Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 3 Mar 1910, p. 1

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kmb Pud shes IDS ins $2.90 $2.90 $3.90 $1.50 $1.50 $1 00 SIC $2.50 IE Zac 49c 49c A'PI'ACKED BY A CANINE.- For Your Dough Hadn’t the Courage to Rise iFEBRUARY'.”?3 Your flour was weak 0| (m. m: mimm, may be. Never so with FIVEROSESâ€"because it‘s €071:th flour. cinemas: as the sun or a. mother's love. .. it unmiyingt'y possesses that ,1 glutinous strength which makes it rise to the blight of the particular housewife - m agiln, :6 rise Marmara. How aggravating to be sure. 0A3: houtr 2:; mother gazed solicit- a y r: saying In a. 3m “FQOr John I Dan'tyvu M II! look: a We tired. Mia-WP And_ John’s {usher repay-i: Don'tyou remember? _BLuIAthe uphnulon is most :finpll. 95M quickly (hen overnight and :leilxlren‘s Dresses. 1.25 for 990 Sheetings. pillow cottons, table linens, table napkins, ;, t-lx‘pl'ttrvls. c-mtons, muslinsr lawns, vestings and all poll.» in wlxire will be reduced during this fine sale, which nil! lam: from February 2.5Lh to the 6th of March. “'n have ~l-oured 250 yds. of white India Silk, worth “ l , ant? one yd. wide, and will olfer at 43c yd. 41W \W The gOchs we are showing during this sale are excel- ix-m. valuws. and the public should profit by in. You remember. Madam. that bakeday a week backâ€"or was It a monthâ€"when his folks were coming to dinner self-invited. And you arose bright and early. and ran over to your mixing bowl to knead that glorious batch of shapely golden-domed loavesâ€"1 And astonish his folks with his wife’s breadmaking. You remember: that was before you bought FIVE ROSES. t'nrh'ct covers, lace trimmed with lace insertion, 35c h” L90 (.nrsct Covers, embroidery with ribbon trimmings, 304' 1'1'11‘ 42¢. . Unl'Svt covers lane trimmed, two rows wide lace inser- {11m .unl hemstitched tucking, 50c for 39c. I Uliw' night gowns, fine nainsook, embroidery head- in! 1nd ribbon trimmings, 2. 00 for 1.67. 1 Mics niche crowns 1.00 for 890, 3. 00 for ‘7 .59, 3. 50 for '_.!H 3 3rd YEAR. This is the time to secure your White Goods, all; ready {or spring use, and What a comfort to be able to choose the first styles, and which need no alteration. We have rm fume} garments in White Goods " that will make ' the pizsines‘t woman look beautiful, and the beautiful woman csmrmmg I AUHCS. under-skirts, deep flounce embroidery with rows tucks aml cluster frill, 1.50 for 1.29 1.:ulim' underskirts, deep fiounce with rows fine hicks, we trimmed. 3.25 for 2.75. L‘qu Waists, pleated, stifl' collar. 1.00 for 85c Lawn waists, all over embroidery with rows tine tucks, m-keci sleeves with lace insertion, 2.00 for 1.743 Hn's is to women one of the most notable seasons of 2;») mercanti 9 year. ‘d_how the dough had W b Note These Goods and Their Prices: mammals-uni... WEAR SALE Fred Walker. ‘4 The boy was Walking "1‘0””, “he” ker, without warning the dog ran 0‘“ and was 3m him on the calf of the leg, from ring which bite he is confined to “his m¢~ wt 11., dog. was shot shortly awn-r48. your hand till at last it riVals our own dazzling Canadian snows. Then think of it, Mistress House- wife, YOUR bread is never sour, never lumpy. never dark or dis- colored, nor soggy nor heavy. No baking accident: when you most covet success. Because you are using FIVE ROSES, and can! help fl. And it keeps fresh for d aysâ€"its delicious nutlike flavor grow: until the last lasslice disappears by dint of second gelpings and smoking of p: What. Madam, you don’t use FIVE ROSES? " Well. you know," it' e W to late to mend. and stay risen, because it has the necessary consistency and clasttbiy. And 'when you begin t_o krgead _it, And i; :33: gfht'ttrgnd whiterpnder Madam, yoh find t'ho dough quite spn’ngy and you hear it squeak and crack as you work. ‘3 4' Whltby, Fab. 22.-â€"Archio Mac-l luughlin, in the Ontario County Juli: here since last November. charged with the murde: of his wife and two! 'childron In the town of Uxbridgo, is taking his case more hopeiullv.‘ ' When first. imprisonod he seemed like- . 1:; to break down in health. but this has passed away with the more con- fident outlook that he has. Occas- sionuily Mr. Cook. of Robinotto, Godfrey. Phclun and Henderson, the. 'J ononto legal firm haxing his case in' change comes to see him. The line .0! defence is one that appears per- fectly certain to Maciuughlin to free Ehim from the clutches of the la“. . i \‘othing new has developed as to the e\ idenoe to be adduced by the Crown: since the result of the analyms or“ several of the organs of the dead. (wife, whose remams were exhumed *for the purpose. The investigation by the provincial analyst showed that strychnine was present in other or- lgans than Pile Stp-matfh. _ so many hours he spent daily in the jail yard. He is always ready for that. He even 01191-5 to do little chores not required of anyone who is that he ambled to procure through mun sums of money which are sent him by his mother. -, _ _ The wait for the Spring Assizes is this year longer than usual. The court will not open until May 80!). Judge 'Ibetzel win preside. Only one other famous manor trial. whack resulted in 9, conviction. and that; a Maclaughlin talks freely to the Governor of the jail, John Schiller. Turnkey Frank Bryan and his 'spirit- ual ndvis‘cr, the Rev. Dr. John Ab- raham, of St. Andrew's church, and also to Dr. Frank Warren. the jail surgeon, of how he hopes to free himself from the mass of circumâ€" stantial evidence pointing to the (net that he is responsible for the death of his wife and children. The prie- (Jnel' i8 COnfine'd in a double cell with another inmate. He takes his three meals a day with hearty relish- Th8 discipline for exercise requires that Grant was nmfiloyad on the Grand Trunk with the section gang fit, 1hr. 59052.. but boarded“ sit: the home of Mr. Marshall bake in the village. This morning Mr. Lake. who is an engineer for Hogg Lytle, went to Grant's room to call him for work, and was greatly surprised to find that he was not in bed, nor in the room. He passed downstairs. think- ing perhaps that Grant had left; for work earlier :than usual. but on the table ln the dining room ha found a letter addressed to himself. Takes flis Case It appears that the young man. who is only about txmnty-five years of age, has been brooding of late. and had been recently disappointed in the way some of his private af- fairs were turning out. In; d1 Oakwood, Feb. 25.â€"A diStPCSSing and sad death was reported here early this morning, when a well- known young man by the name of Daniel Grant, committed suicide. For some time past the young man has been in a, despondent mood, and many rumors were afloat, but 111:; vauain'tances had no idea whatever that he hm! any notion of committâ€" ing the rash deed. ' REV. W A. ADLEY. B. A Of Berlin, eat-President of the Ontario Library Association “ho deliVer- ed an address at the Library In ute Friday morning. Young Man at Qakwood Committed Suicide More Hopefully UNDSAY, 0mg munsmv,mncn 3,1910 (Special to The Warner. double gum. is the history of capital crime in Ontario County. 'Ihat was a noted one, in which Burke and Macpherson ' of the Township of Pick- ering. were sentenced to be hanged. but subsequently m rem-ism and Mt ‘ term of imprisonment at Mr. Brown is only one of many cases in which it has been proVed beyond a doubt that the natural way to cure Rheumatism is to re- move the cause. The cause of Rheumatism is uric acid in the blood which crystallizes at the muscles of the joints. Well Kidneys strain the uric acid but of the blood. Dodd's Kidney Pills make well Kidneys. That's why Dodd’s Kidney Pills al- Dr. Montague says he has ““th to conceal regarding any land W actions, and is quite ready to test“? before any committee Appointed by the Manitoba. Wall‘- ways cure Rheumatism. I was alwn vs while at my work in agonizing pain. _ “ After taking one box of Dodd's Kidney Pills I foundfin improve- ment and after taking six /boxes I found both my Kidney Disease and Rheumatism satirely cured." “ I was troubled with backache and other wellaknown symptoms 0! Kid- ney Disease," Mr. Brown states. “ I also suffered from rheumatism in my right side and hip to the extent that Brantford, Ont... Feb. 25. â€" (Spe- cial.) â€" That rheumatism is caused by diseased kidneys and that Dodd's Kidney Pills cure both the sick kidneys and the rheumatism is again proved in the case of Mr. Durham Brown. of No. 2 Springâ€"st, this city. CONC[.USIVE EVIDENCE GIVEN BY DURHAM BROWN, 01" BRANTFORD. ONT â€" HOW AND WHY- THE CURE IS EF- W Grant formerly lived ctLorne- S1110. and latterly lived in Lifldfifl-X. having been bmkemanlior the G.T.R. out. of this town. He was unmarried and his parents are both dead. Re- contiy. it will be remembered. he was mixed up with the shooting at- fair near Oakwoml in which another young: man was injured. County Coroner Blanchard. of Lindsay. wvnt to Oakwood this morning and decided that an inqpest Was necessary. hé was about to take his own life. aid mentioned where he would be found. Mr. Lake immediately began to search for Grant, and found him ly- ing dead on the front steps of a for- mer boarding house. From all ap- pearances the young man had swal- lowed carbolic acid, but no bottle or vessel of any kind could beIound. That the rash deed was premeditat- A dociov was immediately sum- mOned, but life was extinct, and it. was deCidod to hold an inquest. PROOF THAT NO ONE CAN DOUBT Ihat Dodd’s Kidney Pills Al- ways Cure Rheumatism ed, was shonn by the fact that razor lay beside the dead body. 1‘ was from Grant. who stated that FEC'I‘ED. The ratepayers of Lindsay tax themselves to the amount of $1250 annually {or the support of this lib- rary, and by so doing the town pro- Vlden free books for its citizens, but the law doee not contemplate that the town shall provlde free books for outside municipalities. The man who toils hard all the day long to support his family and comes home wearied in body and mind is not disposed to choose for reading matter. some abstruse scien- tinc or philosophical subject that needs mental effort to comprehend, but he will rather look {or something of lighter vein. and having secured it. passes away his period of rest. Without mentevl effort, in the enjoy- ment of sensationsâ€"the result of his storyâ€"end when done, casts his book aside with no desire to see it again. He may not have added anything to his mental equipment, there may be no lessening 0! his in- tellectual or moral stature, but he has st least passed away a. weary hour in pleasure. cess of 45 per cent. of the whole number or books purchased for the library. The attitude of 'the Legis- lnture upon this subject is commend- able. 'The reading of fiction needs no encouragement; like a noxious weed it will grow without cultiva- t on. It may bring pleasure {or the passing hour. but it does not bring knowledge or culture. while it tends to develop a‘ voracious habit, which uhortens the memory and suppresses any desire for better and more solid literature. Nevertheless, it should not be wholly and indiscriminately condemned. It appears that. the Legislature does not look upon this with un- qmmiea mpg-«Km. .inuxmuch as it has introduced a clause into the Public Libraries Act, whereby there shall be no grant of public money made upon works of fiction in ex- ’ Fiction......... 3746 10542 1796 History .............................. 1195 1338 143 Biography ......................... 878 768 120 Religion ............................. 560 410 152 . Science .............1089 » 1075 36 Voyages andTraveis ............1126 1136 10 It may be noticed that the de-‘ Sec. 13 of the Public Libraries Act crease in the reading of fiction in .1909 says: “ All libraries, reading 1909 as compared with the previous {rooms and museums established under year was considerably. greater than 3 this Act shall be open to the public the falling on‘ in the total circula- liree ‘of charge. provided. however, tion. It may be further noticed Ithat the board may impose such fee that the circulation oi’ fiction {or tea seems proper on non-residents who 1909 was 48 per cent. of the total ,may desire to use the library read- circulation, while during the previous I his room or museum." year it “'33 4‘3 per cent. i Sec. 14 reads: “ Any municipality The evidence gleaned from the ' or school section contiguous or near librarian’s reports for the past few to a city, town, village or town- years is that there is a growing ten- ship in which a free library is sit- denCy to the reading of fiction. uate, may enter into an agreement It appears that the Legislature with the board for the use of such does not look upon this with un- library and for such representation qualified ‘ approt'al; .inamuch as it ,0“ the W '8 my be deem ex- ]... intrndln‘tld a clause into the gpedtent.” The evidence gleaned from the librarian’s reports {01'- the past few years is that there is a growing ten- dency to the reading of fiction. The primary object of an institu- tion of this kind is to place u con- venient as may be. to the hand of the humbleata-mder. the best there is of limture {me of cost, loving it to the dispodtion and desire of the indifidml whether he takes advant- age of thin great privilege or not. 1909. Fiction ................................. 8746 Historv .............................. 1195 YGehtlemp-Now that we are about to reorganize for the work of another “year it seems desirable, and it may perhaps be profitable for us to turn our minds backwards for a tow minutes and briefly review the work of the past twelve months with the object of ascertaining if possible whether or not this library is ans- wering the purpose for which it ex- ists. THE DOMINION BANK Counta'more thou the amount saved, especiaJIy in the beginning. Those who make a practise of saving regnhrly find it possible to save under auditions decidely unpromising. And the small- est' sums, ”sued steadily, in due season make totals of snrprisingsize. Begin now by opening an account with THE HABIT 0F SAVING To the members of the Interesting Report of Chairman of Library ‘ Board For Year 1909 PAGES! m8 ibrary he total number of volumes in the library "at the present time ap- {pears to be 4,900. During themst year trhene were placed on the sheives inew ' vommes. Of the old books there were rebound and re- e for ‘paired during the year 228'volurnes. s for and these books when put upon the v the lshelves the second time were better with beam; and, therefore, more durable asible than when new. are work able, A FINE ANIMAL. Mr. W. A. Fanning, of the Horse Exchange, Lindsay, bought a hand- some black horse on Saturday last from Ir. Wm Kelly, of Red Rock. fie Warder understands that a long price was mid. antlond. is dead at the age of 86. It is a. good thing to be happy to- day. for you don’t know what the chasm: may be for it" to-morrow. The pol-icy of making books free and placlng them within easy reach of the people is based on the hope that in doing so a taste for litera- ture may be :developed. A reading people are an intellectual. n‘ornl, law-abiding people. In this way the very foundation of the state itself is made permanent and se- cure. _ a representative to this board ac- companied by an annual grant to assist in the library's support. During 1909 over 3,000 volumes were taken into the homes of the township of Ops, ch-r 500 into Mariposa, besides Woodvillo. Eldon, Bobceygcon and Vorulan. The rate- payers of those Wealthy municipali- tleevdo not desire the use of our lib- rary without giving an equivalent in exchange. and this hound has been remiss in it» duty. in that it has not invited the townnhip of Ops to send This heavily taxed municipality cannot afford, while it is straining chry nerve to supply free books for its citizens, to supply free books to others.. Outside municipalities have enjoyed the freedom of this library for years. If the book! in circulation during 1909 are classified, taking {or the sake of brevity, only six of the most important subjects, we find the number of books read in each class to be as follows, as compared with ' Last year" 5 total circulation W 21115 as compared with 22829 for Lindsay, Feb. 14, 1910. George Watt, eat-Mayor o! lncmase Decrease 1796' 143 A. E. v'noomN, Chairman. $1.00 ME. mum ydby SHE For h!-

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