Atwood Bee, 20 Nov 1914, p. 8

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ENTER NOW at the ~ Listowel Business COLLEGE Thorough Courses taught by Com- petent Teachers. For particulars address Edwin G. Matthews, LISTOWEL, ONT. "J. CECIL HAMILTON Barrister, Conveyancer _ Solicitor for Imperial Bank of Canada. Money to Loan Office--Main-st., Listowel, next to Dr. Foster, dentist. D. A. KIDD, M. D. Main-st., Atwood, Ontario Physician, Surgeon Accoucheur, Coroner Executiye Officer of Board of Health Specialties-- Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Diseases of women and children. H. B. MORPHY, K.C. Barrister, Notary Public Conveyancer - Solicitor for Bank of Hamilton Listowel, Milverton, Atwood: Offices, Listowel and Milyerton Money to Loan. Ye 2 SERRA 7 bidizrct gp STRATFORO, ONT. Is a achool with a continental reputa- tion for high grade work and for the success: of its graduates, a school with ior courses and instructors. We give individual attention in Commer- cial, Shorthand and Telegraphy Depts. Why attend eleewhere when there is m here? You may enter at any time. Write for our large free catalog. D. A. McLachlan Principal Cream Wanted. HIGHEST PRICES WILL BE PAID BY US Test every shipment. Pay every two weeks. Perth Creamery Co. Listowel, Ont Cash cheques at par. Let us send youacan. It will cost you nothing to give us a trial, Call and see us when in town or write us for fuller particulars. REFERENCE, BANK OF HAMILTON. Aldrich Bros. Managers -- Cream Wanted Farmers having cream to sell during the Fall and Winter months can get best results by shipping to Gunn's Creamery Walkerton Highest prices paid for Butter Fat. Two shipping cans supplied free. Express paid on all shipments. Each can carefully weighed and tested and statement of each shipment_returned with empty can. Semi-monthly payments. Write for cans and full parti- culars to Gunn's Creamery, Walkerton. _ " . Good Morning! American Sil American Cashmere American Cotton-Lis! HOSIERY They have stood the test. Never become loose or baggy. shape is knit in--not presse workmanship. . i Will wear 6 months wi holea, or new ones free OUR SPECIAL OFFE «curreney or postal note, to 7 wtteat Mildredina Hair Remedy Never Fails To restore gray hair to ite natural color and beauty: No matter how old and fad- ed your hair looks, or how long you have been gray. it will work wonders for you, keep you looking young. promote a lux- uriant. growth of healthy -hair, stop its falling out and positively remove dand- ruff. » Will not soil skin or Wil iy not injure your hair. Refuse all substitutes; 50c druggists. e will send a large trial bottle FREE by return mail, to anyone who sends this Coupon to American Proprietary Co., Boeton, Maes., with their name and addrese and 10c in silver or stamps to pay postage ye. a bottle at} guarantee, backed by a five i) dollar company, either. American Silk Hosiery or 4 Pairs of our 50c va , American Cashmere Hosie Amertican Cotton-Lisle Hosi when a dealer in your locality lected. THE ee, HOS P.O ox 2i4 DAYTON, OHIO, U. &. We Are Introducing e e. Give real foot comfort. No seams to rip. The in. GUARANTEED for fineness, style, superiority of material and Absolutely stain- thout to every one sending us $1.00 in cover g and shipping charges, we will send i with written illion 3 Pairs of our 75c value iue ry or 4 Pairs of our 50c value ery or 6 Pairs of Childrens Hosiery . . Give/the color, size, and* whether Ladiestor Gent's hosiery is \desired DON?T DELAY -- Offer expires 18 8€- TERY A. - Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA ONE DOLLAR. ~The Boo to January 1st, 1916, for x Synopsis Of Canadian North- west Land Regulations. THE sole head of a family, or any male over 18 years old, may homestead a quarter-section of available Dominion land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or rta, Applicant must appear in person at the Dominion Lands Agency or Sub-Agency for the District. Entry by proxy may be made at any Dominion Lands Agency ( but not Sub-Agent ), on certain con- ditions. Duties--Six months residence upon-and cultivation of the land in each of three years. A homesteader may live within nine miles of his homestead on a farm of at least 80 acres, on certain conditions A habitable house is required except where residence is performed in the vicinity. n certain districts a homestead in good standing may pre-empt a quarter-section alongside his homestead. Price $3 per acre uties--Six months residence in each of three years after earning homesteat tent; also 40 acres extra cultivation. re-emption patent may be obtained as soon a8 homestead patent, on certain con- ditions. z A sede who has exhausted his home- t. Re. i ! : : may |} stead in certain | acre: Duties--Must'reside six months in each of three years, cultivate 50 acres and erect a house wort! ae The area of cultivation is subject to re- duction in case of rough, scrubby or stony land. Live stock may be substi- tuted for cultivation under certain con- ditions W. W. CORY. C.M.G., Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. N B.--Unauthorized publication of this advertisement wi!! not be paid for. --64388 10c gets the Bee to Dec. 31st, 14. = SS SS Ss SS SS TA} day, Nov. 21st. --){c [¢@)! Beautiful goat set Mink muffs Mink ruffs COME EARLY. $3,500 WORTH OF FURS is the time to buy what you need in furs. Mink Marmet mutfs, $4.50 less discount Mink Marmet muffs, large size, $5.50 less discount " 9.00 " 15.00 7 10.00 Hudson seal sets and coats Startling price reductions on Ladies' and Misses' coats and Ladies' suits and Ready-to-wear skirts. 10 to 50 per cent. off all Ladies' and Misses coats. SATURDAY, NOV. 21st, COMMENCING DAY. Many special lines in dress goods. J. M. SCHINBEIN & SON Listowel te : 10 to 25 per cent. off furs for the next 7 days, commencing Satur- This is the biggest snap ever offered in Listowel. Our assortment is large and our furs are the best that money can buy and every piece of fur in our store is a genuine bargain. Now In wolf sets we have black, natural and silver gray Mink sets, natural muskrat sets and coats Astrican sets and coats (2) RRR: in| iO] CUZCO AND THE INCAS. Peru's Ancient City Was on the Plan of the Roman Camp. The ancient city of Cuzco, when first viewed by European eyes, wis, accord- Ing to the best authorities, a grent and wealthy municipality of perhaps .200,- -| 900 souls. How old it was at that time we ltinve scant means of knowing. Garcilasso would have ns belleve that there were ouly thirteen Incns in the royal famliy line from Munco Capac to Huayna Capac. Montesinos, on the other hand, assures tis that the Incas ruled a thousand years! Which are we te belleve? No written history of the race exists--only the records of the juipus, those queer knotted strings which were the Incas' sole documents and for which no archaevlogist has as yet discovered the key, the Rosetta stone, ; Cuzco's original plan was, singularly enough, that of the Roman camp, a quadrangle divided by two intersecting streets into quarters, with a gate on each face and towers at the angles, The Inens, like the citizens of the United Stntes, bud no more definite name for their country than Tavan- tinsuyn, the Empire of the Four Prov- Inces. The fuur streets of the capital, prolonged. by grent roads, divided It into four main provinces, each under the domInion of its governor. When their people came to Cuzcu they lodged in thelr own quarter, where they ad- hered to thelr natioual costumes and the customs of their own province. The city today retains the same general plan, {ts two principal streets being virtually the old main thorough- fares. Its two enstern quarters lie upon steep hillsides; the two western nre In the valley, Where runs a little river, the Hunt so spnauned by bridges. nee 3 . The nortbenst quarter was the Pala- tine bill of this South American Rome and contains the palaces of the kings, for each Inen, after the manner of the Roman emperors, bullt his own abode, seorning to Hve in that of bis prede- cessor.--Scribner's Muaguzine. HISTORIC NOTRE DAME. Checkered Career of the Wenderful arisian Cathedral, Some account of the bistory and vicissitudes of Notre Dame appears Ip the London Strand Magazine. The first enthedral was erected in the yenr 528 by Childebert ond afterward de molished, the saine site being used for the present building, which was begun in 1163 and finished Iu 1351. Alexander IIL. tnid the foundation stone, the first muss belng celebrated by the patriarch Weraclius. The grand old building has been sorely beset by strange and stirring scenes: The reign of ter r in 1793 led to such disgraceful orgies within the pre- p sof the cathedral thit it was closed to the public ns_a place of di- yine worshtji In 174. but was revpen- éd in 1802 by Napoleon. The Interior has suffered severely ut times at the hands of the mob and individuals. The worst offender was perhaps Louts XIV., who, carrying out bis father's vow, chused the destruction of the fourteenth century stalls, the high al- tar embellished with gold and silver statuettes, the clufsters, tombs and unique "stained glasswork. In 1845 restoration was necessary in many parts of the building, the work being successfully undertaken by Lassus, Viollet le Due aud Boeswiliwald. In 1871, also during the commune, Notre Dame was menaced with grave dangers owlng to the fury of the communists, who, having effected an entrance, collected all the available chairs and other combustible material and, piling them-in a bonfire, drench- ed with oil in the center of the choir, attempted to destroy the cathedral by fre. The evil designs of the In- cendiaries were, however, happlly frustrated by the arrival of the pa- tional guard. Misters Are Second Class. Though one cannot decide what Is a lady by rule of thumb, there are cer- tain kindred problems that can be solved in that way. and the railway company knows how to sulve them, Are you, fur instance, an esquire or only a plain mister? The railway com- pany can tell xt once. If you hold a second cinss season ticket any letter coines addressed tu Mr. Blank, but If you rise to a first class you become at ounce A. Blank, Esq. That ls where the railway has the pull over the mo- torbus, on which there are no classes.-- London Globe. hese ate One Worse. Binks, with a yawn, said to a fish- erman: "Time naln*t very valuable to yon, brother; that's plains Here I been a-watchin' you three hours, and you ain't had a bite!' time's too valuable, ansbow, to waste three hours of it watchin' a feller fish that ain't gettin' a bite"--San Fran- cisco Cail. 7% ° ' Habits of the Hired Man. "Well, did them moring picture peo- ple get: pictures of everything on the farm "Everything but the gosh blamed hired man," sald Farmer Heck. "They couldn't ketch him in motion."--Kan- sas City Journal. $s Fins Cheering. Mrs. Knoagg--if 1 were to dle yon'd never get another wife tike me. Knagg It's very kind of seu to say that-- Boston Transcript. Method is the binge of business, and there is'uo method without order and punctuality--Haonab Alore, Pas ELMA TOWNSHIP DOES REMARKABLY WELL. _ ay The amount contributed by the vari concessi 7 , Elma in behalf of the Belgian Relief Fund are as follows -- --e of Wallace Boundary, east; Joho Hamilton ......' Wallace Boundary, an. Jas. Heft cat y 2nd Con. west, Wm. Coates and Reid Moore : and Con. west, 8. 8. Rothwell and Jas. Gray .................. = her ; . ate eeeete . east, Jas; Cleland and T. J. S MO iicstassh eye 5 vie fe seetsan Thos. Fobnese Ea Sees - east, James Newbigging and Samuel Corry ,.......0e-cecsesse . west, John Ballantyne and J. B. Hamilton AeGuedec svar - east, Michael Little and Robt. Burke. Bes - west, Andrew Steyenson and Luke Lucas - east, A. M. Sweeton and Adam Gray . west, William Bell and Sam-Loye . east, Andrew Robb and Wm. Gilmer . west, Thos. E. Hammond and John Smith . east, Jos. L. Horn . west, Jas. McKenzie and Henry: Ronnen . east, Val. Schade and Wm. MoClory os . west, Geo. Ellacott and Wilson Little a .- a PR e ee etneseeeesses se eteserererene SroseSesueeeeanges: SBSSsssasEserssssekenese 17th Con. east, W. J. Near ......... 2 18 Logan Boundary, west, J. C. Flood ...f:! 5 Logan Boundary, east, Arthur Partridge .......... ccecccseseeeeee eeees 5 Atwood, Dr. Kidd and A. R. Terry...... 1 147 Monkton, Jas. Terry and J. C. Ellacott 67 Preeseds from concerts : me a Grand cash total '$ 1118 66 In addition to this sum about $1,200 worth of goods, new and old, bh ' ' ' as already been shipped to Montreal trom this township in aid of this cause. many dangers and has witnessed many: "Well," drawled the fisherman, "my MINUTES OF THE ELMA COUNCIL BOARD. f The Municipal Council of the towriship of E i a on Saturday, be 14th, 1914. Hoa mot in the Aghowinsh lembers present--Reeve, Wm. Scott; Deputy-Reeve, ith ; Councillors, Wm. Coates, John Illman and Wm, McOlory. sana SON Minutes of last meeting were read; spproved and signed by the Reeve and Clerk. ; Moved by McClory--Smitb, that By-law No. 652 of the township of Elma known as The auchamp .Oreek and Extension Drains By-law as now read be provisionally adopted: and. the Clerk be instructed to have the same printed and served on the pnrtiéB assessed and that the court of re- pone be ge Bay Agricultural ball, Atwood, on Saturday, the 12th day of December, . » at two o'clock p.m. for d ini i to the said court of ell ie ENC Se oon See Moved by Smith--Illman, that the council do now adjourn to meet as a court of reyision on the Gernhbelder dtain, Improvement By-Law.--Car. The court of revision on The Gernhbelder drain improvement By-law after hearing and disposing of the appéals against the assessment in said By-law imposed was then closed.--Carried. Moved by Il!Iman--Smith, that the: council do now meet as a court of revision on the Branch to the Gernheldér drain Improvement By-law. The court of revision on the Branch to the Gernhelder drain Improye- ment By-law having closed the council met for general business. ri Moved by McClory--Smith; that the Treasurer be authorized to charge thé sum of $250.00 against the Coleman drain for work done by the Grand| - Trunk Railway Co. on their lands and that the said ny be credited} with paying their assessment of 6250.00 by performing said work ands to charge the sum of $450.00 against the Coleman 'drain as allowance for constructing highway culverts and! also to charge the sum. of $150.60 again: st thé Hammond drain as allowance: for constructing highway culverts and that $150.00 of the extra work on the Hammond drain be charged to the townsbip of Elma.--Carricd. : Moved by Smith--II!man, that the Reeve and Clerk issue orders for the payment of the following accounts : Samuel Ducklow, bal. township portion of A. Robb Award drain$43 58 J. Cc, Hay & Son, acct. for cement tile, Atwood 1 coal for Hy. Theodore, relief : ( Wm. Scott, selecting Jurors ; Ed. L. Halpenny, , Geo. Lochhead, 7 . two trips to Listowel on township business clerk's fees, Hymer drain of Mornington, Elma assessment re Hymer drain cterk's fees and By law Mornington re Ellice' Maitland Relief drain Jos. Montgomery, farm bridge, lot 24, con. 15, re Ellice Mait- ' land Relief drain Jas. McKay, 31 yds. gravel per H. Ronnenberg 78 yds. gravel per J. J. Strutbers Robt. Murray, gravel per John Holman Chas. Coghlin, 37 yds. gravel per Thos. E. Gibson §2 yds. gravel per J. P. Gordon Chas. Riach, assisting Engineer re Hammond drain Louis Riach, " = 7 Thos. Hammond, Stanley Hammond, Russell Bell, 5 7 Alex. Lawrence, Walter Bell, " ba 7 Jas. McDenald, " i. a Wm. Dewar, farm bridge, lot 8, con. 13 re Hammond drain David Dewar, . lot 9, con. 13, i Sam Mines, rep. culvert, lot 17, con. 16 ; C. G. Erb, cedar and plank for culvert, lot 28, con' 1 Wa. Strickert, rep. culvert s. r. 20 and 21, con. A6 » E. Fleishauer, gravel per J. J. Lambert , = ; a . Wm. Pehlke Val. Schade Alex. Campbell, ditching and rep. culvert s. r. 5 and 6, con. 17 John Wilson, ditching s. r. 830 and 31, con. 10 Dayid Harrow, plank for culyert, lot 33, con. 12 Jas. Broughton, spreading gravel, lot 11, con. 16 David Brown, rep. culverts, 8. r. 5 and 6, con. 16 and 17 Wm. Brandt, gravelling s. r. 5 and 6, con. 6 Atwood Bee, printing By-laws re Gernhelder drain Imp. " id "Branch to the Gernhelder J. C. Baker, account for tile and teaming Wr. Robb, work on grader cons. 9 and 138, Grayel road Thos. McDonald, drawing plank, lot 10, T. L. E. and W. Robt. Rennick, drawing plank-for bridges Thos. Campbell, gravel, con. 16, Gravel road Wm. Karges, gravelling, bridges.s. r. 30 and 31, con. 6 Dayid Murray, rep. cen. 17, Gravel road W. W. Mann, rep. bridge s. r..20 and 21, con. 1 John Ausman, draining lot 5, con. 3 Henry Murr, rep. road, lot 1, con. 10 = " rep. culvert, co#. 11, T. Duncan Calder, rep. bridge, Trowbridge John Hamilton, gravelling, lot 10, T. L. E. and W. Elma's share Harold Peter, cleaning road s r. 5 and 6, con. 8 Cyrus Lucas, rep. bridge s. r. 6'and 6, con. 10 Peter Reddin, ditching s. r: 10 rnd 11, con. 3 SB &83s8ss Treas. Tp. bo wo < Ornoweo Hm " "a " CO e+ bt BD bO BO LO tg 3 SSSSRSSASSSRSSSSSSSSSSESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSEeaTs § to WO WOM ODN NIWOOEDOMH RO ROH Oe * _-- me bo CO ee a L. E. and G. again at the Agricultural hall, Atwood, on Saturday, December 12th, at 10 o'clock for general township business and at two o'clock as a court of re vision on The Beauchamp Creek ard Extension drains By-Law. GEQ. LOCHHEAD, CLERK.

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