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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1907-01-04, Page 2_ ON EXPOSIT ants e ral Merchants for he People. +++++++++++++.+++4 +++++444÷44+++++++44744 We take this opportunity of wish- 4. ing all our customers a Merry, I ma's' and a Happy cS. Pros:per- ous Hew Year. 44+++++444444efeleiefeHeletea++++ H. t++44+++++++4.++ For the Holiday Season ei X.'111a8 and New Year We have prepared -many Specials in the following departments : DRY GOODS, NOTE)* NS, MEN'S, F:URNIStlINGS, and GROOF,RIE' S We have spcially prepared Coffees and Teas. If you have any special friends visiting you, we have delicaciea in our groceries that will sail the best. : : : • . 48111190.10111111•MIIIIMMIININIffinalft •IINEW/MINNIMS0 • We are still handlin4 First Glass Dresled Poultry. Altriough the market has declined, we will nay the beat possible prices either trade or cash. We want all the First -Glass Butter and Fresh- Pas that we c3n get, and will pay good prices. Dried Apples are higher this week. - WILLIAMS and PURCELL Successors to B B GUNN ,CORNER STORE ="- SEAFORTH • PofftmasterS in Canada fur - the gluon Ospooltriv a gfin elleihing post office accommodation and service 'te small communities' at are- SEAFORTH, FRIDAY, Jan. 4, 1907. muneration of $25 per annum. There are 2,000 more who are getting less than $100 per annum. Nothhig could warrant an economy so miserly, ex- cept a desire to found a postal ser- vice in sparsely settled Dominion - but now we have it founded, smooth - working, surplus -yielding. Surely' the time has come to make some effort at paying fair vrages to the workers. The only .mail -carriers who- are ed- e4uately paid, are the railway coin- panies ; and the coaly postmasters Who are adequately paid • are a few in large cities -and they arenot post - !nesters, but politielans called to their reward. : - Poor Paid Officials.- Mhere are no officials in the -pob- lic service, either Dominion or Pro- vincial, what are, so poorly paid, con- sidering the nature of the. service they 'render, as postmasters, mail clerks and mail carriers. The *situ- ation is so aptly deseribed by "Mac" In Saturday Night that we quote his ;remarka in fuli, endorsing them most heartily, knowing them t� be true. He says e The postal serxice of Canada is one of our best boasts, and it is man- aged by competent men. There is more undileted patriotism put into the postal seevice of this country than into anything else ot or belonging to e se. The mail bag Is a thing sacred. It is handled with awo. It is meddled eVith at one's peril. The bevrhisker- ed far -user drives his Clydesdale through the snow (lefts with a mail bag under the seat eaf his cutter, the ter wrapped half breed scooting in his dogsled in the glacial north - these men are on the King' e 'business • and fear neither the tape of man nor the fury ot the storm, but make their appointed journeys. Far and near it Is understood that the carrier of the mails has the. right of way on, any road, that Ile can oeize your horse or your -cart or your boat, so that whatever happens, His Majesty's mails shall not be delay- ed. For a pittance, men ride be' day and night, cress raging tor- reirte, tramp on 'snow Shoes through blizzardo, go hungry-, frozAn.„, . sleep- less, clreeched-climb out of warm beds in the winter's dark and tramp with chilled marrow to the :village railway station; to get the prec- ious bag tossed from the elyiog car. No other public service imposes so -many discomforts on those engaged in it, and dangers, too, for the men, - carrier crosses the rives in the flood when no- other man dares it, and the mail stea,pne,r- leaves dock In the storm, that ties other vessels up. There is a devotion in this ser- vice that story writers and poets have notjnade enough of. The carrier almost worships that stiff .armful of leather that he bears- with him. • An army of postmasters and clerks are imbued with the same feeling. All tide is well enough. as far as it goes, but it is scarcely right :that our finest service should be wrung from men who are miserably under- paid. A postal service was., an ab- solute necessity In this eountryranci men •worked for nothing to establish it. The first postmaster at any one point la usually a man so muele In- terested in seeing postal conven- iences placed. there, that he care, little about remuneration. The nat- ion has imposed upon this class of men. When the pioneer p ostmaster dies, his successor receives the same pittance. It is very gratifying to read in the newspapers of a neigh - 'boring nation priase of our • postal service, but tlils country - had no eigh.t to; make a profit Cif 090,844 last year and pile it on 'the spend- ing counter, while an army of £atthfui worker, were rediculously underpaid. • The people want, the service -they! do not want a *surplus earned by in - Justice. For the preoent any profit that can be made should be cheerfully us- ed in rneking tardy increases in -the salaries of men long underpaid. There 1127tli F=2M22201/1=41C=1:0=;' - • • air is Feed your hair; nourish it; give it something to live on. Then it will stop falling, and will grow long and heavy. I Ayer's Hair Vigor is the only !genuine hair -food you can ff buy. It gives new life to the lhair-bulbs. You save what hair you have, and get more too. And it keeps the scalp , clean and healthy. , The best kind of a testimceial - "Sold for over sixty years" lea by0. AyorCo.. Lowell. Mass - Lazo mattufaeturer* or 9 SARSAPARILLA. rn PILLS. %re 17 4,) CHERRY PECTORAL. . Public Ownership* . Mr. Goldwin -Smith, in his notes in the Toronto Iun, makes the following sensible and timely remarks on the • public ownership and • operation • of public . utilities so, vigorously ad- • vocated in some quartets at the pre- sent tirie . Dr. Smith says t "The assumption of what are cal- led public utilities by Governments, national' 0r municipal, though gener- ast ally re , nable, is not an absolute dictate of. nature, or an article of our _ political .salvation. Nor is it a matter about which sweeping as- sertions can he /bade. What is the _character of the .Governeeert, national or municipal? Io it such that ;you could be sure of improvernenVvflien the management is transferred to its heats?. In •great Britain the requiter of the assumption' by municipalities of what had heretofore been the work of private enterprise Would ap- pear by recent ,accounts to have been to -say theleast, by no means Ilea, formly favorable, while the growth ofmunicipal debt has been Alarming. Here the running Of the Intercolonial Railway 'has • theretofore - been t ar from a manifest. success. A. all 'ev- • ents the private companies, to which the work has hitherto been left, and without the agency o f which it would not 'have been ounciertaken, cannot - justly. be treated as ceernorapts whom it is meritorious* to desp914. They embarked in response to _public in- vitation and, under a public guar- antee." 01111110111111100=1011MINIIIIIIIII. Canada to be a grp.at Nation,. : Prof. John MacCoun before: the ag- • ricultural • committee at: Ottawa, stated that be saw no reason why wheat should not be grown within three 'miles of *Hudson's By, so far as climatic conditions' are concerned. Dealing with the section of the coun- try from' Edmonton to Portage la. Prairie, Prof. Ma,c0oun ;said . that its productive . possibilities- !had not . yet been fully realized. The G. T. P. was going through better country eat of the Assiniboine than the :0. • P. R., avoiding the sand bill which the last named road runs through. The so called bad lands or alkaline plains had also been :found excellent Lor wheat growing., American tiers who have been accustomed to eimilar conditions in. the •United &ate -a, hafv4 been exceptionally suc- cessful. in overcoming the water and* wood difficultiesby •sinking wells and using thick • sod for building houses and for fuel. The reason -far the area capable ofproducing cereals extending so far north was because of a compensating decrease in alti- tude, and, it was Oli this -account that Prof. MacCoun made the _statement as to wheat growing practically on the shores of Hudson's •Day. "As a last vvord," declared the veteran bot- anist, "let me say that 1.amonly trying to arouse their interest. in this subject because I am getting an old man. When I am dead and many of you are dead, the people of Canada will begin to realize that this north- land 15' to them what Germany was to the Romans. It was. supposed to be a hyperborean •-climate, and un- fit far mortal beings to inhabit. Yet'. to -day Getena,n3r le one of the strong - eat nation e in the world, and that: Is 'going to be the outcome of Canada. We have more than half the contin- ent. • We can raise, first class wheat and first class womeh; oertainly we ought to rise first class men." 1 An Incident that never took place A writer in Toronto Saturday Night gete ore -the following: "There are timeo when fine clotheel are at a discount. When Sir Rich- ard Cartwright was defeated in Len- nox, in 1878, Centre Huron' was op- ened or 'him by the resignation of the sitting member. Dan MeGfIlicuddy was at that time editing the Brussels Post, in the constituency, and was breaking into political management although still in his twenties. Mr. Cartwright (for be was not then a knight) appeared on the scene with a silk hat, a Prince Albert coat, and with moustache as p ointed as a staff . „Dan 'got him- Weide at the arliost opportunity, and pointed Out. That a tweed suit and a -soft that would not be oo likely to keep the rural voters at arm's lehgth.. A In. cal 'tailor Wall PiVOUred, who worked overtime, and soon • Cartwright was metamorphosed into a bluff, bucolice looking young peewit But to the keen eye of the young political coach there was still one draw back. Cooking hio head train Side to side criticallY, Dan th,u13 admonished the candidate: "You'd get nearer the boys, Cart- wright, and they'd get nearer you, If You'd Just run a comb through your moustache, and let It draggle a- roused yea face more.'" • We are inelined to think that some person has been, poking fun at our oprightly eitY cgeternpora,ry or tiiat the writer of the above quotation has been drawing very largely on his imagination for tie !facts, as we are very *sure that no steels• in- cident as that described ever took place. Editorial Notes and Comments Montreal 'had a veilr severe snow storm on Christrnas Day, and trafic on the railwa,yrs was very much im- . peded thereby. •Winnipeg, at the oth- er end, is said to have had beauti- ful spring-like weather. We, in On- tario, lo the centre,were favored with Weather that was just right. It was old enough to be invigorating, and not- .warm enough, to be enervating. But, then we always have the best • of everything 'in' Ontario, and the most highly favored spot In Ort- tario is the county of Huron.. We read, under the heading of "Chicsago's Fortunate, Poor," that on Chriernas day 70,000 poor familieg tasted of the bounty ot these on whom ,bleasinge had been showered." Thio does not look as if prosperity is so very general in the great commer- cial city of Chicago. Several thousand poor famines that had to be fed. As It lef in Chicago So it is in most other pieces. Too, much Wealth con- centrated in too few !hands, ,as it is the ceste in the 'United States, and as lo rapidly becoming the case in Can- ada, but increases the great army of the poor, as many- of the great for- tunes are rride at the expellee of °the poor. :We also read in the same connection that in the • same city 000,00 were given to the -employees by the employers. :Why Was not this $600,000 'given in increased wages In- stead of being doled, out as a favor by Way of gill's. • One !hundred and eleven municipali- ties in the province of Ontario will vote for a local option by-law- on Monday next, the fitli of January. In these . municipalities there are 248 11- ceneed hotels. There, 'should be a big drop in whisky if the by-laws are carried in all these municipalities. W'hat a, 'heap of trouble is being saved the Whitney .Government by the in- dustry of the Temperance people in 'submitting all these by-laws. If they carry them they will be- told that Provincial Prohibition is unneces- carer ; if they all to parry them they will be told that the people do not want Prohibition, and hence it will not be right for the Government to try and force on the people a. law that they have shown they do not want. It is a pleasant thing for a political, party to 'have other people pull their chestnuts out of the fire for them, 'so they will not need.• to burn their own fingers. feowarawmasies000morweinti• Piles get quigjk •relief from Dr. hoop's Ma,gic intrnent. Remember It's made alone for Piles -and , it works with' certainty and, satisfac- tion. Itching, painful, protruding, or blind piles dieappear like magic by It s use. •Try it and see 1 -Sold by C. Aberhart, druggist, Seaforth. --V Manton& and Northwest Notes • -At Snowflekes Manitoba, Wm. H. Handford has taken over the dray business from John Fyte, who .has conducted it the past 'three years. -Mrs. .John Davidson, one of the • first women to settle In Manitou, Manitoba, district, died in that town on Monday loot. She was 59 years and 6. months old. . ,-At a Government sale ef Indian lands adjacent to Karnsick, Sask., a, few sections of unim,proved farm lanai were sold at prices ranging from $12 to $14 per acre. - Drr. Nesmith, of Sedley, Sask., while 'returning from a visit to a patient, lost control of his team of horses during a bkizzard and wan- dered for several hours before reach- ing home in an exhausted condition. ascom- -The Batik of Brier North Amer- ica, at Duck Lake, k., was. pletely destroyed , by fire Chrifitmas - night, all the bookw except the led- ger being buen.ed. -Joseph Kenta, of Winnipeg, was instantly killed by being crushed be- • tween two cars at St. Agatha. He had been married but a year and • leaves a wife and two weeks old in- fant. , -The third hotel fire within " two months occurred at Regina a few nights ago, when the Alexander hotel in that city, had a narrow escape from cleetruction. The fire Started In the basement. -A lot with a frontage of 148 feet on' Saskatchewan avenue, Port- age la Prairie, was sold a few days ago foxi $30,000. It is 'vacant land. • A lot with 18 feet frontage, next. • the Bank of Montreal, in the eame town, was sold for $325 a foot. -The hardware business of Smith & Ferguson, of Regina, has been sold • to Peart Bros. for the Isum of:$125,- 000. Included in the Sale is the well known Smith & Ferguson block, and the land on which it 15 built. The great locaI option fight at Da phin, Manitoba, culminated in th 'defeat Of the by-law by a straight vote of 164 to 124. To have carried the by-law it was necestsary to: se- cure a three-fifths vote or some 62 more votesthan received. . - K. J. Hewitt has. purchased from,. Hr.- Gregor Fraser, Glenora, the southhalf of •28-3-13,, half a mile from Glenora station. : There is 250 'acres ;broken, ten acres of wood and good water. This is one of the 'fin- est farens le the locality and Was purchased for $20 an acre. - -A disastrous fire occurred in Brandon, on Wednesday of last week. The Yukon block and the Confedera- tion Life Block were badly damaged, The Harvey Clothing Company lost $20,000 in .goods and the Kelly Hard- ware Co. $40,000. The fire startedin the basement of the hardware store. -While returning from the polls In her cutter after voting at the municipal lelections, Mrs. J. R.Spen- ser, of Seven Okes, Kildona,n, Mani- toba, Vasa stricken with peralysite and died, soon after readhing borne. She was the w1dw of a Wu-di:ion Bay officer. She wae an. Old resident of ICildonan and was 5.7 years of age. In the niorning - she wa apparently _ In the best of health and her, death Was sudden, arid 'unexpected. SAe had gooe to the polls hi the hest ot spir- its and after registering her vote ohe was on the way home when ,her, head Was noticed to drop to the side. -Owing to the scardity o coat 'and wood in the distriet a Wan- chope, Sask., ferrnere are drawing woo1 from the :Moose Mountains, a 'clietence a 90 miles. The; scarcity of Water is* also causing considerable a- larm in the same distriet. -Mrs. Norman Hicks, or Crystal City, Manitoba, -veceived a telegrane announcing the death of her mother at Rainy River. The sad news cense a:s a surprise as she received alet- ter from; her mother only a *eek be- fore her death containing an invit- ation to spend Christmas with her. '• The body was taken east to Guelph' Lor builal. very pretty wedding' took place' .at Thornbank farm, Crystal City, the home a Mr.' and Mrs. T. T. Baird, on Wednesday, December 12," when their daughter, 1 Ethel Affleck, was married to Mr. P. T. Lenn, of .Allan Park, Ontario. The young couple' after the ceremony • lea for the east and willt reside in Ontario. This is reversing the• usual or re -Mr. Jarmo N. Adair, of Ox Saskatchewan, and formerly of Mo. k - ton, Perth' county, was married ee the 12th of December to Miss Ma..., e Ann , McIntooh, daughter ef Mr. anti Mrs. Wm. McIntosh, of Inverness,' Scotland. •They are spending their, honeymoon with friends In the east, lneluding these at eMonkton and on their return will reeide at Ox Bow. -The barn of A. pergueen, South- myn, Manitoba, with all its 'contents including horses and cattle, also windmill, grain crueller, circular saw and other farming equipment, was burned on the nightt et December 24. Mr. • Ferguson was a well-to-do far- mer, but has been especially unfor- tunate, His- entire family was strick- en with typhoid quite recently, and a prairie fire last fall destroyed all hio haee -The residence of Governor McIn- nes, in Dawson, Yukon Territory, 8,nd, known as 'Government Muse, was burned on Christmas day, with all Its furniture. The buildingwas vat- ued at $100,000. It was: the finest building north a .Vancouver, and eontained much personal property be- longing to Mr. and , Mrs. McInnes. The fire is supposed to have origin- • ated from an explosion io the fur- nace. • -On October 6 last, 36 acres of the McKellar property, in Fort Wil- liam, oistuated at the rear of the public school, was sold for $100,000*. At the time this was considered to be a 'colossal figure, and many won- dered what Dr. Reason, of London, Ontario, intended doing with his purchase. A few days ago, hoWever, this same property was sold to a Port Arthur man for $156,000 gr at the rate of $4,300 an acre. . , -On Wednesday, Dec. 12, Misfil Jen- nie McLeod, youngest daughter of Rev. and Mrs. T. S. McLeod, ot Sin-. taluta, Sask., was married alt the home of her parent, to H. Smith, real estate agent of Regina.. The cere- mony was performed by Rev. Mr. Cameron, brother-in-law of the bride. The 'llaPPY couple left for Ontario, where they will spend a few weeks and rwill then go on ,tOw England for a ehortf time. ' maramiasummanuarmam ' Croup can positively be stopped in 20 minutes. No vomiting -nothing to Sicken or distress your child. A. sweet, pleasant, and safe Syrup, call- ed Dr,. Shoop/13 Croup Cure, does the work and does it quickly. Dr. Shoop's Croup Cure is for Croup a- lone, remember. Ire for Croup, that's all. It doesn't claim to cure a dozen ailments. Sold by C. Aberhart„ Sea - f or th. -A disastrous accident occurred early Sunday morning, December 23, on the St, Paul, Minneapolis and Sault Ste Marie Railway at Ender- fline, North Dakota. The train from Moose Jaw, Canatla, was due at En- derlin. at 11.45 p. ne, but that might it was about- two hours late. The en- gineer was running at :high speed in an endeavor to make up the lost time. .As' his train rounded a curve tot• before reaching the yards at nderlin a switch engine was shif t - g a string of box ears to a side rack. The cars did not clear the main track, and the paseenger train.' collided head on with the owitch en- gine. Both engines were wrecked, And the passenger ears were thrown in confusion do:ven a small embank- ment at the side ot the track. Sev- eral of the day coaches were turned bottornside up and the passengers pinned beneath the wreckagewhich todk fire from the -car stoyes. Ten persons are known to be dead, six are fatally injured arid at least 25 others were hurt. The passenger train was crowded with people going to epend the holidays at home. Most of the casualties occurred in the smoking ear and the first day coach both of which were splintered. To otop a. cold with "Preventics" is .safer than Ito let it run and cure it afterwards. .Taken at the "sneeze stage," Preventics will head off all colds .and Grippe, and, perhapt save you from Pneumonia or Bronchitis. Preventics are little tootiisorne candy cold cure tablets, selling In 5 cant and 25 cent boxes. If you aro chilly, if you begin to sneeze, try Preventics. They will surely check the cold, and please you. Sold by c. Aberhart,drug- gist, Seaforth. mmolavarimmuammamar -Mr. H. P. Dwight,. of !Toronto, familiarly known as "the father of Canadian telegraphy," •celebrated -his seeenty-eighth birthday on Saturday laet. Mr. Dwight is still gnite act- ive, and' gives close personal atten- tion to his various business inter- ests. • -A sad fatality- occurred at Bloom- field, Ont., early the other morning, WIle. Vance being burned to death.. His 'residence was discovered by tile inmatee to be an fire, • and, with scarcely any clothing, the family managed to_ get out. For some reason, at present unexplained, Mr. Vance went back -to the burning building, and was unable- to return. Not even a -chair was saved, the entire con- tents, as well as the building, being consumed: PATERSON'S COUGH DROPS Hs& by an old recipe that bas mired coughs and colds tor two gonoratione Approve; by doctors aa surely raiment tor an throat initistions. They pease the elate too. Demand the tbreseornored o' kiwi in tho red and yellow box. a THEY' WILL CURE 6:44449.....4444 - _ : 00440 A Boston schoolboy was tall, weak and sickly• . His arms were soft and flabby. He didn't have a strong muscle in his entire body. The physician who had attended the family for thirty years prescribed Scott" a Emulsion. NOW : To feel that boy's arm you would think he was apprenticed to a blacksmith. ALL DRUGGISTS; 5.0c. ND st.00 40 A. • • • • 41 • 9 • • IL • Ill • '• filli-N,S•t..1?,/iNi PRA.T.,42/1,3\VA..e.A3\42r0.\111)0 • • 0 c.• (. The La el • Theal Protects What do you look Co- --style? —ilt? —elegance? .—quality? This label guarantees them And you find it in "Progress rad Clothing STEWART BROTHERS 0 e) 0 0 0 a 0 The 100 Yedr Old Cough Cure If the throat is "raw," -chest sore -bad cough ..,...and you ache "all over" -take A .‘ Best thing you ever tried. It einies the throat -heals the lungs-eleealts up coid- and puree a cough in no them. . • - prepared, by the largest 'wholesale drug house in the worlie front the -formula in use for over a century. Big bottle, asc. At,druggists. • „ a* NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL CO., LIWOTICO LONDON, Oar Bole's %Preparation of id Friar's Cough Btiisim "rim] et ia Sisetfor fi, and 4 horses, The only Disk that does Title. tke Work while half easier on horseri--s Record Not Equalled by anything built for oultiving. A Success for k- ing Seed Bed ea Pall Plowed Iasi& For Sumner Fellows or Stubble Fields after harvest. Look for the name "BIS - None genuine without it. For Sale by Agents and Manufactured by T. E. BISSELL, ELCMA, ONT. Drops post card for Booklet "II" 4,, By -Law 0s OH! 1906 — THE ---- 0 p of Tumor naith THE or 0011 ty of Enron. -- 1 To authorize the Construction of Per. nianent Bridges in the said Town- ship, and to pkovide for borrowing the money reopilred therefor.— Whereas it is desirable 'that permanent eridgee be constructed for the use mitt convenience of the resi- dents of the municipality Sad the public at Jerge. And wbereas it is estimated Haat the cost, of eons streeting suca bridges will lie Fliteeu Thousand Dee 1D'rov r serthherra.s,thereabouts. And 8the. purptee of paying for the emotion and eonstruetion of the'ded bridgee, it necessary for the Corporation of the Townseip ef Tuckersinith to borrow the said sum of $15,000, re parnbdlewvilletrieliasn 2°theYetoar. ta,81amount required to be miss ed annually by special rate for paying the said pro. posed debt and interest thereon, is $1,103 50, And whereas the value of the wbole rateable tithe perty within the said eceorcling to-thri • last revised eresesment rOM, is $,14O,024. And whereas the totel .preeent existing debene ture debt of the raid Municipality is the sum of ex,. 15843; of wiiieh no part of tither principal or inter. est is in arrear. Therefore be it enacted, and it is hereby enacted by the Municipal teetmezl of the said Corporetion of the Township of Tuckersmith. , L. That bridges of a permaneet nature be erected and eonstructed where expedient and neceesaree within the limits of the said Municipality at a cost not exeeeding the said SOTO of ele,000.00. 2. That it shall be lawful for the raid Council tee 'take all neeessaiy steps and proceedings and enter into, on behalf of the said Corporation, ail necessary contrads or other instruments for the purpose or causing and procuring- the said bridges to be ereete ed, constructed end completed. .5 That for the purpose of Raying for the erection and construction of the said bridges, it shall be law- ful for the said Council, on behalf of the said Corpor. etion, to borrow froni any partiee willing to lend the - same, the taid sum of Fifteen Thousand Dollars at. the rate of four and one-half per cent. per annum re -payable within 20 years by equal annual nienteoiPtrifornetiPaheplaun;.toseo i nt e r fe st 4. nm see. urines tiles -miser -went of the said sum, of *sees to the lender Oiereof, it. shall be lawful for the said Counell to e,ause to be ie. sued, debentures of the said Corporation to that enema in sums of not less than /100 each, and nay - able in 20 years from the elate thereof, eith interest. at the tete of four and one-half per centum per an- num, that is to say : in 20 equal Annual payments of filtered and prineipal combined, witich said debene tures dell be sealed wish the -Corporate Beal of said Corporation and signed by the Reeve and eatintereigned by the Treasurer of the Bald Corporee time and the amounts thereby secured and agreed to be paid sball thereon be expressed to be payableat. the office of the Canadian Bank of Comnie in the Town of Seatorth. 5. That during the cumency a tie .eeid debene tures, the sum of $1,103,50, fer payment of prhictipg. and inter* of the saicl debentures, shall be levied - and solleeteeeen eaehyear, by a epecine rate sufficiere therefor on 91i the rateable property in the eale MunreTiP• hsailit14*-lew shall come into foree and effe when finallypeased, after haying received tbe siseere of the electors, 7., That the votes of the electors a the saidlawri ship of Tuckersmith entitled to vote upon this by.. law, shall be taken oh. iti-ivivam A AT ua SEVENTH DAY: OF JANUARY, 100e commeheing .at the bour of nineo'reock le the fore noon and continuing until live o'clock in the after.- oon of the same dayeat the following pieces withis he said Municipality, and by the followzng Deputy• , Returning Officers, namely : olling,Sub-Divielon No. I. -At George Bates' Egmentivilie, Gootr,e E Jaokson, Deputy Retu ; PoillrifngSub°Ine.r- e.bivision No, 2.e -At School house NO, Samuel MeGeoele Deputy Returning Officer. Polling Sub -Division No. 8.- At School Home Nes Chas. Routiedge, Deputy Bet -inning Meer - Polling Sub-Dime:in No. 4. ---At Scheel Reuse No. Robert bleCartney, Deputy Returning Onleer. Pelling Sub -Division No. 5. -At School Reese No. ,A. O. Smillie, Deputy Returning Officer. . Polling Sub -Division No. 0. -At Strontes J, Wma DeputyReturningOfficeie & That the Clerk of the said otirporation era ttend at biz offide in the dicl Township of Teekete smith, oriWednesday, the eth day of January, 1907,. at, eleven o'elook in the forenoon, to stun up the member of votes given for and against this by-law,. and the Reeae will attend at his residence on Lot. 24, Concession 4, L R. S., attwo esolock in the after. - noon, on Friday, the 28th &Wild De011aber, L900, :or the appointineat of Demons to attend et the earlona polling places and to attend at the final miming vp tlieesee'd votes by the Clerk, on behalf of pereona. ntereded in promoting or opposing the passing of his by:law respectively. ri&r.ovisionally passed this 8tli day of Deliembere A. ea SIIIILLIE,rROD'T, WRAY, lek Reeve 4.IM NOTICE. that the above lea true eopy of a proposed by -lava which bas been taken into consideration end which, will be finally passed by the Council cif the lunioi- pahty of the Township of Tuoicersinitli ein the event. of the assent of the eledore being obtained tbezato> after one nionth from the first publication- in tlie- uneosi maestro.% the date of whieh Aid publieta tion was FRIDAY, Inman -14th, 1000, and that the votes of the 'electors of the did Municipality will be • taken thereon on the day and at the hour end places - there* fixed,• A. G. 81ifILLIE f The Gift 'Giving Season, • 35.4 %4"4.1101111.11111fti% Thei gift giving season is here with its good cheer and good will. You are now on the look out for a remembrance for a relative or •a friend. What is more acceptable or useful than something to wear. We have many things you want. A few hi OLL4RS TIES STJSPENDERS FANCY VESTS e •SMOICIaTO JACKET We would be pleased to sh.o you a large range of all the latest in these gooas. RJGHT BRos. F URNISKER 21 SEAFOR Til SOX BUIE - OVERCOATS By -Law N ovf 1906 A .BY-LAW To Prohibit the Sale of Liquor the - Township a rivo-03<E1 IzZS WE IP 3i3; The muntelpai Council- of the • ship a.ruckoranith hereby enacts, as 1, --:-That the sale b' retail of spieitoue, fermented, or otber manufactured liquors is and semi be prohibit- ed in every tavern, inn or -other house or plaeeef pub - lie entertainment in the said municipality, and the sale thereof, exeept by wholesale, is and chola be prohibit.ed in every shop or place other than a. houeeof public entertainment in the said rnunicie palitee 2. --That the vote of the electors of the said Town. ship of Tuckersmith will be taken on the by-law by the deputy -returning officers hereinafter named, on MONDAY, ThE 8.1E. VE1711 j?)VJANUARY Store Overflowing vChrisTinth as Furniture wealth of stylish furniture for housekeepers—almost sums nt- reasonable to expect to sell Fe much, And yet, if merit i furniture, workmanship and prices will appeal to sae, and we are bound that it did, you'll certainly inspect our splendid new stecl! before investing elsewhere. VOMIT TTISTID-P1E?T1'_A=II\TG-- Plorptly attended to night or day, Night and Setday calla answered at ale relaidence of S. M Holmes!, Goderich street, opposite the Methodist church, Seafoith. S. T. HO Manager. .ft Notice. • Notice ishereby given that the $2nd annual meet. Ing of the tuenters of the Hay Townhip Farmers Mutual Fire insurance Company will he held at the Town Hall, Zutioh, on Tuesday, January 8, 1907, at one„o cloak p, m. Busuiess,-Receeeng the direct- ors': auditorf,' and treasurer's reports; election of directors and Such other buelness ae may be neees- sary for the geed and weliare of the Company, Al - members are requested to attend. 4"1.k' HENRY EILBER, JACOB KELLERMAN,. • Secretary. 2036e3 • President. -• .Pouitry Wanted. The undersigne is prepared to pa- y the higheet cash price for ell hindr, of poultry, live and dressed, during the months of f4ept.ernbcr, October, November aud Dee.ember, delivered every Tuesday, on Lot $0, Concession 2, McKillop. If.drced, mud be dry plucked necks pulled, and I 24 hours before killing. No thin or creoked hr-a',t Imes or deform- ed birds of Any kind taken. Fell particulars how to kill and dress will be given on appileetion. • ROBER7 D. MURDIE, kesiorth. J2 One Tlionrand, Nino Hundred and Seven commencing at nine o'clock lan the morning and eon. tinuing till five o'clock in the efter000n at the un- dennentioned. places : In Polling, Bub -Division No. 1 -At Geo. Bates' Hall,. Egniondville ; george E. Jackson, Deputy Se. ensuing Officee lan l'olling Sub -Division No. a -At School House - No. 8 ; Samuel MeGeoch, Deputy Returning Officer-. In Polling Sub -Division No. a -At School No 4, Chas, ltoutledge, Deputy Returning Officele lan Polling Sub -Division No. 4. -At Sebool Hoppe - No. 3, Robe McCartney, Deputy Returning Officer. In Polling Sub.DiVi1,1011 No. 1 -At Bchool House. No. 1 ; A. (4. Smillie, Deputy Retarning Officer. in Polling Sub -Division No. 0-4 peoree Strong's • Hall, Wm. Sinclair, Deputy Rettuaing Officer- • 3. -That on the 28th day of December, A. D.,10011,, at his residence, Lot 24, Concession 4, L. R. &, of the Township -of Tuckeremith, at the hour of two o'clock in the _afternoon, the reeve Quill appoint alt writiog, signed by hirnsele two Timone to atten& at the final summing up ,of the voteli by theelerk, and one person to attend at each polling place on behalf of the persons interested in and deerone of promote ing the lading of this hy-law, And a like number oa behalf of the persons interested in and desirous of eppoeeig the passim( of this be -law, 4.--aliat the Clerk of the eau! efunieleal Conneet of the Township of Tian keremith shall attend at hie-. office at the bour of ten olocet in the forenoon on the Otil day of January, A. D.19(0, to unl, up tbe number of VOWS given for and egeenst this by-law. 5 by-law anal came into eperatane and he of iull force and elfeet on and after the feet day of May ;met offer the final paselier thereof. Coup -i1 Chaneser, November 17th. 1900. A. G.SmiIIie, Robt. McKay OLERIC REEVE. • _NOTICE Take Pritice that the above is a true vopy of a pre. posed ey-law whieb has been Wain into temilider- atien ev the Municipal Counell ef the Township or Teeestamith and which will be filially paestel by the said 01,1139ii (in the event of the aisent of the eleets ori )eing obt-ained thereto, ae providM by the lege or Means() Mt) after one month from the firet Ji'M'on thereof in Tits Ilt-noe Exreenelt, the 11,st* of hich first publication was FaIDAYI tbe Fame esiekTii DAY OY DY,09149149, NM and that at Ma- har, day and plaece therein fixed for teeing the otyes of the eleeton3 the polls will he held. 20354 A. G. SMILLIE Clerk.