Proceedings of Eiariposa Council The tilemm were E the minutes 0! the 1! read and approved. Mr. Wilson was P“ fled the council thSt drain required cleani sanctions as Messrs. V Thompson. 1 their pet“: drain, bu’c strengthen farm. and 31:; Eh; 9:019:53. 3:3; ‘services in the Ufaugc m... V. Ni along the SO“ 9- ° ° ' n day and administered holy commun- 15‘ . “on. From Mr. SteWart, the tOWnshxp‘, Mrs R C Short Miss Lucy and solicitoe. resuecting the bylaw and \Miss Laura Maugham were in the vil- notices for the board arbitration, 3.1- Q lage recently , . so a. bylaw respecting the Manmali ‘ 01 ' M F f Northern Telephone Company, for. flus' .. Son and. rs. Irazert ° Chlcago, are spendmg the hohdays permission to erect poles and wires; . , a wrth Mrs. Wmn. on the highways of the township of Elariposa‘ 8150 respecting the COD' Mr. and MYS. P. Barr ViSi‘bed their tract for cleaning out the part of Escn at Irondale menth- the Dunn drain. Mrs. B. Beales spent a week with A request. from Messrs. John Rod- i friends in Kinmount. th1 man. and C. H. Lapp that they be: Mr. and Mrs. Casey were in - . 4h: M +ho village of {village on Saturday. A request. from Messrs. John Rod- i u -â€" 7 ' Mr. and Mrs. Casey were in the 1 man. and C. H. Lapp that they be. dded to the village of tvillage on Saturday. Graham. Mr. HarVey Rose had the misfor- notiï¬ed the council to clean out their " tune to cut his leg Very badly. ! i 0 portion af the Dundas drain, accord". Miss Helen Graham has returned, ing to the report of Judge Harding. 1 after a month’s visit in Monmouth. t The treas ‘ If . . yearly s+ate::e:t 355:?tefo 2:13 hie-3 Mr. Wilkinson, of Monmouth, also ' g iMr. and Mrs. Conkell spent a short | ceip’cs 0: $6482.44 and total expendi- mm in the villa 9 recently tures of 36145-45, leaving a balance i M G wfl g 1 3,15 th ‘ ' - r. eo. son 5 o in e vi.- assessed and a Little Britain. Mr. George PU; vau u- v, - ing to the report of Judge Harding. 1 The treasurer presented his half E yearly statement showing total reâ€"{ ceipis of $6482.44 and total expendi- tures of $6146.46, leaving a balance i of cash on hand of 9325.98. 1 RESOLUTIONS PASSED. 1 Motion by Messrs. Varcoe and Fer- guson, that the following persons be notiï¬ed to clean out their portions of the Campbell drain, by the ï¬rst day of October next: Mrs. Fee, Messrs Black. George Copeland, John Kiv- all, and John Jacksonâ€"Carried. Motion by Messrs. Swain and Ferguson, that the reeye and Mr. Rogers be appointed a committee to look into the matter of cleaning out *he township portion of the Dundas balmâ€"Carried. MotiOn by Messrs. Rogers and Motiou and ’ "ain, that we appoint Mr. Varcoe “1 Mr. Ferguson to look into mat- ; reiating to drainage at lots 13 ' 14 in concession line 3.â€"Carried. ‘igtion by Messrs. Swain and Fer- ,n, that the reeve and clerk be i.orized to execute a lease for a vel pit, being a part of :th quarter of lot 6, in concession of the township of Maeipcsa, one garter of an acre more or less, for a rm of ï¬fteen years, for the sum of , vo hundred dollars. This shall also. 1clude a right of way to and from -‘2e said gravel pitâ€"Carried. Motion by Messrs. Rogers and Varooe. that the reeve and clerk be authorized to execute a lease for a; gravel pit. being a part of the south :n Annmcainn 2. 0f the ‘ A _ c ‘2 _: 1_‘_ .7 § Belfast. July mâ€"Fire swept through i .the . Kelvm Hotel yesterday, burning . the - :to death three employes, while sev- .l eral guests received frightful injuries. 1 Five of the guests were dangerously 'burned and others are in a serious condition. 3 . , | Among those surviving who suï¬er- . to tell of it. The fact that he escaped| , ed most were Rev. William J_ Mc- death is marvellous. But let the; j gfugiï¬ii, for several years pastor of young aviator tell 0‘ it himself 2 i . , rew’s Church, Toronto, Ont.,| “Ide th f d h'b't' : and late of h' _ , . : a: wea er avore my ex 1 1 1â€" r C wage, and hls mfe on in my dirigible baloon at Petter-. ; The McCaughans were caught an , , .811 upper floor; and in attempting to son, N.J., on Sept. 10th, 1905. The ‘ ï¬nd an exit through the hall were ‘engine was working splendidly and as: ‘ terribly burned. Their escape through 3 the wind was light I was able to per-i .the usual ents being cut Off by the iform every manoeuvre. After I had flames, the minister and his wife ï¬n- , . lcircled around several times for the \ ally threw themselves from, an upper . ‘ window. Both struck the pavement ibenefit of the crowd, I went up, up, : With gigatoforcehoanqm‘lhan they f werg 3 until I was about 5,000 feet above the 30h. Megauglfsrli’s sllrullviid (gin f cityâ€"nearly a mile. In fact, I was so ‘ fractured. Mrs. McCaughan’s injuries ’high that the people below could not see the baloon. A ï¬fty foot baloon ‘ are less serious. ‘_ ‘ ‘can be seen nearly a mile away, and l ‘ “Wâ€" .as Iwas in a98-foot one, I am cer- ltain that 5,000 feet is a very conser- fact, it is doubtful, if any man has; ever fallen such a distance and lived‘; ' 1 required cleaning out. Harcus notiï¬ed the council ‘ bests. Dennis Makins an lros. had disregarded his in- 1 ions as to their statute labor. L William Channon, Foster 1 pson, Lorenzo Davidson, and present with ! Minthorne were petition reapecting a municipal ‘.- ‘â€":-J Hum- +.-. ,» LPS. gravel pit. being a part of the south ‘ half of lot 7, in concession 2, of the‘ owns‘nip of Mariposa, one half acre l gore or less, for a term of ten years, i for the sum of two hundred dollars. ‘s This shall also include a right of Way 3 to and from said gravel pitâ€"Carried ; On motion of Messrs. Rogers and i Varcoe, accounts aggregating $246 '- were authoï¬zed to be paid for exâ€" . penses of making cement pipes. ‘ On motion of Messrs. Rogers and , Varcoe, accounts aggregating the sum L of 3230 were authorized to be paid; for the expenses of using the crush- ‘ On motion of Messrs. Swain and Ferguso'a, miscellaneous aécounts am- ounting to $686 were ordered to be paid including $400 for the two graV- el pits, $60 to the cement walks at 'mina, $50 to William McInnes for “es of quarantine of Albert Jew- \ ~ily, dating diththeria, and \ “Innes family during scar- ». \ ‘ $80 to William Wool- ariag. \\ .g at several places present all present. and ï¬st meting were sent and noti- the CEMPben of bylaw 660 and to appoint David Yerex a commissioner for the south half of the tOWnship of Mariposa. Bylaw 670 being a bylaw to raise by f loan the sum of $450 for the Epurchase of a ï¬re engine and applian‘ goes for the village of Little Britain. j‘Bylaw 671 to permit the Manilla. Northern Telephone Company to erect poles and wires on the highways of ‘p of Mariposa. Bylaw 672 l‘fthe townshi :to appoint Albert Davidson an arbi- 1 ad- ‘trator, after which the counci {Any-nod +311 the second Monday in way 0 journed till the July. (Special to The Post.) i Hay making and berry picking tall the go just now. K Mrs. Hunter and son, Bob, {to Toronto to attend the funeral ngs. Chas. HcFaden's baby. I : Rev. P. DeLom, of Haliburton :\services in the Orange hall on rim and administered holy com: ‘ Mr. Geo. lage. A new daughter 1 home of Mr. Deane. We are pleased to son, senior, who h: most well again. Think Dentist is Demented Toronto, July 27.â€"â€"Divine revelation 1 played a prominent part in the arrest 3 of Dr. J. R. Irish, an aged dentist with oï¬ces at 90 West Queen street, who was taken into custody yesterday morning by Detectives Murray and 'allace, charged with being insane. Complaint was made to Acting Staff 1" tient of the dentist,‘who says that he went to consult him about a tooth earlier in the morning. The doctor produced a formidable array of for- ceps and declared that he had just had a message from God, that he ,must extract all the teeth, and that he intended to obey. The patient im- mediately declared that he, too, had . â€"Amivod'n message to the effect that $2312 't‘orconsult him about a LOOLU g. The doctor earlier in the mornin produced a formidable array of for- ceps and declared that he had just had a message from God, that he must extract all the teeth, and that he intended to obey. The patient im- mediately declared that he, too, had received'a message to the effect that he must not have them out that“ day, ‘but must wait till tomorrow. This iappeared .to satisfy the doctor, and r. the extraction was postponed. GOODERH AM en's babY- of Haliburton held" . ange hall on Sunâ€" and holy commun- .â€" B. WELDON. Clerk. been 111, is al- arrived at the ibui‘st, formed aparaChUte tWO nun- ""‘mr- -- are . dred feet abOVe the ground and broke was simply knocked unconscious. Part! 'the fall. As it was he struck the.“ the engine went through the roof. ant roof of a building with such force that t hilt Within ï¬ve minutes after it struck 0’ he was conï¬ned to a hospital for ‘1 was able to get up and walk away. i three weeks. Some of his other fallsh‘IOt 8 bone was broken, but the shak- ‘ ‘ing up I got was so terriï¬c that I ield' although from much. lower attitudes,§ ‘ had to spend the next three weeks in , lun- 'have injured him more seriously. In . 'fact, there is scarcely any Part of his a hospital. Of course I was covered lun- ‘body that has escaped injury. His With bruises, but I wasn’t really badâ€" and t collar bone has been broken twice, his 313' hurt. Several falls that I have v‘lâ€" right knee cap has been broken once,‘h3d from girders had far more dlsâ€" 1. - astrous consequences. The baloon was ,his ankles four times, two of his _ . . Iribs have been caved in, and he has (far more 59110115137 injured than 1. 0f broken ï¬ngers so many times that he "SENSATION OF FALLING days doesn’t recall just how many Of his “Falling is not an unpleasant sen- digits have been injured. In addition, 1 sationâ€"at least for me. If I feel Sheir his right leg has been dislocated twice ‘ certain of striking deep water I do“ isfor the number. .. th d Of . ht ‘ _ e groun . course a man 1mg l DAShED TO THE GROUND dia of heart failure from such a fan, lrned, 1 Strange 85 it may seem, he has hand? if he has a fairly good heart )uth. only four falls Since. he t°°k the flying \ he will be just as much a‘iiVe the mo- i also ' machine last November. Three Of ‘ ment he strikes the ground as he short these took. place at II-Iammonttlspgrt l was before he fell a foot. Of course,‘ ,N. 3., while he was earning 0 y. ‘5 man can’t breathe when he is fallingl ,, . H," cut Oh his _°°m°r3 {0° closely ih lbut almost anyone can hold his breath 1e V1“ .1118 biplane, “71th the result that he lfor a minute.- In fact a man who has was (“Shed to the ground. been under water- three minutes can at the ; His most serious fall in a flying ibe revived. And in three minutes a \machine took place last April near man could fall many mifeé through 6 {Ohm Seattle. While flying 225 feet above 1 the air. In a minuteâ€"which is not a 13 31' Lake Washington one Of the wires very long time to hold one’s breath, that connected the ï¬lanes jumped its a man could fall several miles. In pulley. with the result that the qua-my fall of 4,200 feet I don’t suppose chine turned over three times and fell }1 was prevented from taking a breath B into the water. In the fall Hamil- for more than twenty seconds. Of ton’s head was jammed against one course I have a strong heart. In fact of the heavy P0188 on the machine, ‘ my heart doesn’t beat well unless I [red and he was unconscmus for three lam having some excitement. I should? hours after he was rescued. Elike to have a job falling of! Brooklyn} hrough HIS GREAT-EST FALLS. iBl‘idge every day. I’d fall oï¬ ten ' ltimes every day if there was enough ““ng . This however, was trifling in com-i ‘money in it. It would be a shame to 33113:: parison with his 4,200 foot fall. In! erously fact, it is doubtful, if any man has; serious ‘ ever fallen such a distance and lived": : double yourself up like a ball just beâ€" suffer ? to tell of it. The fact that he escaped, ' death is marvellous. But let theéfore you strike the water. The fall .u-o take the money, however, it would 1. Mc- , , .j . . Lstor of young aviator tell of it himself : 5W0“ ‘5 hurt you a b1“ 1‘ you strike â€.Oht" ! “Idear weather favored my exhibitiâ€" 5 the surface that way, You go pretty Wife. ‘ deep, and you want to take a breath 'on in m diri ible bal won at Petterâ€" .ght 3“ y g ‘ lbefore you come to the surface, but if ' son, N.J., on Se t. 15th, 1905. The >tlng to p Dyou can resist that impulse it is all 11 were ‘engine was working splendidly and asi . lvery Simple.†through 2 the wind was light I was able to per-i rig. Ex): gform every manoeuvre. After I had; 3 upper {circled around several times for thei ivement .beneflt of the crowd, I went up, up, i A“ Aeroplane ey_were ; until I was about 5,000 feet above the l . - . .. ,_ _-’. Q-_-unnna“'n1 4-.â€â€" Most of the talk in Montreal and lbreatl - Toronto since the aviation meets in ' loom: , these cities has been about the bird- thong men and their strange craft. smasl It is very evident that Charles K. gas b 'Hamilton, the famous aviator, 'born to be a bird man. When he was - fourteen years old he Jumped from a and 1 l .- ‘railroad trestle 50 feet to the ground ‘ riï¬c n ' with no more injury than a little sha- iout t inste ging. In the past six years since he; . he has taken to flying, he has fallen! “W11 .altogether 10,645‘ feetâ€"a little more‘â€"110 i. f ‘than two miles! At one time he tellihow' dgMy ‘ l 200 feet, and would have been dashe acht ’ to death but for the fact that the‘ it 1’. {bag of his dirig-ible baloon which had. hute two hunâ€"' r ‘burst, formed a parac e ; dred feet abOVe the ground and broke was fthe fall. As it was he struck the.Qt l “t roof of a building with such force that ‘ bUt 0‘ he was conï¬ned to ahospital for ‘1 W eks. Some of his other falls ‘ * L t I Z i three we . :ld' _although from much. lower attitudes! mg m- thave injured him more seriously. In haé ln- fact, there is scarcely any part of his a 1 ilbody that has escaped injury. His Wit .nd ' collar bone has been broken twice, his 315' ken once, ‘ha‘ right knee cap has been bro :7“. 4“ A‘ Bic 8.31 Fell a Mile Through The Air llsula uuvv -r‘ his ankles four times, two of his“ (1 he has ( ribs have been caved in, an broken ï¬ngers so many times that he doesn’t recall Just how many of his digits have been injured. In addition" his right leg has been dislocated twice 1 his left leg dislocated once; his eye cut open and his head badly gashed. As for being rendered unconscious by falls, that has occurred so many times that he has completely lost track of the number. l DASH‘ED TO THE GROUND. 1 Strange as it may seem, he has had ' only four falls since he took the flying ml. “A n! vative estimate. GAS BAG BURST. i; “I had only begun to ascend, andi’c had dropped 600 feet gradually, when Without warning the gas bag burst, . and the machine began to fall. The 11 instant I heard the explosion I knewlw what had happened, and I thoughtlf. everything was over. I know that a" fall from that height would dash me‘ Lto 'pieces, and I also knew there was ' nothing I could do to save myself. My whole life flashed through my brain, I thought of everything I hadn’t done. The mere sensation of falling wasn't particularly unpleasant. I had fallen so many times that I was used to it. If I had known that I wouldn’tl be dashed to death, that fall would‘ have been little more than a thrilling ‘ ‘ l a of my whole life was terrifying. I don’t know how many seconds I was falling. It might have been ï¬fteen. it might have been twenty, or even more. It seemed an eternity. RUSH OF AIR TERRIFIC “Down, down, down 1 went. The rush of air was so great I couldn’t Lbreathe. Suddenly, when the city Iloomed up directly below me. and I thought every second I should be smashed into a thousand pieces, the gas bag of the baloon spread out like a parachute. It was only an accident that it did so. It had been cracking; and flapping above me, making a ter- ‘riï¬c racket, and how or why it spread ‘out two hundred feet above the ground ‘ instead of six hundred feet or ten feet Llâ€"when it would have been too late, , 1‘ â€"no one will ever know. It spread out â€however, and that saved my life. 1; My fall was not stopped, but the par- â€laâ€"A1..- I 1 My fall was not stopped, but the par- achute made by the gas bag broke it to such an extent that when I crashed upon the roof of a. hotel I was simply knocked unconscious. Part of the engine went through the root. I‘HE LINDSAY POST dn’tl No King George Coins Yet. auld Ottawa, July 27.â€"â€"There will be no ling issue of {new coinage bearing the Lt I efï¬gy of ng GeOrge untll January. 7‘ The new dies are being desxgned in View England, and Canada. and Britain are I expected to have the ï¬rst coins of the 'was i new: reign simultaneousll- . _ ~- An Aeroplane Somersaulted New York, July 27.â€"â€"After his aero- ‘ plane had turned a complete somer‘ sault, falling to the ground with him, during a flight near Garden City, L.I., yesterday, George Russell pick- ed himself up and walked from the 'debris without a bruise or a scratch. Russell had made one flight in a 25-mile breeze and was rising from the ground for a second spin when lthe accident happened. He ran along ithe ground at high speed for several thundred yards, but when he under- ‘took to rise the second time, the soft soil caught the tail of his aeroplane and caused it _to swerve as an automo- â€" Ann-\1nnn Wu iv w any..- f, 1 auu ‘ bile skids in the mud. The aeroplane aired straight up, turned a clean ~“backslip†and came down on its Eback, with the engine on top. Rus- . sell was flung head over heels and fell \in a tangled nest of snapped wires. The aeroplane was damaged badly. The Conservation of Children These samples Table Covers, hen O’clock Tea VCove' brellas, etc. Eve brought out to thi aide was established in Winnipeg at the beginning of last year by the Honorable C. H. Campbell, Attorney General of Manitoba, and the ï¬rst annual report of the judge, Mr. T. M. Daly, has just been made public. The report is bound together with ‘that of Mr. F. J. Billiarde, the Su- perintendent of neglected children, and forms an interesting volume en- titled, “The Child, the Home, the Parent and the State.†The judge held court on the otter- noons of Monday and Thursday in the dining room of the Detention A _a A A ,_ Home, and during the year. 242‘ children, ranging from eight yearsto sixteen and over appeared before him. Of these, 174 were boys and 68 girls. Of the girls, thirty were charg- ed with immortality and others were taken out of surroundings which i would, in the opinion of the judge, 5 have led them into criminality. For- - ‘ ty-iour boys’ pleaded guilty to chap get a Just cleanmg up the Summ have the smallest need to ï¬ll: 259 and 350 Dress Mus“ About, 75 yards of Dress Muslim colorings, some fancy Swiss Spot floral designs. Every yard sold at 35c. but to clear, we say per yard .. The ï¬rst Juvenile Court in Ladies†and Misses’ Tan Lace Hose, sizes 5 to 10. Regular.» ‘ 'c quality, to clear at per pair ....................... 13C These SolWenir Fans have ï¬ve ï¬ne views of Lindsay and Stur- geon Point. Regular 15c; to clear . 10C You can easily save $2.00 to $3.00 on you “ specxal prices. Come and see the nice vamety of ï¬ve o’clock daily except Saturdays. Tan Lace Rose, 138 Souvenir Fans, 100 lese samples afford you a wonderfully good buying opportunity. Beautiful Covers, hemstitched and plain; Bath and Toilet Towels, Tray Cloths, Fm , etc. Every sample represen 1t out to this country for first choice. The lines will interest you greatly. WASHYOODS PRICES CUT DEEPLY md 3513 Dress Muslim, 8c Yard ‘yards of Dress Muslims in a variety of some fancy Swiss Spot. and others are ms. Every yard sold at: from. 250 to 8" Stores in Lindsay, Oshaur Summer Wash Guods stock, but i an“ VV 5 charg- that to improper home surroundings ‘ yrs were and .m1: of home training. we can - attnbute musty-ï¬ve per cent of- the s ‘whxch poys and girls who go wrong." Later Judge, 1n the report he adds. “The mothers .ty. Forâ€" are not so much to blame as the {3- 1 to shop thers. The fathers seem to think they . breaking, and thirty-nine to men. Several of the boys~ appeared more than once, but it was found neces-- sary to send not more than eight to the tetormatory it! Portage la Prai- rie. The judge says that many of the oï¬ences “indicated that the di- l‘mquents had their minds b'ént in the wrong direction, and that they were caught in time.†If, out of 174 boys bent in the wrong direction who were taken .In cnme, 168 were left permanently straight, the work of the judge of the Juvenile Court is Combination Underwear Ladies†Summer weight Com- bination Underwear, ribbed and nice ï¬nish. Per 2M- 39c ment ............................ o'm of~ thg important influences in the country. Ladies’ White Lawn VVaists with all-over embroidered fronts tucked along sleev es, lace trim med collars Regular" 69¢ each. special... ...53‘: Speaking of causes, the judge re- 1 marks that truancy is a. fruitiui source of delinquency. “In nearly evâ€" 1 ery case of serious delinquency." be ' states, “the boy 15 shown to be a. triant." The most proliï¬c case, hoW- . ever. is improper home surrounc’tings ‘ From my experience or the FOaY'S work in the Juvenile Court, and from my previous ï¬ve years' exPCT‘ ience with delinquent children in the Police com, I do not hesitate to say ......................... ‘" 8c LINDSAY OF FREE COUPONS wash dress or suit by taking advantage of 01 pi very pretty garments We are ot‘fmng now building and sur- Fancy and Plain “'ash Suitings. Crepe: Muslins in floral ï¬gured and stripe patterns. Regular 25c yard, for '-nine to theft. 250 Wash Suitings Reduced to 15¢ it means and Barrze LINDSAY, mum: 3g money saved for those Wash Suitings. Crepons and red and stripe patterns. li Children 5 Print Dresses. my neatly made of dark color â€a print, each only.. Childrens Linen and Print Dresses, 'néatly trimmed. * Special each Remember. with our sped} prices you receive a coupon it every dollar 3' our pmdllr amounts to. These coupons :9: you useful household min 'gIâ€"Assware. etc. have discharga they provide 3 {es to live in, childrens’ Dresses M same. 3113 W“ their wives ' and draws attention t mg needs of. the I es in 111 noted American “the future of. nearly 9““ is determined before has age.†and “tonip in“: and .- uld- considerable . . tk "15 Our greatest mm“ d boys and girls- To â€a of them-‘30 drift in“ ‘ crime. is to do a â€â€˜0‘" importance- Mud d theirfnllm chases.