:GoV' Lttd .10 BA 'Cl’ :0 meW'ARREN umsn‘, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 8. Dns.KENNEDYKENNEDY -7 Dov-“VI. CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable to can write for a Q‘mï¬w B' ank for Home Treatment. ., We treat and cure VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND PRINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Diseases WNOTICE Statements made by mm taking the New Method Trcamezz Th 2y 1m mow it Cares Patient No. 16765. Age 23. 8121:16- Iadulged in immoral baits 4 years. De- p052: in urine and drain- at night. Varicose Veins on both side'. PM" in back. weak sexually. He writesâ€"“I received your letter of recent date and In r- ply I am pleased to say that after 23km: two months' treatment I would masmer myself completely cased. as I her."- seen no signs 0: them coming back (one year). B‘ No Nana or Testimonials used without written consent CONSTHUXONAL BLOOD DISEASE. , COS}: ‘ nINS CW3!)- _D_a;re ,Y W ,, ou Marga/1?: THE WORLD SEEMS DIFFERENT. SAYS TWO MONTHS m m. Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St, Detroit, Mich. J Patient No. 15923. "I have not ‘had T-“zuisxr Emission I don’t know when ‘ :xm feeling ï¬ne. The world seems :~z.-:‘ner dimer-en: to me and I thank V1 for directing me to you. You have ten an honest doctor with me.†Patient No. 16474. “The spots are all m from my legs and arms and I feel “,1 now. I am very tuneful to you :3 shall never forget the favor your edicincs have done for me. You can Be my name in recommending it to 2:; sufferer. I am going to get. mar- ed soon. Thanking you once more. OUR HOMEMADE §BUGGIES STRONG AND STYLISH Several Second-hand Buggies For‘ Sale Cheap iPmmote s'Digesï¬omCleerï¬d- ness and “Contains mime ; 0pmm Morphine nor m ; NOT NARC one. A cctBemed for Qmsti tioflour StoméhDiarrtnpeaaj. \N‘ormsï¬onwlswnsfevensh- ness andLoss or SLEEP. Aï¬l‘gehhlel’repmï¬onfods- Similaï¬ig MON amneguia- {1112 IR 3% andBawels d â€afï¬rm EXACT COPY†m. facSinilg Signature of SECRETS 0F Hflfé‘gf ESE-'5 CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY BE All lotion from Canadian“ be addregsgd to our Can- nu. .v--v-v -_ w, adhn Congndenge DZMeht as follows : u DRS. KENNEDY KENNEDY. WINDSOR. ONT. Patient No. 13522. This patient (aged 58) had a. chronic case of Nervous De- Ility and Sexual Weakness and was run down in vigor and vitality. After one month's treatment he reports as to]- lows:â€"â€""I am feeling very well. I have gained 14 pounds in one month. so that I will have to congratulate you." Later reportâ€""I am beginning to feel more like a. m“r2. I feel my condition is getting better every week." His last re- portzâ€"“Dezu- Doctorsâ€"As I feel tth is the last month's treatment that I will have to get, r thought at one time I would never be cured but I put conâ€" ï¬dence in you from the start and you have cared me.†Case No. 16888. Symptnms when he started treatmentâ€"Age 21, single. in- dqu’od in im-1 \rnl hibits sr'vrral years. Varicose Veins on both sidesâ€"pimples on the race. etc. After two mnnths’ treatmen: he \rntes as (0110\s'szâ€""Your welcome utter 10 hand and am very glad to say that I think myself cured. My Varicose Veins have completely d1:- appeared fer quite a. while and It seems a cure. I Work harI‘er and feel has tired. I have no desire for that habit whatever and it I stay like this. which I have every reason to believe I will. Thanking you for your kind attention." etc. GAIXED It POUNDS IN ONE 310N213. MSTBRIA The Kind You Have For Infants and Children. mot-non m. I‘M-IN". Sir James took great credit to his Government for having increased the revenue of Ontario by one hundred per cent. In other words the latte Lib- eral Government was spending about ï¬ve million dollars a year, while the Whitney Government manages to get along on ten millions. What would the citizens of Lindsay think of the members of their Town Council or Board of Education if they asked for re-election on the ground that they had succeeded in squeezing twice as much from the town in taxes or sales of lands, etc. as any previous body plumes himself on gathering in :10,- 000,000 a year, the people of Ontario should not forget that it comes from them or from‘ their heritage of land, in their position ? When Sir James mine or timber. In the ï¬rst place Sir Jame. took great credit to W (or living up to that plank in his platform whidh pledged him to give no my great: to railways, ignoring altogether the grave charge of Mr. Rowen tlnt he had granted to a railway a. vast block of land out of the heart of On- tario’s clay beltp one-sixth the size of old Ontario, and had not, as in the case of the Dominion Government, safeguarded the rights of the future settlers. No doubt the defence offered by the Premier of Ontario Was the very best available, but fair, openminded Con- servatives must have listened in disâ€" may to the pi‘tiable attempt. to meet Mr. Bowen’s charges. No Premier of Ontario has had a} better opportunity of making his dew fence before the people than the Hon. ; James P. Whitney had last evening. ' The Opera. House was packed with t intelligent Conservatives and Libemls' who were waiting expectantly for his . reply to the scathing attacks of Mr. Rowen upon the Whitney Administra- tion just one week before. I Sir James again expressed his utter hostility to the Liberal plank in favor of purttipg the Temiskxaming amd‘YNor- thern Ontario Railway under the jur- isdictiorn of the Dominion Railway Board and’ the gen 7ra1 railway laws. “The English language aflords no vehicle of proper expression regarding this proposed act.†was the way he put it. The Conservative candidate, Dr. Vrooman, followed the usual line. He 1 criticized the new Liberal platform, ' describing it as an imitation of the platform the Whitney Government had been working out for the people of this country for a number of years. He admitted ‘t’hat Mr N. W. Rowen was a clean and 209d citizen, but ques ‘ tioned whether he Was a strong man : as a leader. i Sir James Whitney, in his opening remarks, referred to the loss the Conservative party had sustained in the death of the late member for West Victoria, S. J. Fox. The Premier was especially empha- From Saturday’s Post. Sir James Pliny Whitney spoke to a crowded house at the Conservatary of Music last night, at a. meeting held in the interests of Dr. Vrooman, the Liberal-Conservative candidate in the Provincial elections. Mr. Wm. Channon, of Oakwood. Pfesident of the Liberal-Conservative Association occupied the chair. and seated-Swim him on the platform were the prominent Conservatives of the riding. PREMIER WHITNEY [AMENTABLY WEAK DEALT OUT INVECTIVE AT THE ACADEMY What is wanted is a Workman’s Compensation Act that involves no law suits and court‘coets. and a Factory Inspection 'Act that means what it says. Vote for C. E. WEEKS and get them. It will see that when proper safeguards are removed for any reasonâ€"when machinery is being cleaned or repaired for exampleâ€"- they will be replaced in time to prevent accidents. (Fr0m Saturday's Post) It will see to it that safeguards are um employed which may turn out in practise more dangerous to life than the unprotected machinery. . C. E. WEEKS stands for the Twin Guardiansâ€"a Work- man ’8 Compensation Ac; that compensates and a Factory Inspection Act that inspects. The two tag-ether form a. complete system of workman's rightg_ Together they stand and divided they fall. To amend the Workman's Compensation A“ Without amending the factory act is to dead with the affect and neglect the cause. If the Factory Inspection ‘Act really does its work there will be less need of calling on the Workman's Compensation Act. The Workman’s Compensation Act merely locks the stable door after the horse has been stolen. The Factory Repetition Act keeps the horse from being stolen. In plain words. a Factory Inspection Act, properly enforced, would prevent-the majority of accidents now taking place. The right kind of Factory Inspection Act will pmvide Ior en- ough Factory Inspectors to make frequent inspection! an! see that their recommendations are carried out. SIR JAMES P. WHITNEY’S DEFENCE COMPENSATION ACT THAT COMPENSATES Nor is it any defence to say that, when carried by a three-ï¬rth majority it is more dimcult to repeal, for wheo .the day comes in a. community, that the majority feel that local op- tion is a failure, it is quite hopeless i In discussing the boundary question :Sir J ames referred to a charge made by Hon Mr. McKenzie King to the ef- Afeet that the Whitney Government had fallowed Ontario to be deprived of a. 5port on Hudson Bay. He related the ! story of his unsuccessful attempts to ; secure a. port from the 016. Government t and wound up by placing a portion of I the responsibility upon the former La- ! bor Minister‘s shouldres. Sir James is neither wax nor putty so he sticks to his un-British and unâ€" fair three fifths' clause. In the eyes of the law, all men should be on an equality, and it is an outrage upon the temperance people 01 the Province that the votes of twenty men in favor of the liquor trafï¬c are as valuable as the votes of thirty men who see in this giant evil the greatest menace to our civilization. restores every nerve in the body PhOSDl‘IOflOI to its proper tension: restore. vim and vitality. Premature decay and a2; and weakness averted at once. PW d‘. nake you 4. new man Price £31 30:. )r ti»: (0} Electric Restorer for Men moVing told at mcnncbotnm'a an: m ADVERTISE IN THE POST cense Act, altogether ignoring the fact so clearly brought out by Mr. Rowen at his meeting here a week ago. that so eminent a Conservative as Mr. J. W. Flavelle, of Toronto, re- fused to continue to act as License Commissioner because the spoils’ section of the Conservative party in- sisted upon running it in their own interests, and so ultraâ€"Tory a paper as the News was quoted to show that fair-minded Conservatives regarded- the Toronto License case as one of complete surrender to the lowest ele- ments of the party. But one does not need to go as far as Toronto for evi- dence as to the grossly unsatisfac- tory character of the eo~ca11ed en- forcement of the liquor- license act. Every town, city and county in our Province provides evidence. potent and open to the eyes of all who care to see. that no serious attempt is beâ€" ing made to check the evils of the li- quor traflic. tic regarding the righteousness or his party in administering the Liquor Li- , If the record of Dr. Merchant show- ed that a’buses existed. the Govern- ment would remedy those abuses, but would condemn nobody unheard. The use of its mother tongue to teach the French child English Was, he declar- ed, the only common-sense way. 0th- erwise, the only thing to do wa_s to shut up the schro‘ s and put padlocks on the doors. The teacher must for a time, be allowed to teach the public school subjects Ivy means of the French language. “That, " he added, “is what We have been prepared to carry out. That is what we will carry out†, Dealin; with the bilingual schools, issue, the Prime Minister positively declared that the Government would stand by the present statute, and allow the use of French for instruc- tion in public schools where the chil- dren were not able to understand Eng ligh. He explained that the law pro- videdlthet English should be the lang- uage or instruction, but permitted the use 0! French, where, in the option of the Minister of Education. it was nec- essary owing to the pupils not under- standing English. THE LINDSAY POST estOfel' for MCI] mOVing grain almost at once. Wheth- ssom every mm; in the body er the coui'pamy will be prepared to ) m proper tensxon: restore. rematuredecay and ali‘exun‘ handle local freight, our informant at once. PM .1! .u Prim 331301. N twc f0: did not know- ;. i {j 3’ ' .Gl'ï¬ss “9 â€SM“ n", -.~.â€"-â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"-’~ The Orillia Packet learns on good authority that the C.P‘R. manage- ment has given up the idea. of run- ning a. pï¬ssenger service through Oril- lia until the station is ready. This will not be till after the beginning of the New Year. It is intended, how- ever, to make use of the new line for The sale is advertised of the boats ‘of the Peterboro and Lake Simcoe Navigation Company, the owners of the Steamer Otonabee, which ran on Lake Simcoe waters last season..The following comprise this fleet oflered for salezâ€"Steamboat "otonabee." Steamboat “Mandta†Steamboat, "Monarch†Steamboat,“ â€Water Lily†Barge, "‘Otonabee,†Barge “Sultana" Barge, “Davis," Barge “E. White," Steamboat wharf and storehouse Pete erboro. The boats can be purchased in hlocli or in one or more parcels. Ten- ders are open up to and including Jan. 8, 1912. N0 PASSENGER SERVICE THIS YEAR STEAMER OTONABEE OFFERED FOR SALE Last night’s spealier made no men- tion of the Administration of Justice although no other department of his Government except that of education has been so inefï¬cient. The escape of Beattie NeSbitt aod the murders and other shocking ol- fences which have gone unpunished in the past seven years. have left a feel- ing of gravest insecurity amongst the citizens 0! Ontario. It is often said that one story is good until you have heard the next. but Liberals who listened to Mr. Rowen a week am, and to Premier Whitney last evening, must feel that they are following a highâ€"minded, wise, statesmanlika leader, whose claims and charges remain intact aft- er the utmost eflorts of the astute and veteran leader of the Govarnment to destroy them. Last night's speaker practically (b- clared that they did not want settlers 1m our great north country. They ‘were too expensive. It cost money to give them schools, etc. If Sir John A Macdonald and Sir Wilfrid Laurier had adopted the same attitude to wards the North West, we should nev- er have had our C.P.R. or G.T.P. and the West would still bethe haunt of the buï¬alo instead of the granary of; Great Britain. If the great clay belt ‘ of Northern Ontario were ï¬lled by settlers it would mean boundless? prosperity to merchants and manufac‘ turers in Old Ontario. Our own Tud- hopeâ€"Anderson ï¬rm would umnnfac-1 ture and sell thousands of seeders, rollers, etc. to a much closer market: than they now have in the West. 1- Mr. Rowen pointed out so clear- ly tnhis remarkable address of a. week ago, the gravest (act hang the people of Ontario to-day is that the children in so many hundreds of our schools are growing up without any real teaching. We may soon wak- en up to and that large sections of our great Province have grown up grossly illiterate. Sir James tells us that Dr. Merch- ant, Chief Inspector of Schools for Ontario, has been sent out an the bi- lingual question to go over the ground '_‘with a ï¬ne tooth comb," to use the Premier's phrase. Dr. Mercu- ant is evidently getting enough or his comb' to prevent a report: until aft- er election day What the people d On- tario, including thousands of staunch Tories, want to know, is why it tcok the Conservative Government seven years to learn that we were having a second solid French Quebec for- med in Eastern and in Western 0n- tnn’o. 8, 10, 12 or 20 pupils, are to pay young people, barely out of their teens, $1200 a year for teaching rural public schools. Candidly, now, what do you think of the proooeal? The school question was also touch- ed upon, but a more absurd and ut- terly ridiculous suggestion than that made by Premier Whitney has not been heard in Lindsay for many a day. He said that the solution was indicated by something to which his attention was drawn the other day by a friend. He was shown two ad- vertisements for teachers, one from the Canadian West, onering $1200 and one from Ontario oflering $450. "The †said the Premier, "is the solution or the question." So gentle readers: in the days to come. our struggling] school sections, with an attendance of} to attempt any real enforcement or the law, and a majority vote should repeal it. Reo automobile, for which he said he had paid $1457.50. He was not a bit selï¬sh, either, taking Mr. Martin and family out for spins and treating them in ï¬ne style. He also made over tures towards buying a hotel. WOULD PURCHASE STOCK. “After a few days he expressed a desire to purchase some stock in the Martin Electric Company, and as his representations seemed goad Mr. Martin decided to sell him some thir- ty-ï¬ve shares at $100 per share. The papers were made out and duly signed but the cheque from Graham was not forthcoming. and the bluff was only those with whom he came in contact, that he had smooth sailing from the start, and for that matter might have been sailing on yet had his con- science not started working and caused him- to admit that his preten- tions were false. CAME A. MONTH AGO. “Graham came to the city about a month ago and secured employment at the Simcoe Canning factory on Lake street. He worked for about two weeks, when he secured a job with Mr. Ed Barrett as an electrical worker. For Mr. Barratt he worked for a time, after which he was engag- ed by the Martin Electric Supply Co. ‘ anything but a millionaire. or the son of one He is of middle height. fairly stout, and about 25 years of age. He was dressed in a gray suit with a soft shirt and collar. Large circles under his eyes "bore evidence of the great worry which had doubtlessly been on his mind since he ‘broke in.’5 “When the charge of securing the material from the Martin Electric Supply Co. was read to him he plead.- ed guilty: electing to be tried by the Magistrate, and was remanded for a week. “It was at this point that Graham started to break into the "classy style.†For two days he kid of! to attend the funeral of an uncle, he said, and upon his return stated that a small fortune of $44,000 had been bequeathed to him by his deceased re- lative. He aha said that his father was the owner of two fme automo- biles, and- was staying at Niagara Falls for a few days before coming to St. Catharines. To further streng- then his case he appeared with a ï¬ne make Mr. Pierpont Morgan blink or material; would have done justice to Mr. John house a: D. Rockefeller or some other pluto- pears th crat. But it is doubtful if John D. directed would make such a splash in such a was boa: short time, with all his millions. Graham started in in grand style, “When and so easily won the conï¬dence of this mm book. He came to this city practical- ly unknown, and alter a few weeks he- gan cutting a. swath that would “The king of bluï¬ers has been found. He is Malcolm Graham, of [rent-3n, Ont, who was arrested on Weinrsâ€" day night and: is now conï¬ned :n the County jail on a week’s remani. “Graham surpassed all records as far as what isknown as “four-flushâ€" ing" on the street is concerned, and his career, though short. contained enough interesting features to ï¬ll a We have to than}: the Editor of the St. Catharines Journal for a copy of that paper containing the following account of Harry Malcolm Graham's escapade in that city : GRAHAM’S HIGH FLYING IN ST. K1113. CAREER SHOWS HE [S SOME BLUFFER The way to make Sir James Whitney’s Government behave is to either turn it out altogether or give it a strong opposition that will teach it good manna-rs and a willingness to listun to the pee- ple's Garland for reform. Thousands of Conservatives, rank and ï¬le, condemn Sir James for his bluebedng distant-bury to deputations, in fact to evexybody who diners from his opinions. They single out Sir James Whitney, becenu he is the Govern- ment. MkelnuisXIV, heeaya: “Iam the state." Sir JamesWhit- neyisIT. NeVer was a prime minister of Ontario so berated in the house of his friends. ’9 HE Ottawa .10qu, the Hamilton Spectator, and many other ’ Conservative papers, condemn Sir James Whitney for his in- diï¬erence to tax reform. The Toronto Telegram condems Sir James Whitney and Hon. Frank Cochrane for Rip-Van-Winkling six years among the agricul- tural possibilities of New Ontario 8 15,000,000 acre clay belt. The Toronto News has at times condemned Sir J ames Whitney and his Government as unmir, urn-British and high-handed. ' Many Conservative newspaper and: Conservative members of the Legislature condemn Sir James Whitney for his rash misstatements regarding bilingual schools. The Tomato World makes a Cartoon of his blundering equivocations. The Toronto Worl-d condemns Sir James Whitney for his sense- less opposition to Allan Studholme, the only labor representative in the Legislature, CONDEMNED BY HIS FRTENDS called when the “millionaire†ad- mitted to Mr. A. F. Fiï¬eld. the mn- ager of the Rec garage that he had no money, and could not pay for the auto which he purchased. 111'. Martin was notiï¬ed, and'he in turn notiï¬ed the police, who arrested the man last night. “While negotiating with Mr Martin for ashare in the business Graham announced that he was engaged and about to be married to a Jonng lady and upon the strength ofthis obtain- ed a quantity 0! wire, electrical ï¬x- tures and lamps. Mr. Hat-tin be. lieving that he was tomarry Kiss Disher, Summer street, at whose home he was boarding, gavehim the material, which was installed in tha house and is still there. It now ap- of one He is of middle height, fairly stout, and about 25 years of age. He was dressed in a gray suit with a soft shirt and collar. Large circles under his eyes ""bore evidence of the great worry which had doubtless]! been on his mind since he ‘bmke in.’s pears that Graham's aflections were directed toward a Miss Harrie, who was boarding at the Disher home. IN POLICE COURT. “When arraigned in police court this morning the man looked like anything but a millionaire, or the son JEWELLER - - KENT-ST PROPERLY CARED FOR WILL LAST A LIFETIME. we HAVE A LARGE ASSORTME‘NT OF THESE WATCHES." A WALTHIM WHBH PAGE I)