nthsh m for‘ hilars "3 GOOD I and fenc- . Wei“, i Mm a. a! "M Will all mini. 11, “n; bred at†18. not re 0: u. . hone. ‘ abot'e rtoâ€" fot 0.! on“, b mm Lindsay Branch. a. s. WALKER. President 41,5“me LMRD. comm W DRAFTS AND MONEY ORDERS sold; FdREIGN BUSINESS. choqm and mm on m um am Great Britain and other foreign countries bought and told. an telegraph or latter. COLLECTION§ made in all parts at cm and in ma couch-la. WANTE Dee “'pEIOUZER LINDSAY to the 3lst inst. :ndnme- ~if}; - " Lindsay, Doc. m1“??? 10 to 3 o‘clock. Saturdays 10 to 1 o’clock. Branches of the Bank 111 every Province of the Dominion . A general Banking business transacted. ' Savings Department at (New Branch. ‘ ' I!“ t) OFFER. TOROR‘I‘O thL BANKING auslisss TRANSACTED AT AuT mucus: . JANEARY omce Hour“ H. B. Black, â€m“ “WIVHW . 1‘ r‘fwwu , Highest Cash Prices Paid Paid-up Cnpital, $10,000,000 Remve Fund, - 0,000,000 . Homes, Manager ,, and may trmhmd by Manager Lindsay Branch ESTABLISHED I“ 7 Ops council mm ‘oi John Deyell pea mm w. 11:. slam Wesley W,aldon and Rowe Peter Hawkins, met at 11 a.m., and after taking the necessary declaratnons be- gun the business of 1910. Keyed by F. W. Hickncn, seconded by J bhn Deyefl, that the minutes of last meeting of 1909 be adopted as read, with anemia: of the resolu- tion, making" a conditional grant of $25 to John Robinson, which was rescinded, as Mr. Robinson had-fail- ed to accept the conditions of the grant-Carried. A communication from Hospital for Sick Chwldren, asking for a, grant, was read, and on motion of Mes- rs. Dayan and Sloan a grant of 85 was made. accts. - On motion of Mossrs. Moll nnd Hickson, Jan. Henson was appoint- ed ssscssur nor the your 1910. On motion of John Moll and W. H. Sloan. a loan of .100 for tile drainage was suthorisoti (or John Calvert. as inspector Road‘s report no the work dons. was sstisisctory. Ensinoor Smith was proscnt and council discussed with him tho com‘ ‘dltions and legality oi toxin; his bill on the Stoney crock droinogo system on petitioners or pctronl oi some. Tho engineer anally advised consultation with tho solicitm- and on Inotitm oi oi John Moll,“ mood- od by W. Walden. tho mo. clock and W. H. Hickson. were appointed a. committee to consult Solicitor sto- wort on the matter. Applications for auditors were re- ceived from Jno. J. Twohey, L. L. Train and Walter Lee, and for u- sensor, from J . T. Currlns and Jan. McLGan. On motion of Messrs. Waldon and Deyell. ,the clerk was authorized to order six copies oi the Municipal World. for use in this council. Moved yy Fred W. Hickson, see. by J'ohn Deyell, that petitions re a- sess-ing improvements, at a lower rate than land Values, be made to Premier of Ontario and leader of the Opposition. On motion of Messrs. melt and Sloan John J. Twohey-and Wulter Lee were appointed auditors of 1909 Council heard with regret or Mr. Johnson Ellis' death this morning, and unanimously decided to sgnd a wreath. as a token of respect,“ and also passed a. resolution of condol- ence to the son-owing family. On motion of Messrs. Sloan and Hickson, Thomas Downey was up- pognted a member 0! the Ops Board of Health for thres years. On motion of Méssrs. Weldon and Sloan, the members of council were appointed road commissioners as follows: Div. 1, Weldon, 2, Deyell, 3 Hawkins, 4 Sloan, 5 Hickson. On motion of Messrs. Hickson and Deyell, the reeve and treasurer were authorized to borrow money. _-_. _~A By-laws Nos. 685, 686, 687, bats and 689, appointing auditors, as- war, member of Board of Health, road commissioners and authorizing borrowing of money, were given the usual readings and duiy passed. On motion of Messrs. Hickson and Sloan, council unanimously decided that the bonus rfor wire fence be 25¢ per rod in future, as original by-law provided that price could be any- where betWeen ‘15c and 35c. in council’s discretion. Hickson, the folyowing bills were ordered to be pai'd : Deputy-returning oflicers, poll clerks and booths $56, G. W.'Bea11, election supplies station7ry, $10. 97, Engineer S for taking levels of drain, $10, AVA vâ€"â€"-â€".â€"° _ , ter Hiclmon, Mt. 'Horeb, for 24 loads county ‘treasurer, third share of work on Ops swing bridge $14.47, J. Carew, timber} efc.,“‘$107.57. _ 0g mobion‘of Messrs. Deyeu and Hi'ckson, 85 Was appropriated 101' wire tenet; bonus, purchasing stone. etc. .“ â€"_._I On motion of Messfs. Sloan kWaldon, the clerk was instructed make application to county cou for use of crusher for nexï¬ sum! Council .adjourned to meet 1 7th, at 1 p.m. , . i-1~'s discretion. motion of Messrs. Weldon OPS COUNCIL ,â€"-To Paul-8t», 6 Bon’ :- WARDERe Smith Excellent Sermon on Inlay night m the Moihodiai “m. Ml Jo I" wuflï¬n. 0' L'nd' â€, mumv an oxooiimt sermon in bob“ oi the Minion work at the Min: Methodist church. Hr. M took u bin text the inspiring Iona at Paul. "For I am not. aimed 6! the (cape! 0! Jam- Ohflst. for it in the power of God unto ulvution.†The word. 0! 01h wvv w- , but were words 0! power. they had cone down the centuries with the penetrating [area of a rifle balk they were well known to nearly every- one who called himsel a Christian and their power was more intense because of the man who uttered than. Mr. Wilson then outlined the Biblical account of the early life of St. Paul, mentioning his privileges as 0. tree born Roman citizen and his ,eplendid Greek scholarshipu The epietle to the Romans showed in the original Greek that the author was thoroughly versed n the construc- tion and idion of the Greek lan- AI, tion and idion of the Greek lan- guage. Paul was as familiar with Plato as with Moses; as familiar with Homer as with Isaiah, but in spite of his Roman citizenship, his Greek learning and his knowledge of the laws and customs of the Jews, Paul was not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it was the power of God. All men loved power. We elect a man to the township council and he felt greatly honored ; .elect a- man reeve and he felt exalted. Why ? because he loved power. Further, Mr. 'Wilson spoke of the power of God as permeated in natural pheâ€" nomena. The comet rushed with - told force and swiftness _millions u on' millions of. miles. but when ~ it reached a certain point by the pOWer of God it was arrested inthe‘ Vast en were year after year gradually be- ing raised higher above sea level and the power that was raising those countries was unknown to scientiï¬c menâ€"it was the power of God. The vast electric energy. physical won- ders, such as the formation of moun- tainS. all had their source in that boundless forse, " The power of Mr. Wilson then spoke of the .pow- er of God in its glorious ea'ective- nees in redeeming man from lives of sin through the blood of Christ. Let one manned in this church, place all the sin! of all mm for all time upon his W and through the power o: God he might rho “9' a saved mm. {warm of Jesus Christ. God’- soar. W “'9'“ ’ "LINDSAY, ONTARIO. L- V“! spook for'ZoIn-Bnk bonus it modmodstuï¬blyhdim'ss Mrs. AliooBer-ymon £190 John t. oomo binned on swollon sad so t Ifsintodsws . Inspitoof trostmont, tho wound got no bottor sad the footbocsmo more snd mots swollen until it wss savers! times its nsusl size. Tho flesh was terribly bruised and block- onod and it was qulto impossiblo for no to wslk. My husbsnd’s moths: st lsot brought no s box 0! Zsmank. This wss spg'liod to tho foot sad it wss sur- prising ow soon I found relief from tho sovono psin. A fun-thos- snpply of Zone Bah wss obtsined snd I password in using this hsltn slono. In o oonplo o! (Is tho swo hsd guns down oon- si stobly, tho isoolorstion wss loss distinct old tho n wss bonishod. In four 1:3,. I go sbost ss ms! 3 tbs Ian and bind toot hsd boss thor- oughly onnd by tho and, ass of Zun- JANM‘VHM. Missions Other--Items woi‘d, “ Jouuu " was tha name In all languages. and many of tha Ohlnm in Brltluh Columbia had testiï¬ed to the power of God through Ohmt in taking away tha hut-don 0! than Man. He had pmhod to three hundrod India: man had woman in tho Want and on than one» “(10.5“ in- mpmoi m- wbrd- ‘ to tho‘ Stem Indian. and another on the other side interpreted to tho Om. W ol the Indians through the blessing o! the home missions were living consistent Christian lives. Eleven of the twelve apostles were foreign missionaries. Paul and Barnabas had gone away from Antioch to the heathen world. and in {our hundred years Christianity was the prevailing religion and. a Christian emperor sat upon the Roman throne. He knew a gentleman whose two daughâ€"' ters were in the mission ï¬eld and whose son was a medical missionary in West China, and the gentleman said he would rather have his son in that position than Prime Minister of Ontario. The Laymen’s Mission- ary movement was one of the great- est movements of the age. At the Masxy Hall last winter 4, 000 men from all parts of Canada had gath- ered to devise how best to further missionary enterprise, and the pow- er of God was present with them. The Fi-Ji Islands had been given to the Wesleyan Methodists of Eng- land as a missionary enterprise and now in those islands where the most hideous scenes had once been enact- fellow men. now there were one hundred and two thousand Chris- Did you ever ask yourself: “How is it that Zun-Buk teeo popular?“ It is because it is superior and diflerent to other calves. Contrast them! Most salve: are nine-tentheanimnl oil or fat. Zem-Buk hasn’t a. traoeofanimalfet in it. Hoot the gospel who were said to know the taste 0! human flesh. One hundred years ago all the Christian world has! only given $250. 000 to mmions. now the Canadian Metho- dist church alone was giving over $500,000 and the cry of the church was " the evangelization of the world in this generationf' ‘ There were still eight hundred million peo- mmrf‘ullq mauptio ythisn cm 0 car no acid. Yet it stop- EW '07 causing pun Years with Coughs w 01 thus in ’3 whamm- luolbocunooh 0 next day walla: and had mod. v. _ . _ W :1 â€an: in" .113“ .3}. L n 3 3?: m m w pie owe-had by Christian influm M war. In batman dun-knoll! ; what they are my hm were. and but for the power at tho gospel we VIM“ um be. Ir. Wilson than draw at.- Mtlon m 1M cMHflng lnfluolm cl Chflmwlty no what H. Md don. tor the warm; the dark spam on. the maps were not Christian. " MW My mm In Europe: Thu: a cyclc In Gamay." Rev. Mr. Wflaon coucludod hill in- Itmctdvo address by aborting his emotion to read about sub moo my tor mission: and to [m to mission, that the power at God might be spread about to an. all nations. ‘ends in Lindsay for a few weeks. nous. Percy O'Brien and Frank W, of Dongola, also PW Argue 9nd Will Quinn, of nausea. attended the Salvation Army hm Int Sunday evening- Er. Geo. Wilson of Fenelon Falls. m in the village on business 188‘ ‘Uondoy. NOBLAND. Miss Katie Eclntyre has returned to her school gt Highland Grove. Mn Angus McIntyre. o! Cobocoak, has moved his wife and inlant dal- ghter we to his pareats', Mr. and In. Duncan. ICIn't-yn’, ’ r winâ€" w. while Mr. McIntyre is in tho Miss Dossie Le me has returned to her school at Essonvflle. Mr. W. T. Wilson has mm from Toronto, where. he visited fri- ends. 111'. Wilson has also accepted Mr. M. Tait has returned ta his home in Toronto. ‘Mr. and Miss Long, of Bentley, Spelt Sunday with Norland triads. Miss Bella. Dung is attending Mr. w: Tait has returned to his home in Toronto. ' a position as 33 [on Carriage 00- Mr. Sidney Weseell is home iron: the Donald Chemical Works, with feet. We understand Miss E11513 Wand is engaged to teach the Clear Lab school at Lutterworth. Perkins is visiting fri- PAGE FIVE. â€â€™" for the Vï¬ubh I.»