Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 20 Jun 1901, p. 7

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hag, 25c to 75¢ Natural Wool: 45c to 111g IER 35c and 5°C Lhing. To “1 {miner Suits at 0B CAYGEON .w Hat for just 70¢ hat, for $1 25 at 15c, 25c, 35cm! hing from the mill 0 A QU ARTER ‘..An.or 1w at W“ ail ow er KAHAUIF [W and ghVCSOme makes of Iwme ten [11199 it to work satisfactory and as isomer kinds that are being offer- on certain few who will take stock .iactory. We will sell the three wands at 8:, 9c and 10¢ per may person and invite comparison '7 .I These kinds measure from M75 ieet to the lb. HOGG BROS. lâ€"Billder Twine without length mien every ball is not this It's make, and the manufacturer M responsible for its length. 0:: At same time recomm'nd the mped 650f:et to 1b. pure alumnus the most satisfactory both in quality and vane, and before accepting statements that. first-class twine nuns 6530 feet to the lb of pure mm inspect, them and there is thisdifl'erence that the law imposes navy renal’cy on both the manu- facturer and dealer who sel s twine made this season not stamp-d, or if Wine does not measure up to the lengnhmarked on if, and on several ms we h we found that. McCoxmick TsineéPur: Man’lm measures wwaeetto'hczb. It is made in the largest and most: ‘ modernly 'I I.-- meeetto'he-zb. It is made in the largest and most modernly equiped mil] in the world, and has behind it the guarantee of the Ingest and wealthiest manufac- masaswell 2w our own unquali- fiedguarantee. or twine may be returned. Stocks on bud b0 11 at finelgvator and ~tore, and faxmers undepend on get! ing any quantfity nyday in the h uvest. hth:WestV:i:i§:f;;z:z} $49 @1ng 18th. Remming until Aug- 91in?“ Rail or 8.8. Alberta.) My 16th. Returning until Sept. Gd WI Rail only, or 8.8. Alber: a ) 513.“: Jul 3111, Returning until Sept W1 ' or S S. Alberta.) LENGTH“, “that Gama Passenger Agent. 1 line-n. East, Toronto T-C.M15[l‘CflEâ€"i'T, Agt. Twine you take no chances. on 39“ for tickets early to OAKWOOD, ONT. 10115 H ‘2”?! mam. Carroll. ifimk “3331431355 mwmminamdy.’ 301(1de dedb m Wmmffiinom lLau- 33.: Medicine discove 8h Winnipeg" Maniac” Antler ..... Estevan . . Ioosomin , . Hamiou. . . Swan sz5 60 KENT 81.. LIIDSAY Regina. . . . Moose jaw Yorktown . . Prince Albert Calgary . . . . . Macleod .... AT RETURN FARES has of Tobac- Pouches and Low Prices Twine with year_s EX-PREMIER HARDY DIED ON THURSDAY APPENDICITIS CLAIMS A DISTINGUISH- ED VICTIM IN THE ONTARIO STATESIMN He was ill Since the First of the Month â€"Died with his Family Around himâ€" A Sketch of his Career Hon. Arthur Sturgis Hardy, ox- promier of Ontario died at the lone-ml Hospital at 10.08 on Thurs- day morning. Hon. Mr. Hardy had been ill since the last Monday in May, and was confumd to his bed with appendicitis. Dr. McPhedran treated the case, but on Saturday night Mr. Hardy’s con- dition gradually changed for the worse. There were several rallies in his condition. and in the early part of the week there was even a faint. hope of recovery, but this was quick- ly overcast. On Thursday Mr. Hardy was unconscious. for some time be.â€" forc the end, which came at 30.08. The cause of the death was given as paralysis of the heart. following up- on the operation. Mrs. Hardy, Miss Gladys Hardy. the ex-I’remier’s daughter, and Dr. Hardy and Mr. A. C. Hardy. his sons, were present when death occurred. When Mr. Hardy was forced by ill- health to retire from the Premier- ship of Ontario it was feared that he would not live many years, but 'relief from the cares of office brought such an improvement in his health that. hope was revived, and it was thought that he might long enjoy1 the rest to which his quarter of a century of arduous public service en- titled him. ‘In him the province floses a man. upright. farseeing, resâ€" 9olute, eloquent and chivalrous. An able lawyer, he abandoned the pracâ€" tice of his profession to devote his entire time to the task of goveen- inent. Had he continued to prac- tice he would undoubtedly have stood at the head of the bar a wealthy man. Choosing a political career, he won for himself the high- est position in the gift of the people of Ontario, only to be forced by ill- health to abandon it and seek the repose of private life poorer than when he entered the Legislature, 26 years before. Sketch of His Career Hon. Arthur Sturgis Hardy, K. C., was born Doc. 14, 1837, at Mount Pleasant, Ont. He received his educa- tion at the Mount Pleasant school and the Rockwood Academy. and studied law with his uncle, H. A. ‘IIardy, and the late Chief Justice Harrison, in Toronto. Called to the bar in 1865, he began the practice of his profession in Brantford, where he was very successful, and was at one time Corporation Solicitor. He was appointed Queen’s Counsel in 187% by the Ontario Gow’ernment, and elected a. bencner of the law So- ciety the same year. In 1873, Mr. Hardy entered politi- cal life being elected in the interest of the Liberal party. to fill the va- cancy caused by the election of the representative of South Brant, the late IIon. E. D. Wood, to the House of Commons. In 1877 he entered the Mowat Administration as 170-! vincial Secretary and Registrar, and‘ in 1889, succeeded the late Dr. Par- doe as Commissioner of Crown Lands in the same Administration. During the absence of Sir Oliver Mowat in Europe in May, 1895, Mr. Hardy rve as acting Preâ€" on Qir Oliver joining the Laurier Ad- mier and Attorney-General, an“, m. Sir Oliver joining the Laurier Ad- ministration in 1896, Mr. Hardy succeeded to the important post. of Premier of Ontario, by choice of his colleagues. 20th. 1901. Report for W night, June 15th: Highest Lowest .......... Warmest, mes Coldest. mean The week . ..... Greatest TuesdaYv Rain fell HON. A. S. HARDY. LWJ ' tell on one 383.1 rain fall 0'91 . ............ .88 30 Friday .37. '70 Monday 74. 70 Friday "mean "of" .. .52. 50 Sunday , ”D mean of. Temperature The Weather of "' mos: BM Victoria County Soldiers Left for Kingston on Tuesday With‘ companies well manned, un- iforms bright and clean and new long-range rifles the 45th Victoria Regiment, Col. Hughes commanding.- mustered on the Queen’s square and tramped down Kent-st to take the train for Kingston on Tuesday’- The boys looked well. Most of them were bright intelligent look- ing young fellows whom this country can never afford to put up for tar- gets on any battle field unless it lies athwart the march of an enemy upon their homw. Col. Hughes, always a soldier, is even more so after his sharp experience in the South African war. It instead of the goose step and mechanical closeâ€"formation exercises of the books, the manoeuvres this year should partake of the methods recommended by him for years. ad- opted by him so successfully in Af- ‘rica and slowly being forced on the British officers there, the annual drill this year would mark a new era in the effectiveness of our militia. With a knowledge of the changes the conditions of actual warfare have thrust upon our forces, it seems in? congruous if not a trifle ridiculous to See our preparation for war go- ing on without asign of adaption to the actual needs of war. It is said that at Camp Niagara not' a single new element has been adopted. 1f Col. Hughes does not introduce them it will be for the reason that he is not permitted to. If the Torâ€" onto Telegram's estimate of Col. Hughes, that appears in this issue is correctâ€"and it most surely is -â€"-â€" it is a pity that after the expense of sending soldiers into camp and the importance of their drill being effect- ive. his superior methods should be over-ridden by men who are greater in authority and less in ability than he. The new Lee-Enfield rifles with which the boys are armed are fznc looking weapons. They shunt quite accurately for a mile‘and have a ra-nge of twicdthat distance. The British troops are armed with these guns and it is said that most Boer commandoes use them in preference to the Mauser-s. They of course get them by captures. The bullet is not more than a quarter of an inch through but 114 inchesrlong made of a. nickle steel sheath filled with 'ead. They drill through a bane is not. dangerous in many parts 0f the body. There was some Oimcuuy :u numb the companies during the last few days before leaving because the boys found they would have to be vaccinated at camp; It. seems a strange thing to expect. men to carâ€" ry a rifle and'go through exercises for hours per day with a good healthy vaccination scab on his arm and the generally tired feeling that comes along with such an arm. â€"â€"The regiment band is in goon condition. â€"-'l‘he regwent will be twelve days. â€"â€"A few of the Institute cadets went in the ranks. â€"â€"Mr. Randolph Soanes has charge of the officers rations. â€"â€"Capt. Staples and his Eldon men ,are the pick of the regiment and, aw ay THE 3mm OFF TO CAMP â€"-Capt. Staples and his Eldon men are the pick of the regiment and, some say, of the whole camp. --â€"Mr. Geo. Fox went with the regiment. Although he cannot see __.Dr, Shier 11 tion as surgeon hence did not 8 BY “SIRS MILBURN’S PILLS. The T. Milbum Co.. L'um Toronto, Ont. Dear Sing-Some time : GAINED tier has resigned his posi- rgeon of the battalion and not go to the camp this will be missed by the men. some difficulty Field Notes §ours tryly. The area. of the Dominion. extend- ing as it does from the Atlantic to the Pacific, is as large as Europe, but the population is no greater than that 01 London, says Lloyd’s Week- ly. What a. prospect this opens up to those who are possessed of the neces- sary energy and capital to take ad- Vantage of its great resources in ag- 1 Anna»? (3 sax-y energy and capmu w vantage of its great resource riculture. minerals, fisheries, and manufactures! It om grants of land to settlers provinces (Manitoba, the N J ma_bn A, ‘ Vantage U1 luv 0' v..- riculture, minerals, fisheries, forests, and manufactures-! It offers free of land to settlers in some provinces (Manitoba, the Northwest Territories. and parts of Ontario), Crown grants in o wick. Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, end British Columbia), and imprOVed farms may be obtained chrywhere at reasonable prices. What ‘Canada wants is more people and more capi- tal, and those who are anxious tc obtain information about: our lead- ing colony-its progress in recen1 Years. and the advantages it offers t< settlers of all classesâ€"cannot do bet- , .. '71-}- (‘n‘nmis ter than consult Bioncr for Cana< at 17 Victoria s Knapp".- Bullion u. u-..-__. - The newspaper business must. be a good thing in Dawson City. The rates for The Dawson City Daily News are 25 cents a copy, or $4 a month. The subscription rate for the town is $48 a year. It, is an eight-pug. daily for five months oi the year and four pages for the re- mainder. The circulation is a. little under 900 per day. A 16-page Week'- ‘ ‘- “K A.“ ta 3 “nae! ”W W “OJ. -_ _ , _ v 13' Paper is published at 25 Cents a copy for the town. It is diotnbuted . mic!" up the “93““. _by‘ ASEg‘i‘Snirsc. 0i . Mer‘wthder machine. 'wmch. vfih .1! equipment, cost. “p.700. 5‘“ by Immigration to (funds. all“ VIII? 9.“ - w.â€" ~ , v I of all classesâ€"Cannot do bet- m consult. the High CommiSo for Canada. whose ofi'lces an Victoria street. London, S.W. Business in Dav-0‘ others (New Bruns- a, Quebec, Ontario, abia), and improved nined chrywhere at 3. What ‘Canada ople and more capiâ€" 'ho are anxious to ion about: our lead- prOgrcss in recent City. GENERAL IGEIT That is our motto. When we measure a man ’ ' " 1 be the size and shape they 23131031? llWe know how clothes should ,,__ 4. 2-.-...” Dual“: W UV-o nuv ‘- be cut. to suit different figures. Our stock of goods is not surpassed in "3!: Lindsav. It contains the most serviceable wears of the Mi'ls. ‘CATHRO 8: CO. Will suit you. “‘J M w American and European 289‘. If $9.3 b'oén" CHEâ€"33661153 lafe for n; “on and had to be curied 400 mien over the ice. The horse feed alone cost $39 a. day and it took 27 days to ml. the trip. GATHRO a; co- '. LOGAN '. LOGAN SELLS THE BEST' PIANUS, UHGANS and SEWING MAEHlNES in the matkct, and the cheapest according to quality. He pays cash for all his goods, 'ge best discounts, and can give pur- chasers right prices“ and best â€"For all kinds of dry lumber, bill stun, shingles, lath, Wood and Coal go to R. Bryans k Co., Phone 56-. I10 KEI {-81, LIIDSIY OI [IRIO

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