire time to fairs, ~_Applications will writing up to Jan. : Applications will be re Reeve Hamilton Fleming by, P. Office, for the pos Superintendent for the â€" North Grimsby, for the y Applicants to state sal; and experience in road building, 8. F. WASHINGTON, Hamilton Provident Chambers, Hamilton, Dated January 4th, 1917. Ten per‘ cent. of the purchase money in cash at the time of sale and the balance within fifteen days withâ€" out interest, or the vendor will allow fifty per cent. of the purchase price to remain on mortgage for three or five years, at six and a half per cent., half yearly. For further particulars apply to the Auctioneer, or to Hugh H. Anderson, [Epiwn e TLE T: § % ROAD SUPERINTENDENT WANTED Grimsby, or to ‘Post Office Ing; â€" Office Inspector‘s Office Toronto, Jan. 3rd, 1917. : » NC 2} ) :90 ~ ts *a. JA s @‘5‘,’__1 P o chov Ves â€") U o > ; 2 :) n e W â€" Parcel. No., 4. Part of I Fifteen in the Broken Fron Concession 6f the Townshi Grimsby containing about This property is situated miles North West of the _ Grimsby, on the Lake frnn s are easily digestibl y masticated, but they rly make part of a h MAIL CONTRACT ifprniiipit neith ut t sc h 228 +1 4 Lasterly, near the Town Line betweer ,Saltfieet and North Grimsby. On the property are erected a frame dwelling _house and out buildings and the great er_part of the farm is set out in fruit. Parcel No. 3. Part of Lot number Twentyâ€"one in the Broken Front of the Township of Clinton containing about fourteen acres. This property is situated about a mile and a hailf North West of Beamsvilie and was formerly owned by John Read. On the property are erected a frame house and barn, and the, greater part of the farm is set out in fruit just coming int‘_o bearing. s ;. ; i Parcel No. 2. The Lot number Twent] Broken Front of the North Grimsby, contai more or less. This prop on the continuation of a mile from W the premises a: houses and . or greater part of fruit. at rursuant to the Powers of & tained in certain mortgages will be produced at the time there will be offered for sale a auction by James A.} cTLiv! Auctioneer, at the Hotel G Grimsby Village, on Thursd First day of February, 1917, a o‘clock in the afternoon, the fo lands and premigsesgs:â€" $ Parcel) No. 1. Parts of Lot. bers Three in the Second and Concessions of the Township c fleet. containing . 4hawnr ‘â€" 2. E. w e m‘ 1 Sm PC SA â€" AALS â€"MULTH bers Three in the Second and Third Concessions of the Township of Saltâ€" leet containing about forty acres, nown as the Cockburn farm, lying it the foot of the mountain about half o hn Puse.. teres _ wWEDNESDAY, JANCARY 294. the Estat the Town: County of who died June, A.D fore the 1 to send by ated at inuary. In the Matter of th Jane Miller late of South Grimsby, in the Farmer, Deceased. Notice is hereby giv Revised Statutes of C Chapter 121, Section 5 tors or persons havin the Estate of Mrs. Ja the Township of Sout ment in baked apples the apples are insipid. Mortgage Sales A Notice â€" Sutherland, as to conditions of ons will be received to Jan. 3lst, 1917, from Winona â€"xecutor of TERMS OF SALE near the Town Line between and North Grimsby. On the are erected a frame dwelling 1 out buildings and the great the farm is set out in frnit Superintendent to west of the Villagé the Lake front. 77 // 2A0U5 OL â€" proâ€" y be seen and blank may be obtained at f St. Ann‘s and at ost Office Inspector, rieming, Esq., Grims * the position of Road for the Township of for the year 1917, state salary expected, n road and bridge ... Part of Lot number Broken Front and First the Tovgnship of North rve _ received . no th distribution. /inemount this t D. 1917. JAM_ESAREADY 2. The East half of T‘wentyâ€"two in the vOf.: the Township of Y, containing fifty acres This property is situated uation of Barton Street are erected two dw out buildings and of the farm is set o Office Inspector Or of the said Estate Vlnemount, Ont. itendent to devote the Township af. purtee BR Sare o satatirbrinatalild, 4 S3 421 â€" their <christian and â€" surâ€" es and description with B in, writing of their claims and the nature of the seâ€" hqld by them. Cinnamon aining further of the ] y of ~ the in the Cc received by the . Jane Miller, late of South Grimsby, in the h, ~Farmer‘" Dernkvénds if do i vy the time of or sale at r ost Office ty Creditors n put itario , that thorâ€" not meat ten acres. about two unty o Of thi rd day ec. ne of sale ? at public ivingston Grimsby LIm 18 at three following ce. _ On dwelling =4, . 1917 1M a d â€"the out in ale con which int to 11 e IJuXeâ€" day of estate parties h to the in IOD4. Crediâ€" igainst the Ip inco Mrs Of

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