Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 20 Aug 1903, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ma Steel Shingia. merican movement 0; guards i ‘ to“. in: your Watch 15 he Jeweller 104m. Dairy Pails, or isfactzon, both in price LIES hers Ah. yes; 3 And have ”Irv-'F’ Hour 00W” add use“ of "a | il WV,“ ISON m. l. S. Unghson, B. A., 58,3 um... um an: at Lindsay School Children Best of Beaverton, and moderator of the Presbyterian church in this district, preached rec- enfly on L-hc'tmmp nuisance and as - «amndv advised people to refuse ,Rev. D. W. Rev "Whosaevcr, I himself as 111i: is the greatcs Heaven.” 'J full 01' ambit as any wier en the 20m u sured tht-m Li‘ God's stundm‘ Parents w with social duties that. homes, that look aflcr pendence i churches to rents Shuuld SOD believm 350115 tenth” SHIL 0f thl‘ SChOOlS lllm‘ the parents teach. 'l‘l' cuts more 1' it does anyl ems believe termine its iather smul will likely do not. the faith ( may come faith w ant d anybody 91: A doctor c child than 1‘91!) more truths of p “five to Wand N° Other remedy possesses sue}! ”flat cleansing, healing and pup- blag Pfoperties. - ,, I. Emmy, heals Sores, Ulcers,l “mes, and a}! Eruptions. .lntemany, restores the Stomach; hi“: BOWels and Blood to health, ' mm” 3 your appetite is poor; your energy gone, your ambition‘ ’ 3-3-3. will restore you to til." 3 e“joyment of ham vigor“!!! ‘ums Bad Blood into‘ Rich Red Blood. ‘ } not mom ma CflURCflES 313.1 auu uv hat, tukc. t1 Lhut they 11 cr thcix‘ 0\ is put to do for mm d() for s and sxu [rt ox' them. MI‘. Llu'gu-l agitation for reli- g 1 schools .was a re- c to transfer to the 1 of teaching What - msvh‘es ought. to 1 h! believes its par-g] I and implicitly thanl‘ MM}. What the par- 1 do will likely se- 1 i and action. If a mi swears, his boys h e and swear ; if he xith rare exceptions. a child is taught is lute? years. Doubt Faith may waver, but »15 of our childhood .Ex'm when everything He ce the import~ parents. :t to transfer it to J’here are things that] um do for the} man the parents .canzl in more for a sick‘ w-nt : the teacher can § .\ h*SS()nS : but, the‘ “a “I have just returned from a. busi-’ ’51: i ness trip through the Canadian;l zirl Northwest” said Mr. Geo. A. Jon“ to gdan the other day, “and while away‘ le- 1 I was pleased to meet a. good many (1! . . . . n t former cxtxzens of Victona. county, >a-: :h-fand very glad to find them all ' getting along so well. I ,‘ll' E 1'0“ At Calgary, by the way, I met a 1"" | number ' of ,a'Cquaintan'ccs not from lat | the east but from the westâ€"men ‘0 3 from beyond the Rockies, whom I a""ihad known when I lived in Vancouâ€" L"mix-er. We had a. pleasant time to- m" i g'ether. But about the people you S8“ ‘ know : - ,. A._1I-t‘l rier rises between thém‘ and their parents. so that the ‘mpnts’ are last to 3; say the very things that they most want their j’children, to hear. That'should'not be. ’ ‘ There is a. lack of respect 40:- 1their elders among, the achgldrem of ' Ont-’ ario today that shows a. defect in our method of Child-training,â€" and lies at the very: foundation of irrev- emnce for religion and God: ‘When I was in Quebec the school children on .the street met me with deference, but when you meet a. crowd of Lind- ;say school children, you do well to {keep your- place on the sidewalk. It is a pretty hard thing for the pastor to get near the children now- adays. When he calls the chiidmn an usually at school, or if at Jmme. are in some, cases kept out of the way. N o minister sho'uld, however, lose sight of the fact; that young children can get a. knowledge of rel- igious thing» and retain it through life. Spurgeon, Hammond, the evangelist; and other great auth- orities had firm faith in child con- version. AT s'r. PAUL'S: In the absence of Rural Dean Marsh 'who’ is holidaying at Clerks- burg, the service at St. Paul’s‘ on Sunday night was,“ conducted by Gui-ates Hallam and Bel}. The for- me:- preached. His text was : “I am the good shepherd, etc.” John 10 : 13â€"15. The preacher referred to the great popularity of this representa- tion of Christ as a shepherd, in the art of old and modern times. Even in‘ the catacombs of Rome were found many piptures and engravings )df Christ as a. shepherd. The idea always powerful-1y appealed to. Chris- derness that it suggested. Because tians. That was likely because of the ten- of his patience with and care for the silly sheep and helpless lambs the shepherd always appeals to human hearts, and the sentiment- has readily become associated with Christ who called himself a. good shepherd. Guidance was a chief duty of the Shepard ‘to which the preacher drew attention. By the shepherd the sheep are directed into places that are safe and productive of pasture. So, it was _'declared, Christ gives infal- lib-1e direction to every man. An- othefiduty of the shepherd was to Seek and find lost sheep. Likewise did 'Christ seek ‘lost men. He had ox en given'His life for the sheep.. Having announced those very sug- gestive parallels between the work of the shepherd and Christ, the preach- er did not expand them at any length, but rather turned. to rebuke his hearers for ,_‘not accepting these ministrations o? Christ. On this acâ€" count the sermgn, {while quite effec- tive did notifilifininate the office of Christ as the shepherd. of mankind, as much as one could wish; Both Mr. Hallam and Mr. Bell are apparently young men of excellent spirit and good ability. The service lacked nothing of the dignity, im- pressiveness and. devotion ' ‘ that should characterize the occasion of worship. FORMER VICTORIA COUNTY FOLKS ARE DOING WE1L OUT WEST (ML Luv. xxwv--D ..__-__, \V ‘ l Macmillan, who is here, and Mr. 7; L. Orde, brother of E. D. Orde. At' 3 Brandon I met Rev. W. H. Emsley, ; who was once pastor of the Cam? bridgeâ€"st. Methodist church here. He l has a line church and splendid con-f i gregation. He likes a good horse as well as ever, 'and gave me a drix‘e Iabout town. The Model Farm ati lBrandon is a. capital institution that ‘ :gives the multitudes of American 1flaring-1‘s now coming into the west *an idea both of what can be grown tin the country and how to go about ‘growing it. ‘1 At Calgary I met Mr. Bruce Smith. 1He is town solicitor and prosperous. gBut Messrs. Patrick Burns and C. J. iliuggan are the kings of that dis-' _itrict. They are the great ranchers, kwho together control the cattle trade “i"? that” part of the west. British [Columbia and the Yukon. Mr. Burns Eis from Kirkfield, and his partner is a "enelon 'man. ' hat firm pay $25,000 a year in railway frei-ghts. They Wintered a great many cattle ilast season, and lost very few in the ispring: storm. Their abattoir will » jhold 500 dressed carcasses. It todk .g'million feet of lumber to build it. “Mr. Burns lives in a mansibn at Cal- gary. I met there also, a Mr. E. lH. Crandell,‘ who is a prosperous - --â€" man fhrmerly of Eastern Mr. hllUÂ¥V . At Winnipeg a lot of them called on me. Among them were Rev. J. W, Macmillan, who is here, and Mr. W. A‘- a Fenelon man. 5525.000 a year in They Win-tered a. 1 last season, and lo: Suring" storm. T] b H. “'Crandell, * who is 1 business man farmerly Canada. ‘ T -_.~h banana. At Strathcona I came across Mr. .I. J. Duggvan, his brother William of FoneIon, Dry McIntyre of Rosedalc. l‘onnis Twomey of Fenel'on Falls. and Makolm McIntyré, who is ih the cus- country . perhaps a sonâ€"of Mr. Sam. Suddaâ€" by, Burnt River. j Mr) J. 'D. Hut- ton is a prominent citizen. ' I was see the Victoria ‘boys doing ' --" '3'th are all contented and They are an comm. m. .. .., healthy The Duggans are putting up a big block at Strathcona, and if as some people there hope it will, the C. P. R. locum its shops there, that is going: to be a great town. beehive. It will he ‘s’RonI. Geo Jordan Taiks of a TripThrongh the Canadian Northwest. American prairie tachoomzl‘fir 81‘ 8 530mg in there all the time. ‘ sever 3-1 new towns are springing up smh “3 We taskawin, Red Deer Lacombe and Ledue.” ~ ‘-_A__. Mr Jordan was west ‘in the inter- ests ‘ o! the Big Bend Lumber Com. W, of Arrow' Head, 13.0., of which: he' ’is a‘directo'r. This is one of the recent big lumbering corporations formed in the Pacific province. Mr. Theodore Ludgate, the best-knoxxn lumberman out west, is president of the company, and Mr. Adam Hall, Peterboro; Viceprwidcnt. The other directors besiaes Mr. J ordan are M98513. R. R. Hall, Peterboro, Jas_ LUdS‘ate. Parry Sound. and G. S. McCarthy. Revelstoke, B. v. The enormous mills on Arrow Lake are almost completed and will start to Stun in a. couple of weeks. They are 1Situated on 'Arrow Lake, to which the product of the company's limit can be brought by water and from Which the railway takes the finished product. “'1‘ _..2“:-_.. yo V“.~ up There is on the limits 250 million feet 6f pine. The capacity of the mills . is 40,000,000 or 50,000,000 f?et of lumber a. year besides lath and other small stuff. Cutting can go on 11 months m the year. “I was looking over the ground in tho. west with a View to our market v “I was looking over the ground m the West with a, view to our market there" said Mr. Jordan. “I had no difficulty in appointing agents at the chief points and the prospect for a big trade are good. You see the Territories must buy about all their lumber. -Our mills are 401‘) miles nearer to them than any others in British Columbia so we shall have a big freight advantage. We have great hopes of the property." - ‘_-v _"_,,- Mr. Jordan came éastfibecause ol the illness of his wife, who is now r04 covering; and expects to resume his work out there in a few weeks. They Superseded the Roman stuns In the Eighteenth Century. A heating apparatus called a “stuba” (stove) was widely used among the higher class of Romans before the be. ginning of the Christian era. ‘This class of heaters was fixed and immova- ble, besides being in several other re- spects wholly different from the mod- ern store. In Germany and Scandina- via they were used in bath rooms and ‘ hothouses during the middle ages. They were usually constructed of brick, stone or tile and were of im- mense size. They sometimes covered the whole side of a twenty or thirty foot room and often extended out into the room as much as ten feet, in which case the“ smooth, flat top was used for a bedstead, the heated surface impart- ing an agreeable feeling of warmth during those cold nights of long ago when such things as covers were quite rare. Cardinal Polignac of France was per- haps the first to attempt the construc: tlon of a s‘ove wholly of iron, this at (about the beginning of the eighteenth century. The first real improvement oyerr the old Roman “stuba” was brought about by Franklin in the year 1745. One of his eflorts produced a , typical base burner, almost perfect and a model of workmanship. Stoves were not used in private houses to any great ; extent prior to the year 1830. i A Plecutorial Gunner. ! The jaculator' fish, the piscatorial ‘. gunner of the Javan lakes, uses his 1 month as a squirt gun and is a marks- man of no mean ability. Go to a small lake or pond filled with specimens of l jaculators, place a stake or pole in the , water with the end projecting from one 'to three feet above the surface, place ' a beetle or fly on top of the pole and , await developments. Soon the water 1 will be swarming with finny gunners, ; each anxious for a shot at the tender : morsel ‘which the experimenter has " placed in full view. Presently one L1 comes to the surface, steadily observes ; his prey and measures the distance. ii Instantly he screws his mouth into the ', funniest shapes imaginable, discharges i .- ammm of water with precision equal It is a remarkable fact that although there are nearly ,or quite 100,000 flow- ering plants known the relative num- ber having odor is wonderfully small, not more than 10 per cent, in fact. In connection with this it is noteworthy that because one species of flower is endowed with sweet odor it does not necessarily follow that all or nearly all or even a fair proportion of the other species of the same family will be as favorably endowed. An illustra- -- -. run {a found in the familiar that because one species of flower is endowed with sweet odor it does not 'y follow that all or nearly all or even a fair proportion of the other species of the same family will be as favorably endowed. An illustra- tion of this is found in the familiar mignonette. There are some fifty spe- cies of this genus known, and of them all, but one has any fragrance. Nor is it certain that the most insignificant looking flower has the greatest fra. ance or the most gorgeously colored likely to be without odor. thus seem- assist in cross fertilization. ‘ In Uganda ». man can uu, u ”a..- some wife for four bulls. a box of car- tridges and six needles, and if he has the luck to go a-wooing when woman happens to be a drug in the market he can buy a suitable damsel for a pair of shoes. A Kamr girl ls worth, ac» cording to the rank of her family, from four to ten cows. and in Tartary no fa- ther will surrender his danghternnless he gets a good qnanflty of butter in re- girl can marry ““1959 her been pacified byapresentot ricenndt THE FIRST STOVES. Odors 8111!!!! C L ”Mu -â€"v most gorgeously colored vithout odor, thus seem- ‘mg the theory that color 9 are given flowers for of 'atti'acting insects to the Roman Stuba og Flower!- Wile. can buy 3 pand- lTheN. A “Dorothy Dodd” ret it has been worn for month; at every step you take, ther remedy is so simple? EWC are opening up to.‘ Famous Shoe. When your foot Btired from long "thing or standing. you rest it mostly by holding it in your hand and compress rt 61ml around and beneath the instep. That is exactly what the “Dorothy Dodd Stce” does for you You will never all the time-itis ‘ e a soft hand firmly grasping the"waist” of the foot and supporting the arch. reahze how rind! of your daily futigue can be relieved until you try a “Dorothy Dorm." y to the foot after A “Dorothy Dodd” retains its arched shape and sets closel No other shoe is made like it. Other shoes bend tiring the foot. Why be foot-miserable when the is prepared to turnilh tho people of Lindsay and‘ surrounding. country with monuments and headuoneo, both marble and granite. Estimates promptly given on all Lindsay Marble Walks kinds of cemetery requisitel. Marble Table TOpI, Wash Topl, Mantle Pieces, etc., a. specialty. Being a practical workman, all should see his design! and compare prices before purchasing elsewhere. WORKS.â€"In the rear of Market on Cambridge-et., opposite the Packing House. ROBT. CHAMBERS. THE N. HOCKIN‘ 51191;;- STORE Puppet Crown, 3 romance pure and simple by Bar oMld Machth price,25c Granstark, a. story of a. love behind a. throne,b G B McCutcheon, price 25c When nightfihood was in Flo ower, a. love story byE .Caskoden, price 250 Wee MacGreggor. a good Scotch stg’ry_ by J.J J.,Beil price ........ .26c 9- h-..-kl- a- 11 “AW MOk TRENT VALLEY NAVUEQ June 15th to Sept let Bobcaygeon leave 6.15 mm. and 3.10 pan Sturgeon Point “ 7.15 " “ 4.10 “ Lindsay Arrive 8.40 " " 5.30 “ v “ Leave 11.00 “ " 6.3) “ Sturgeon Point Lve 12.10 pan, 7.40 “ Bobcaygeon Arr 1.15 pan and 8.55 “ DuringJune, July, Aug" and Sept... Saturday's boat will wait arrival of ev- enng train from Toronto. After September lat will leave Lindâ€" say at 4.45 p.rn. instead of 6.30 pm). ~ lune 15th to Sept 5th or till notice Coboconk Ive 6.00 sun arr 7.10 p.m ‘Rosedale Lock “ 7.00 “ lve 0.10 “ Ftnelon Falls arr 7.40 “ “ 5.39 Fenelon Falls lve 8.30 “ arr 4.4a “ 6| 9w 6‘ H 4.15 .8 Pt . Lindsay arr 10.15 “ Ive 3.00 “ Connection made at Fenclon Falls with mornin train for Toronto and Lindsay for art Hope. Time at. Fen. elon Falls for breakfast and tea. Juniper Is. “ 7.10 Mcb‘racken's “ 7H) Young’s Pt. “ 8.10 Lakefleld arr 8.50 Lakefleld Ive 9.16 Young's Pt “ 10.“) ROBERT CHAMBERS The Luxury of mm, mm mus, unusu! Confiectij Bunelun, ‘m‘s Pam 1W1 messâ€"- NEW BOOKS Boncumeon, _ gummy, Bunema . LITTLE’S BOOKSTORE MANITAâ€" cu. um._ncm Amt 7.10 'hter, a new book Vard, price. ”$1 25 The SoIdAgent in Lindsay for the Famous lnvic' 66 w-go t-IH CO :13 m 4.15 Ive 6.3) 7.15 Wearing this Delightful Shoe WE ARE IN LINE ic’us Shoe for Men. With the finest assortment of Trunks and bags even: oficréd to the public of Lindsay. No mawer what you want in Trunks, Bags, Leathen Goods, Start Gases, 'l‘elescogés, QtC we have it. All are handsome and well made; but- moderawly priced. Lightsnd heavy Harness. always on hand‘or made to order. ‘ ‘ ' Repairing neatly done. PAGE SEVEN flJ Little MST- of this and: ' piomPtLV‘

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy