Water will not lie on a hard, smooth, surface, even it is almost flatâ€"a crown of even a couple â€" of inches will throw the waterâ€"off and all=aay person has to do to prove this is to look at some of the new tarvia roads which are almost flat, and yet ten minutes after a rain they are free of water. But if the old _ style road builders were to attack them and grade up the sods and throw them into the cenâ€" tre of the road, then those roads would be impassible for the whole season. â€"and these roads are a{;vays fit for travel during the dry season, simply because they are left alone. â€" There are pieces of road in North Grimsby upon‘ which there is little or no work done, at any time of the year My opinion about clay road buildâ€" ing is that if the road builders canâ€" not leave the roads in better condiâ€" tion than when they start to work on them, they should never go on them at all. Had the road superintendent ripâ€" ped up the sides of this road and carâ€" ried the‘ sods, clods and dirt to the cent of it, the road would have been impossible to travel upon for the rest of the season. This is a flat road, with little or no grade and little or no ditches. But Russ followed the same system of scraping on this road, carrying the dirt to the sides, and leaving the cenâ€" tre smooth and hard; and much to my surprise, immediately followed that big rain, this piece of road was also in good condition, either for auto or team traffic. « The other piece of road to which I have reference, is of ‘an entirely. difâ€" ferent natureâ€"it\ is ‘the concession sideroad from the Stone Road east for a mile to the Book Brothers side road. I had occasion, shortly after the heavy rain, to drivg along this piece of road I have mentioned, and greatâ€" y to my surprise it was dry and smoothâ€"Why? Because the centre was hard and smooth and the water rushed right off it, and a few hours after the rain the road was in a beautiâ€" ful condition to travel upon. Here was a piece ‘of road which had been graded up very high, and each road builder, up to this year, conâ€" tinued to grade it up and leave the loose > dirt in the centre, making the centre still higher. That shows the wisdom of keeping the centre of the roads hard and smooth. There were two pieces of road, in the early spring, that I had my eyes on, especiallyâ€"one of these was from the north corner of James Hurd‘s farm, running a mile south to the south corner of the Douglas farm. After a big rain, the centre was alâ€" ways a mud puddle and nobody could travel on it; and there was such »a slope on the sides that it was almost impossile to drive along them, withâ€" out skiddifg into the ditch4s. | Meaam A week ago last Saturday night, we had one of the heaviest rains that the Township of North Grimsby has exâ€" perienced in many, many years and I expected that all of the roads would be almost impassable. When W. B. Russ was appointed Road Superintendent, this year, he decided that he would try and grade the roads, and scrape them, without leaving a pile of loose dirt in the cenâ€" tresâ€"he followed that system and the result has been. most surprising. \ _ Russ changed all that. He scraped his read and instead of piling the dirt in the centre, he distributed it along the sides, with the result that the cenâ€" tre was left hard and smooth and fit to be travelled upon, immediately. The result was that the clay roads in North Grimsby were always in a worse condition, after the road buildâ€" ers were through with them, than they were in before the work was commenced. The result would be that after every rain the centre of the‘road was a muckâ€"heap which held the water, and if the teams took to the centre of the road they cut the loose muck into rutsâ€"and if they took to‘the sides, they skidded into the ditch. It has been the custom in North Grimsby, for the past forty years, when grading a road, or scraping it, to carry all the dirt from the sides to the centreâ€"leaving it there. Some of the boys in North Grimsâ€" byâ€"Township got an object lesson in road scraping, this last two or three weeksâ€"if they will only be ‘wise enough to look and learn. New System of Road Grading. 0:0).0-()-()-0.0-()-( ue .0 4ue 0 m 0 u> câ€"<un 0â€"<me 0 <ar c<are câ€"<un 0 ons C <umâ€" 03-()-().0-0-0-0.()-0-0-().()-0.()-0-0.()-9-..0.».0“ TWO THE PEOPLE‘S PAPER ESTABLISHED 1885 JAS. A. LIVINGSTON & SONS, Owners and Publishers Member Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association Weeklies of Ontario. Member Grimsbv Ch JAS. A. LIVINGSTON, General Manager. Issued every Wednesday from the Office of Publishers, Main and ? Oak Streets, Grimsby, Ontario THE INDEPENDENT TELEPHONESâ€"Business Office. 36: Editorial Office. 23 J. ORLON LIVINGSTON, j Editor ewspaper Association. ~â€"Member Selected Town Member Grimsby Chamber of Commerce C ozox-o-o-o-x).o-()-(J-()-op«)-u-o-o.n-«)-0.().0.()-o.o.o-o-o-n-o:q a 310 99 02â€" 0 <z»â€"0â€"<ar 0 â€"<aae 0â€"<u> c I C A e m eie m OllUWllls all the signs of deterionation, apparâ€" ent on the Livingston Avenue stretchâ€"the ratepayers on Ontario street, no doubt, will be asked to pay one hundred cents on the dollar, in their tax bills, while they have only received a road of the seventyâ€"five cents on the dollar kind, and it is very doubtful if "it" is" wnrtk, /+ A road that cost as much as the Ontario Street piece did, and never was finished should have never been started. The excuse is also made, for this piece of road, that it was never finâ€" ished. Anybody could tell that, to look at it. I understand that this road cost about eleven thousand dollarsâ€"it i8 not worth, to the ratepayers, seven thousand. The excuse that the Countyâ€"CTCounâ€" cil puts up for the Livingston avenue fiasco is that the road was never finâ€" ishedâ€"then why ask the people to pay for it? frR The ratepayers had/ to put up the money, and they did ‘not put up sevâ€" entyâ€"five cents on Athe dollarâ€"they put up one hundred ‘cents on the dolâ€" larâ€"and for it t\He;i have to put up \lE&, seventyâ€"five per cent road. The soâ€"called tarvia road on Onâ€" tario / street, morth of the Grand Trunk, to Lake street, is another case of almost highway robbery. . â€" Neither one ‘of these is a tarvia road, nor a near approach to a tarvia roadâ€"and the ratepayers who have to pay for them are not getting anyâ€" thing like seventyâ€"five per cent. value for their money. This is not allâ€"this piece of new road is already showing dips and holes and ruts and the bare stone is exposedâ€"none of these conditions will ever show in a properly built tarvia road. 8 Two of about the rawest deals that were ever put over on the people of this District, were the jobs that were done on Livingston avenue, last year, by the County Council under the name of a tarvia road; and the job that was done on Ontario Street, north of the railway, by the Town Council, also disguised as a tarvia road. is followed by a cloud of dust almost as bad as on a sand or clay roadâ€" not one particle of dust will rise from a tarvia road. It is time these knockers would take a tumble to themselves, and realize that they are back numbersâ€" and stop their little knocking game, because it will not get themâ€" anyâ€" where: Wirezan automobile passes up Livâ€" ingston avenue, on this new road, it Glaring Cases of What?? Lincoln, there are a bunch of knockâ€" ers in the Township of North Grimsâ€" by running around trying to do everything they can to poison the minds of the people against him, and poison the Council against him. But a graded clay road, no matter how well graded it is, if there is a ridge of loose dirt left in its centre, to hold the water, will never be anyâ€" thing but a muck heap or a hard road, full of ruts, after it dries up. In spite ofâ€"the fact that W. B. Russ knows more about buildingâ€" roads than any other man in the County of This piece of road is > »aAand as God. let the Jews get into all sorts of trouble with kings, He is going to let this old world get into all sorts of trouble with socialism and soviets, and the devil knows what all, unlessâ€"yes, unâ€" less it repents and seeks God. ( Will the world do it? _ Read the Bible as God‘s Word and you will learn a lot. *I. Sam. 8-7. DMansiatalkL +M3 + 1 ue And Samuel is displeased. . But he does the right thing with his wounded prideâ€"he tells God all about it. And God repliesâ€"Give them what they want, "they have not reâ€" jected thee, but they have rejected ime." An.d\t}_lat i§ the trouble today. Nations want to cure evils felt and evils imagined by a change. of government, and God says the trouble with you isâ€"you have rejected me. n ta in n lrlle SLhvitct 1O Inc jowish Nation 4s priest,. prophet, and judge, the ungrateful people come to him and sayâ€"give us a king like all the other nations round us. 3 Au &# t( -vcv- aï¬nut- RESTLESS PEOPLE After a lifeâ€"long service to the Jewish Nation Samuel is angry J. A. M. LIVINGSTON, if it is worth that Business Manager. "They have not rejected thee, but they have rejected >-()-()-().0.()-0-(_(l-()-()-()-()-()-( adlso showing '(0;0 It‘s a lack of decision that loses big battles and ruins many â€" busiâ€" nesses. â€" ~ If a fellow is dishonest, you can watch him; but if he is untruthful, you had better leave him entirely alone. It is not what you get, but what you expect to get, that makes . life worth while. The has a ing. Man was créated first, but woman came a second after and asked him how long he had ‘been waiting. Even if we saw a monster like the plesiosaurus, we‘d be afraid to say so for fear of arousing suspicions. fight about? To settle which Irishâ€" men shall have all the freedom. Silence is always safe, and quently the smartest thing say. ¢ The only sweeping reform that has succeeded is the vacuum cleaner. The bestâ€"mixer isn‘t always the best business man. The truth is mighty and will preâ€" vall, but it is mighty hard to find it. Organized labor is all right until it progresses to organized loafing. I do not know how long the Govâ€" ernment is going to stand for this botch work on tarvia roads, but so long as it does stand for it, it will be allowing the contractors to rob the people out of a considerable portion of the money expended on the roads. It is time the Deputy Minister and the Minister of the Ontario Departâ€" ment of Public Works and Highways, wakened up to facts as are, and stopped this robbervy. He who takes his owu time genâ€" erally takes other people‘s too. them follow the formula; they cheat the road; they do not use enough tar via or penetrating material to build a proper tarvia road, and the result can easily be seen in the condition of the roads at the present time. in allâ€" of ‘his road building 1sbeu;é practised on the highway by the (}0ver1}n}_ent contractorsâ€"not one of Peter Robertson has built several pieces of tarvia road in the County of Lincoln since that first one, and not.one of these latter stretches is a first class â€"roadâ€"the reason is simply that he did not follow the formula for building proper tarvia roads, on any one of these except his original piece. i When a) short piece of road is tied up for a whole season, with an army of men and teamms working upon it, and scores of carloads of material are used on it,and it is then only a third class road when opened to trafâ€" fic, there is something decidedly rotâ€" ren in Denmark. f There is nothing more satisfactory than a good road, nowadays, and there is nothing more unsatisfactory than a miserable piece of road. for which the people have to pay the full price. The difference lies in the fast that Peter Robertson, when he built the Vinelandâ€"Jordan road, was a greenâ€" horn and had never Built a piece of road beforeâ€"but he followed the schedule on the formula laid down by the Yankee engineer, and consequentâ€" ly he got produced a splendid piece/ of road. s & Why the Difference in Building? Talking about tarvia roads, I had a trip over the highway from Grimsâ€" by to St. Catharines the other day, and while there are pieces of new tarâ€" via road in that distanc that are pretâ€" ty good, yet there is no piece anyâ€" where on this seventeen miles that is as good as the piece of road from Vineland to Jordan, built seven years ago. ‘And this piece of road was built by the same man who built the Livingâ€" ston avenue, last year. Hasy Street is hard to find Ireland is free. Then what‘s the Uncle Josh Says:â€" Copyright, 1921â€"â€"J man who is behind the times view that should be stimulatâ€" ‘-(7-()-()-()-()-(':. THE INDEPENDHENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO 99 e is freâ€" we can Mr. Bottomly‘s great talents and personel magnetionv> caused him to occupy a very prominent position in English public life. He was a very able speaker and writer and is said to have jbeen the best recruiting agent Great Britain had during the war. The chief cause of his fall was that he was a born gambler, exâ€" tremely generous with other people‘s money, but quite unscrupulous and uncaring as to how he got his wealth. His sentence to seven years of penal servitude@@t the age of 62 is a severe one, bul,proba:bly not too The case of Horatio Bottomly illusâ€" trates the speed and certainty of British justice no matter what wealth or station the culprit may occupy, nor how popular he may be with the public. Had Horatio Bottomly purâ€" sued the same sort of career in ‘the United States by the lavish use | of money he could have prolonged his case many years and in the end would probably have escaped the full measure of justice. During the last two years in Belâ€" fast there have been over 2,000 casâ€" ualties from rifles and ibombs, includâ€" ing 400 killed.Those who seek a quiet life will have to eliminate Belâ€" fastâ€"as well as the rest of Irelandâ€" from their visiting list. â€" The question has been asked Speaking generally, Do men have a better time‘ than women? In my opinion they would, if women were not generally speaking. It is . a tradition hallowed â€"by centuries of approval that a good: son makes a good husband. But this statement has in turn been challenged and ‘the question asked. In this really true? Does he? In reply to which a cynical woman asks ‘"Is there any such thing as ‘a good husband‘ "? Apparently she, at all events, is of the opinion that there "ain‘t no such animile." Lord Northcliffe is reported to have broken down from overwork while on a trip investigatâ€" ing present conditions in Europe. Quite recently, speaking at a luncheon of the Empire Press Union in London, England, he said "Canadâ€" ians are not a very noisy people. We did not hear very much about their coming into the war; but they came and when they came they did things‘". Some compliment, eh!. h in Quebec province, near Ottawa, reâ€" ports wages paid to be about $2 per day and $4.00 for teams, which seems to include food and lodging and proâ€" vision for the horses. Track laborâ€" ers in Toronto employed in construcâ€" tion have been getting twentyâ€"five cents an hour recently. A similar rate of wages for common laborâ€" is reported in other districts. Accordâ€" ing to estimates of the cost of living such wages are probably lower than as yet warranted, but they fact reâ€" mains that many men are prepared to take them. Moreover it is apparâ€" ent that only on the basis of such labor costs can new employment be created. These lower wages appear to be the result of competition for work by the unemployed, many of whom could get much higher wages in the organized trade to which they belong if the union leaders would consent to a wage basis that would permit the employment of capital. It would seem to me that if ever there was a case of people glorying in their shame it is the one in~ quesâ€" tion. ~Under license law observers contributed $10,000 ~to the city‘s revenue and â€" lawâ€"breakers $5,000. Under prohibition law observers conâ€" tribute $00,000 to the city‘s revenue, and lawâ€"breakers more than $33,000. In other words lawâ€"breakers in Lonâ€" don have multiplied to a large exâ€" tent. . And it appears to me that any class of people who can point to that as a matter for congratulation ought to have their heads examined. ploying Before prohibition the city received about $10,000 in license fees and $5,â€" 000 in police court fines. Now the city treasurer reports that London‘s share of police court fines last year came to more t"1in $33,000â€" all but a few hundred di.sars being obtained from fines imposed on persons found guilty of breaking the Ontario Temâ€" perance Act. k Prohibitionists in the city of Lonâ€" don, Ontario, appear to (‘be much elated over some interesting facts that have recently come ‘to light as to the effect prohibition has had on the amount of money the city reâ€" ceives from liquor and in their joy they have adopted an "I told you so" attitude. It seems that those who predicted that by the adoption of proâ€" hibition the civic revenue would show a very large reduction have been proved to be poor prophets. NOTES AND COMMENTS â€" ON CURREET EVENTS BY PETER PETERKIN 0:0)-0.0-«_a-_n)-o.o.o-(_o-n-o-o-u.o.o-o-4 ’:.-O- 0 <me 0 <m> 0â€"<a> oâ€"<mp 0â€"<me 0 <me 0 â€"<m> 0 â€"<unâ€"0 <me 0â€"<u5 0 â€"<us 0â€"<u5â€"0â€"<u> 0 <u5 0â€"<uS ) <us 0â€"<u> 0 â€"<r> 0â€"<u> 0 «us c 0 «m ( ).fl-(’:’ They Dont‘ Read the Papers One conclusion to be drawn from the questionnaire is that college boys, like their seniors, will find it necesâ€" "The two last Constitutional amendmentsâ€"‘Brought us _ railroads and steamships‘; ‘for paved streets‘; ~restric~~ t â€"immigratfon.> : " ‘Three out of thirtyâ€"six juniors in one state college could not identify a cartoon of Uncle Sam,‘ the report says." "Charles Evans Hughesâ€"‘President Wilson‘s private secretary‘; ‘wants to conquer Russia.‘ f "Charles~G. Dawesâ€"‘Secretary of the Navy.‘ "Senator William E. Borahâ€"‘Uncle Sam.‘ "The Knox Peaceâ€" Resolutionâ€" ‘Called for an indemnity from Gerâ€" many‘; ~ ‘sought abstinence from foreign affairs‘; ‘re@€uced navy and international disarmament.‘ > "Peonageâ€"‘The murder of â€"emâ€" ployes‘; ‘a law regarding punishmeéent of negroes‘; ‘the state of a day labâ€" orer‘. ~Ssinn Feinâ€"‘A lawless mob in Rusâ€" sia‘; ‘the Socialists in Ireland‘; ‘a gang Oof mysterious men.‘ ‘President of the Senate‘; ‘English speechmaker‘; ‘Secretary ‘of War‘; ‘writer on psychic research.‘ j ‘"The Budgetâ€"‘A bill of particuâ€" lars‘; a< booklet for keeping exâ€" penses‘; ‘news or announcements.‘ ‘"Benator Henry Cabot Lodgeâ€" ‘Beâ€" liever in conversations with the dead‘; ‘Ambassador to England‘: "Samuel ‘Gompersâ€"‘Head of shipâ€" builders‘; ‘‘a> poet‘; . ‘labor‘s repreâ€" sentative in Congress‘; ‘Secretary of Labor‘; ‘head of the strikers‘; ‘Minisâ€" ter to‘ France, England and Japan.‘ "Lloyd Georgeâ€"‘King of England‘; ‘King of Ireland‘; ‘Ambassador to the United States.‘ STUDENTS ARE IGNORANT severe for one guilty of such misâ€" appropriation of poor peoples‘ earnâ€" .ings. I‘m full of worms and happy. I‘ve dined both tong and well, The worms are there as alwaysâ€"but I had to dig likeâ€"â€"â€"â€"" Oh, here and there red roosters are still holding sales positions, They can not do much business now because of poor conditions. But "as soon as things get right again," they‘ll sell a hundred firms Meanwhile the old black hens are out aâ€"gobbling up the worms. Said the . §E little o & f _â€"_red rooster: ; ; "Gosh all hemâ€" lock. Things are tough. Seems that worms are getâ€" ting scarcer, and I cannot find enough. â€" What‘s . â€" S become of all those fat 0 ones is a mystery to me; ‘ 00 «there were thousands thru 0000 that rainy spellâ€"but, now 00000000 where can they be?" The old 000000000 E* black hen who heard him didn‘t 00000000000 grumble or complain. . She had gone â€" 000000000000 s through lots of dry spells, she had lived 0000000000000 through floods of rain. She flew upon the grindstoneâ€"she ~__ gave her claws a whet. "I‘ve never seen the time" quoth she, there weren‘t worms to get." She pickd a new and undug spot, the earth was hard and firm. The little rooster jeered, "New ground! That‘s not the place for worms." The old black hen just spread her feet, she dug both fast and free. >~"I must go to â€" the worms," she said, "The worms won‘t come to me." ‘ The rooster â€" vainly spent the day, through habit, by the way where fat round worms had passed in squads back in the rainy days. When night fall found him supperless, he growled in accents rough: <"I‘m hungry as a fowl can be. Conditions sure are tough," He turned to the old black hen : and said: "It must be worse with you. For you‘re not only. hungry, you ‘must be \ weary too. I rested while I watched for worms so I feel fairly perk but how ‘are you? Without worms too, and after call that work?"‘. / The » old t black hen hopped to her perch and dropped her eyes to sleep, and murmured in a drowsy ’ f tone: ‘‘Young man hear this and weep : 0000 0000 0000 . 0000 , : 0000 a THE LITTLE BLACK HEN His field of usefulness is hroader than anyone else in the community, and if he does not get any returns for his efforts for settlement he has a sufficient reward in seeing things get better. The editor has the greatest opporâ€" tunity to protect society from evil by sanding for the law and creating pubâ€" lic sentiment for it. The editor never tires of . boosting his own town and country, and â€" if both do not grow it is not his fault. He helps the deserving young men with words of commendation and reâ€" strains the old by words of warning. The editor distributes more flowers than a filorist and he asks ncothing in return for them but thanks. The ediâ€" tor has an opportunity to do the inâ€" dividual citizen, a service and he never hesitates to do it if consistent with his obligations to the public. The editor has the greatest oppor: tunity to convert men and women to his way of thinking on public quesâ€" tions. ~As the lighthouse on the shore warns the ships from the rocks the editor can warn the public from frauds and fakers. The lawyer makes a great speech in the court house and only one or two hundred persons hear him, but when the editor writes a good‘" ediâ€" torial it is copied in various papers in the state. He stands ahead of the preacher, the lawyer and the public speaker because ~he never talks. to empty benches, but speaks in all the homes where his paper goes. He never makes impromptu speeches which generally disgust the audience, but writes with deliberation and premediâ€" tation. The preacher‘s influence for good seldom reaches farther than his congregation, while the editor‘s field for geed reaches all the congregaâ€" tions in the country. CoUNTY EDITOR HAS IT ALL OVER RURAL PREACHER He Has â€" Bigger Audience â€" Than Speechâ€"Making Lawyer Everybody has written about the trials and tribulations of the counâ€" try editor, but few have â€"written about his joys, says the. Elizabeth town (N. J.) News. sary to read the newspapers if they are not to become ignoramuses. One would say that it would be an utter impossgibility to even glance at the headlines on the front page of the American newspaper without knowâ€" ing who Lloyd George is. He is perâ€" haps the bestâ€"known public man in the world.. The answers to the peonâ€" age question show a hazy understandâ€" ing of it, for the three answers given have each a germ of truth in them. Confusion about the budget is not unâ€" natural.. The budget, so far as it apâ€" plies to the American Government, is a matter that is discussed rather in editorial pages than explained in large headlines. Senator Lodge has been mixed up with Sir Oliver Lodge, which is evidence that more American college boys have heard of the famâ€" ous Englishman than of the Senator from Massachusetts. 0000 00000000 000000000 00000000000 e 0â€"<mm 0 â€"<zm> 0 <am 0 mm +6 .Miss Jones‘ Private School for girls and boys, top of Mountain street, Grimsâ€" by. morning , and ‘afternoon â€" classes. Classes for very young children mornings only; all the usual subjects taught, inâ€" cluding French, Music by Mrs. W. E. Johnson, at the school and practice hours at school can be arranged. For further particulars, apply to Miss Jones, phone 375, Grimssby. Next term commences Monday, April 24th. PRIVATE SCHOOL ©__ W. M. WILSON Architect 15 Queen Street. Telephone 2418w. St. Catharines. t+f mm in e e n t t Nelles Road Hamilton Dominion Land Surveyors, Ontario Land Surveyors, Civil Engineers James J. MacKay, Ernest G. MacKay, "William W. Perric Phone Regent 4766 72 James St. N. _ Home Bank Building MacKAY, MacKAY & PERRIE Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public 45 Federal Life Building Hamilton 86 Keith Street, Hamilton Piano Tuner Orders Can Be Left At Independent â€" Office. Phone 36 or 23. wu h t h o o Mn To on coraemne® smm nenecomincntienct Dentist Office" and residence, 73 Sherman avenue south, between King and Main streets, and five doors north of the H., G. & B. railway line. Hamilton . . .. Ontario Dentist Officeâ€"Corner Main and Mountain Streets, over Canadian Bank of Commerce i Office hoursâ€"9 to 12, 1.30 to 5.30 Phone 127 Grimsby, Ontarto Our stones never fail to please those‘ who are looking for something conservative and tasteful in memorial work. The MIDDLETON MARBLE AND GRANITE CO., LTD. 234â€"236 King Street East, Hamilton, Ont. Ub mtmmmtmnn DENTAL I. B. ROUSE (Globe Optical) z Optician 52 King St. East, Hamilton Established, A. D. 1901. Office Hoursâ€"8.30 to 6; 8.30 to 9 on Saturdays. DR. VANCE R. FARRELL CALDER & HAZLEWOOD PHONE NO. 7 Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Money to loan at current rates Officesâ€"Grimsby and Beamsville TO COVER _ PRESENT. VALUE OoF PROPERTY? Fire, Life, Accident and Automoâ€" bile Insurance GRIMSBY BUS MARRIAGE LICENSES ‘Barrister, Notary Public, etc. Money to Loan. Office: Main Street, Grimsby Phone 7. Dentist Extraction with gas ‘Phone 92 for appointment Office â€" â€" Farrell Block Issner of Marriage Licenses Council Chambers Grimsby, Ontario IRVIN & MACFARLANE HAVE YOU ENOUGH INSURANCE (Late of Royal Engineers) HENRY CARPENTER LET US CUT YOUR FUNERAL DIRECTORS Funeral â€" Directors. Phone 72, Night or Day Motor Equipment. GILBERT RAYNER Transacted ~HARRY HAMER G. B. McCONACHIE MONUMENT CIVIL ENGINEER W. F. RANDALL Wednesday, June 21 LAND SURYVEYOR DR. D. CLARK R. C. CALDER ARCHITECT PIANO TUNER NESS D Grimsby, Ont F. HANSEL Phone 440]J d _ PromptW Efficiently LEGAL REGTORY Grimsby ind ONT Ontario , 1922 2415