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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1873-01-31, Page 6s Plille'PlOtri letLis'd DeeP Tillittif.' • In farmi g, as in most, nther things, one is not always sufficiently master of the situation,to do. as his judgment dictates would tie the most prOfitable, in, the end. Tjt us it often happen a that the year's plow- ing ia thrown over to Spring in- stead of being performed in Aeturan, and then the necessity of *getting over a certain extent ot gro,und-in, a limited • titne leads to -skimming, with furrow four inches deep in • stead of tilling with those of eight. There is sufficient exouse for much of the present,• alipshed fpracticee but should 'not lead to Any undereitting • of the utility of both All ita com- pared with " Spring Plowing, and of deep as compared, with shallow 'filth. When heavyssoil i upturned in autumn it is rendered more perme- able by moisture ; the frost having greater acceas-freezes eepee and in- ures a morethorough Li titegration of mineral particles:; the expoeed • roots of the stubble ate oftener fro- zen and thawed, and, consequently rot- -quicker ; the s rplus - water drains away earlier it the, Spring as. thelgioond soonm attain the • s . r condition of swarnith and froedom from excesses of moist ire easential to the vigorous startin of seed. ' As concerns deep til age, the tertn does not always mean eep plc:ming. Whether the earth, si , eight or ten inches -below, the surf e, should be :suddenly brought to he top, • de- pends Wholly, upon its attire. -We have known a light loom, yielding not more than eight hu deed weight of second grade. hay 1 er are one year, to give at the rite tit thirty- five bushels uf &its per • cre the next, simply because the plo Una; 4riyere beam deep in its Autu nnplowing. in this case the soil was, ot jilt:LAY, homegeneemi' &ern • the surface to more than a foot, in depth, and the deep plowing siniply brought up to light and air for the reeeption atilt) seed the nativ ,. elemeate of fertility. Similar uSage may obt4111 ited like results be skewed on satidy soils that have been Evilly; y . Immured, riots which 'aresuMeet to leaebiee 1 In thei se the fertlizing- i tatter being. carried down by reins i. likely to be _absorbed at a depth of a tow inchee • by the filtrative action of the sand, ,. especially if minutely divided clay be t present.' : 1, - sucl cases the • ratio- flak , of bringing he-like:Hee . medium .to the surfacei. manifest. But with lands havi a a subsoil • different from teat at tspa different practice must prevail. ' T One up soil in which every ele -Refit of fer; • tility is so thinly combiaed as to re- quire two br tome years otexposure , . to the ageneies of frost, inn and air , . - 10 ehange its chemicet ; relations and render is soluble, is manifest nen- :setae. On gronediif this character, treed' plowingewhich stirs., but does not lift the eubsoi!, will prove it -great advaotege, but will tic.fini.ed expen- sive. . A better way is to set the elevis to pion- an averitee of leaf an • inch deeper ouch sudeeeding year, dius gradually working .i.inelioisition to the reqeisite dt;pth. T • A Great Far 'Jeer. Henry Verker owns boat 1.000 :yes oF Ltn(i nom- Mooon, Kent County, Delaware, 50 .) 'items of chic!) ire covered \vitil )(Me I 1 t.reeti 11 i s 'fees are it 22 feet apart, and 111.5 crops have prosled vrry- satisfac- tory. A good crop will give him 100,000 baskets. Ile .1 L -a) inauu- facturc1 abolit 3,000, gal It ne of peach erandy the 1)34 season By cans1 ning and distillinir Mr. "Terker ex- pects to find a demand fir his great erop at. payioe rate. • 10 also de- votes ome. 400o, 500 ac 'es to regii- lar'farming, and the pa t year _his heat crop yielded Platy .busheli the acre. The comin season -he will plant 20 acres •Of •asparagus. as destili cd to become the garden of the con - 1.0 rezards the Peninsith • tinent. Mr. Yerker ia by birth, and on coming t try he cmemelleed the s .of glue itt Philadelphia, offal from this esva1lishu riched his land. Fattening Ho s. I have for the last 15 years fat- ted -my pork entirely en old corn- aneal, and think two pus els of old • eorn, groind, will mak as. much poi k as three bushels of new corn in the ear. Tile 12th d y of last September, put up tea hogs. _Nine of them were one y r and a half old. The weight of the .hogs a Germ in this‘conn- an n fact u re nd by the en( he en- put up at the time pcevieusly men- tioned, was 2.872 pout] t' 8., I fed tliem corn -meal, mixed vith cold \eater, making a swill of it ; 1 weigli- t:d them every six clays. The sow weighed separate fromr e others, as• 1 wanted to know shat she. v. otticl gaiti per day,_ aid ough wz.is fed in the slime pen wiIm the oth- ers. The first snc days she gained 35 pounds ; the second si d irs- 38 1-ounds ; the .third dayS 57 pounds, or 9;1, pounds per lay. _Af- ter that she did not :do sove14. The -whmole nuher of lio • s 'from the 12th of iSeptembe to the 1th of November, whet killed/ t 1i ree pounds and three ounces per head per slay, niatifti-l,73poittiai" of pork in sixty -threes days. The amount of COrn fed ,was 148 boshels before it wits -ground, or four and -three quarter pounds of corn to make • one pound of pork. • The morning I butchered them I •drove them on the acales,_to see what they would waste in clreesing, I found it to be sixteen poundit to the hundreds or sixteen per cent.- Correalsondef-ree Western Rural. • s Pork Packing- Th e old-time methods ofpor k- pack ing and: pork speculating are repitil •passing a:aity. It has ceased to be profitable for packers to borrot money in the fall for purchasin hogs during theslaughtmieg season and pay jitter* on tbe capital til high prices in the Spring and isum • mer following. The;period of higl prices does not retutti with the en eouraging, regularity that used t assure the wiuter packer of et profit able market for; his stock, and th day is not far distant when pork packing will btegenerally carried on iiite milling and other bearachesse) business1 r every day in the yeas- Themostsuccessful packets in the country are those who'have adopted the summer packing, a, system in which, by -Means of ice, their pack ing and curing rooms are kept coo daring the hottest months of the year. Some establishments no kill andpack an averagie of 1,000 bogs per day throughout the year, and allowing the very stnall profit of $1 per hog, the aggregate .ite inF mense. The cost of the ice nsed in tue process -does not exceed the in- terest paid by wither 'paCkers-- who catty stooks on bank renewals, and the freshness of his meat alWays •giyesthe semther Packer un advan- tage in the market. Another mat k- ed effect of the summer packing is the ihcrease of the hog crop. Which naturally results from a largo and constitut- demand for -fat h -igs. A bushel of corn fed to a porker in wenn or moderate weather, packs a good dfssl more • fat on his ribs than if fed to.him in cold weather, when there a greater demand for animal ticats and a censequent heavier draft upon his superfluous fat. The •new bin 1113keS t1101n11.6011: (for Ie* mon- TH HU sees o _ELF) SITOR. itirand air; ot'that it tretds tilting a train of gunpowclet.: ben Wiped, the flour resolves it.si1eliiiss4gasei. The carbon, by mixtug with the oxygen of the air, becOmes carbonic oxide or oarbonic aid, and the ,hydrogen tied oxygen becomes wa- ter, vapor orlteetb. The volume of these gases is .much • increased by the high temperature at the moment of combnetion. The -Conditions re- quired to brig about a 0°a:explosion are sontewhat similar to those which „ cause a garaexplosion. 1 Your agrefis . with coal gas in being .explosive y when tuingled with ails„but the fine impAlpable dust tutiO be diffused v through the air in dOlnite pepper - tions in order to eons44tute an ex- , plosion ; it is also iiiseeasivey that 1 the flour mixture be rime or less . *confined within a givoit space. The more cominonlway of the _ production of the spark of flame o which fires the flour Sir explosive - 'mixture, is the feed oing off the e stones doing work when the. stones,. - set down on each _othet and as tgeFSS are of flinty or °diet hiard siliceous f• rock, and are revolvin1;at from 100 • to 160 revolutions si Minute, they quickly strike' fire and, become very hot. The feed tnay go Offtrnm want of gram in the shopper any oh- . struction in the feed pipet •4'.4. 1 der'f; web actudiseito ped the feed in one case,'Ipi ,les! to violent ex- . plosion in itn &iglus flour mill. 1)r. Macadam .,sugge.st vtaious ex- pedients to be adopted for avoiding flour mill explosions, s k:11 as the re- moval of exhaust box -es` ef0V0 rooms, smut rooms, and other receptacles of flour dust to the outsk of the mill. ey, and at a much 1J81• expeediture of food than is possible by she old plen. By constantly 'packi iand sel1ing:4, the summer packers keep the market`supplied and • are able :0 turn their money With good pro- fits several times a year, while , the old ftlgies_deplete the hanks in au- tutnn, tuat cirry their stocks • from month to month in anticipation of a rise. These rises, like • high waters in the 1 issiisappi, do not come .as frequently as they used to, end pork specailators who do no'.7, keep their eves opeu to the marked changes that are raki, g place m their busi- 'less will suff4r for their negligence. Louis 4krnocrat. , -- Farm News and Ngtes. An act hes been passed by the Provincial 1-segis1ature• - Nova Scotia for preu'iotiieg the formation of farmers' clebsthroughout that Pi'ovince. --Ad.'61-nr)any 'has heen nn d, \Atli leadotiar tors at Chica- go, for the oil -pose of neinufacturing the Parvin 73 tenni Plow. ----A. Westein faruier calculates that two• T,11())1, -,IS ie a stock -far iti 9'exas, couiprising idl . bushels of ol • corn, ground, Will make es mud pork as; three bushels of now corn. i:.'1.. the ear. -----There , 200,000 awes with 70,000 head of . . cattle ;. anethP4., of 170,000 acme, with 50,000 dattle. Not less then : eight lines of •ailroAd are being (fAxl- , struetedinto Northern Ile ae.------- ! ase, seta for An item lets ' eeu going the reunds 0u:teeming a ien ia llost laying eggs so small. hat 21 of t tem :were. I put in a collar poi, at *rice. This ; looked like pr .tty small lyusiness:ifot J. P. BEI Ey T ICENSED AUCTIONEER or the County of 1-4 Huron. • Sales' attended i • all parte of the Country. ordare left at TILF !Exeearron Office will be promptly attended to. •198 • THE SEAEQR H L MBER A R D MACDON ALD • EG to inform the public that they have opened a Lumber lanai in Seaforth, near leheareon's Mill, on the ground formerly used ss a Lumber • Yard, by Mr. Thomas Leon` They will keep constantly on hind a good aseort- meta ei ILL KINDS OF "LUMB,Ell, dreseed and untlreesed. Also, LATH AND . HINGLES, all of which thee are prepared to sell a the loweet pousi- ble pricee, for Cash. -Bdilders and others will find i their advent- , -age to inspect our stock, apd neeertain our pi -ices before purclutsingebtewhortehis vie are in a position 10 offer good intlutement8 'Cil8 epureltasers. 160 e MABEE et TAACDONALD. THE HOLIDAYS OVER, BUT THE TIME tOR 'CHEAP JE7EL.RY t - 1)3 71t.t• 7ut ended 4.t M. R. COTTN JUST REC T170 11. Cs. VED, 'IWO VASES Or THOSE Celebrated Watches, , „ Mannfartunel teem.. elle- for IM.R. COUNTER, :817LCE L LoNDON AND LIVE1 f• -SVIVASY, poor_ REP.AIRINC DONE Ai • tng ten" regulat- Co:I! Perfeeted M. 1 COUNTER. POULTRY! POULTBY no e en el aft entistt pone' b, repel ch OK. TER:US-ST.1i essr.s. Let:anis, Morri ; iij elm:lee.' an able -nods& of the story -and explained collar box 1101 ous, an :En'gl must be consi or at least a she produ4.ed in 72 -double dueed four, th • and thriving. only tell how • keep up this r is a Suffolk, f , tle Of the s ,bett, until the aut' or 4. iadly, stepped foisirfaal atit \vas a lio e- . seam Mr.• Pr sh farmer has w ter, t erkti a preeimis cove-s- in-plific one. In '71. - WO calves es.; once, 440 , . her stake ande pfee .ee of which are alive Of 'coarse. time' (-an • lOng 'sheinteuds r to do of ilicrest-Se. She er years old, and the ory, 0 f_a• achieve- - men b 18 • roue] ed !for ou good au- - • thority. 1 Will Flour Explode? Pei/• ij .14lls.-On .tho 25th of lasv.--toouth,'befote the . Scot- tish of Arts, Dr. Stevenson -131aad1ril mid a. paper tending to slic)w that flour.mills are almost as ditIICOr0116 neigs hors as gunpowder , The chemical comeoleents or gi ain are combastible when • burned in the ordinatfr way, and so 'eon - smiled with gqater rapidity eniteel diffused as a clnud through the air. When -fleuiis showeicd through a sieve placed 44ove a glass' flame.'. rapid combustion takes place. Indeed tlki flemr burns With explosive rapidi- ty:, and the 'flarne licks up the flout showered -someWhat in tho d.141; it 'flashes -through tt miXture of eSIT. 'rite tatheerih, r will ne the UAL.311 '11.1.CES For eny et:amity of fen We 1.-dreseett C.) Cs? Tel a‘ , leil vet tel at the EGG st‘itior • .101,71XftV- D D. p. SEAiuJIi& ;PLANiN •SASH, DiIOR AND BLIii FACTORY ye -neer ..,ent .2 : tee t 5 te h5,,:k romnrnue 'r.E115: rue 1 1 eeetnee env ! h.. !line,: net nine,• :Amulet' to • hint einet. eenum peel- •1s, wile, ilea triel:. then- e( 1: - n 1, en te t - a e„el Of the noun nerd( iteevainte t o e .511...• e. :1 t., .1 ht. p•1141.8.1'd lea_'t. steel, of elle-hut of 1 •MV s A ei ee , .Int)t)14. BLIND`4, AIM J,I)INc:4, SlifNULF.,,-. LATH'. -ETc. 1 re feel, muddle' t of. !1Jl1f e I , nun. tenour bite Nf iLI all it` NIL Ih,Z f.1 ewe_ 1)11 ettet-ellie teoriant 51 . tee ' P1r11Ler1:5e ettentIne nirtxttiC 201. .101 -IN 11-1:0 ....._ .4_ OS:',.4S \.( I LiN1. •• m \ FC)01'• - • 11 1 VI: i oevit 1. 1, n -le - : t . .31,, en; te• - 1 ' tlo peblie thin air. 11-,,= le.-.,... •,, ar ...D., ti)1. et, ed up hi, efeee ii, a theme r 11, .11 11 ,,,t•aCt.• th: t.-r,..n I. ,e- e'en'', i ! if tni. ess., !tit 11;i .1. T tt.et, let- beet! -.fitted up in t b. -, neele ine to. anent u- if -el t:'...:Iti *nen ,In witthive0,,!torte . -!, r.5 . te, be 1.1. their Ali ant.i:.:•• t..1 g,t, i. .18.;. :ti 1: 111t.1 1.5-' )1tot•••:-. .1, le li,)*``'' 1 -JAN. 31, 1872. HOLIDAY SUFIS, • HOLIDAY, SUITS, • The subscriber would reepettfully announce to the inhabitantof the Tovnii of Seaforth an. d Surround- 1 HOLIDAY SUITS ing (vestry that he has fitted up the buildinghereafter to be Itirlowia as the CHEQUERED STORE AND TigA DEPOT, HOLIDAY. SUITS, Situate on Main -street, nearly opposite the Maandon Hotel, Where he baa laid in and is now opening a • large and well selected etock of Teas, Coffeea, Sugepii, To -fiancees, HOLIDAY SUITS WIVES AND LIQUORS IV WOOP' AND BOmEs FRUITS NEARLY ALL KINDS, Comprising flaieine-Layer, Valentin, Seedless, dn., Currants, Figs, Dates and Prnnee, Lemons and ae- eorted Nate, Sardines, Croene 4; Blackwell's mixed Fieklesnwith a full /supply of • • HOLIDAY SUITS 1-10LIDA.Y STfl - HOLIDAY SUITS, And all antiolee ntatally kept in a • A.. FIRST-CLASS GROCERY STORE, Ciornprieing in part Brooms, Pails, Tubs, WashbOards, Halter .Rope and Bed Ropes afT ‘ngths, _and • "CHINA, CROCKtRY AND GLASSWAR.E,, Tea Sete in•plain china, Tea Sets in sold irnd chine. Tea Sets in be granite, Tea Cups and Sittleer8, Plates, ishea and Bowls, an size HOTEL, TAVERN AND SALOON KEEPERS Will find it 4 their intereet to call id the CHEQUERED STORE AND TEA' DEPOT, Where they wiflfuel good Wines and Liquors at Nrmxt-y• MOr PA.T PRICMS The subscriber having had low eximrien e in the Grocery Trade, and possessing a good knowledge of the Market, and having bpnght hli Stoek for mush and,hie expenses being very light, is able and de- termined to sell for the enehllesc pc3eeiblo profit 'tin- caeh, on which principle -he proposes to ceeduct tell his transactions, both in buyinaud selling Inhabitants of the TOW of Selleftrth an give the CHEQUERED STORE AND TE for your money as can be got in any Town ItEME' THg .01-1EQUERED Nearly opposite the ConntieFi of Efuron and Perth, you are cordially invited to DEPOT a Mal, where you will be fiTIT8 to Rot au good value City in Ontario. . BER THE PLACE, TORE AND -TEA DEPOT anion Rotel, Main -Street, Seaferth. MES MURPHY. •-THOMSON &• WILLIA.MS' 4ILL -A n ENGINE WORKS, mITCNELL, ONT. N. F. Burnham's Patent Turbine Water 'Wheel. VIVE have now thoroughly (Rated the above wheel and guarantee it equal or superior to the best wheels " now in nee, while !stronger and more darable. References to well-known and reliable nn1l owuers, who have them in use, given on application. We build all 'sizes and kindi id* str.4%..m.er HOLIDAY SUITS, HOLIDAY SUITS, • AT T. K. ANDERSON'S T. K. ANbERSON'S T. K ANDERSON'S ' T. K. ANDERSON'S T. K. ANDERSON'S T K. ANDERSON'S .-T. K. ANDERSON'S • T. K ANDERSON'S • 4' i'. K. ANDERSON'S • T. K. ANDERSON'S CLOTHING STORE, aLliTHRIG STORE, • CLOTHING STORE, .31A1X-STREET, ,STAFORTH. • • JUST RECETVED Stationary, portable and Upright, and guarantee them unsurpassetfley any in nee- We use on a our Engine!) the cGOVERNOR.elebrated JUDSQN GOVERNOR. We fire prepared to rontraet for the erec- A N'ICE .,:k8S01-1TMENT tion cif all kinds of Grist; leroureerut Sew -Mille, with all the lateist improvetnents. Let& Mills, Bolt -ere, Shiugle Mills, Double and Single Jointer, Heading Machines, Heading, Turn- - ers'emil Planers' Stave Machinen, and all kinds of Flax Machinery, de., date -manufactured largely. Scotch Check Tweeds One Boiler Shop is in fell blast, and wa.heve as foreman of this important department, Afre..10IIN WRIGHT, who, for 20 years wee cc:woman of the Brantford Boiler ¥, erke. Haviun A good force of ex-, perieneed boiler makers, we Aro prepared to attend to boiler repainS either at the shop or at mills promptly; DIVE US A CALL. We liana fotind out what eeery Farmer wants. It is . THE TWO HORSE' POWER. SAWING IVIACIIINE, The power tif eihich ii supplied with strong fly -wheel, suitnd to driving a Straw Cuttet, Grain Crasher and other Machinery, with no extra charge, except for the belt, This machine is Well suited to Fairy farmer's own use, SR an with two horses and from three to four num or boy e ant from 20 to 80 eorde of wood per day. Our machine leas been- thoroughly teeted, end ie strong enough to do all we recotne mend it to do. It is supplied with friction liangos, by -which the Raw s etopped, when caught or pinched, before it would be posUible to -stop the hovels. - A TRIAL -OFFERED. t We are building greet members of the diimining'e 8011.47 Cutter, for hand' or horse powee. Aino, - Grain Crdshera, with iron and wood iramein Fanning Mills, Her)* Powers of all kinds, Gang Plows, Steel Plows'with wrought iron hearus, t000d.beinas and eget iron Imeme, florae Hoes, Weeders Culti- vators, /tee dc. Repairs of all kinds crone pronantly. Orders by. mail or otherwise solicited. Address' , 267 THOMSON do WILLIAMS, Mitchell*, Ont. .18V f ). JANUARY, 1.873. 'ilE 'CHEAPEST, STOCii, AND '1‘111.: • r 'I 111 -ZEA rEsT A.RIETY lel TO 11E HAD FOR CASH CR APPROVED oulprr LIVING§TONE'S DOMHJIQN H USE, 18 111 pit ...tent!,:, 45.g. s !id oat,- . t tear wen hit tee titul it Inee.h Mail enne....r. AIN.LEYVILLE .. • - 11.1•11111/AVIONAIMIninnoinssm••• ••••••••m•••••••....5,..m... PO WTER. • STRATFORD, SELLLV(i OUT 11-71-fs ,J 1:UFF,411,0 1101Ei AT FOUI;_ LA-1)1ES' F if •1• :ef,) 0 1' P e. !Ci:;', I) st) AND tiVV'S.% NUS. en fe i".VI) .01. 7*() .1LIK/: new; _I/ I 1: SPPING STOCK. . PO -•-• 4FIT) h.. Which mile the raireet suite fcrwuta can:be got. wear that .GENTS' • FtTRNISHINGS. AND KNICKNACKS Suitable for liolidan Preheat., in great variety. A1) SEE irfl CALL AND HEM. CALL AND SEE THFIVI CALL AND SEE THEM. ANTI -COMBINATION. • SEAFORT11- NOVELTY WORKS. JOHN , RTIN AATISHES to return thanks to his real:le-eters and friends for their generous patronage eine° &s- eeming charge of the above Works, and begs to re- qnest the Attention of 14.31 who Bray regnire any- thing in his hue to the following hbt ofpricee at which he is prepered itnedeh work of e. quaiity that cannot be surpaeeed in+ the eraele: HORSE RAKES • • $ 5 00 FARM GATES. freer.- B 5u WAGON ...... 7 00 WHEELBARROWS... ... 4 75 LAND ROLLERS. ene515 and terearde. SURFACE DRESSING, per 1000, 2 FLOORING and heyt BOAliDleNte per 30004 SCROLL G oue by the pince or eel REPAIRING ^-.`,1-AC1[INES. I am prepared it eil times to eepeir 'the wood - week of reaping and mowing nuechinee, and, in fact, every ether machine Get can he meet:lowed. juxis babbited. ) WA 0 0.1si INIAK ER S. The tradereigned V.17ttniel la ISO 14 g th inform Wag- • on atid Carriage Ilalters that leo keeps censtantly on hand, all kindle ol let nt Stuff etatAltie for their werk. • Cerpeni; Farteet le mete elle 1)10)1211 ger(-rally 111 nea of any of tn., Abote artielet, wove, 1 tin Nvt.11 1 Ili, with their nate menet, as • in my 7te1.1- 144•1121 .1'44, 1 }11111• J.112111f ftyl ti4ii14.6115 • braliell V.E1'h eti11t•4; .10IIN :NI, :MARTIN. eae th N.. t eine ereee teethe ieh Street. - ,AEN LEV 1tAE- 5• PLANING -Al ILL - SAS11 Ogi}:ii.AND:Blittii.:FACTOBI _ '5 le tenet -rile r ;it, aim, tit •Fond- e of I reeneed te hill e11 teel.ea iein e.t tett. al; .vc- D.Oar :it 1,1 • Sash, Door. and. Mouldings. 0:.,;.BA.ND AND MADE TO ORDER On the ele.rte •t _ ' i v ' t.,:, e 1 ., f t .1 0 11 1 f 4 N'T I 10,:1• if 1 ./ Ll . • ..I J.J.A.I.A 1.1-Nkv sieletla Inn:At d to. . 1101-sle DI.(iCKTNel ALWAYS Oin HAND:ea-en . Promptly Hippie .1. JAME., BENNETT. A iehnvellle, 7.11ey lfe lenn. nenh47 • • Couscm kn.ntitienenre:qi jaPfil4eliswat!,:g3':1114er • toW;s,Mscall.)1)ruP,1 Asses41r, sal by Valions r Mr. Sherrit mg. M r, ping from also on Cent 22;Ciernk taes-imi Countni Aon -ILvteItreng,realoiten: Barnc ifl taxis, place in iiit on Con, paper, $:?, 71 sesstnent, J. Tie ;thick $1 50; J. Ho $3. # Go cNm pal une, met on -Gorrie, the 4 made and su -and of qua,,Li atENisecistsj:res ittAetletvi Wier, Di -put Wigg,ins and. Minutes of la ed.-. A letter the 1:ounty no action wys fru :3y 4lletrte. i‘• v 4-hieo Was ig that the T penses in go ing 1 - 1.1,4x4- ;lzeobneillIL7.81714 ed front seho section No. S, • Cyear l‘afj' ri motohervwiAltniyitmo Gibson, that tebeiisteite .eeP)efla d. Carried. 3, by Mr. Wane sessor tor th, Varried of is house -. t) ;14e: hzerror to ‘ Moved byMm Wit, thit t: its present .:431:itljUtlh:e1;8,elltii;"1•13 4111.11e -t•' of »v second teash rest in the the section, te4;a4 ,dary of Wal 'e°°11;r..-Iaats''d n1eai Wier, seeono. Thomas Brow his taxes, on burned before it being impos- repairs oirstctn ai o1118, beet)flilk, §otheran and Tnspeetors-1' that Simon 1 Wier moved that -John ,eindsat-enadofi dee08.b(tr to meet again itinotleki,hrINti,ayrorxet mpplioations fo Ct./IL Council cleft 1 lett, inkt at L the 20th inst And subsenbt qualilleatoui o their ,daities fu ntes of forme and email -414 second$ 1474 he prlpired an to be paid to 'leers for the The 'by-law w Moved by J. Stephenson, Auditor for t George &Inuit tel the other Moven by A Stivr,thatJc sor for t 6 1lr4144 by J. Wami son, That T for the preset • by A.. M ufltCit Th at L).briel tor for the We John Britton East Electoral year,- --Learrio. seconded. by J.: of 5,5113 8t, ar Lot 19, Con,N, ;Robert Crrt4 paid by the County That by F. Stiver, son, That the a petition to larure of Out; and, tlerk on 1 ing them to at 21), h Vi;!. as far as reia. so as to eau. that the said 11 onded by R. of :3511 ite gran -on side road that $30 be '14r pose on side he paid ae.-3)r gravel pat ton and to he don ence of J. W by A. Montt wick, That