Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Lindsay Post (1907), 24 Oct 1913, p. 1

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In in our Village when Khm- paned this life. She fillin- abont a month. She ”Mend three children ‘k‘hla. besides numerous '53- They have the sympaâ€" Me m neighborhood. The Elam to East mood “3'32 RI Mia The Post.) . mm, one 0! our section his move escape when the I passed over him when it h It the rate of about 10 I ”but. "It bruised him up flit he is able to be out LIB“ g the engine-room, arm was ‘mm of bricks from m tall. His body was bad- ..u Ba worked in the lath rm that low water in; Law the afilosion. “In“ I ‘wfiymdore 8 o'clock. The: in operating born 7 till: in there was a temporaryi ‘1 ID by up. There were-’lonr ya 1‘30. 3. gfiloded. 1m in: coming from the m!!! was blown 50 fleet. E39 section ' of the boiler his head against a wagon- slabs. The boy Fraser was me engineâ€"room. and was 55“ m MODES jswmnuaas co Ar MIDLAND TO THE] We” Kiiled andWomen Members of the ””2111in L ‘ Paxty Set Free O“ 31...“: explosion o! m- gun‘s sawmill ‘t ’ . “bu-b, this morning. [t "0 line, while time i, m whys lawn?- John Sager, fireman. 03!. M» aged 1‘. :1. JW anene. shoul- ad mldtd; Peter Heb- W and head cut. not IR; John Leach. cut and W around the head. .3 m vounz men. 911‘ ..... {1108 LINDSAY’S LEADER OF LOW CASH PRICES 7. flown Harris: Suit spans, 51 iv. 1 n!- frice W88 Year iidren’s Mantlps pzfead and neat MNA‘NW ,, vaNwWww v‘Wmv , whxoh .‘ ‘. ‘eir guilt. Mrr. Knapp was allowed ' f to go on suspended sentence and Miss ck. The; Helen Kelley. alias Mrs. Allen, who 3 7 an!) 113d been held as a witness, was also r at owed to go. :po 3:] From the 9.16 of evidence gathered: "g, ; by Chief Kimmins the two men have re Jour; served tlme and are wanted tn many 3 (laces. They are wanted in Toronto“ m the? for attemoting to pass a worthless} .0 leet § $350 check on a bank branch at the . '[ corner of Queen street and 80- ‘en- ballet, vanes avenue. Mmlndale, who comes wagonâ€"J from Owen Sound. has a wife and n. wasf child in Toronto. He. was arraigned‘ d was! in Sandwich, Ont... how. 13. 1942,, ; charged with consplracy and theft, 3 lromg and sentenced tr twelve months in s bad-F the Central Prison. On March 19. e lath? 1913. be was tried In Toronto for a “ similar ottence. but sentence was sus- ; pended. He was paa'oledjrom the ‘3 "’0‘ Central Prison August 11, and had lallingi two months and twentyvslx days to e fire-J serve. d was; Kindy was sentenced to twenty-‘ 2 four months in .he Central Prison on I- The: a charge of forgery ft Cayuga. 0nt.‘ :innede He was paroled on July .26, 1913. 1e! 3e “.3 1911 he was charged with mutilating * documents in the Registry ("Alice at Y Cayuga and fined $250. 3' fire-é Union Bank checks aggregating ‘ 1mm? $30,000 were tound-on the two men. t: [01_§six of which were for amounts 0: l mre thousand dollars odd. Evidently they had intended to use these. to Kindy‘s written confession to r the police hentates that his home is l a ’l - â€"-â€"â€"â€".~..- Selkirk. Ont. He met Martlndale a‘. . the Prison Farm in Guelph four “"0“ § months ago. He was released in July 3 the. last, and Mattlndale‘two weeks later. . T4 ziting l lpe, Brown I “F The men met the two women in Buffalo. The women up to the time of their arrest. had no knowledgetha: the checks were Earned. ‘hey both went to Toronto. and at the imperial Bank branch on King st reet presented a worthless (heck ; hlch Martindale drew on under an as ssumed sum: to be deposited in a s: ings account. The next day Mar- 1 indale drew on the bank with a false cut-ck for an Amount which he says was $350. The two told of visits to Hamilton and St. Cntharines. At Hamilton the} c Lged a. check, nsiz : the name of ..J Aikens of Dunnville. and de- posited it at the 'nion Bank at St. Catharines. Other forget-lea and at- tempted {organics against the ‘Dom-‘ inion and other banks were told of in the confession. sentenced to l rte guns . ment at Kingston. bemg coa their evidenc: ccntaiue; I statements to Chief Kimmiu gara Falls, in \ hich they : Cancun to the Poutn Little GIs-k’ and Buy: Hats from 50c to . -. . . . . Ladiés’ and Childre ’s Knitted Un- derwear. Ladies’from 250 to $2 :30 a garment. Children’s 15c to $150 a garmonf. Bian’kd Cloth for MantFPS in colors Navy, Red, Brow” and Grey 5 Spea'aJ .................. l .2 Culored Plaids for Waists and Chil- dren’s Dresses, 250, :350, 400, 5 5:08 and... ................. c 3 they EHQC4 an signeq Rimming: or .x‘ia- , V.-. rauxL'LLl‘ a. worthless! The ( anch at the can wat nd RO' ’e"- pected t wrbc comes is 2. Ge] 9. wife and her co: 5 arraigned, Hertha. 13. 19.2,. Not a. and timing sans an dock 1 hot low-l supper will be served, after whxch a splendid pro gram will be given. Admission: Ad- ults 35c. Children 20c. | The Methodist Church at Manma iwhich has been repainted and decor- ‘ated will be reopened 'tor Divine Service on Sunday and Monday Oct. 3. m. and 7 p. m. Sermons win be preached by the Rev. M. E. Sex- smith, B. A. L. L. B., of Whitby,‘ Out. On Monday evening from 5 to 81 CHURCH OPENING I AND FOWL SUPPER:i Gen. Din. in a wireless message received last evening, announced his intention of remaining here 10-day and proceeding to Mexico City of: L‘hursdav. Judgment, and in the opinion of the authorities. the peace of the city he thereby disturbed, the soldiers and police have crders to shoot. Col. \‘idaurrasaga, secretary to Gen. Blanquet, the Minister of War, is aboard the gunboat Zuragosa. The 1‘ gunboat has steam up, and unless the orders are changed, will run along- side the Corcovado before she docks. ' Col. Vidaurrasaga will request Gen. I Diaz to counsel his partisans to main- ltaiu good order, and in return for i this he will assure Gen. Diaz his protection. Not a. very~great number of parti- sans are expected to greet thglr chief. Those here are headed by Jose Luis Requcna. candidate for the vice-presidency. Senor Requena be- oooooooooo The Ccrcovado should be in Mexi- can watcr tc-day, but she is not exâ€" pected to dock before to-nigbt. She is a German boat, and close behind her comes ,the German gunboat A‘ (Special to Tho Post.) VERA CRUZ. Oct. 22.â€"Gen Diaz, candidate for the Mexican deucy. who is now on his v 1 O dyers Will Check Any Demonstration ______ mg ml we memcan Presi- . who is now on his way to Cruz aboard the steamer Cor- .0, will be permitted to land to~ but there must be no demon- y lrrasaga, secretary to t, the Minister of War, gunboat Zuragosa. The team up, and unless the ?.â€"Gen. Felix UNDSAY, ONTAFIO FRSDAY‘ In Mon-day’s shoot, on the 600 yr rd range. Rifleman Hunter had made 1 is third consecutive bulls-eye. He fired his eighth shot and the scorers flash- ed the flag across the target indicatâ€" ing a miss. The young rifleman neith- er changed color nor showed any pen- ceptible emotion, though to miss the target under the circumstances, would .have been! little short of a dis- grace. Captain Austin, as executive oificer, phoned the target pit and asked the men to careful-Ly L-examino the target. This was done, and again the flag was waved across the face of the target, indicating a clean miss. Young Hunter was as impassive as ‘before and merely prepared his rifle 1for another shot. Captain Austin, still dissatisfied. again phoned the target men and asked them to look 3 yet once again. They did so, and} flashed back the signal of a bulls-.: eye. The bullet from Hunter’s rifle had pierced the target exactly in the small black spot in the center olthe: red and the men in the target pits The shoot seemed to justify the‘TDe emau fair with a good honestj The Rose . ‘ Memorial Hospital r topinion that the Canadian Rifles had 3mm and clean attractions haigcelved a check today for 3451 the better sights, while the American :come to its own. Take that loca r . ;throu h H k” ' e rifles were the more serviceable guns. gpaper on my dGSk there It reads 35:131. Pg J MOI; 1118 :Iopkms fro: ‘ 2 - I - . . a on . o‘ ‘ - The essence of good sportsmanship , if there never had been such a fair in. BY 1 ornwall, wh , marked the shoot, attention being~that town. That is the general story. j recovered an amount from the Tow 3 paid by the American oflicers to ev-, Why Not Perpetual Fund? 10‘ Lindsayin a sue for, damage a l ‘ery detail that would show the Can-§ “Your 'ra-lny-day' fund will not begarising out of his daughter haxini adian viitors the fairest opportun-l'so heavily drawn upon?” I ventured. 9 been placed in the 15°11‘41” HOSEita . ity to display their skill. ; "Oh, no! There is going to be very lgwhen she had scarlet fever. The doc Rifleman Hunter’s Nerve. little demand upon it. Yet, in aifors clalm tiat the building was n01 , e ? hat’makes little real difference 11 proper 5 ate 0‘ repair or fit f0] Rifleman b. H. S. Hunter, who was * sense t ' ' ' ’hl h l "'"du 1 f th d . mfor we are no further ahead with the i the reception 0‘ the Slek was 5115' V g nm.‘ a gun or e ay, 13 a; ’tained and he was award (1 th 1) ' student cl the Columbia University ffund after a fine year than after a, e e a OH at New Westmim‘ster B C and fired ‘String 0’ disasters. What money isiamount and .COStS by the court. his first Charge from; a miltitary rifle ’not expended 13 returned to the! In thROPImOH Of a great many eiti on GOOd Friday of this ea;- His (18- ; treasury. It is rather a pity that’fzens the time has arrived when the I t . rtyrifl ’ h 5th.“; year’s left-over money. for imrtown should seriously consider the ve opmen as an expe eman as! _ ' c ; question of the erection of a suit- be u 11 r 'd d h h ed stance, could not be held as part on an unus a Y am an e 8 CW ; . . , :able building for an isolation h - Monday a nerve that would haVe been'a fund to whlcn would be added the. OS creditable to a seasoned veteran. gamount unclaimed year by year. In I “ital. This was the young man’s second Be_§that way we would soon build up a, vere coutest. his first being with the I, reserve upon which we could draw? LB C R. A. at Vancouver when thelwithout restriction in case of a very .n O I . elimination shoot to select a team bad ”3803' As it Is at present the! {or the International meet at Camp grant is simply from year to year,‘ Perry was in progress. With 76 enfland we get no further ahead finan-l ' ' ' ‘ iaan’. tnes, the young rifleman came With-{c I in two points of making the Ottawa! The Faker is Not Wanted. ! am EDMUND B. OSLER. M.P., PRESIDENT. C. A. BOGERT. la clean store on this range of ten straight bulls-eyes; This event was itaken by tit: Canadians by a score of 137 to 124. In the second event, 200 yards, r-yid fire, the Americans led by 120 M. 118. This was the only event in which eAmericans showed superiority as the Canadians took the 500 yard event by a total 0! 139 to 105. and the 600 yard event by a total. of 125 to 169. The tabulated score 0! the shoot was as foliows: i The day was dark and a cold rain fcll steadily throughout the shoot, which began at 10 a. m. and ended at 1.20 p. m. The high score for the Canadian Rifles was made by Rifle- man Hunter, with a total of 188 out cf 3. possible 200. The second high score of the shoot Was made by Ser- geant Mitchell of the American team with a total of 172. Sergeant Crook- all was third high rifle with 166; Sergeant Porter, fourth with 165;; Sergeant ‘Short, fifth with 155; and} Private Spacn, 6th with 131. j The Canadians won the toss and opened the shoot on the 200 yard: range, slow! fire. Rifleman Hunter had i [with special shortshooting sigma! The Americans were armed mith thei new Springfield rifle with the regula- . tion army sight . Captain H. A.’ Comeau of Co. “G” was in charge of; the Company team. Capt. 0. R. Ausfi tin acted as executive officer, while; Captain R. H. Fleet was officiali scorer. 5 The team representing 'Co. “G" was composed of Sergeant W. S. Mitchell, Sergeant B. H: Short and Private G. Spoon. The Canadians were armed with t_he Ross rifle, fitted of Vancouver, B. C., in which 2 met Vex-ul'am lad, C. H. S. H1 figured prominently. He is only teen years of age and is a son D. Hunter, of Dunsford P. O brother attends the local Colleg The Post says:â€"-' The Post has been» shown a copy of the Grays Harbor (Aberdeen, Wash- !ngton) Post containing an account of a shooting contest between the rifle team of Co. G. Aberdeen, and the Duke of Connaught’s C~wn Rifles: Story of His Prowess 0) Pacific Coast VERULAffi BGY IS CRACK SHOT cgntinued on page llght’s Own Rifles -. in which a. for- C. H. S. Hunter, ’ He is only nine- nd is a, son of J. McGREGORâ€"At. her residence, S‘ec- . 0nd street, Midland, on Monday, October 20, 1913, Ann McGregor, widow of the late Louis McGragor, in her 87th year. l The Faker is Not Wanted. Much of the success of rural fairs this year is probably attributable .to lthe infusion ct new blood into the directorates. In the past it has been :a matter of policy with rural board- !ing that the same men be kept in jharness year after year, even unto the third and fourth generation. Oi late. however. newer and younger men have been added, and they have given that touch of modernity which un many cases has meant success rather than failure. Whether or not it is - due to a reformed diiectorate, I one feature of this year’s shows is the absence of the faker. Superintend I cut Wilson has for years been a tire; I less toe of the confidence men and the gambling fraternity, and no one apâ€" preciates their almost complete re- moval more than he. Interment at day. ‘. OCTOBER 24 19,13 Ofli That feeling of satisfaction and shâ€" carefreeness which always acco'mp- mtlanies the safe garnering of a srl-end- he id crop is this year reflected in the nd uniformity of success which attended ies the f: Isl fairs recently held through- 3r- out Ontario One cannot journey er, from place to place without hearing 1eJon all sides glowing reports of the J_ .big crowds and the huge gate re- [15' ceipts at “our fair. " The hundreds of 3.;locsl papers are filled with lengthy accounts of the festive occasions, I .'., and through the whole chorus of ieâ€"' S licitous reference there sounds not a; 1didiscordant note. Why this should be as requires some explanation. It is far 3 d'from being the case that successful‘ 8 ushow should follow successful show: 1e are five follows four or twenty nine-; 1_ teen. Thirty years ago the small; l :fairs in Ontario were better, as fairsf :i. ‘pure and simple, than they were five;I years since. 'l‘he economic change i :which has revolutionized our whole: 1 rural life afiected the small fair and' 'tended. by its very artificiality oi: nature, to bring success to the gatesl of those fairs which depended for' their crowds upon shady racing cal endars and trashy vaudevi le stunts e For a time they succeeded, and well But the past five years’ time has: [woitness ed a wholesome change for? 1ithe better in the desires of thosei ' connected with our rural fairs, and today we find that those fairs which' I struggled through a decade of re-J verses, depending scl ly upon thelrf ‘ excellence of exl-Li it for recogni‘. ion,. are dram mg large crowsd, while their! =ertswhile flashy competitors are lefti ,‘ disconsela .e and out of pocket. ‘ A Clean Exhibit Wins. In a chat with the writer the ener- ‘ getic Superintendent of Fairs Mr. J I éLockie Wilson, declared has concur-g frence in the sentiments above ex-; pressed. “There is undoubtedly a reâ€"l rival in fair work " said Mr. Wi.lson f "‘I have been looking over the re-1i cords and I find that since fairs; l I XI: 5 c a t a t v B .were first held in Ontario, about one hundred and thirty years ago there ihas not been a more generally suc- ‘ icessful year than the one just closing! ,‘The small fair with a. good honest! 5exhitit and clean attractions has come to its own. Take that localice th paper on my desk there-it reads as; if there never had been such a fair in : D‘ that town. That is the general story. i re: Why'Not Perpetual Fund? ’ 0‘ “Your 'rainy-day' fund will not be : ar: so heavily drawn upon?” I ventured. ! be‘ Clean ExhibitWins Every Time SUCCESSFUL YEAR * FOR FALL FAIRS DIED ”com on Th 111'3 :i) The Ross Memorial Hospital ree‘ 1:5;celved a check today for $45. 00 ' 55through Hopkins Hopkins from :lDr. P. J. Maloney, of Cornwall, who recovered an amount from the Town id Lindsay in a suit for damages “arising out of his daughter hax mg ,been placed in the Isolation Hosrital lwhen she had scarlet fever. The doc- §tors claim that the building was not :11) proper state of repair or fit for {the reception of the sick was susâ€" 'tained and he was awarded the above E :amount and costs by the court. it | In the opinion of a great many citi e {zens the tune has arrived when the town should seriously consider the 9 1 l ROSS HOSPITAL OTTAWA, Oct. 22.-â€"-"\'. commissioner of immigrai yesterday: "If Mrs. Enamel burst visits Can-'da ..3 a to: a lecturer, we won't bar I but it she starts to smash I will be prompt 33’ apprchsnd< carted. " (Special to The Post) NEW YORK, Oct. 22.--Mrs. En:- meline Pankhurst, addressing last night in Madison Square Garden her first American mass meeting on her present eventful trip, explained why militant methods [or the cause of no- man suffrage are carried on in Eng- land but not in America, and defend- ed the employment of such methods. She criticized the British Government as the most conservative on esrth and held it responsible, through failure to enact legislation desired by women for women resorting to violence to obtain the ballot. Only through dy- namic means, she declared, mull" English women hope to secure lavas dealing with white slavery. industria! i l evlls and other conditions affectin: . women. New MRS. PANKHURST GETS A FROST York Meeting PoefiysAppoint412m ef Failing-z: Attended Pastors Urged RECEIVES CHEQUE ; Review: It was announced in 81-- 31 I“-Smter's Cathedral on Sunday that a $45.00 gnaw Roman Catholic church would in from trim near future be erected in East ' who§City. Since the Rt. Rev. M. J. O'- ‘Bfien, D. D., has been raised tome I TwnjEpiscopate, this section or the thy “.388 ihas been supplied with a separate aung school and now His Lordship is fur- ;pital 1' ther satisfying the wants of that doc- jporticn of hislflock by arranging for 3 not a new church. I: for ;’ . Very Rev. Dean McColl informoxi 5‘18“ gthe Review this morning that the hove gait-e has not as yet been selected. . ghut there is a possibility of it, being ' “ti facets-a on the hospital grounds. #1.“ All thm‘e now attendingfi itcr’s and who res 'de on the [of the Otonabee river, will .the new church. The style 4 has not as yet been decided. ANOTHER NEW i The report of the Commiteee an Non-resident -Iembersh1p. read by lRev. C. J. Cameron. showed that labout one-eighth cf the membership- '0! the ch"rc .cs are nonâ€"resident. The establishment cf a can trail: :re2u for non-residents was suggests . 8:: that the pastors rri 4 t send i: farmaizc-n in respect to a. mem‘c-er and sficrts couId be made to bring him into re- lation with the church in 1'13 haze. Differences 0! opinion were expressed as to the establishment of such a Ce. partment. The committee was con- tinned until next Iconvention. PAGES 1 T0 8 :preciation of the Children's Aid So ciety, sympathy with the temperance work, and the hope that the provâ€" inces would soon be able to banish the bar and suppress liquor saks in stores, sympathy with the efiorts to suppress the white slave tramc and with the British anti-opium societies. also with the Canadian Baptist So- ciety, and favoring the changing of the date of Thanksgiving Day to the last week in Octoqer. {cafivmmu 0F BAPTiSTS CLOSED CATHOLES CHUPA. fl a river, will attend - The 813114.9 of edifice are non-resident. Tim I a central bureau {or as suggested. so that l 5112: send iz'farmaizon a member and eficrta to bring him into re- : church in Us 213:;- . P39 ii?"

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