Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Lindsay Post (1907), 28 Jun 1912, p. 2

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«I’AGE 2 $1.25 per yaw; $3.00 if paid in advance «not to publlsner We have no subscripuon agents. WILSON Er WILSON, THE LINDSAY POST «cease of $26,000,000 over the pre- r-mons total of $814,000,000, an m- the Last year amounted to the enor- vious year. Some observers interpret the increased expenditure as meaning increased prosperity, the argument being that the more money a people than the more they are able to .spend, foolishly or otherwise. On the other hand it might be contend- ed, says the Woodstock Review, that the more money the people of a na- H... mud in drink the less likely possession To the Massachusetts Historical Society who is endeavoring to get sit meekly by and let bank mergers become the fashion in Canada until ,Enafly the country is wholly in the power of a great money trust will do tell. says the Kingston Stan- dard, to read the evidence before the 29:3) Committee of the American Home of Representatives which is investigating the lac-Called money m in the States. When a perfectâ€" 'f'" Those peeple who sit meekly by and 13 solvent :away by I. Morgan “Twelve per cent 01 the men voting in the United States cannot read their ballots, according to W. H. Hand, of Columbia, who contributes an article to the ‘Child Labor Bulle- tin, a. new quarterly review, issued mWWWWMWWflWflWflmfiWWWWEWWW FEWWgWWWWWWWIWWWmm IIIIII‘III‘IIIIIIIIII Il‘lvklu! (I ‘III IlIII I‘ll . Sam Hughes to reply, have we hold." IKE COLDNEL’S REPLY BRITAIN’S DRINK BILL 5.0000000 ILLITERATES US. Phonographs 81 Recgrjg, We have just received another ship- ment of these famous Phonographs and unbreakable Records. Call and hear all the best selections any evening. in the States. When a. perfect- rent bank can be forced to the and good men’s names taken' by a. dominant and dangerous it is high time to ask where :onntry is at, and where the will be later on. We want of this sort of thing in Can- ', FRIDAY, JUNE 28th. '12 BARK MANAGERS Proprietors 17'7‘5 of Great Britain for I imam St. captured at V A recognized authority on econom- ics, Chiozza Money, 3 British M. P., has recently published a book which 'is createing considerable comment. The writes declared that high wages ! so far from making economy inproâ€" Iauction. impoadble, tend to greater I economy in production. In support 5 of his stament he stated that U. 8., i United Kingdom and Germany pay ' higher wages than any other coun- lately by the National Child Labor Committee. He adds that more than one in four of the native white chil- dren between the ages of 10 and 14 years, in eleven southern states are not in school at all. Dr. A. J. McKeleway of the com- mittee, who also contributed to the ‘Bulletin,’ says that one in seven of all the children in the United States between 10 and 14 years are not in school. He estimates that there are 2,000,000 child laborers in the coun- Dr. F. Adler, of New York writing for the ‘Bulletin,’ estimates the num- ber of illiterates in the United Statâ€" es at six millions. tries in the world, and still these three nations have by far the great- est export trades in the world. Where labor costs little there is apt to be extravagance in the use of it; where it costs much it is utilized to the best advantage. Moreover high pric- ed labor is necessarily highly skilled labor and skill spells economy in production. ‘ In- Germany a 300 horse power in- stallation has been successfully op- erated, consisting of a peat gas pro- ducer and a gas engine, with a. result which shows that peat is one of the least expensive fuel sources known to i the scientific world. Ontario has no Icoal, but plenty of peat. Now and i then we hear of attempts to con- 1 vert moist peat into dry compressed “briquettes suitable for use in do- mestic heating, but somehow the product has never become so plenti- ful as to be available in the general _ market. The difficulty has always been in the drying of the peat be- fore it is compressed. If gas can be a. i 1 1 He would indeed be a public bene- factor who could invent a. system by which moist peat could be converted into compressed briquettes for fuel. The rapid depletion of our forests, and the absence of coal in this pro- necessity. QUESTION OF ECONOHICS makes a cheap, fuel an urgent PEA! [OR FUEL made from the peat in its natural condition, without drying, and turn- ed into power, we may have as large a. source of wealth in our peat ibeds as we have in our water pow- T. P. O’Connor; tamiliarly known' as “Tay Pay,” one of the most bril- liant Parlianmentarianl in the British House of Commons, makes the toll- owing comment in reference to the threat of Ulster to fight if a Home Rule bill becomes law :â€"Mr. O'Con- nor bases this statement on the coma mercial situation in Ireland, Belfast, the chief city in Ulster, although do- ing a large international trade. does a still larger trade with the rest of Ireland. Three great seed houses in Belfast, O’Connor says, supply the greater part of the farmers of Ireland with seed. All the south 0! Ireland gets its ready made clothing in the same city; in tea and whiskey. Bel- fast is again the chief supply house for the rest of Ireland. In fact, Bel- fast commercial travellers are found, O'Connor says, in every town village‘ and hamlet throughout the south and west. Belfast's trade would of course be entirely destroyed by civil war, and with the destruction of trade would come the ruin of the city in which it is carried on. Belfast knows all this and knowing will not be so foolish as to commit commercial suicide. In a recent speech at Swansea, Wales, Lloyd George came near treating with the real land question in Great Britain. This question, he said, had been handled as gingerly as if it were a hedge hog. He declar- ed further that if the British people generally were as timid in business matters as they were in politics in- stead of having the greatest interna- tional trade in the world, they would be nothing but a coal yard to the German Empire. Then going on to weal! of the land question, he “The greatest people in England own land which at- one time belongâ€" ed to the pooropaid service of reli- gion. The vessels of the consecrated sanctuarv are still on their side- boards. Meat dedicated “to the altar stocks their larders today. Go to a Primrose League meeting and look at those on the platform. One-third of them are probably people who have got church land. The very prim- roees which adorn their buttonholesi were plucked from land consecrated} to the service of the altar, and they have the eflrontery to charge us â€"â€" when we ask that the money which belongs to the poor ought to be re»- turnedâ€"they have the eflrontery to say we are robbing God. “I will tell you what is the mat- ‘ter with this country. It is an un- llimited monarchy. Here and there are 10,000 little cZars. They hold abâ€"i solute autocratic sway. Who gave it to themâ€"this trust and property ? We mean to examine the conditions. of it. It is a fight full of hope for democracy. We are asking nothing we are not fit for. We are not a na- tion of pirates seeking to pillage. We seek but our own." The day is at hand when land taken from the people of England will be returned to those to whom it rightfully belongs- Under the above heading the Tor- onto World publishes a very com- prehensive editorial uuon the race for the Presidency in the United States. Within three months President Taft has ceased to be a possibility for. re-election and Theodore Roose- velt has become the leading presi- dental candidate. If Mr. Taft is no- minated at Chicago he cannot be elected. Mr. Roosevelt will be nom- inated but his defeat for nomination would by no means prevent his elec-3 tion. It he receives the nomination iiat Chicago there is scarcely an;r iroom for doubt as to the final re- Isult in November. é Three months ago Mr. Taft con- ;trolled the federal patronage, the Republican national committee, the Republican organization in practi- cally every state east of the Missis- sippi River; Mr. Roosevelt on the other hand was a private citizen, THE ENGLISH LAND QUESTION nl ocal applications. as they canno ipsessed portion of the ear. There wy to cure deafness. andthet is by constitution a! remedies Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of th Eustmhian Tube When this tube is inflamed jou have a rumbling sound or imfeflect hearing. and when it is entirely closed Dee ness is the result, and un- less the inflammation can be taken out and this tube rest red to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh. which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollan or any case of Deafness icaused by caterrh) the cannot l: cured by Hall's Catmh Cure. Sand for citculuni tree. I. J, can“ a 00., Toledo Soldbvmgm ) force ULSTER WON T FIGHT Deafness Cannot be THE MEANING OF PRIMARIES Every Woman Who Has Ever Worn A not in touch with the party machine in the various statesnopposed by all the big city newspapers and with the dice loaded against him in the Southern . States. Under the old-fashioned system of mustered a corporal’s guard of sup- porters. He won out by contesting selecting delegates by state conven- tions, Mr. Roosevelt could not have the primaries wherever presidential primaries existed and by stirring up an agitation which caused them to be provided for by law in many‘ states where they had not previously‘ existed. His popular victories in 11- linois, Pennsylvania, Ohio and New Jersey, coupled with the poor show- 'ing:made in these states by the Pre- sident and the absence of any Taft supporters at the Republican primâ€" aries in states like North Dakota and Nebraska, demonstrated beyond peradventure the inability of Mr. ‘T‘aft to be re-e-lected it nominated, rand in all probability has saved the FRepuinCan party from the hopeless disaster which would have followed upon his renomination. Twenty years ago President Harrison was renom-‘ inated by the politicians, because twenty years ago the politicians did the nominating for the people. The dissatisfied Republican voters defeat- ed Harrison at the polls. Had they been. alIawed to express their preferâ€" ence at primaries, the Repume party would We carried the elec- tion. . NEW STRENGTH FOR NURSING MOTHERS Aching Backs anb Tired Limbs Need Not be Endured Aching banks, tired limbs, attacks} of tainltbessh headaches, and Lulckr aches, need. not be a. part at no- man’s life. Thule me tin-.33 when her blood needs sp'ecial attention, and these times are indicated by one or more of the. above symptoms. It is at such Itimes that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. are worth their weight in gold to women, for they actually make the rich, red, health-giling blood which. makes weak, tired. de- spondenst women active and strong, and feeling equal to all their houseâ€" hold duties. Such a. sufierer was Mrs. William Sullivan. Main River, N.B.. who says: “I am writing to acknowv ledge the great good I received through Dr. Williams: Pink Pills. Af- ter my baby was born last summer I was so run down that life was really a burden. I had to drag my» self about to do my housework, and every movement was one of trial. If I went upstairs I would be breathe} less and tired out, and my heart would palpitate violently, and I‘ would have a feeling as though 1’. was-smothering. My appetite g was poor, and my baby was suffering from my weakness. I was advised to» try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills 231d got six boxes, and before they were all quite used I was like a difierentwo- mam My appetite returned; I m- gained my strength, and the work about the house no longer bothered me. As the result of my experience I would strongly urge all‘ weak wo- men and nursing mothers to use Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. ’ " the use of Dr. Wilti‘ams" Pink Pills. The Pills are sold by an medicine dealers or may be had by mail at 50 cents a. box or. six bores for $2.50 from: The Dr. Williams' Medicine 00., Brockvine, Ont. There is no woman, no matter what her station in life, who will not enjoy better health if she occa- sionally fortifles her blood through Children 01‘? run ELETOHER’S CASTORIA LINDSAY P93_’E knows what thorough satisfaction she had out of every yard of “Priestley’s” cloth. Whethe: it was 3 soft, delicately tinted Silk-end- Wool Cloth for house or evening wear â€"- a fine Twill or Coating Serge- ora “Priestley's” Craven- ette â€"â€" the service was equally satisfactory. Agk your dealerto show you the new weave: and colon in “ Priestley's " Gown, Suit sud Skirt fabrics. to Pfiegley's Limited .4 stamped CV“? 5 7““ on the odvedga, 3 Gown or Skirt RELIGIOUS FANATIC IS JUDGED INSANE ODD HABITS 0F DRESS AND FOOD Intelligencer: Messrs. Gunton and. Wrightmyer of the Children’s Aid Asâ€" sociation went to Brighton yester- CLERGYMAN AND I “The attempt to rescue the en-g V to...bed man was then renewed] DOCTOR BRAVED DEATH Three times the firemen and police,l who were working frantically, al-l ‘most reached Dominick, but each Dr. Kenneth Overenc, son of Mrs time the Wall of the trench caved in. W. J. Ovehend, oi Peterboro and a. and they had to begin all oven nephew of Mr. Geo. Overend and. again. Twice several of the rescuers Miss Overend, of Orillia. who is well were trapped by the sand and had: known, here, had a narrow escape to: be dug out. Finally after four from death recently in New Lurk. flours' work, the buried man was The New York World gives the iolr dragged out. He was dead."-â€"Orillia ilowing account of the incident: Nmutter. “As Father George Gardiner Said ________.__.._â€"â€"- *Mass at St. Finbar’s Catholic ChuICh. on Benson avenue, Brook- D PEH Al- lyn, last Sunday morning, he gave thanks for his remarkable escape from death. Twice while he was giv- Miss Mary Simone 05 Owen Sound, 138 the last rites 1"; an entombed 18- who has just graduated on June 12 borer Father Gardiner had to be from St. Michael's 1103mm}, Toron- reSCued himself from being buried to is visiting her cousin, Miss Mar- alive- Dr. O-verend, of Coney Island garet‘. mehan, Lindsay-st. Hospital, shared the peril with him. Mr. and Mrs. Sutclifle, of Barrie, “While a man known to his fellow- announce the engagement of theii LMHAD mu - -â€" from death. Twice while he was giv- ing the last rites t4 an entombed la- borer Father Gardiner had to be resoued himself from being buried alive. Dr. O-verend, of Coney Island Hospital, shared the peril with him. “While a man known to his fellow- laborers only as Dominick was shov~ elling sand at the bottom of an eigh- teen. foot sewer trench in Nineteenth avenue (near Eighty-fourth street). a cave-in buried him beneath five feet of sand and lumber. His fright- ened comrades were led to the res- cue by J. F. Kerrigan. a contractor, of No. 1-37 Bay Eleventh street who mug mankin2_ LVL Miss Mary Simone 0! Owen Sound,i who has just graduated on June 12' from St Michael's hospital, Toronâ€" to is visiting her cousin, Miss Marâ€"g garet Mechan, Lindsay-st. 1 Mfg. andiMrs. Sutclifle. of Barrie, announce the engagement of their eldest: daughter, Madeline May to Mr. W.. Oswald Wilson. of Oshawa. The wedding will take place the latâ€" ter part. at June. The. hair yearly distribution of prizes: ta? the graduating nurses 0! the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto were made yesterday after- noon at the: Lakeside Home. Miss Pearl Austin. of Pension Falls won “Fifteen patrolman from Bath Beach Station, under Capt. O’Con- nor and Hook and Ladder Company, No. 143, with Battalion Chief Dono- hue, helped to make the sand fly. When they had uncovered the man's head Dr. Overend was lowered on a. rope. He shouted back that Domin- ick had only a, few minutes to live, ‘and' Father Gardiner was summed. “On another rope the pmesc was 'lowered into the pit and had just administered the last rites to the “But the rescuers held on and the two were being hauled out when there was another cave-in. By vio- ilent tugs on the ropes Father Gar- ;dimer and Dr. Overend, who had only been gripped by the sand as far 33% their knees this time, were dragged clear. The rescue was made just in time, as the two had only scrambled to their feet when a fifteen foot sec- ! tion of the ground they were stand: ging on slid out from under them but 'Jâ€" 9 one rumbling and another portion of the: treacherous sand wall caved in. The men holding the ropes were car- ried ofi their feet by the tons of sand which rolled into the trench, burying the priest and the surgeon nearly to their necks. YOU can get many things hmw that are mm to he had at ”binary drug stores. Here are awfew seasonable (mes. PALMO for aleaning Panama. hats GE- S‘rfiXW"H'X;i‘"éLI-:ANER.... .. . 10c DRINKING CUPS (UL)ll.-a.ps5b1e)...15c up THERMOS BOTTLES.....,...... $1.25 THERMGS JUG for ksepiug ice;- cream. etc............. "W32“ WASH CLOTH in rubber SPONGE BAGS .......-. 75c tozsc ENSIGN CAMERAS.-...51.50 u $25 SIJETY RAZORS. ..$5.00 to 31m SAFETY RAZOR STROPS...sl i0 :2 NEILSONS’ FAMOUS C 80 C 0. DUNOON’S .o.---.-u.. when ‘0‘... .Ȣ ‘ 03.58.“... the ! fasting. Soap he never used. Riding ‘ behind horses Was taboo to him. and ; he would not cut down a. tree. His lidea of marriage is that the human beings should be like birds separatâ€" 9 ing when they failed to agree. Sa- bins said he would never die. He believes himself to be Jacob ' risen . from the dead and that he will be ‘ King of Kings before long. His chil- dren he also belieVes to be the reinâ€" carnation of persons prominently mentioned in the Bible. This strange character was exam- ined by two doctors, and pronounced insane, and subsequently Dr. Wade and ' Mr. Thomas: Tweedle, magistrate I committed him to the Toronto Asy- : lum, and the children to the custody 3 of the Children's Aid Society. drink wine. He does not believe in washing the body, except the feet before meals, and washing the hands and anointing the' head with oil when Strange to say, Sabina had made two converts â€" one a. young woman who committed suicide two years ago, and Henry Vincent a farmer living near Brighton who is now living near Bnt said to be insane. is high time that the stray dogs were destrvyed and owned ones kept : under coma-oi at all times by those who value them. As a community, MAD DOE SCARE IN. WESTERN ONTARIO the prize Em charting. Guide: 1m Western Ontario madl dogs are gain in evidence, and it} would.-be well in “times of peace to‘ prepare for war." Dogs should no more be allowed to run. at large than pigs, cows or bears. Every day or two children are bitten; by the worthless curs, whiCh are allowed to run 'at large, under no restraint or control. It‘ is can this week that a small hM'was Bitten on both legs, and 1t OGEMAH LAUNCHED LAST EVENING MARRIED I 1 CURTISâ€"WWrried '3 the ‘ home 0! the bxitte’s sister, 311-5. 3. l Bateman, may, Wednesday-June , 19th, 1912. by the Rev. D. Williams The cabin waiver Ogemah built. by 1:112-me Boat Works was launch- ed,yestemay afternoon at thegfoot of Ridout street without any csremonâ€" ies or. the breaking of a chmpagne bottle..- on her prow. The; Ogemah gracefully took to the mats, thus completing the work on the finest power. craft ever built infihis dis- trict..'1‘.he boat tested pressed to the entire satisfaction of the builder, ME. 13539 Perrin, and_ the owner, m. “WV 1....-.u, Iâ€"“u_ uâ€"v v-~â€"-â€" “v-Wv- Mr. H. P. Bean of Om, should Jumzsagldygd Eel: justly proud and mud have no ~i and (x, n ,. sand TIN“ . rig <1” 3‘ l! thing t0 regret for hamug his boa; until \cpr 17 _ '11!” built by the Lindsay 13mm: Works. ‘WINNIIEG AND “5 .unD The Ogemah is forty feet in lengm anfi has a nine foot beam. It is flin- ishzed with oak amt has a twenty- five horse power angina. Electric Restorer 1b.! Me: PhOS mes ev we in tlnbod man its prognosis); . More: ”VOW" ___..._.._. to its props; tens vimfind vlhhtx- We chm 3:3 P41 8.6 (chores ml Curtis, both 'of Lindsay. LINDSAY. F Are congenital. was born with There is often a eyeball, Of a sh“ ders seeing dificult‘ The muscles of a: tomatically sum detects, Which a“; causes all Sorts Tnere is a. Simple, Plea for all these troume’fihe _I-_._ We are able to lenses each case n with seientific ace Dr. LP. M 13300}: 81‘..le Win mu 315550): figs; 9.”... "z”:uxxxuxnxuanzx s'A'" ,' "'éry Is: and 3rd We!!! the month from 2p. m 106: onsulr. ‘Linns 1n 1:? End gDR. McALPINE c.‘ “d. .1 anpmmn1 o o O :oo°oo' WM.” . .4 LINDSAY MAM sign 3 Cambx idgest NNGMI: DOMINION Good going June 18' 29’ Smgie Special fl p. In. on a coaches d For litexature. U HOIVIESEEKERS’ 31‘ Shin Waist Setts Bet ween . fififi; A? Lat-«ion. Eng“ attention to m moi women uni: Spggial atgnuon an CHAMBERS- 3633mm Y tmd film“. a. recs ”1‘

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