wl 6 9t 5 S Te n uind . + e en o ie ons â€" * > as he was listed> regardless of wha his neighbour paid. The majority of the council upheld the rate charged in the cases appealed. As Lawyer Bowles has been instructed to collect all unpaid taxes and had sent out notices accordingly there were some appeals re this matter made to the council. In no case was the tax lesâ€" sened, but where reasonable a greater extension of time was given. A letter from a party asking for an exelusive water franchise in the township was placed on record if wanted at a future date, no occeasion for such a franchise seeming apparent at present. â€" The enâ€" sineer asked how much should be spent on the Davidson Road and Box 110 stated that nearly $300 had already been used. He was told that he had just better fix up a few more of the worst holes (one day‘s work, probabâ€" ly), and let it go at that for this year. ere was considerable discussion over a water line to George Helmer‘s £eCsuiling tne outlay. A letiter was read from G. Gauthier, solicitor for Mr. Bromley, asking for compensation for his Jdoss of time owing to having been struck by the township police car. A request for a grant of ten dollars toward the Norâ€" thern Ontario Crusade to help adverâ€" tise Tisdale was granted. It was also decided to continue membership in the (Ontario Muncipal Association. This association meets in Toronto during Exhibtion time and as Councillor Kerr was going down with the Cruâ€" saders, probably: it was decided to discuss more fully at next meeting the various methods of assessment and taxation so that Councillor Kerr could present the views of this council down there, when there is to be special disâ€" cussion on the Muncipal Assessment Act which will likely come up in the Legislature next session for revision. The new law raising the income tax exemption has hit Tisdale very hard, taking away a good many thousands of what has heretofore been taxable income and making it that much heavier for the man who wishes to own his own home. The greater part of Southern Ontario is not so materâ€" ially affected by this law as are townâ€" ships like Tisdale, Coleman and Teck. Being a member of this Provincial Municipal Association is a great help in getting a bill before the Private Bills Committee, etc., and they also keep their members posted as to new legislation affecting municipalities. There was iconsiderable discussion again over the question of rock or no rock in connection with some of the Schumacher services, but again it seemed to be apparent that the propertyâ€"owner in buying his lot should have considered how such lot was situated in the likelihood of being supplied with water. If he at that time had decided on a lot in front of which there was rock formation there seemed to be no reason now for makâ€" ing amends for it anrd the result was that he would have to pay according meeting it had been deemed expedient to accept the resignation of Policeman Cushing who had figured in an auto accident in which Mr. Bromley, of Gold Centre, was injured and after which his horse had to be shot. There was correspondance re repairs to the tractor or the replacing of it by a new one. â€" Reeve Gallagher thinks the tractor an expensive piece of furâ€" niture but if the roads are to be kept available for motor traffic it is a neâ€" cessity. It is reckoned that during its four years of usage it has added about $2,200 a year to the expense side of township accounts. There are some who question whether the resulting good warrants the outlay. Tax Rate in South Porcuping Will Be Eightyâ€"five Mills Township Council in Meeting Monday Night Strike the Tax Rate for the Year. Many Causes Tend to Make the Rate High. Other Business Dealt With by Township Council We Install and Repair all kinds of Electrical Equipâ€" ment. Estimates Given Campbell Bros. Electrical Work It has the most delicious flavour. Tryit. L0 South Porcupine Residence Phone 93. Insist Upon â€"18â€"31p Marriedâ€"On Wednesday, August 3rd, by the Rev. F. J. Baine, Miss Lizzie Peltola to Mr. Kalle Maki, and Miss Ida Peltola to Mr. Aksete Eokâ€" kila. We itender our congratulations to the happy couples. Miss Donald, of St. Andrews‘ Sceotâ€" land, is visiting her brother, Mr. Donâ€" ald, of Tomkinson‘s photo gallery here. Mr. Reginald and Miss Jean Wilson, of Allandale, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Wilson. The number of motor collisions seems to continue. During the counâ€" cil meeting the quick thud of two cars clashing was heard just out on Bruce avenue. _ Chief MelInnis and Officer Brooks were soon on the scent but no serious damage was done. In the afternoon at the turn from the Dome road to the Timmins road two cars ecollided. Traffic was held up for a while. No one was seriously hurt. Sufficient room had not been given to the car coming on the Dome road to make the turn we crash occurred at one of the corners in town on Saturday night, We are told the cars in question were quite badly damaged but again no one was seriously injured. Some of these corners in town are decidedly dangerâ€" ous. Silent policement on them would help some. Chief McInnis drew the attention of the council to the danger at some of the crossings in Schumacher some drivers coming directly on to the main road without much consideration of the traffic there. There was some talk of making that road the same as a ‘‘through street‘‘ in a town. on Main street who would join in with him for a tripe service on Main street and from the back of one of these lots he would cut across his _own property to his dairy barn, doing his own digging but expecting still to have the township supply the pipe. However, the council thought differâ€" ently and stated that if the line were run so that it only served the dairy barn and was on his own property that there the story ended, so far as supplying pipe was concerned. The argument was made ‘that the other parties that were later to be served by the extension did not want the water. _ Neeve Gallagher remarked, * *1 don‘t blame them when there is so much but by December 1st, they may be wishing they could get it."‘ A byâ€"law fixing the taxâ€"rate to raise money for the expenses of 1928 was passed. Several features have helped to make ths rate the highest yet, one being ithe lessened income from taxes on income and the fact that some properties are possibly not assessed for as much as they might be to help overcome that shortage. The rate for this section is 85 mills. It was deâ€" cided to order pipe for an emergency line on Railroad street., It was runâ€" ning too much risk to property to do without it. The routine bills and accounts were passed. dairy barn. When Mr. Helmer asked for this line it was decided to put it in so that it could be considered as an extension later on. Mr. Helmer said he would do the digging if the townâ€" ship supplied the pipe. Afterwards Mr. Helmer had seen two residents NESBITT, THOMSON COMPANY Our Buried Wealth New Wealth from the Earth will be a Perâ€" manent Factor in our Progress. LLMLT ED Royal Bank Building, TORONTO, 2 Montreal Quebec Ottawa Hamiilton London, Ont. Winnipeg The fifth of a series of booklets dealing wit‘i the Basic Industries of Canada. Copy on request. can‘t last forever.‘‘ Mother: ‘‘Did you give our penny to the Sunday School, Tommie?"! Tommie: ‘‘No, Mother, I lost it.‘‘ Mother: ‘‘What, lost another one, that‘s the fifth time you‘ve lost your money.‘‘ Tommie: ‘‘Yes, but if I keep up I‘ll win ‘em ‘back, that kid‘s luck As this child‘s illness was a form of heart disease that necessitated her beâ€" ing kept absolutely still, her mother had to invent many games that could be played without toys or physical exâ€" ertion. _ Arithmetic games, building air castles, imaginary hide and go seek and making up happ) nursery rhymes passed the time. The little girl‘s schoolmates sent letters through the mail and when she was strong enough she was given a tiny gold watch to play with. Any errands away from the sickâ€" room were made the occeasion for sweeping a floor, wiping a few dishes or doing some other ‘bit of work. During the mother‘s absence, the sick girl recited verses and sang songs she had learned at sechool. The housework was carefully sysâ€" tematized, the day‘s meals planned and dessert made while preparing breakfast. _ Many chores, such as ironing, mending and peeling of vegeâ€" tables were done in the sick child‘s room, the mother talking and enterâ€" taining her daughter the while by tellâ€" ing about the \e"etazb]e she was preâ€" paring, and dlscus.smg favorite desâ€" serts and how to make them. The difficult task of nursing .and enâ€" tertaining the sick child in the home, at the same time attending to the household and other members of the family, was succeessfully accomplished by Mrs. G. H. Marshall, who tells in the August Hygeia how she managed 16. The hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. all week and on Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The staff is as follows. Gordon Cotâ€" tam, manager; Chas. MeMillan, asst. manager; Miss Josephine Osborne, cashier; Herb. Jacobs, warehouseâ€" man; M. Corcoran, night man. MOTHER TELLS THE WAY TO AMUSE SICK CHILDREN This store will supply the district west of Connaught, north to Holland, south to Ramore. Phone 88 HARNESS SHOP TRUCK TRANSFER Agents for Cockshutt Plow Co. Gilson Manufacturing Co. â€"aer Best Value The Iroquois Falls Broke Hustler this week says :â€" The first car load of liquor for the store arrived Friday and was earted to the store in the Orange building. The store opened Wednesday, Aug. 10th. Coal, Wood, Ice, Feed Transfer QUALITY SERVICE [f it is feed you want we have it. [Phé Church of the Nativity was the s¢éene of a pretty wedding on Sunday afternoon when Ercelia Mamoliti, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mamoliti, Tisdale avenue, became the bride of Peter Baratto. The young bride lookâ€" ed charming in white georgette, with veil. She was attended by Miss Quinta Baldowin and Mrs. D. Guardo. The groom was assisted by D. Guardo and P. Tonin. After the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride‘s parents, where a supper was served to fifty guests. _ There was dancing after supper and a good time was enjoyed by all, the music being supplied by Victor Dorigo, a noted player of the accordion, from Detroit, and C. E. MacDonald. The young couple will reside on Tisdale avenue. IROQUOIS FALLS LIQUOR STORE OPENED ON MONDAY. Porcupine Feed Transfer Co. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO PRETTY WEDDING SUNDAY THE ‘"‘"LINDBERGH‘‘ OF THE / AT CHURCH OF NATIVITY: NORTH LAND HIGHWAY. South Porcupine â€"Exchange ‘*My dear young lady,"‘ said the clergyman, in grieved tones as he listâ€" ened to an extremely modern young woman tear off some of the very latâ€" est jazz on the pano, ‘‘have you ever heard of the Ten Commandments2" "CWhistle a few bars,‘‘ said the young lady, ‘‘and I think I can follow * 9 vou. Lindbergh the second otherwise Fritz Anson reached Iroquois Falls from Toronto by motor Sunday evenâ€" ing. He was accompanied by Harry Duff, who was one of the party to go down with him on the nonâ€"stop flight. They reported that they had made from Toronto to Temagami in tén hours without incident and only changed gears twice. The remainder of the road was slower owing to the heavy rains making the newly built road very slippery. ® ® Coming through the Temagami reâ€" serve they saw a red deer which stepped off the road to let them pass and quietly ate its lunch in spite of the tooting of the horn. The Iroquois Falls Broke Hustler this week sayvs :â€" J. B B. T HIBOUTOT wWHEN, BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE McLAUGHLINâ€"BUICK BARBEE SHOP 46/, Third Avenue Next to Blahey‘s Store Timmins, Ont. Interior Color Harmonies that match the lovely effect of the Drawing Room cLAUGHLIN â€" BUICK for 1928 sets a new vogue in motor car designâ€" â€"A vogue for faithfully reproâ€" ducing in closed car interiors the matching of colors . . . the tasteful harâ€" mony of appointment . . . the luxurious comfort with which skilful decorators have enâ€" dowed our finest drawing rooms. Rich fabrics, covering walls and ceilings, blend pleasantly with exâ€" terior finishes, forming a neutral background for matching or conâ€" trasting interior effects. Formâ€"fitting tailored seats are upâ€" holstered in attractive materials of the finest quality. Carpets of pleasâ€" ing pattern add a touch of lively color. Even the interiorware is careâ€" UUUUU â€"Exchange Marshall â€" Ecclestone, Limited Timmins, Ont. Introd ucing An Afternoon Tea and Sale of Home Cooking will be held at the home of Mrs. John Dalton, on Saturâ€" day, August 13th, by the Ladies of the Altar Society of the Church of The Nativity, beinning at 3 p.m. Fort William, Ont:â€"â€"J. H. Millway, crown timber agent in the district, reports 340,691 cords of pulpwood cut during the past season in that disâ€" trict, as compared with, 281,213 the previous season and 266,131 in that of RITEâ€"G0O@OD or 192 § CUT OF PULPWOOD BUILT â€" McLAUGHLINâ€"BUICK WILL BUILD THEM ///4//’ Mfl e l ,/J. H o @ y es fully selected for its decorative effect, that the complete ensemble may be in perfect taste. Now you can have a motor car as charming as your drawing roomâ€"a McLaughlinâ€"Buick for 1928. See these lovely closed cars at the nearâ€" est branch or dealer showroom. iR oquAl Thursday, August 11th, 1927 #° mw.q‘mmdazmm BOOK FOR +REE E M .8 280B