Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Lindsay Post (1907), 15 May 1914, p. 9

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mm It rh fvl' poultry messy. 0n!- SON KEITH D LIFE .Q“‘ . and Dealer MS. D e355 h W I DDESS. ’CONNOR rance CFC” 09'1"ch 5pm! .g'du‘! 511m: who XC' "0t "th 133‘: In» if min; n 13W: 1M Woman-m WWW: 3 The Canada Life Assurance Co. Anderson Nugent 3 W- R 'VVIDDESS vertise in The Post “How EXPENSE RATIO, con- triimml to (he earning of a record surplus 'l‘HIi MORTALITY of the year was again more favorable than the expcvtarif'm: qughig with amcpntinu- “ 'l'llis chair looked too shabby to keep; but I made ll ll mli like new in odd moments with a small tin of â€";a durable floor varnish combined with unfa Tim: l> what many house/wives say after using this made En imitation of natural w'ood effectsâ€"Ught an Dark Mahogany, Walnut, Cherry, Green and Cle: \x'it‘nstzmd the hard wear floors are subject to. It gives : docs not show scratches or heel marks readily; when wat< d‘me. (Ian he used on old or new floors~for old fler5 is runny-Cd before applying Floor-lac in the desired color. direct and preserves the natural grain of the WOOd- Fioorlnc also gives excellent results on furniture and .insig and Varnish rzuher than a paint is required; Sold ini'ja, and (13?. cans. full Imperial Measure. Ask us for a colr 3")” Dunc-ls finished with Floorlac. ' FACTS WORTH KNO WING PRACTICAL TYPEWRITER ION SPECIALTY CO., Lindsay, Ont District Manager, Lindsay AY. MAY 1 SHEBWIN- WILLIAMS F L 00.9an H a rdwa re, 5m 14 uf machine} wanted full particulars. my. lmL i< capable of writing fr-mn30 to 60 vm-ds :1 minute. These tvpmvxj. era given f! we for selling fr"om .5 to 150 pacxagas nf nnr pretty pest, cards at 10¢ per package. zu‘cmding to size This 1:4 one of the best prem- iums any hnv 01* girl could wish to \\'in-~Rmne-lniwr this i< nnt a Paints, Varnishes, Oils, etc. LINDSAY furniture and inside woodwork where :1 stain red. Sold 1n ’.Pt )4. Pt, Pt. Qt. ,1»; Gal. Ask us for a color card, we can also show after using this finish. S-\V Floorlac is effectsâ€"Light and Dark Oak, Light and Green and Clear. Floorlac is made to set to. It gives a good tough finish which eadily; when water is. spilled on it no harm is lrs-for old floors a coat of Floorlac Ground the desired color. On new fioorsit is applied 9’ with unfading pigment stains “'1 it? I'm ' The five McMillan children, which “'ére‘taken in charge a. few days ago by the local agent of the Children's {Aid Society, and who were afterâ€" fwards taken away by their fat-her, iare qt present with their grandmo- ‘ther at King’s Wharf. The Society ihad left the children at the home of iMrs. Lyewood, who had been em- jployed to care for and board child- il'en, when they were taken by the {rathen It might be stated that she [is not a rerative of Mr.‘McMillan. g'l‘he Seeiety is proceeding with the icasv, with a view to securing the I . gchildren. CHILDREN ARE Pioneer Railway Builder Dead. BROCKVILLE. May 9.-John G. meat-y. a railway contractor of eon- tinental reputation. died at his home here. yesterdav, ag‘ed 77. In early life Y‘Ir, Steacy was associated with his father in the erection of passenger stations and engine shops along the line of the Grand Trunk Railway. He was the senior partner in the firm of the J. G. Stem-y Co. whit-h‘built the “TS! lifty miles or the iimopean North American Railroad. n'uming out of St. John, NB. ’ BAD ACCIDENT Fenclon Falls, May‘ 7-â€"On Wednes« day afternoon Mr. Edward McKin- non was the victim of a serious and painful accident while driving Mr. Geo. Martin’s team. It appears that he had been out with a loah of him- her for Mr. Martin's new cottage, and when returning with the empty wagon the horses took fright when at the railway crossing, and making a bolt threw -Mr. Wilkinson from his seat to the ground, where one of the wheels of the vehicle passed over him’, fracturing the bone of an arm above the elbow. He also sustained several severe cut: and bruises about the' face. Mr. Simmons conveyed himhome in his auto, and medical aid was at once secured. At latest reports he was resting easily and programing as well as could be ex- Dected. Haynes made a full written con- fession of his crime in the presence of Jailer Ram and Captainl‘uller- ton. (Special to The Post.) SYDNEY, N.S.. May 9. â€"- Frank Haynes expiated the murder-,0! B. S. Atkinson on the. scaffold yesterday afternoon at 5.41. The hangman, followed by the two ministers, pre- ceded Haynes who walked firmly to the scaffold. Standing in the centre of the trap and with the noose placed around his neck Haynes ask- ed for the doctor who placed a mor- phine tablet in the prisoner’s mouth. His words to the doctor were his last. MURDERER HANGED -‘ IN NOVA 'SCOTIA AT KINGS WHARF AT THE FALLS 103‘) Mr. Hearst spoke-of what he was aiming to do in developing this country. Roads are being k lil‘; in advaDCe of the settler to make his lot as Easy as possible, an] .43 ii.- duce settlement. ~_ DEVELOPMENT OF COUNTRY ; Nothing will cement the east and west together like the settlement and development of this great north country. We will haVe a united Can/.- uda, a dominating influence in the Inglish speaking world. ' ‘ AVAILABLE WATER POWER. The speaker spoke of the thous- ands of water powers in‘ Ontario. Some in New’ Ontario are almost. as large or powerful as Niagara. New Ontario will be the great manufac- turing centre of not only Canada, but of the North AmeriCan contin- Pnt. ‘ TIMBER INDUSTRY ‘_ ‘ Over titty millions of dollars ha‘Ve Tcome to the public treasury through lontario tirnber since confederation. The industry is going- ahead in’hUge strides, having gone ahead over four hundred per cent. in the last few years. Our province produces one half of all the timber produced in Canada. In the past there has been a good deal of waste of timber, but now we are trying Go conserve the timber for the best interests of the country in the fature. Ifa land is not suitable for settlement, settlers are kept out and the land treated with a view to the proper results from the timber. We protect th’eforâ€" Psts frOni fire by a huge army of fire rangers. Mr. Hearst then named the different huge areas of provincial parks where the timber was being kept. ' I The staple mines like iron, etc‘.'are the real wealthproducers to the people orthis province. More men are employed by this class of mine with a larger pay roll than any of the others, and this is what is im- portant to the. people of Ontario. PRODUCTION OUTLOOK Hon. Mr. Hearst spoke of the high productivene-ss and outlook of the copper mines. One seventh of the worldjs silver is produced in Optario, and seventy-five per. cent. of all the nickle in the world is prOduoed in Ontario. ‘ The productmnÂ¥~ofmetals is enor- lmous. The gem vamp ofwroxcupine ‘bids fair to make Ontari‘o mo're fa- mous than the silver mines of_ Co- balt. Don't l'etéthis make you :0 out and buy stock because there are as many people mining the pockets FIâ€"EL'D (3R0? PRODUCTION. New Ontario l'prodnces over 40 pan cent of all the new crops of Ontario. ' We glory in the productiverness (.‘f the western whent lands, yet" our ()Wn province of Ontario' DF0d\lCés over 26 million dollars ‘more in field crops than the two largeSt producing mo- vinCes of the west. We have agric',1lâ€". tum] lands double and treble in area i NEW. ONTARIO , A GREAT HERITAGE 11' NEW Ontario than we have in 1n- ier Ciiltivation in Old Ontario. AREA 01* 153W ONTARIO Do not judgt; figew Qntarig by a humied trip thrmrgh certain pans by railway a totathnn of a few hundred miles, while there are ttmu- sands of miles of Ontarié to - t.1e west. There are large areas 171mm it. would he a crime 19 put dbwn a settler to make a living. V'I‘h‘ere‘ 'are tine waterfalls, rocks and ’111111ch tine ianh also. ‘ of the people of Ontario as there are working her mines. so far have been taken up. GOOG land errands a thousand miles in length and over a hundred miles in width. Mr. Hearst then told of an ostensive exploratlve trip he had. taken through New Ontario last year. He described the diflerent stretches of land he passed through,vgood_ la‘hd, rock and timber. He travelled over four thousand miles in the trip. THE CLAY BELT. In the clay belt the speaker said. “we have better agricultural land than in the prairies. The depth of land is wonderful. Soil taken from a well sixty feet tested rich Very pro- ductive. TEMISKAMING DISTRICT ’ UNIMAGINABLE RESOURCES I will speati 0f Temiskaming most- t We have a country of unimaginable 1,; tonight because that is mOSt in resources and posstbilities. We proâ€" the public eye. We have heard of the 'ldlcg the very best. Our ideals are vast area of fine land in the great :the highest. We are determined to clayr belt. There are other huge 860- 3 make our country one of the best in tions of fine land, but only fractions g the world, and if we are true to our so far have been taken up. GOOd pcseibiliti'es, we will {111 Canada NEW ONTARIO MINES Over twenty tgousand men ave employed in New Ontario mines with a Day 17011 of thi een million d01- lars. '1o'ntinlledf1‘0m pwgé "Seven THE LINDSAY POST n advertisements, particularly in :real estate for sale, was introduced iin the Commons by Hon. C J Do-‘I lherty, Minister of Justice this alt-.1 lternoon. It is- an amendment to the: ‘Criminal C odve, and provides that fanyone who knowingly publishes.qu .Lfalse statement in any advertise-' Lment for promoting the sale of pro-3 {perty is guilty of an indictable CL; fence. and liable to a penalty of $200 , {or six months' imprisonment, ‘_ ~I. 'both. ' Mr. Doherty said that there had come into existence veryk widespread abuses in connection "with 'the adverâ€" tising of property for sale, particu- larly in regard to the ‘advertising of real property, in some parts of _the country. , - _ I ' r” ” !1 The numbers 0f new settlers are. ”1 sented his report .to creasing by leaps and bounds more satisfactory" '11, RAILWAY 1‘A111. ITIES ' ‘ lights throughout t1 Si far we haVe comparatively l1t- 1' The chairman réw ltle ral‘wwy facilities. rMozt o: .the 1 three magnetite li 1railways g0' through barren lan'l. on William- st. sout Next year the NatiOnal Transcontin- the corner of Glenel; lental .will he in operation' through D11rham-sts.,!at ac 'thousands of miles of fine cau'ntry. are light at the con {Two other lines will also traverse and St. Lawrence-st: itme land, the Algoma (entral land ‘of' William and PM: Lthe. (,anadxan Northern. Northernl'l‘ungstens on Elgln‘ i011tario has increased 114 per .cent toria and Albert-sts ’in the 1331: three years in population light on St. Paul-st 1 which is faster than every other proâ€" Dep.â€"Reeve Smale ijince in Canada except one. , . matter of extending 1 UNIMAGINABLE RESOURCES undertake” “mm”? ‘ Judge 'Barhorst of Ft. Loraimeu jOhio,.__ says: “After treatmqnt by -i three doctors thhout, result, I was‘ qured of a. very bad case of Rheuma- ’tism‘, by using two bottles oI'RHEUâ€" VIA " E. Ewesry. Blanchard, widow ~ -~of the late ~ Alexander Branchard formerly 'ot Sutton Ontario and mother of Mrs. J. A. GiI_l_0g1y and Dr. Blan- chard of Lindsav aged 77_.ygars. -.~...4 ‘ A-.. ’u .< We aim to induCe industries tl‘at ruse diflerent woods to Mafia in ch? -3 country. so the settlers can sell the wood they take ofi their land. Huge Paper. and. pulp mills are. being os- tabliehed‘bhro11gh011t the~nontli land. The settler in Northern Ontario has large adVantajg'es over the settier‘in the West as they can immediately get a revenue from their timber an (1 do not have to wait to break land and sow crops before they can .; t a revenue. RHEUMA Ottawa, May 7â€"A bill to prevent the publication of untrue statements REAL ESTATE AGENTS MUST TELL TRUTH “““ VOTE'OF THANKS " Mr. .Wm. Flaveile moved the vote of thanks to thebspeakeg. (nae _ Jadâ€" dress! was much appreciated, .Iand gave those present a. much greater conception of the possibilities ‘of this great country. _ ‘ f 5â€"”: witba glory of achievement unsur passed. ' v ‘ , Right away-the first day you; start to také RHEU MAâ€"thé Uric Acid poi- son begins to dissolve and leave the sore joints and muscles. Its action is little less than magical.“ 50 cents a bottleâ€"guaranteed. ' ' ' ” Y Mr P. E.‘ Weeks seconded the _mo- tion, and referred to, the high class addresses delivered during ' the season by the Canadian Club "71nd Hon. Mr. Hearst’ 5 address was best of all. It was a fascinating story of the bigness and prOgreSs of this new land. The committee who noWi'nated the officers for next term'knew what they {were about. The Club ’wished they would continue the finé'type of speakers they had had during the past year. Judge McMillan inm few well chosen witty remarks, put~ the mo- tion, which was passed amid “ loud applaixs‘c. RHEUMATISM cause of all yuur .v. Mixtur'c h in ;t such 3 0t im-rcdi;n;. .uh'ich, blood .11] impurities ‘h‘itn any disease due to impurq blood Ouch a. Eozoma, scrofula, scurvy, Bad Logs, lib-ceases, Ulcers, Gkundular ,Swemngo,’8qiu, Pimprcu, Sores of W?! kind, Piles,3lood Poison,Rhoumaticm, Gout, oté.’, (11111'1 \the \ 0111 11111 111111: .0': 1 _\' 011 1011011~ :11111 1ri:1.t1111:111~ 1111 1c11 1:111:10: gcg, 11211111111" ~11.'1'11::111 :111-s11i1.1 \\ 11111 \«11: \1':,11z i~ :1 11121111151131: 111:1! ‘11‘11111’101‘011g1111 1:111. [ht-111111111 of,111cpuixoz11)u~ 111:111cr 1111ic11z11u11ci~111011111: 1.1151: of 1111 _\uur s111?cr111g.(j1.11’kv'> Nguj 511x111rc1~111~t 5111i 11 :1 1131111:1111- 11 15 1:11:111511511 01 1113re111-11.> .11 111111, 1.1111: 1.1) vxpc] 111-1121 [116' WHEN WUARE ~ ILL “For the Blood is the Life. ” ______- __‘-â€"- _..__ f FOR Au, FORMS o ’2' f . ”mw‘mmn'wumm§m“““‘- .4' .V .q ‘.. smmuommo IMPROVEMENTS Dep. Reeve Warren’s Pro- position for Better Light Last night Dep.-Reeve Warren, chairman of Light. Committee, pre- sented his report .to the council we. more satisfactory" distribution' of lights throughout the town. r““‘ Delaware Potatoes Campbellford. May: 6â€"Caught in the middle GI the [LT’R bridge Last night Den-Reeve Warren, chairman» of Light Committee, pre- sented his report .to the council rera George Staténnan" empioyee 0? the more satisfactory" distribution of Weston Shoe Gompany here. was lights throughout the town. . hurled $1201 hm death in” the Trent The chairman recommended that .iRiver today bf bemg struck by' a three magnetite lights be installed ifrei‘ght tram. The body had not boon on William st. south (staggered) at {recovered tonié’t- 5?. Staten” “50 the corner of Glenelg, Melbourne and had 'only1 Pecelgtly ,Ome here airfim Durham-Ste, lat a cost of $125 an Toronto w'éswallqng ”9".“ the “$353 are light at the corner of Melboume from the: fact”? ‘0 hi6;- ._.b08ramf! and St. Lawrence-stag; an arc corner {house to five a few “3311i” time. of" William and Pottinger- -;sts *wo ‘He had :91: We“ be the bridge when Tungstens on_' Elgin-st. between \ic- 1the train rushed along a'tuti‘t melt toria and Albert-st8.; changing of him before it could‘ stop“; throwing light on St. Paul-st. north. {him into age river . 30 feet below. Dep. ~Reeve Smale said the whole iThe body has not seen after al- matter of extending lights should be though several DBODYe 81W th" MCi’ undertaken carefully. The council dent. undertaken carefully. The council dent. V could not undertake to light all the he Trent giver below the bridge town 'brightly. No one would like to is shallow, but the cunenois very see the outskirts brightened up more rapid, and the body has no. doubt than he would. The council must cut been carried {31' down the stream. their garment according: to their There . will be? an inquest. St: 1mm cloth. The council could scatter the gleaves a wifeland' familv in Toronto arc lights and intersperse with small lights. It was a mighty serious matâ€" GRAIN SMENTS- . ter to move hastily, as an arclightl :' 'was equivalent to adding $1000 tog. .21 . AT fl. Mcnwou the honded indehpedness of the town. 1 Ald .\icholls felt,that the council i . should take one night for each ward‘ Fcfllowilg the= announcement; that and go ‘over the streets thoroughly. the C. P.R.' - had aVain cancelled the BLANCHARD+.At 183 ~Sherbourne- St... On .');-'M3y 9,; 1.914, Josetta Blanchard, widow -- wof‘the late - Alexander Blanchard, formeriy 'of’: . ;““tmm“‘“s‘ ”sss-mm“sus“‘a . Chairman Warren referred to the need of a light at the corner of St. Lawrence and Melbourne-ate. _ Mr. John O’Reilly who was present, pointed out that a light was needed there. Certain improvements were being made in that section, so that proper lighting wee still more neces- sary. _An incandescent would not an- swer as well- as an arc light, as that section of the town to the sontheaht would 'be' set-Ved’ by an arc. The committee gave the Chairman authority. to substitute. Tungstens’ for arcs-at the head of William-st., and also the head of Victoria- avenue Balsamâ€"m me: home; 15 Thorold ‘10 avenue, Toronto On 'May 10th ‘0 1914 Isabefia Manuire, wife of fhe p¢ late Daniel Brisbin of Plcton. Service will be held at her ,late ‘ 7 “RN home, 15 Thorold avenue, on Mon- iMa-CKE-NZIEâ€"On Saturday, May ‘3 day“ 7.30 p. m., Burial at Picton é‘ at Blenheim; -.,"Ont to Mr. and We. on TQM“ on" the arnvgi of‘ 0’30 b 137.61” . MaCKenzxe, a aafightex"... 3'." 8- m CNiR.’ traifi. - l 3 ~ M. LLLLILLL ,Eroceries and China Hall Kent Street PINEAPPLES grown in Manvers. We can confidently recommend them for seed or for the table. ‘ “ q see'our‘ Kent- st. Window disâ€" play of fruits and vegetables It shows the high class quality. of Our goods. We have Just received a car (if We carry a full line of Garden" and VegetableSeeds. . Are now at their best and w e buy only the beSt Selected Pines. Leave your preservmg . order now and we assure you of satisfaction at low- prices. PHONE 10 CAUGHT 0N 33mm; 1 . ANI; KILLED Sad FatalityatCampbeu. ford Wednesday Tn‘e Trent’ Q’fier Below the ' Hfidge is shallow, ‘b‘ut the current" is‘ 7 very rapid,rand {he body has no_ doubt been carried, (at dpwn'th'e stream}. There - will be!an inquest. Statrm leaves a wifelanJ-familuf in Toronto, McM‘AHONâ€"dn ' Lindsay: on Thursday May 7, 1914, td Mr. and '_Mrs. J'os. ‘zvt‘éMEahbh, ‘Sifiico‘éét, 3-80m TORRARCEPIawLindsay, . on Thurs- day‘ May-- Rh- 1914 to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Torrance, Elginâ€"stw” :1 Mrs. son. W ‘30“ PAGE NINE HI

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