Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1884-09-05, Page 66 The Dead Alive. TEE STRANGE seone OF A YOUNG PdAN FROM MONTREAL. "Do I look like e •corpse!" The question issuing from the lip a of a healtheelooleing young man, apparently not yet 30 yeara of age, implied that the enopander of the interrogatory was mazy. I" No, indeed you don't." i" Wen I've been dead and buried a yearn' continued the young man,-" and now I want a ticket to Montreal, Cana - de. Although a corpse, I want to travel fast, and get to the home I left years ago; so1 want t o -get off on your first train to -morrow morning." This conversation occurred lastSatur• day evening, and after Ticket Agent Abbott had supplied. him with a ticket with a long string of coupons attached, and had booked the young man for a berth on. the sleeper, he entered into conversation with him and elided e strange and romantic story. Several yeara ago a young man naLed Cunningham, a native of Canada, whose parents. resided in Montreal, determined to set out to see the world, like many others, having become tired of the monotony of home. He had acquired the art of telegraphy and was a very fair operator, and with this stook in trade on hand he left home and, his parenta full of youthful vim, expecta- tions and. hopes for the fature. The United. States offered a fine field for his youthful ambition, and he soon obtained a situation. From point to point he made his way to the great West, and 'Gine nye yeara ago reached California. Having tired somewhat of his wander- ings, aud ;mowing a good position, he settled down and remained, it is believ- ed, in San Francisco. He oorresponded regularly with his parents, and he had the replies addressed to the hotel where he resided. .Abont a year ago he again became restless and coecluded to continue his tour of the country without writing to his parents to notify them of his intention, he no soon- er conceived the idea of travelling than he carried it out, •and that same evening left for Texas. The night of his depar- ture the hotel was destroyed by fire and several persons perished in the flames. Cunningham was supposed to -have been one of the trictians, and his parents were notified, to that effect. In compliance with their request the ruins were search- ed d all th d bf an n y e suppom od o Cunningham was found. The grief- stricken parents telegraphed to have the charred and unrecognizable remains sent on to Montreal, Canada, for inter- ment, whieh order was obeyed. Upon arrival in Montreal a hearse was wait - hag to carry the -body to the family tomb, and the family went into mourn- ing for their lost sou and brother. About two weeks ago CIInninghant Secured a leave of absence, and deter- mined to visit New Orleans, arriving here last Friday naorning. His life having been insure& and having some business to traneaet with the company, who have a branch office here, he went there and introduced himself. To his consternation he then heard that he had been dead a year, having perished in the fire at the Californian hotel. Of course he denied this emphatically, and inquired after further particulars, when the story came out. Cunningham at once proceeded to the Western Union Telegraph office and wired to his father the fact that he was still alive, and. that his supposed carpet, Was that of soraebody else. Last Saturday morning a reply came to the effect that he was believed to be an inn pantor. Send me you mother's maiden name," said the telegram. C an - ningharat anxious to establish his iden- tity, complied. Another mune "proof not satiafactory. You will have to come on here to settle the matter," and th,en Cunningham realized that he would • have to comply in Order to remove the impression on the minds of his parents that he was dead. AS soon as this fact became apparent he proceeded to the Louisville aud Nashville ticket office to purchase a tieket, when the cenversation ensued which appeared above: Cunningham left on the 8:20 morning train, and will reach his home about Tuesday night. Who can Portray the feelings of his father and mother when he once more erabraoes them a Con- vinced that he had perished, mourning him as one lost to them On earth forever, following his remains to the grave, and. weeping at his untimely and horrible . fate, what must be their joy to filed that. he is still alive and well, ? —New Orleans Picayune. Flour Made of Wood. Letter from the Catskills to the New York Sun : The chief industry up here is producing wood -flour, a kind of cousin to.wood-pulp. It Was first manufactur- ed. in the Catskills about nine years ago, emcl now over twenty mills are in full blast. The process is exceedingly siraple. Any soft -wood. tree—poplar is the favorite—is felled and. drawn to the rain. The bark and boughs are removed, and the trunk put in a. machine which is nothing but a lead pencil sharpener on. a large scale, with four or more knife- edges inatead of one. On starting the machine the pencil sharpener revolves with great swiftness, and in a few min- utea converts the log into a hundred miles of fine, clean shavings. These are ' ground and bolted exactly as in a. flour mill. The product is a soft, fine, yen lowishly-white flour, similar in appear- ance to a very well ground cornmeal. It possesses a slight woody smell, and is - almost tasteless. It is put up ha large bags, and then is despatched, unmarked, to the buyers. I tried to find out who purchased the article, but with no BUCCOSS. The wood - miller was not very communicative. "It makes," he said, amain I don't know how much exactly. One log may -give five bags, and it may give ten. It sells well—that is pretty tolerable. I reckon 1 clear about a8 or $9 a day out of it—perhaps more. I never figured it up. What's it good. far ? Good many things. It's used to stifen pa.per, bat if you put in too mueh the paper gets orittle. Pepper stook is much dearer than poplar flour, and that's why they put it ire If you mix the flour with linseed. gum and tbiled ' oil, you. may get a kiad, of oil cloth. Soro.e folks mix it with meal to give to pigs and other enimals. 1 guess it is good, but t never give it to my hogs, and. even those fel- lows give a to some other fellow's orit- tore and not their ewn. Yes, I have heard that some bad contractors mixed. it with meal for army and Indian sup- pliees but I don't take much etook in the story, because they could buy sour meal as cheap as poplar flour. It wouldn't nay to mill pine, caner or hem lock; they are worth too much as Ural ber. But any wood that isn't used tha way oan be milled hate/flour. 1 us poplar almost altogethke but when run short of logs I grind up buttonball birch, elm, or willow." The farmers dislike the new industry as it promises to play. havoc with th forests, which are bath an attraction t the boarder and a protection to agricul- ture. The tanneries years ago used ti nearly all the oak and .henalook ; th lumbermen have stripped the countr practically of pine, cedar, and walnut • the °hair factories are consuming th hickory and rnaple, and now the wooed - flour mill promises to grind up what re- maining trees there may be. Berfralo Bones.. A letter to the Boston Transcript says One cold day last fall while in one o the northern Pacific cities, I saw a box oar standing on a side track and a man busy unloading something from mwagon into the car. From a distance I could not make out what kind of merchandise he was handling, so I went up to the wagon to satisfy my .curiosity. Fancy my aruazement when I found the mer- chandise nothing more nor less than— bones. Having found out what it was I at once proceeded with the illogical but altogether natural inquiry, What is that stuff ?" "You're a tenderfoot, I guess," said. the man. I pleaded guilty. "Well, sir, these -are buffalo bones. We farmers are all through with our fall ploughing, and past now we gather these things as fast as we can sell 'em. What's done with 'em? We oan sell all we can gather right here, and get $8 e ton for them. There shipped to St. Louis, and there they're ground up and sold for fertilizer. I don't know whether the buffaloes was much obliged to us for driving 'em off from their old stamping ground, but anyway they've left us their bones as a kind of legacy, and we make good. use of 'em sir. There are two or three carloeds of buffalo bones shipped from here every day now,and will be till snow flies. Yes, they're shipped from most any piece of any size all along this line as far out as Bismarck. • Well, I must get this load off. There are two or three other teams waiting their turn." The Awful Taste of Human • Flesh. One of the junior officers of the Thetis talking to•day on board the ship of the charges against the Greely party, sail: "Here, on this very spot, one of the sur- vivors held us through all one night, telling, if words can tell, of his .first taste of human flesh. He would give years frorn his life to forget it; but he said that the first taste, the sensation of having -between his teeth the flesb of one who had once been his friend, was with him always. Waking or sleeping, he seemed to feel his lips pressing the smooth, flabby meat that naust be chok- ed down somehow if he would live. And then the inhuman, savageway of getting itt Each feeder upon such food nmst out off his own shreds of flesh; no friend could be found to perform this horrible office. Every man, if he would eat, must of necessity be his !awn but- cher, and these canabalistio (genies, these midnight feasts, were secret. The little beaten paths, worh smooth; be- tween the graveyard and the wretches' tent, told its tale. But every dweller in that tent shut his eyes and refused to see. Body after body was stripped of flesh, but none of those that trod that little path dared speak of this., No man asked a question at the too common sight of a starving wretch creeping up to the only fire at midnight, carrying in his hand a strip of flesh. As he thrust it into the flames on the end of a point- ed stick, no one of his companions says a word, and when tearing the smoking flesh with his teeth, he lies down, and as another of the would-be sleepers, rises up and pee silently down' that mysterious path, k ife itt ess his ffeots of 1 as the sea The d eaten ir weak hand, it is easy to g horrible purpose. The after these ghastly feasts was as aw dementupon the mangled cor mere thought a what they h brought on nanSea, and in th state. the stomaoh refused to r tain this human flesh. Is it wonderful that these men ,will carry that eensation of chew- ing human flesh forever? "1 hope and pray I may forget it when I dio,» was :the only prayer the wretched cannibal could truly utter. It was his heaven of heavens to forget that awful, sickening taste." The Spur of the Moment. Occasionally, very awkward conse- quences have been known to follow from acting on the spur of the moment. It is related of Lord Ellenborough that when on one occasion he was about to set out on circuit, his wife expreseed a wish to accompany him, a proposition to which his Lordship assented, provided there were no bandboxes tucked under the seat of his oarriage, as he had too often found there had been when honored with her Ladyship's -company before. Accordingly they both set out together, but had not proceeded far before the Judge, stretching out his legs wader the seat in front of him, kicked against one of the flimsy receptebles which he had specially prohibited. Down went the window with a bang, and out went the bandbox into the ditch. The startled coachman immediately began to pull up, but was ordered to drive on and let thing be where it was. They reach- ed the assize town in due course, and his Lordship proceeded to4 robe for the court. "And now, where's my wig?" he demanded, when everything else had been donned. "Your wig, my Lord," replied the servant tremulously, "was in that bandbox your Lordship threw out of the window as we came along 1" Working Around. a Point. About the 1st of July a Chicago fruit buyer went over to St. Joseph, on the Michigan shore, to view the peach crop prospects, and he found one orchard owner who was feeling so very blue that he said to him: "Now, then, I'll give you a check for a thousand dollars for your fruit as it stande." " No, I couldn't do it," replied thegrower, after some hesitation. "It would seem to be doubting the Lord.." Two weeks after that, when the prospects were still poorer, he appeared ixi Chicago, and said he guessed he would take ,the thousand dollars. But it will b doubtingthe Lord," observed the buyer. "Yes, it probably will; but I've con- cluded to doubt Him on peaches, and make up for it by hanging on to Wen min cabbage." • iestanstwee. The s Wind ing ataclii Actio give t A tt on he d nee no sMn. All (In: obeli If. TEIO MORRIS pl st, trongest and most sat*facto ye ' mt4de. For pumping wate* sa , e p g grain or driving it4 lig ry, ha no eqUal. . I I. U . S I 'i PUMP% m nu aettire iron Lift and boub:e orc I' pe, whioh are guaranteed to she on ck o p mps and hose kept constant y e t 1. If do not give satisfaction ers d e�aedtc the undersigned, MR - 0., jro, ptly att aded to. STil 52 . M. MORRIS:: Q06 Whcle trolle Stoc eldors but n gred andi be e grade of lot merit ill Thos hieki wet°ill d them. A RA RORA N WATCH. plant peed nly ar move id at er m e rea g of well CO r Seafor as a and a.1 in Sea peran brand served paid t Renee posite M a N $EA Ha class r annornlic that ev.(t prove peeper the sh to see many on ha owned and,. co* al watohmoate agents. Ncithin ents will be Mad rims of ordlinar es. The ziove September wohaeing a fin to wait an se NITER, and ViCinitI. B RGEOS OF T E - RES .AURAN'r, S AFORTH, - mp e e stock of Confection n4sI of Fruits and Vegetnbleis frsh. Ice cream and em- s always ready. The, est rs and Tobacco. Lnnoh hour. Every atteraion ers. A call solicited( the pl pared, JAS. B Glass' bread rie Cig asattb be rk t ce—directly op- aforth. RGE . •always on 4.ncl h my new m nning order, I ng to my one enlarged p achinery, I a to turn out eat notice, a I my old c *own. A la o trade with • 11 LEN MILS. s now in first- heve pleasure in neers and frilinds emises and im better than ver rsteclass work on d Will be pleif.sed st mere ancl as ge stock of gods anal. 111 11 11 G. VA E MOND B'S G OOERY SEAFO TH. Parties wishing to purohase Penh Grocer ee of the Cho °est • Brands, are 1 partio larly requested el call at the Popal ' Grocery, Sta. k'a Block, Main Stre,l Seaforth. I ha le , ow e 'fine s oc/ :of the est Sugars i the market, f all brands, and wil ve 1 , 1 FIFTE 0 POUNDS Fill ONE DOLL4R. ESH HONEY., I h ve as fine a lot of extracted Honeyscan be found. in the mer et at 15 o lis per pound. - As, us a oelebra ! lvtays specie 1 ured m ii eats h All n ham s ivited, orNDys R AN IN Fili ALI 8 MO c., don We sel CHOICE TEAS cheap and good. Ro b's Cured Hans: and 'Meats n hand. The hams are ed fine this Biprocess. Cuieden, 'having been an improv lesale and retail. s of Family Groceries' always Inspection respectfully in- : HUGH. ROBI3i —King's Specific, a sure owe sia, always on hand. ETER FOUNC) Y MACHINE SHOP L BLAST AGAI rts ts, wi Jo of repairs of Agricultural 1111 le• Engines, Boilers, Saw Mill W rk, h despatch. I Abell's Horse power and Nam tt Threshe , 3 w MilliRigs, Sta ionary and Port 'ble Engines, ith " Victar " double Huller and "BLrd. sell ' Clo er Machines, dm We ale 'k ep on hand repahs for MI Muhl and ongite 1 ade by John A ll. , A large li ok of Plow Points &c., kept const lY onlhan Aliso o an s ppl y he short.Bt Plee.se 856x26 PORT B OS., Wroxeter APL S. APPLES a IV It - castings done ith despatch. e ti with any &die e in the trade on ossible notice. tis a Itrial. '?HIT 1/19, Qu?e ES :DONALI & 0 IL, tree, tondo C., England, lad to correspond witli Apple are*. chants and Shippers with a view' to Spring business. They will facilities to customers requ Innn30 ILL he • era, Mei ntumn ve the su Mgr ALEX. L, GjIBSON Begs to annou ce to the Iub1io that he has commenced to o rate the iiVROXETER !WOOLLEN FACTORY - ared to give end that he wilil be pre god value •TWEOS, UNION TWEE En FLANNELS, PLAIDING I WINCE and varieties STOO FULL .0 OTHS, CUSTOM OA Spinning and Fulling pro ed to. ` Parties from a distance nomible, have their Roll them, and as he has put good working qrder and but efficient workmen *arranted. ; Remember the Wroeet ALEX. L. GIB PR 5, YARNS. DING, ptly attend - ill, as far as home with the Mill into mploni none all work is Mill. PRIETOR :13 spVol.LV2 ornl lVattluoylT 10 •s/scoLy lialttV ff TO tIAND THIS WEEK —A4— J. L. S I A CONSIGN NI1 OF VELVETEENS ¶JASH MERES, !DRESS 0430IDS 1 ald. In all the ne est alt es. ACES, .EMBROIDERI FRINGES, These goods are e s re to ensure emcee d are offering grea ummer Goods. L. S 0 a V V SEAFO EAFORTH HORS 1• tra val berg ORNEB of Jarvis and door to the Presbyte ' t. All diseaseE of Horse the domesticated anima the infirmary or elsewh tice. Charges modera terinary Surgeon. P. tortaary Medicines kept TH 8, e, and are ant room, ins in ell TH, INFRMARY. derich Streets, next Ch h, Seaforth, , cattle heap, or any , succeLiully treated re on the shortest . Ji4 W. Ems; .—A lale stock of constant' en Mud. PLOWS! • .1k. Car Load of Genuin South Bend CHI LED PLOWS & syLKy PLOWS ! —JUST RECEIVED AT— O. C. WILLSON'S gricultural Implement Wareroom Seaforth, Which *ill be sold at old prices, notwithstanding the inoreaee of 10 per cent. import duties, the subscriber being determined to keep those valuable Plows in stook, iMported One Hundred and Fifty of them anew days before the rise in the tariff; cOnsequently, he is enabled to sell them at former prioes until the present stook is xhausted. Call and see those Plows before buying a common or in- ferior artiole. Every Plow gnaranteed to give Benefaction or no sale. A full stock of Maesey Rea,pers and Massey Mowers, Toronto Reapers and Toronto Mowers, Toronto Coed Binders and Maesey's Low; Down B' der, and Sharp's Rakes, all of which will be sold cheap and. on reasonable terms. Repairs of all kinds always on hand fOr the above maohines. Don't fail to see my stook before baying a machine. 0. C. WILLSON, AllOn Street, 8eaferth. NEW MILLING FIRM IN SEAFORTH. TBE SEAFORTH ROLLER MILLS, LATE THE RED MILL. MdBRIDE & SMITH, from Strathroy, Having bought the above mills, and refitted them throughout with all the bated and best !machinery that could be procured for a GRADUAL REDUCTION 13iLLER MILL, And the iesu1t attained is, they have one of the !best mills in the Province. Farmers an now get all their GRISTING and CHOPPING done in Seaforth, and have it home with them the same day, and Satisfaction Guenanteed. FIJ T_TR; 33R.A.1\T .A.1\143 81-101R4'S For sale 4the ton or in less quantities—FOR CASH. Cash for any ;quantity of Wheat MR. Mills. McBRIDE & SMITH. HOMAS SMITH will personally superintend the Seafo4. Roller T 11 EJ a- i•T. 1 1 1 We show this week a fine range of Table Cloth.:I Table Napkins, D'Oyles, yl‘welsi, and all kinds of Linen Goods. Extra icod value in WIltite and Cream Muslins anci. Sateens, suitable for Ladies' and Children's Dresses. Embroideries and Insertions for Trimming. Mantle and Dress Silks cluiap. Full stock of Paliasols from 30c to $4,00. J" .A. MIL I M S 0 1\T., SAFORTEE SEMI-ANNUAL STOCKTAKING. CHEAP SALE FOR OASH t f. McLoughlin' Seaforth. Imme RINTS, UCKS, D TRAW H refer. The ba1anoe of Millinery Stook to be cleared out regardless of s fresh and good, and cheaper than ever. Good Bu prices 4uting stocktaking. se bargains in every lidepartment all this month. C RE SS GOODS, CRETONNES, HOSIE7,GLOVJ NIMS, COTTONADES, SHIRTING, TWEEDS TS, reducke'n to prices that must attraict the atte Groceri taken at eas ASHrIRES, , PARASOLS, FELT AND ion of every oat. ter an Eggs cLOUGHL/No Whitney's Block, Seafortih, SEPTEMBER 5, 1884 SEAFORTh TOITE AND TaTWA EMPORIUM, C M. WHITNE R ways keeps on hand a fall line of tles'' latest styles of OK, BOX AND PARLOR STO ES, eir beauty shows them and the ice sells them. TINWARE 't° Aeernemivaegairilind aendof rTigahbtleinaprirdicpeo. Pocket le atWeverylo have: arneplroicteosf. G r a dalelsoariurPtgtnZ odiWanaYdn siguareektne. tie:Kset°atl*'. in stock for preserving, nee. All sizsk ax4d prices. EAVETROUGHING. All kinds of Jobbing Work prom at ended, and satisfaction gearan Parties wanting goods in my r will pay thet*i to see my stook oorapare prices. &Worth Che: p Stove ce Tin Ho 0. M. WHITNEY, Late Whitney Brothers, ti THE PIONEER HARDWARE STOR , - STONE InLOCK, WINGELAM , HEADQUARTERS FO Washburn & Mo TWO-POINT Seel -Barb Fencing Wi LE AGENTS FOR VIE WO /14N & WARD LEBRATEP BARREL OHU See them before you buy any et Boot brands of NGLI8i4 WHITE LEA —AND - 11 Li seed wad B Farm and Garden Utensils at bot om prices. JAS. A. CLINE & 00. TEAS AT WHIOLESALE PRICE —AT THE P ST OFFICE STO We nier off not do s have just reeeived a large consign - t of Teas, which we intend jobbing. t wholesale prices. If you iactve )lready tried Charlesworth's T ate o at once. Fipe Pounds of Young ontor -$1. Fi e Pounds of .our Fijjty ent Tea for $2. .Fi e Pou92,ds of. our Sizity ent Tea for $2.50, f Five Pounds of our Sevent five Cent Tea for $3.00. 'OrlIr three pound Tea for $1 is su ior t • amp 40o tea in the market. . A. OHARLESWORT WANTED. BUTTER AND EGG AT THE Grocery Department —OF-- DUNGAN & DUNCAN Main Steeet, nleaforth. CHEAP SUGARS & CHOICE TEAs —4.ND A— STOCK oP G1?0C.ERiEs to sele*ot from. Farmers consulting their own interests 'would do well to bring their Butter and Eggs to the MONTREAL 110 USE SEAFORTH WOULLEN MILLS j BE to inform hose lindebted to nio naa &culturing or1 bookiiccounts, that owing to the 4ntlre destructon of My mill by fire, 1 ink compelled to call on you for a rompt settle.. ment 01 your accoues, as the s tks mud b� I hoe a socond speed will not be memoir,' 639 A• VANTAGNOND• 1. 1! Nbte be 1:-:313Vs, etsh:efe 1 8Siitarer r laiwtfvooitunf ghnaB?: atti ihnaQee. i tai, a r i ur av ye:Tanireoiomr se enar :I:Downs: ol ftraeags, t 084ewiewi n3a;t80 0:0,:i at e di Ho the Ottlf . , re are three case fro . e eithriutfitireeptoecalittYnitri 1::nueeltineasfom'u!s' s ea ofi hi, • friends of Mr. Mow ......A Toronto telegrem en, the other do eir bust of Hon. (i: 1o'• ir of :let:sdrryel anLede,exbooprekskeno: te lay pleased -with W igi te MoParlin, Cinciena q countered so -much ice a . aienatidar iii; ---6 Aretnart:itaopupneda en Pensacola Florian, fi MaI to move forward.: T , t forward and foned the Ordered, 23 balls in 'his ; as isid on the track.; mom man named Bola p of Huichinerook, : hasaor: ed to death by a bid/. ed been chained, and go bile trying to get him see Broth and gored him. 143shiewkill adas wereea,bband: tent with a rnilitain r .—There are a lilarge lame en and. the Ottawa Valle oms from a-milten, badly al, ziiktaliteevotyliage elarsarate rde tare 4 t o in. e,onnection with the lief expedition. J. T. Lariat We, is organizing the party de it trey le so ei:t ihf rs ;4 itiI x11 es . - --ey inTugh:eienlahf:yrra rd on Chal endsor, a big Nendoui, as tied in . the Ban* yar undoubtedly been plag4 ale for it suddenly Made, the lad and broke the chair c.ious animal mangled the bA :a terrible manner, and te ears nearly off. A geralern tensing along the street, rate away, or the lintle probably have been !kale was immediately shot by tt 17to jhehe MG°ilviteirhe °Dr -e eGpal4e Ttmraelrl the names of some militia O. eavices can be -obtained to nthe contingent of 0 mune' it will be sent to aid adon. Preference re who toped und.em ia the Red Riven -en somo French-Cenediaa Dine be taken, as it is expecte majority of the vonagen roonelinnegh-fCoraevalitialintsee. rsAia:vilialli one.. .---A special; from Bra ork, say that. at Fall Cre4 county, Pennsylvania, 84 person entered nt boarding - id.oar people were asleep, a 'a wife and another ; man nt an attack was Ulltde eietor and wife. The lett The assailant found $400 the bed aud bedding, but 16,Med in a bed cettilt. Pass . Oat room the skulls -0 ; temple were crushed, but Pend. The first weeman. a.1Most instaetly. Tim on lent accounts, *ere 8411 liv h, spes of recovery. , Township 9014 COURtil ! clerk's office on the ev:enine August. All , the rnerals The reeve in the chair.. . meeting read; and eon& - .following accounts were hal 1 on motion of T. B. nand by a, -Sanderson, were o i paid, viz: J. W. Green, $ - i half year salary, e37.50, ,ringing bell half year i en1- :02 Samuel .Willis,15 n :63.75. ' A. petit -ion fel= t ;Christian. ),Tereperancie Uh. .iisehouto.edr duinriurgireonhiebeitra Itt of profane language on, 'On. motion the petitien aud the the clerk was Metall° ledge receipt of the aerate rag instructed to draft a tei itig by-law No. 10 (Ai 180 of taxation was struck at t'l the dollar for all purpOsese Was introduced and read , and. passed, levyingthe reeve reported ihavingne .enanty treasurer VAS• appropriation, and having. :Mae to the i village tre • treasurer was inetruoted payments Mow dee, a be emincil adjourned: to Vara Tuesday of Septemb :nail of the menet. . , ' nnennnaem.--iCouncik ra, bury. Meraben all arese read and and approved. inhe icannts were ordered to be to PLDonald,tCut eWs' a.inPld89: PaCer uefe n .h° arb :copy rt . a to , 1 gravel paid. Moved y WI taded by Daniel Menle, 3, authorising the: Ron parate school trust es tion No. one, to borrow th. r the erection' of schnol la t and adopted.—Cattie -c . n ehael Murniemme4nde nley, that echool i sect Rfliended by detexhinn lot ; 10, from schoel section flexing said lot to scboel --Carried. Moved by, Beeonded by Wm. Arn ib 0414eaniktirhesf'cdvr oibzillia.re t15.T. ;f:oserallattdoref:enar teed two and three-eigath anilar for county puitpos and onenaalf nailbn elao t be instructed - to levyithe , 41 ired by the different sn j n our township presented , B 0 0 os i ld, el ci'd r b. My.:01433i GeorgeanbY, 4; He s eo 1 lii k be inetruoted to !not -in 14elEardal:til'tilaleTliee.t°hCnvelit'iihn3nOeilltbilf°'h14441adani f5r' 3 - :41 ' t