Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Lindsay Post (1907), 12 May 1911, p. 2

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Wdl‘ the roar of city traffic, and fits-«Weaning and nerve-racking din, ever be silenced, remarks the Chris 2681: Guardian? Some rubber en< finsmsts claim that the solution of I my: problem lies in rubber pave-' «mats, and that these Will not by any means, be impossible inside oil «a. few years. At: present the price ~32 crude rubber is prohib.tive, but } wanâ€"Mâ€" it re thought that an increased out- ”: will cause the price to drop a point where rubber pavements, rill become a commercial possibil- ity. Next month there will be a rubber exhibition in London, Eng- , had. with Klng George as Patron 9 and Sir H. A. Blake as president, ‘ and an the rubber ‘prodncing areas ,3 Id thd world are expected to to exited. At the last rubber ex- ‘tion Sir H. Blake said that a‘; prominent manufacturer had , snared him that when rubber sold 3 %§%%%%%% HQ 5 flag m" i=5: 0.99.. >20 02m $3.0m @wmwmwmwmpmwmwfim mm W @ K 8g}? (at THE LINDSAY POST :25 yer par; $1.00 If pa}: in sumac directjowubllsm We have no subscription agents. ‘V II SON ' ”W ILSON, " PAGE 2.. .JNDSAY, FRIDAY, MAY, 12th; 6f? 8:: 32:: Bast, cgaam Tankard 5:33? Beet, Baden Tank- an}, Yelfew Globe. Etc' This Mange! has received the cadm's'ujon of the Dep=-rtment as well as the most, successful local farmers. ‘We also have the other good kinds. flammoth ton: Rad, Jumbo \Vbich lms received the highest commendation, being an abund- ant vieidcr. 5.: ilh high food value and gum! misk pr )(iucing prop- e: Liz-s. is the DUNOGN’S DRUG STORE THE MANGEL You will get. the right. kind R8385}! PAVEHENIS Propric A 85:33am a-pound mark. Some think, how ever, that by 1915 the pmce W111 be low enough to justify its use §for pamng the city streets. But isome of us thmk that agood num ber of other things may happen be lion that time. For the present, i then, the city's multtudfinous nois- es must ccntinue. and we must ,bear it with what .gtaCe we may. -â€"~\.-- Elsewhere in this issue a writer throws out a suggestion which should be acttd upon by our Board. of Edu- cation. It is to the effect that in View of the fact that the Coronation ~ of our beloved King takes place on June 22. Lindsay could not more fittingly observe such an event than to name our two handsome new public schools after His- Majesty King George and Her Majesty Queen Mary. or Alexan- dra, the Queen Mother. This, to our minds, is an excellent suggestion, They would serve as 911 enduring monument to perpetuate the career of a monarch whose reign gives promise of being fraught with deeds which mean much to the glori- ous Empire of which we form so great a. part. His Majesty's beloved Queen-wile is, too, destined to play a part in the future of the greatest empire that has been, and the two educational institutions named in their honor will serVe to instill in the hearts and minds of this and the future generation, a. feeling of love and .lyoalty for the throne. at 50 cents 'per pound it could be utilized economically for street pave meats. But rubber of late has not been heading towards the SO-cents- Several fatalitles have occurred, and a consxderable amount of prop- erty destroyed by fires started for the purpose of bummg overa. very small grass plot, or to burn upa collection of dry leaves and sweep- mgs. That it is a dangerous pro- cedars. no one will deny, and es- peciaily when it is 'attempted by women or children. The former by the construction and material of their costumes, are very liatle to have thexr clothing set on fire by sparks, or the rapid run of fire A brass tablet could be placed in a conspicuous position amend-sing the fact that on Coronation Day, June 22nd, the schools _were dedicated to our beloved King and Queen-wife. A PAIRiOTIC SUGGESTION narecaas‘ or GRéSS £1223 he przca m1] i What a payment of 25 cents or stify its use 'fifty cents a“-week would purchase streets. But ‘at any age may be asccrtained up- at agood num Ion applicatlon to S. T. Bastedo. nay happen he ‘ Superintendent of Canadian Govern- the present, ment Annuitles, Ottawa. to whom Ltudfnous nois- ,letters go free of postage. 152% gee @2353 Q; QB lag gm Juld be t pave as not -cents- hnx‘! and 7, the Annuities to become payable at 60. FrOm that time as long as they live, a yearly income of $547.76 and $437.78 respectively be paid them by the Government. If they die befcre they are 60, the money paid in will be refunded to their heirs together with 3per cent compound interest. so that to} a total of $2,808 to be paid in an income combined of $1,925.53. or greater than the income to be de- rived from an investment of twenty thousand dollars at five per cent, would be received. The one thing is feasible for a man even with a very limited wage. while the other would be quite impossible for him. Taking advantage of the low rate to he obtained whcn the children are young is what patents should aim zitâ€"the children would carry the payments themselves as soon as they are able. @Q @263 mug lad ,,, )Efi -l $353 LE5 through grass. Children have been burned by reason of their inability to‘ escape the flames. Only a very light wind is required to create a dangerous blaze. Flres have been started in the woods from a grass fire that has got away iron the person' who started it. There is hardly anything more dangerdhs than the grass fire a' householder xmay start in hls yard to clear away the dead grass and prepare for a green .lawn. If he must do it, he sliohld take preceutxon to lay the garden. hose near by, con- nect<d with the water service, and ready to aid in stopping the blaze when it starts to run away. J. dark day, when no wnd is stlrâ€" ring, is the {best for such a pur- pose. but the safest way is not to attempt to burn grass in a thlckly populated section. There should? be a regulation aja‘nst 2t, and the rule enforced. .v Lewis F/Post of the.Chicago Pub- lic, is a friend of organized labor but he takes a. very sena'ble View of the recent arrest of the dynamiters when he says : “Arrests of union labor men for blowing up the building of a Los An- geles newspaper with dynamite and killing many persons, are reported this wce‘s quite sensationally. If these men are guilty, no considerations of merCy not applicable to eVery crimin- al can be invoked in their be- half. Such crimes are diabolical undâ€" er all circumstances in which they are committed with deliberation. They are a menace to Society, they endanger the non-combatant; they put labor organizaticn at a disadvan- tage which the legitimaCy of its purâ€" pose can ill aflord to bear in its. al- ready unequal contest with monopoly and they make the way increasingly diflicult for equitable adjustment of industrial relations through political agencies. {Montreal Herald). . When Sir John Macdonald declared to appeal to the country in 1891, Sir John Thompson was, probably, his principal adviser. It was Sir John Thompson who made the speech in Toronto by which the campaign was opened, and in which the country was told about the probability of getting a treaty of reciprocity with the United States. Sir John Thomp- son was a candidate for election in Antigonish, Nova Scotia. and very naturally he issued an address to the electors, the terms of which have been prescrved. Part of it is worth quot- ing to-day, considering the reputa- tion in which Sir John Thompson was held. He wrote: “The Government 0t which I am a member is appealing to the coun- try with a, policy, which we be- lieve will be hzartily endorsed by No greater encouragement to: thrift has ever been presented by: any country than is offered to the people of Canada. under the pro- visions of the Canadian Govern- ment Annuities Act, which was un- animously‘ passed by both Houses of Parliament in 1908. While any‘ resident of Canada may purchase,‘ the Act was densed ch.ef1y to en-l able wageoearners and othrrs with} limited incomes to make absolutely' safe provisim for the closing years} of life in a way that would be‘ impossible to make...under any othâ€" er cond‘itions available. For exam- ple, a mechanic, whose weekly wage‘. is but a little larger than his weekly expenditure, is, by paying! a dollar a week, purchasing An-i nuities for his two boys, aged 5 § A WISE [ROM TEE PAST [HAT DYNAMITE OUTRAGE CflILDHOOD'S OPPORTUMTY THE LINDSAY POST { “But fortunately for Canada and for us, we and they have learned much more than we realized two decades ago with rcspect to the nece ssin of proper methods of forestry and of lumber cutting. And henca we may be safe in saying that under proper ,modern methods, the timber resourc- jes open to us in Canada may he in: .exhaustible, and we may derive ample supplies of timber from Can- :adiah resources to the prozit of Ca..- 1 ada and for our own benefit. ” i The summarized report as published in the Canadian newspapers, remarks ; the Winnipeg Free Press, rather tend- 1 ed to support the argument put forth jby various critics of the agreement E that the United States, having wast- ed their own natural resources were now desirous of also destroying the resources of Canada. President Taft, howeVer, Expressed his hope that Ca- nada would conserve he: resources to the ultimate benefit of both countries. iIt would, undoubtedly bedisastrous , if the United States were to be al- glowed to draw without limit or restrictiOn upon our timber, mineral, ! or fishery resources. The result would , be rapid and ruinous depletion of our national wealth. The right and the I duty of the Governments to limit the I output from these sources of supply are now recognized. The sensible [course isto safeguard and protect . our resources, selling the yield that E is» alloved in the widest markets and under conditions which will give the largest financial return. “Another, and a very conclusive 5 reason for closing the contract. is the 'opportunity it gives us to increase ' the supply of our natural resources, 5 which, with the wastefulness of child- Iren we have wantonly exhausted. The timber resources of Canada. Which , will open themselves to us inevitably gundcr the operation cf this agree- ;ment, are now apparently inexhaust- iible. I say apparently inexhaustible i l for if the same procedure were to be adopted in respect to them that we ‘have followed in respect to our own 'iorests, I preSUme that they too .might be exhausted. Cobonrg, May. 4.â€"I‘. oland Lona- berry, a young farm hand, whose father residzs at Warsaw. was in stantly killed yesterday afternoon by being thrown from a land rol- ler, fracturing hie skull. The ace:- dent occurred almost on the same spot where MLss' Day, of Cobourg, was killed in a runaway three years ago. and his remains were taken to the same house and laid in the some roozn. Lonsberry was in the employ of James Behan, 0} Hamilton township. He had COm- pleted his work in the f;e‘.d, but instead of unhitching the team and taking them to the barn, decided unwisely to take the roller down the hill.. The team became unman- ageable, and he was thrown Off the roller. His brother and uncle $00}?- the remains to Warsaw todaY- He had been working for Mr. Behan for six weeks. Young Farm HUSSEY.â€"At Gravenhurst, on Fri- day. April 28th, 1911, John Hussey, formerly or Lindsay. a great majority of the electors. We have made to the GOVernment of the United States, throngh “13 Government of Great Britain. pro posals for reciprocity in trade, WhiCh. We haVe good reason to be- lieve, will result in an arrange- rent by which the markets of the United States win be reopened to the products which our 1300918 desire most to send there. A fair measure of reciprocity is what we desire, and we have! no doubt that that can be obtained without un- due sacrifice." And what, might one ask. was the Macdonald-‘I‘hompson idea of a “fair- measure of reciprocity?" would they have rejected such an arrangement as Mr. Fielding and Mr. Patterson have been able to ei‘i‘ect? Not likely. for it conforms almost exactly to the standln; ofier, which stood so long on thz statute book, ket‘lt there at their own instance. What Sir John Thompson wanted was "an arrangement by which the markets of the United States will be re-opefxed to the products which our People desire most to send there. " Isn' t thlt just what we are now get- ting ? President Taft's reference in his recent speech, to the desirability of Canada's natural resources being made available to United States de- mands, was not quoted in its entire- ty in the report which came through to the Canadian newspapers. This is what he said : TAFT ON CANADIAN RESOURCES Hand Kifled Inca! anNE('a*ic~ns. as they cannot reach the dis-«Ned portion of the 9â€"1: 'lhm'e is only one way to ruse deafness. a- d that in by constibution. 3.] remedies Deafness!“ mused by an inatmed audition of the xuucmu )iniuz of the Eusmchian Tube When this tube is inflamed you have a rumblin sauna orim rfect hearing, and when it is entire y dosed baa ness is the result, sud un. less the inflammation mm be taken out. and this tube rest red to its norm n1 condition. hearing will be destroyrd forever: nine. cases out of ten are mused by (Iamnh. which x3 nothing but an m flamed condition of the mucous snrfnnva. I should like to know what authori-l' ty they had for having an article; like that publishzd, when suqh is not' the case. No one is allowed to use . dip nets, or any other kind of nets 1 except 11; under authority of a license‘ 1 from this department, and anyone so; doing subjects himself to a fine of; from $5 to $50 for every fish so. taken! Yours truly, , mWe will give One Hundred Dalian fofany case of Deafnr-ss caused by catarrh)‘ that cannot be gnreal by liali‘a Catarrh Cure bond for circular, Fishery Inspector Bradshaw has re- ceived the letter given below, and will have to act accordingly. This means that all (lip nets will be pro' hibited'. The letter'is as follows : Toronto, May 2, 1911. Sinâ€"One of the Pcterboro papers had an: article last week stating that Fishery Inspector Watts gate his views on» the FisheryAct, and it ended as follows: “The suckers have begun to run. and Inspector Watts states that it. is permissible to use dip nets to capture these fish. Permission- to use acts will be rescinded when the game fish make their appearance." Bl? NETS MUST NOT BE USED sote heads old wounds etc. Zam«Buk is without equal as a. healer and also for cuts bums, stiflfness and whatever and whenever a handy balm is’called for. Zam-Buk soap will be found as superior amongst medicinal and toilet soaps wthe balm is amongst salves Mothers should use it . :- oaby's bath 25c tablet all druggists and stores or post free from Zen-Eek Co. Toronto The thumb had begun to swell and tester and had lost the nail. I per- severed in- the application of Zam-Buk and the sore was cnt‘reiy healed." Got only for piles but for inflamed sons, ulcers, eczema, ringworm boils eruptions, scalp sores, itch children's ANOTHER OF OUR $15 SU’E’IS We have many different styles and the man who has $15.00 to invest in one of these Suits, wiil find better style, finer fabrics, longer wear, in a word, more value in our ciothes, than in any other. Mr. G. A. Dufreene of 183-185 St.. Jcseph streee, St. Roch, Quebec P.Q. writeszâ€"TI can highly recommend {arm-But to everyone who suffers piles. I have also found it'most ef- feceive in curing a sore thumb with which my little son was suflering. Read What Those Who Have Proved it Have To Say Mr. Thomas Pearson. of Prince Albert Sas‘:., writeszâ€"“I must thank you for the benefit I received from Zam-Buk. Last summer I suflered greatly from piles. I started to use Zamâ€"Buk and found it gaVe me relief eo I continued it and after using three or four boxes I am pleased to S'Jy that it hat afiecttd a complete cure" DUNDAS FLAVELLES F. J CHENEY CO.. Toledo 0 Sold In Druggists. 7:9- 1 5 full: 1 ‘ mi: m; Sm cons‘ im’. Beafness Cannot be cured ZAH-Bifii CURES FILES E. TINSLEY, Superintendent Limited EADVEMISE IN THE 3’65? MADISON WILL 3. 3A M S 20 H. P. RUNABé‘éEJ'F equipped for _ $900.00. with 3 oil lamps. ham! “\VXLL SECURE A 1911 20 H? m TORPEDO RUNABEEEH re~az«-x‘x/-â€"u TO PAY FOR A 1911 mm“ EH15 PRICE is fit She jatesy 5 passenger. 20 22.2.. Car with the afifion of top. windshield. speedomcier utor and gas lamps will be supplied for $975.00. ES A SMALL AMOUNT F039 WEIRENG 51in Eng Car, equifped with 3 Ci] hips, 110;“. tire with the same equipment A: the Torpedo at $800 an “Afiord a Ford.” $775.00 $800.0G THE PRICE FORTE} $875.09 LET US GIVE YOU A DEMONSTRATION mp SAY £125,934? FRIDAY repair out!!! W}: t! \‘e “118 that Fran With it. Y it honor-ah] “’8 his "i: 11:11:; “P6212121: 0? soiled Pinned to ”:3: she. he missed “By the necklace? “Here." “knees- flege. w: he Would about it n: valno know in: A man'i em expvet trusts his‘ 3!:ng “i Mint in e The refq self, {or about be (are fmn she be w the mysa “It [121 know: :1 pearls yo Iain. 51 joy of m enough u ply intell left her, own mind (ex-rid in: officer-ca “There give you Fulton lightly. memory c.3801!!!)t we rust V Winifn mdwfll For one cum [an I“! set: her «31th ' ‘ aoldie He 0 “I si When cupi coile VaValvv t she uld a! 2 Dn

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