Loading...
The Wingham Times, 1888-09-07, Page 2see teear e. • lase • -pleasure was expresat-the marked i e aliam itcin Idleimprovement roub cnsoltaolc 1 iterttturot�l 4s ia 'r;,, ezer-.-e., p x+ uentl y alio imperfectly Laugh 11n £i q y Ji'RIDAY, SEPT. 7, 18t?8. cause was to be atilt' in the liluitt,cl truowledge, colts e 1:nt on limited SUPPOIIT TUE lrjja:SVS. general reading i id research by touchers. 1'iere t ha reflection-un- I1i view of the by•s now bell; !necessary ee; a tllill_1 -was cost thatsubmitted, it behoove every i teneYer ! teachers ught to t'i d more tliue in to eaialidly consider the situation. i their libraries anal les: in the corner Ilasistiug prejudice +aglit to btl; laid iteroeeries. In an 'er aside and the matter t'eitlect by asldi'g lit was stated c / nu i half the schoollssfin ' these queetions : \\ lull will be the l:esult if the bylc vs are curried 'What if defeatedflat some towns in Ontario aro dest'haed to retrograde o already rapidly apparaut. Wing• been steadily ad- eaks well for its ise, its facilities. is : Will its present o trade of the sur - sustain a town of lam ?' With timber --that nota fear a retrograding -is ve halm thus far ha vaueing. That s • 3ocatiou, its enterp But the questio j ides:ries and t rounding countr the size of Win pretty well eider. sted end farming less 1enumerative th u formerly, there is little likelihood of our country trade inereasing,uuleswe draw from smaller places and fro a greater distance, As soon as con deuce is shaken in the growth and pr•speets of a place, even existing indite 'ies gravitate to larger coutres. It w' 1 bo admitted that to prosper, we tin st not only retain what WO have, but a tract more, We believe ''that exteudiu present prosperous in- dustries is jus as beneficial as getting new ones. 111iny opposed to grauting bonuses, or ren to extending aid, admit that t lose places judiciously doing these t lags are the ones that are growing and prosperous. At present we dal only refer our readers • to Berlin, Li towel, Woodstock, Galt, Brantford, etc. We believe he proposition for the chair factory •s well received on all sides, so we 1 ave it for the present. As to Messrs Gilchrist, Green es Co., What have hey done ? What are 'they doing? What do they propose • to do? The , T. R. agent is author- ity for the statement that last year they shipped .omething over 100 oar loads of fur iture-e-on an average two car load- a week. July and August are tie quiet months of the year. Yet the averaged over $5,000 in shipments each month. They averaged betwe n seven and eight for months this ye. r. They have on their •floor today over $6,000 worth of stuff broken up an shaped. Some have the impression hat the renting of a wareroom iwpli d a large unsold stock on hand. The t et is they can't keep up with orders. They tell us their ,present connections would take the output of the fa tory with 100 hands employed. Tod y they have a trade and great demai d for goods in Nova Steitia,New Brun -wick, Newfoundland :and Prince Ed rd island. Three nen in British Co umbia have express - ca etron_g desires o have their goods. •But they say wis( ly, Why ship there when they can't ' supply the hoeio ='rade, But what -lse do they bring `.o town? Over million feet of :umber is used y arle, cortin; from $10 to 6650 per t Iousand. Take 35 ;elands at the low rate of $1 per day rend calculate it fo a year. ' But they 1tsevt: hands gettin r nearly twice that 'iaum. Any taxpay r can figure this • out for himself anc see what money is `orought to town. A statement fro Mr, T, Bell was ;lot received in one to insert in this issue. We b lieve it is equally i wvorabie, however, . Some tell us this is satisfactory, a d better let this natural developmei t continue. Weil, if the makers of these propositions are willing to put forth greater ever• hies, to iuvest ri re capital, to run greater riskit, ;ill . E which are certain rte redound to the material prosperity and development of the town, and coyer all possible ,'irks by good secur- ity, w}iy should n the offer bo taken advantage of? a ven assume that the town had to run a little risk. Have net individuals t• run risks at times, its business? W1 at is a corporation but an aggregate .f individuals? We have here a Chan.e to add about 115 to our present .tag of workmen in town, and a good y sharp of these will be heads of fain} les, is ib not worth evhlle ?, eighteen iurpeetoirs W to say that mime wa per cent of thiel schoo tricts. The pt ogress 1 was quite up to What light reasonably be expected. The ajority believed history to be badly taught, and were of opinion that tl text book3 were unsuitable. Mr. Ross advised the inspectors by ell neans to call the atteution of tertiehe .to the necessity of encouragiug;outdool names. Those was a difference of op lion as to the extent to wli4ch goo manners had been inculcatejl by th • teachers. But four of those ,presen had given lec- tures, as urged by he law, in their respective insecto tes. The proposal to limit thirt c ass certificates to counties Was !ado ted without debate, by a large rhejo ety. The talk on teachers' institut: elicited the fact that 80 per cent of tie teachers in the Province attended the leetings,whieh, 1Ir, Ross said, was a 1 rgor proportion than in the States. The Minister of Education was tencle ed a hearty vote of thanks for calci .g such a meeting together and for his courtesy and kindness whilst p esiding. against the poor and i 'Why ono man who ha Inose or less, inv sheep or swine, while his neigttbo dollars invested i machinery to till to bear the burden i like some of our wis Instead of ii erea Legislature shout have decreased them. There are entirely to many exemptions and the land i Made to bear tun undue proportion of t o burden. They will not be o Minister, equally or eqt tably divided until we have ie ares ht Illicit law require g the assessment of all kinds tat 1'roittoetaugand oaf personal In perty wherever it is found. favor of the rich, ne thousand dollars 111 in horses, eJ>,ttle, aid escape taxation, , who has his thousand land caud tho necessary land, should bo made something we would legislators to explain, Ig the exemptions the Idgo so far its 13us, iu the In wntime, the lam must be ttdtniuisterecl its a :tilts. and consequently taught in 75 we direct the attouti of municipal officers s hi their die- to these additional t •ernptious proirded aciie in drawing for last session by the • agislaturo. THE WHEAT 0 •. DEFICIENT' Business men genera y and especial- ly the thoughtful ag iculturists are eagerly watching the , op prospects as the best criterion to Hoes. There is apparently a grea shortage in the wheat crop of the orfs this year, and the prospects aro for higher prices: We make a few e tracts from a Lon- don, England, despatof the New York Times of the 30t , of August : at The old world ne 000 to 80,000,000 more than the ha will produce. Tl always have to b year buy some while the oounti'i they consume evil 000 bushels to s s from 70,000,- usbels of wheat vests of the year e countries which y wheat must this 70,000,000 'bushels, s raising more than ave about 295,000,- E lig! aud 95,000,-England will have to import at le tst 170,000,000. Frauee, which next to the United States, is the greater t wheat producer in the world, 'las ,ee of the worst Groes ever reap°•. Since the last storm and the d'-covery by the first threshings of th bad quality of the grain the shorts a is put at 90,000,000 bushels. Very ittle if any of this can be made g•od by Algiers, where the grasshopper. have decimated the crops. Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands must uy more wheat than usual this yeir. Of the great exporting countries the United States and Cansyda can e counted on- to supply about 11 ,000,000 bushels ; Russia, 90,000,1 I0, and India, 35,- 000,000 ; but 1 these latter countries there is much . ore uncertainty than in the form :x. 3udgilig from our special ropdrtfrom the wheat pro- ducing States the United States will not be in a •es' ion- to furnish very much of the 70,00* ,000 or 80,000,000 bushels of wheat w ieh will be required to meet the defle•ency. Indiana and Wisconsin appear to be the only States iu which the yie11 is above the average, and can be col sidered really a great one. In Ohio he crop is reported to be not over 60 ser cent of the average, and of inferi,r quality. In Illiuoie the quality s not high, though the quantity liar ested is satisfactory, and In Kansas th 1. of fully one-third has been sustaine . With the suffer- ing expected in ]L igland and the rise in the price of . read already made there on account of the failure of the wheat crop, and in anticipation of the certain scarcity of that cereal hi the immediate fat re, the United States is to be congrat latod upon the amount of wheat all . ]harvested hi this country. If we t knot feed the world, it is pleasant to now that we can feed •0HOOL IN 1Eii r'TOIb3 IN SESSION. ourselves." 'The school inspectors of Ontario wet in Convent . a recently and dis- MORE T custeu sundry to lies of great interest, BY a ream and we beliese t' thus profit. It was vthiell cane agreed that t e least satisfactory August, no ho f.lature 111 schoo or surrouudings was [ kept on a farm, c the lnatter of ventilation. It was lie an extensi admitted that th 3 ill health of teachers I exemptions. u was largely attri utablo to this, The the Seaforth remedy was largly in the hands of the This seems to u teaehers. As to ;-ubjeots titllght, great diacriuhiaatien, and o BX.ttIMPTIONS. gislative enactment, force on the lst of , cattle, sheep, swine, n be assessed. T11it1 of the principle of .A. TRIP TO THE NO T&IWEST. ANITOBi' . ,AND ent.I1oether oUnRI s kir EAST WAwANOSII, TELLS some -roma OF WHAT II13 SAW AND BEARD BY 1: WAY, ON 1112 R.iiOENT (tloNTIeusD rltOn L ST wssz.) On leaving Witinip g for the west built town elaiming 3,000 inhabitants, very little of the°la, d is cultivated. many of the houses are built of Out stone, which is easil obtained in the neighborhood, The sl elation. is on a grand bend of the Pot river near to where the Elbow ri -ne unites its waters with the ]3ow, 1 was auxins when here to see the wheat that had been sown last I+obrl ary near to this town, according to t to Calgary news - peppers of that dig •t. After cooking diligent search I ould Bee no wheat or any other grail growing near to the town, and only of attempt at a gar- den. which was po ited out to me by Mr. Mattheson, all ole' resident of Clinton, Ontario; he itso showed me a splendidly equipped sawmill, but no wheat could be fou d. Some parties told ole there was vheitt 4.0 miles oat way to get there alk or hire a pony was not inclined to me to the conclusion s had glade its way orae other place to e time the wheat ed. Imo tui 5 entree squaws selling polishe' buff10 horns to passeugcrs ou .the ailwlty. The next etatio of importance 10 Langoviu About 00 Miles west, of Winuipeg, vetted for its ufitural gas which is now u:, el for hgbtinii the motive power to. supply of the en- . Co'y. have also en miperiuleiitel pl )t hero of 3 or 4 adres, it part WWII With Wheat, ft hart with potatoes and I part kith flowers, oeoh looking wtl , but some of the potatoes a1111 flow, 1'S were not Sllnwiiig above ground yet on the 27th day of Juno. 1 would ; dvise time, i itoudiug west not to be i11 it capithtl 110 my place that he it spend e year 'ted with the s and ens toms Method of enl- houses and for tl pump water for -the gives, The O. P. settler going to tht burry to invest whit have, but to look for thinks will snit, and th or more to get acquit' soil, elimate, the mantle of the people, and their tivating the land. Going. west from passing several static as 00 the way. we reach Calgary, w first sight of the 1 coming from the e engeviu, and ere one gets the ocky 11louutalus st. It is a Well It is held by specu i tors and retie -ay eoinpanies. For so a distance) it looked well, a level prair a as far as the eye can reach. As we came near to Morris, which is 49 miles by the Pem- bina branch road, here are settlers, and a few miles farth. ' to the south and wese we came to the Mennonite settlement. They live in villages and work the land for mi es around each village. The crops lo ked as well here as they did,all along the railway as we went to Delorltine, 200 miles south- west from Wiani eg. Crossing the country to the no th for about a hun- dred miles from near the lime of Dakota, by way of Boissevain and Brandon, to see sone and hear how they wer and to view the coantr3 to be a fine rolling rairie, thinly settled, many of the pe,pie being from North Huron. I sp. co to nout3 but who had great hop : ,For the future. The towns are prosy roils. The prope looked well as far i •rth as'I wont and the people well s tisfied with their sections or half se' tions. The soil ou the high lands is well adapted to raising wheat, o '=, barley and potatoes, the crop of p.tatoes last year being much better til n in Ontario. The virgin soil is rich• and well adv. tech for raising all kin' of roots, where it is dry, and the low, wet land grows great crops of hay. I all well satis- fied with Manitoba as a wheat produc- ing country; Ithin, that for 250 miles west of Winnipeg it cannot be beat On the north half of this continent. From. my not book ; 7 o'clock p. in. June, 22nd ' 888: At 1t.?'oosomin, a town of 500 in abitants, a flouring mill, en elevator -Ogilvie u; Co's- steno store, three iio lis, farming ilia plemeuts covering a s,lace of three or four acres, herds of ca,tlo, surrounding country thinly settle , some Indians, lots of scrub ; fire ad run the plain last spring; crops 1.ok well ; a num- ber of lakes with 1 rge flocks of ducks arouud ; saw a v ild rabbit close. to the traek. Tbi , country is settled with people of a kinds and national- ities, some havi.g no experience in farming before 'ettling in Manitoba. They cannot exp - to do as well for sdme tittle. The !1l: nitoba lidople say the cold in winter severe, and 1 know that there is a super -abundance of troublesome flies in snninler, yet the people are hea hy, well dressed,• iciud and hospitab of contentment Every one is bus do more in the sl can accomplish v and perseverance As we go west rem Moosomili there appears to be Ii ss rain -fall, not sutiieient -to bring t e crops to the same mathirity as the country through There are few egina. Although rich clay the grass wn boasts of a gaol, a post office, all of o Dominion Gov. mattered a dis- er, for what pure except that each Id acquaintance getting; along west but the onl we found it to see it was to and buckboard. do either, for I c that some of the from Langevin or Calgary about t story was publish• (To 731: cone to oontention of the 1S said th( of the Dakota v No. 1 hard, otltii frost. reseteetetetesseenease BY-LAW LCA. 147-18801 7 of ))c'Lent,<res to the ,;elven Dollars, for the or Laic p,re:motion 1.t' ;1lcrhar, "lire taker tltala (.Valeo) teilhir. i'ah'avrd IZUd to authorize La.ial ruin fvr Mu payment t f the sats til„_ ,Hz rite of the tt�...d Statuteu of lies k ate ti'nJ ,) E}lL' l:nliFJeil dm, n hi,, My, Timm and Inver - t 11ot over 20 pee veal, «it crisp will rank as til ;r'at damage by tv:.3 7'v provide 1o) Op. atn(uut of Fit%':: purrtit'- - 7 Malan Whereas, h1 not hio, lh'1, of every 01,11) putated e'ill - may +yj r b-.;,r.n'.o0;'r,uttiw; 0115 by way of helms for 51 ' pi' a-ai<nl ut eion,40((tures mete 11v ; t nt,t.; hieth stuu or 1111(1,8 of phoney to 1, ,- t pet a 1; ,,r body rerpnrate and in within its 1 respect of anvil blanch o •hull, ry as Like said tnllni- eipaltty may determine fele and etih,;,•t to such eeru,„,, (allele Mee Wel (..1r1'(fe t.l i s the geld limpid - pulite may tv 'b t ut expedient tent And whor l i0 'i4ur3 Gilehri.r„ Green and Com. pally 'vol 'lb Is Bell, Masrti,+••tnrora of httrniture, ether ti,:n tl tel, ri ryieg or, their said httaines:, 5(11h1n the a od 1 » n anti being tea sell iunntttactur- crs in the said 1, le within the s•.irl town, have respce- tivel • app}ied , the Connell of the thnporation of the said Town of brio c,el 101• ani by :ray of'bontte to the amount 01 rt t t n 'rbr.usand collars; And whcrewi, the 1:1.:,) council being. desirous oY asotin•; the said industry hat,. " :mast it expedient to grant the Fain aid t, the said ' •st..ttrs Gilchrist, Green and Coh,pauy and Thema" 13 11, upon and sub- test to ceratin 500(19, conditions ;;n, l restrictions as to the extension of their factories and the employment •.1 wnl.mel t credo, a, will bee emitained in the ulor t agcy het Matter mentioned +.'eel 1.111 subject also to. the further condition that tl , 1i(0 nru of iilteon thousand sonars 0, repaid t:, t. saCorporation wit•uxlt 3ntet t in0'.:n it t t t.:lilt': tt+ thirty fhst day of Deco tb r 1.181 as follow.: Thu suns ot seven' hundred and they lo11,1( anon.' t suing the said ten years and t h f, .line.: at the m.piry thero4, and that the pe rfor a nee of the xei i :nae, ceeditions, and reateietl0113 e th' unit 13111171.5 of the wall ad. 11aae? lo+ 1:eure1 by Wet 11(0(3 ;a:;, upon their real cants ams nut+ell ri,:: to $.1.13 c• oc ntiee by tit:, said 3'lo .,fella trilailrit�, Green and CL ;t1>uly and Themue, loll, to the raid t::,rp,,roti,,n of alt.' Town of Wing - ban, befoee the (OStle of 54: d,:l:eutures authorized by Ibis hy-h,aw. AO%mesas, the sa'd 111 •deer•, Gilchrist, Green and Company n0 Themes ilea have agreed to the sahib terms, metathesis and r •:,.riot:•,rs; And wllsret(8, foe the purse,• 1d granting the said. aid P. is necessary y fes tee krill Lille iripr lity to raise.' 1,y way of leen too .-. i i .1110(1 i of fifteen thousand d.Ala o in the utavue:r n're l t t, e •evidul; Pn,t wheev s, for the 1t _. l i : ,,le debentures to bGi oi.i under tni3 by be and i.,terer,t thereon it will r,quiro the suuYrt'01(411' hundred and forty- three dollars to be refited annually: be special rate on' the whole rateable property 1'.om; within the said Municipality of tho Town ,',f Wil,/,:ann. And whereas, the woo0 retealle property of the said nuinkipality,O :cording Loth.- 33 :., revisers assess- ment 10it, boil:; tar the ;year et' thousand eight hundred and eighty -tight, ie four 1J";,•hedand ninety- six thoueaud three 111!,.hundred :•.'nay -ileo dollars. Aud whereas, the aliment ..f tee ei..zting dobenttrie debt of the said Mnlc:3r:elity o: the Town of Wing - hem is thirty-seven thensa td ret•.'n hundred and thirty-two dollars and there is rm,thing either of principal or Itlterett in crrear. Therefore, the Council of the Corporation of the Town of wh,gham meets as rollover -1. That the Council of the Corporation of the Town of Wiggin m ellen raise by way u: loan the said suet of fifteen thousand dollars and shall grant the sante to the said Messieurs (31011riet, Green and Company and Thomas Dell, as aid by tray of loan for the pro - Motion of and in respect of Furertzre Manufactures hi the said To'cn of \Vin•;han!, subject to the terms, conditions and restrictions hereinbifere recited. 2. That for the purpose afon,lail the Mayor of the said hnauieiyakity shall (.1111%., debentures of the said Town of SVingha'n to 0: issued, which said de- bentures shall not bo loss than one hundred dollars each nail shall not exceed In t3(0 whole the 50111 Ot ftftoon `ac, 1 A e , n • 1 ahn. 1 in; Claroaalo Coughs and Colds And all Diseases of the Throat and Lungs can be cured by the nae of Scott's Emulsion, it contains the healing virtues of Cod Liver Oil ' id IXypophos- phitos in their fullest form. See hat W S bluer, M 0, L R C P, oto,, Tone, N S, s ya : "After three years' experience I consider So tars Emulsion ono of the very best in the marke . Very excellent in Throat ACeetions." Sol by a Druggists. 50 cents and 51. • AT a conVenti'u of Methodist lay- men in }L milt, last week, it was resolved that th custom of invitations at the end of til, first end second year of pastorate sho Id be discouraged ; that quarterly..ards should be air - corded by repro, utation the right of pers')nal appeartal ce before the Station- ing Committee ' 1 regard t0 their own oases, and the, laymen should have equal represent tion with clergymen upon the Statio ling Committee and in all church court Consumption Surely Cured. TO Tel; IirIT0a :-Please inform your readers that I have a positive leeredy for the above named disease. By its timely ose thousamde of hopeless eases have been cured. I shall be glad to send two betties of toy remedy Rival 50 any of your readers who have eensutuption if they will sand ole their Express and e, wearing au alk P. ,y address, Respectfully, Dit. T. A. SLODU7,1 and Self-reliance. 37 Venire St., Toronto, Ont. , many striving to ort season than they 'th all their energy which we passed. settlers around the soil is a dark looks thin. The t a eourt house and red briolt, built by er'nin611t, They Lance from each ot pose I don't kno expects to have a the near .future. two or three ul "Pile of Bones,' 10 the mounted police, ant Governor's resi from Regina for a come to "Medieitte is a good grazing face is very level. houses near the stab of the C. P. R. are, commenting on this an important stati )ositor said : pollee. 'Thera are ever, a vary fluent in this vicinity, but the principal trade schools bat 8 per wh?all 'Hilt oporato of the Iflaee as unite/ 04 by thetedue.ttional experelitt1 r DR. Doyen, in :1 ineteente,Century, endeavors to loci i nationally 1150 great 'nen of thiel time by examining into their birthpl .es, mad finds one he every 22,000 Scott men, one in. 31,000 Englishmen and ne in 49,000 Irish- men. Any= TO Merlins.- Aro yon disturbed at night and btolren of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth? If so send at cum and got a bottle of " Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teething. Its value ie '0101 hut• able. It will relievo the poor llttle sufferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers ; there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diarrhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures wind Colic, softens the Gums, reduces Inflammation, and (lives tone and onortry to the whole system. ' Mrs, Win. slow's Soothing Syrup " for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of ono of the oldest and best female physicians and 1115804 fn rho United Stator, and is for sale by all druggists Owls et its own ill thmu�llout the world. Price twenty -live 001,58 a At the distance of bottle. no sure rind asst Por "Slits. Wi rsl utl's ,ceruse S8ictn, and take no other 01n3. es is ' 11 village of' the :r:.-- headquarters of left . G. W. I-1 tiuAN, of Elmviile, ,ud the Lieuten• delegate £rein them t tiitronTeachers' nee. Going west Association to the rovinoial Incctita , out 300 miles we had n resolution c rried requesting tho fat," around which Minister of Rime oII to grant au in - entry. The sur- creased aniolutt t the public selionis here are a few iu each municip ity. In 1886, the x. Repair slope grant to high schoo wail $10.50 per ituated Here, else pupil, and to publle oheels $1.17 per n of the mounted pupil ; also, the to al grant to high evoral coal niiees schools was 20i per it end to pubhio at of filo vital r0, nlgtlanli all 1111 .Fact 11 :ti;eie to fur the payment or intciest. 4. That the said debentures shall bear interest at the rate of livelier 1•.outnii per an 001 from the date thereof and said iuterest'.lhali be payable annually on the thirty-first day of the uaaltn of V.:ember in oath year, ut the place where the sacci debentures are wade payable. b. Thatdurtugthe eurrenryref the said debentures the stun of seven hundred anti fifty dollars shall be •raised annually for the payment of intcreet on the said debentures end the sut,l of eleven hundred aid ninety -throe dollars shall ba raged annually for the payment of the debt to bo seemed by the said de- bentures, leaking in all the stun of nineteen hundred and forty-three do01518 to be raissel .tnt,uaiiy as afore- said, C. That the said annual sum of nineteen hundred and forty -thole dollars 911011 be Prised and levied its each year during the saki term CC tun years, by a special rail suiticient therefor on all the rateable property in the said municipality of the Town of Winghanh. 7. That no purchaser of any of the said debentures) shall be required to see to the a tplieation of the pur- chase stoney thereof or that the conditions in any a,gre3mcnt made or to be made between the munici- pality of the said Town of Wingh;lm and the said Messieurs Gilchrist, Gruen and Company and Thomas Bell, have been complied with,0bserved or performed, but such debentures and ol.upans shall be unite. !teachable on 011y such 510U11ds fn: the hands of any Purchaser for value. 8. The foregoing sections of fhb, by-law shall telae affect on and from the fifteenth day of 0,tobcr, one thou3and eight hundred and e'.guly-eight, oath's and the subsequent sections thwoiof shall take effect immu3tately. 0. And it is further enacted, by the Municipal Cor- poration of tho Town of Winulram, that the votes of 011 thethEislectoby-rslaofw theen said municipality shall be taken Saturdays, the acu'on-Nfnt'.i ala? a Eep- Comber, One thousand eight hundred and ci;rhty-eight, com- mencing at the holo of 1)11(0 o'elett 111 the forenoon and closing at the hour of five o'clock it, the after- 0oo13 nn,1crs athereunder rho placesps oeif(511u3 l by; the Deputy -Returning Xu ward number the at Iiidd's oirlce, Victoria street by James S'leuty, Deputy returning Olticer. In Ward number two at Tamlyn'o 1510031, Josephine street, by George Payne, Deputy Pawning Officer. In Ward number three at the Town hall, by Johns- ton D. Ferguson, Deputy Returning Othecr. I,1 Ward number fors at tho IV..aiten I+Iills, Alfred street, by John Dickson, Deputy It.;tarliiny Officer. 10. That on the twenty-eighth day of Septotnbor, one tllouamnd tight hmldr,:d and ci:hfy.eigilt, at half. Past ten o'clock in the forenoon, at the Council Chamber, the Mayor shall appoint, in writing, *nod by himself, two persons to attend et the final summing 'up of the votes by the elate of the said Connell and one person to attend each polling place on behalf of the peroons interested in and desiro,;t of prelnoting the passing' of this by'laty and 0 like number on bar 101(311 ifs tbhy-lae persow.0a interested in opposing the passing U. That on Monday, the first day of Octobet, one thousand eight hundred and cllrhtr-eight, at tear o'clock its tho forenoon, at the 'Sown kali, the Clerlt of the Council shall proceed to sum up the number of votes given fur and against this byLsw. fi '1"A1<3✓ I'CJTZCE, That tho above le a true copy of is proposed by-law which has been taken into impanel:hien by tho Connell of rho Corporation of thoTown of 1V}ngham, and which will be flintily passed by said Council, in the ceent of the assent of the electors being obtain- ed theroto, after ono month from the 1rat publication in the Wisomut Tfnss newspaper, the date of which first publication in said newspaper was Friday, the 7th day of September, 1864; ones tinct pulls trill be field and the votes of the duly qualified 0lcetora of the said Municipality of LVieghain Ki:I be taken oh the 103.11 day of September, 1893, commencing at tint hour of nine o'clock in tho forenoon and closing at: tho hour of five o'clock in the afternoon of the sable day, at the places set out in and awed by the Otis 0115089 of the altove,true 003)5 of the proposed by-law and by tho deputy.keturiling officers tht.rein nom, d 3. D. PLRot ;40.:, Cleric1 the sail Municipality of Win;9tan1. . Vine , a r' c,]t :,;,11, 134. t