Grimsby Independent, 17 May 1911, p. 2

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I have often noticed children m Grimsby and especially some chilâ€" dren on Mountain St., who seem to take a perfect delight in seeing how A peculiar thing about parents is that they rather like to see their children take risks and will find no fault, but these same parents, just as soon as the children are brought home mangled, injured or dead, they generally yell the loudest. I have often spoken in these colâ€" umns about the practice many chilâ€" dren have of riding onâ€"the steps of heavily loaded drays and clinging to the backs of drays and wagons, yet many children in towns and villages all over. the courtry follow /up +this system of enjoyment, with the reâ€" sult that scarcely a week passes without some child meeting with death or very severe injuries. Daily I see children playing on railway tracks, trolley tracks and highways and when I have spoken to them I generally received a saucy answer and when I have remonstratâ€" ed with their parents I would. get little or no thanks for my solicitaâ€" tion on behalf of their children. I have many times referred in these columns to the fact that chilâ€" dren, and sometimes older people too, constantly rush themselves inâ€" to danger, without the slightest reaâ€" son. ‘‘There seems to be something born in human nature to take risks and this is apparent in the child of two years old and continues with him up to manhood and even to old age. A most lamentable accident ocâ€" curred in the eastern part of the city of Hamilton, on Tuesday evenâ€" ing, when two little boys, who were playing on the tracks, were instantâ€" ly killed and badly mangled by the evening mail train on the Grand Trunk coming east. Beamsville is asleep and Cy should not have awakened it by putting ten cents extra tax on anybody. Cy is to blame for changing the is sessment on account of the fact that there is nothing. moving in Beamsâ€" ville and therefore, the assessment has no right to move. 4 Cy assessed somebody fifty cents more this year than he was assessed last year and immediately the howl went up. My old â€" friend Cy Wardell, assessor in Beamsville, is having a few troubles of his own. If these cinders pack so as prevent vehicles from bumping while going over this crossing, the writer ~.of the Facts and Fancies will not feel that life has been in vain and a great many horsemen and teamsters will cease to be profane (on Depot St.) I see that the crossing on Depot St. has been fixedâ€"At least a few loads of cinders have been placed on either side of it. TERMS: § Subscribers in Canada $1.00 per yea‘ in United States $I 50 per year I know of nothing that will tend to retard and cramp a minister of the gospel in his work so much as pinch ing, scraping and saving to keep fiâ€" nancially solvent on a miserable pitâ€" tance per year, that a prosperous business man would spend in a few weeks. INDEPEN DENT Write for our private address. M‘N J PIW&E, All letters from Canada must be addressed to our semeemmsemw@m . Canadian Correspondence Department in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are used for correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows: CcONSULTATION FREE. Books Free on Diseases of Men for a Question Blank for HOME TREATMENT . Drs. KENNEDY & KENNEDY We Treat and Cure VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD and URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY and BLADDER Disâ€" eases and all Diseases Peculiar to Men. CONSULTAT]ON FREE- BOOkS Fren‘nn FWaancasr nP Mn > IB 222 LX y oc uy n ts »aoP x mss ce t cisonnite (6 C3E *\ I\ Q J im '!."Z{-P'T,E'v"'.-:'-”:"v 4 HOW m > ::_ ¢ 1 :-';'_v“_:!f_\:-.. $ f /‘// any you ‘ it e off -"3”'//// :A can look back ong rels Â¥H @ C ) 7 early life and i Fnelf wl 0 h e //// // misdeeds. *‘ regret their 2 r A c ’f-‘\ eX P {"« wild oats‘‘ in \?;r?cing oea :;’.' ' : A\ ;1\ N /-é, & U /( [ { t\\: I gh 2 tEXC(’esses, violation Sov;ra}’S. $X AMoa U \ Y f/~47;*1 + alxl;de glaws, ‘wine Woni] o (° :.:. We \( & 0 ,/ '< We ' victisr(x)lng"’â€"au have theei? S Mc 6 / & _ e ormed but what shoot ane .: H ,//’/ MT i. . _ «l / $ seed you haj"ehzt about the t M I l4 »2° 4 ownâ€" ar //’ wispaY SA e e ol Afe Ratvert" Don‘t * -.... “ /'// | f &]‘ J 4 ' § 4 at rto luCk‘ If B'Ou are Socs AW LW BP T unco onl in #;a W C (1\1"§ TA . BA | clutches of any s it "~MUIGC U ss=prs: hibt t .' A . $€5 ~ Te > by degrees'ppfmg you e & * dscR o2 M\ fpact frels ths resulte ol 9 22 sonkonw Paiebts ) = past indiscreti e results of dare Lotr matey: 4 esY i ? _ blood has l;:retloqs; if your out and expo: y; if you are married e i ooo any privét e;n tainted from lii‘eâ€"DRSp il(ng your past; if you and live in dread of sy e eeiinan 108 oo OR n t L ARE vour neruce."" Pn Ofi markbine ‘ntially and they wi R REFUGE ult of a misspent aily anda they will tell you honestl *, Lay your case bef y if you are curable PS &* ’fi_‘;;â€"‘â€"“â€""'\& l rnâ€"- CAE m ) .2 : ..{, \fi' & |0 s ( t ~@Wasy t L $ wl %// | g\ as . ,?___. #i+:, M 1$ \ P â€"FRNRF * )",:'..,-" //’/ %1 f:*yj """a «W L« MAPWL i raa hy \ f S (‘lf'l‘ % _.“../ \‘ k C 2. [(’ ‘l c DEBHLIHTY pa o. tegy ‘ 2. VE A t o PPA ow 2 PGIPOID & a. _ 5 e â€" SOWING HIS WILD OATS Facts and Fancies. Continued from paSe i or. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit; fii:ll. REAPING A HARVEST OF SORROW YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. T H E: LIVINGSTON, Editor Their conduct seems to say as plain as words can sayâ€""Willie Jonse*ts was killed ou this spot and I am going :o ity how near I can â€" go to ybeing killed"â€"Several times he gets very close and escapes, but some time it catches him and a few weeping friends and a few « sweet scented flowers is all that is left of Johnnie â€"He followed Willie Jones. What is true of boys is equally true of men but rarely true of girls I often think that there is a taint of recklessness or insanity running in the blood of most people. There is no other explanation in my mind for their conduct. These children of course,vdid not know the danger, but why did they sit down in the danger zone instead of some where else? It has often seemed to me that there was some influence drawing children and even men to their death, when we know that they go deliberâ€" ately into a place of great danger and linger there and loiter there and play there until the death dsalig monster comes. I have seen quite. young children leave their mother‘s side, run out inâ€" to the street and sit down on the ground right between the car tracks. It would seem strange that when there are acres and acres of~vacant land and unoccupied woodland in East Hamilton, quite close to wher» the little boys were killed on Tuesâ€" day, that these boys should choose the double track of the Grand Trunk Railway to play on. close they can run in front of a team of horses without being knocked down. I have even seen these children run across the street immediately in front of an automobile. For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulcer. ation, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. We cannot understand why women will take chances with an operation or drag out a sickly halfâ€"hearted existâ€" ence, missing threeâ€"fourths of the j%y of living, without first trying Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound. _ Lindsay, Ont.â€""I think it is no more than right for me to thank Mrs. Pinkham for what her kind advice and Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound has done for ~o C aismese,..;~]| me. When I wrote o :*./ A %9 "‘] to her some time l C :A ago I was a very $ _ : sick woman, sufâ€" e .: :] fering from female ces «& â€" Eey::q] troubles. _ I had smy > Esccc3 inflammation o f io 3e o =<] the female oOrgans, forRessSsSL.::¢5A and could not 22@ §ey? § stand or walk any s &\ & distance. At last I \\ \ was confined to my \ X bed, and the doctor said I would have to go through an operation, but this I refused to do. A friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable. Compound, and now, after using three bottles of it, I feel likeanew woman. Imost heartily recommend this medicine to all women who suffer withfemale troubles. Ihave also taken Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Liver Pills and think they are fine.‘"â€"Mrs. FRANK EMsLEY, Lindsay, Ontario. . ~»fingeyyy. :: ~@ ‘ s 392 C# : :: hss oc Sm . c ces o 2 ++( + s * :fi Ee Eoc 0 o8 829 Was Curedby LydiaE.Pinkâ€" ham‘s VegetableCompound OPERATION HER ONLY . If unable to call, write CHANCE Most of the streets of Grimsby are quite stoney and the grader gathers up a lot of stones, and the result is that unless these â€" straata In the Village of Grimsby, the same practice to some extent praâ€" vails, the road grader comes along grades it up and then goes away and leaves the street unfit to traviel on. Whereas, if the centre was fixed s)|land in Manitoba that the public. could travel on it, * * s the sides would not be cut up and far| Mr. Dan McGi less work with the grader would be‘| tioned the Canad necessary. ; y l arm=r in mamareacs e se d The result is that by the time the centre of the road is fit to travel on the sides have all been cut into ruts and the services of the road scraper are again required. The consequence of this is, that after each rain, the . wagons keep sliding down the sloping side of the road cutting ruts there and driving part of the road back into the ditch again. + During each summer about half of the roads in the Townships of North and South Grimsby .are unfit to traâ€" vel on, having a «windrow of stones, clods, and sods in the centre. while the public is forced to travel along the sloping side of the road. It is a peculiar thing that just as soon as the roads gets fit to drive on in the spring, the road buildetrs come along and Gestroy them for driving on and leave them ‘that way for the entire season. If the road. builders would, stoP | gso grading at 4 o‘clock each day and kn put one team on a harrow and the other team on a roller and would har f row and roll the newly graded road 1id alternately, for a couple of hours, OT using ‘choe> roller last, <they wounld pe have the piece of road ready for the Te A 3 e public o drive on; ready to turn the 0 rain and ready to carry traffic withâ€"|â€" o s 3 all out cutting up or working into mud holes. I & n i We Ni : If the road builders would spend errxll‘glinvzox:}legwtso ;ne fofrgrlgittttete G(t)g ts dn hour or two going over the newly walst a lot of . time in whitewashâ€" This is a great chance to graded ploce of road: which they NSX" ing a minister, who has strayed from | cellent summer reading cheap worked up during the day, with a the path of virtueâ€"Why notâ€" send good harrow and a goqd roller, the:}: him up to the Niagara District and would leave the road in first class give him a good spraying with lime 3 f r 25 S»h&ape for trilflif.* 7 x ¢ and sulphurâ€"A good power spraysr 0 C would coat him over in five minutes If the road. builders would, stoP so that his best friends would | not grading at 4 o‘clock each day and | know him. They have a road grader, which rips up ue> sods, clods and stones, but they have no tools to finish the road withâ€"They should havy> a harâ€" row and a good roller. The real trouble with the rg! builders of North and South Gri by and the Village of Grimsby, that th:y have. not sufficient materi to work with. For the past ten years, year in alnll year out,I have urged the road buill ers of the Townships of North an South Grimsby and the Village Grimsby, to _ finish the Lrgads leave them in a fit and proper sta\ for public travel before they‘ qu work and remove their machine from them.â€"In very few cases h the road ever been completed, fit f travel, by the road builders. If the road commissioner and machine hands and the two pai of horses leave the road in a wor ondition than they found it thi the township is wasting money to t tune of about $15.a day. What is the object of sending a road commissioner, a couple of maâ€" chine hands, a road grader and two pairs of horses out to work on the road?â€"If is is not to put the roads in better ecndition than they were beâ€" fore, then what is this gang sent out foOr?‘. . If the road builders leave the road unfit for the public to travel om, tueu the road builders are unfit to build roads. I never could understand in what portion of a man‘s anatomy his brain was, when he would grade up a piece of road and go away and leave it with a row of sods, clods and stones in the centreâ€"The very spot where the public should drive. s It is amazing to think that a pigéce of road graded up a year ago is stil! in the rough sody condition, that it was when the road builders left it. I drove over a piece of road in North Grimsby the other day, which had been graded with a road grader a year ago, and a windrow of sods still re‘nained almost intact in the roadwav. f The spot where both Grimsby and North Grimsby ‘road builders fall down is nuishing the road, ready for travel, after it has been worked. Besides the harrow, North Grimsby Council should also invest in a good heavy land rollerâ€"Not a steam rollâ€" er, nor an unweildy road roller, but a good heavy land roller. Two implements ‘of warfare that are needed very muchâ€"One by the Village of Grimsby and the other by the Township of North Grimsby, are two good iron harrows. The men and boys know the danâ€" ger and seem to have an insane deâ€" light to defy itâ€"The girls and women also know the danger, but their timâ€" idity keeps them from rushing into itâ€"In this case I am well satisfied to call their timidity, wisdom. The reasgson of this is not that the girls or women are wiser in their day and in their generation than the men and boys, but they are more tim id and naturally more careful. Not nearly so many women. are killed on gerous spots as there boys. or women that unless these streefé known â€" dn are men : n and 9T The way the resolution was piut by Sir Wilfrid, leaves quite a nice little loop hole for Hon. Frank Oliâ€" Mr. Dan McGillicudy never menâ€" tioned the Canadian Northern Railâ€" way Company nor the matter of lands at all so it is pretty good guess ing to assume that Sir Wilfrid knew a little about where the money came from and knew a little about why it came, before he made his resoluâ€" tion. . McGillicudy‘s charge was that Hon. Frank Oliver had received sixâ€" tyâ€"nine thousandâ€"Sir Wilfrid‘s reâ€" solutionâ€" states that the charge is that Hon. Frank Oliver received sixtyâ€"nine thousand dollars _ from the Canadian Northern Railway Com pany, for using his influence to get the said company some six million acres of good land in Saskatchewan, instead of six million acres of swamp as a professional handicapper to the white washing committee, by stating in the resolytion, a specific charge which McGillicudy did not mentioa at all. It was not mentioned where th» money came from, nor was it menâ€" tioned specifically where it went to. That is what Mr. Dan McGillicudy wants investigated; but Sir Wilfria Laurier showed his fine Italian hand As long as a road builder contin ues to take money for improving roads, which he does not improve he is taking what he has not earn ed and he is dishonest. The charges, ag originally puâ€" blished in the Toronto Telegram, were thut Hon. Frank had received sixtyâ€"nin> thousand dollars in cold cash from somebody and had used i: unlawfully in an election. A funny thing about the investigaâ€" tion into the conduct of Hon. Frank Oliver is that the committee has been instructed by Sir Wilfrid Lauâ€" rier to investigate a charge that w«s not made against Hon. Frank at On the committee are three proâ€" fessional _ whitewashers and the Hon. Frank should be able to get from faem a preftty fair dose of limeâ€"Sufficient toâ€" fumigate hi n and purge him from all his evil ways. Any soad builder who could not take an ordinary piece of clay road in the Township, grade it, harrow and roll it and leave it at night as smooth as a billard table does not know his business and he should go away back and sit down until he gets some idea into his noddle about roady~uilding. o In <the outlying parts of the Vilâ€" lage of Grimsby, where there is not much ,traffic, the grader brings up sods, clods and dirt into the eentre of the road and if ‘this is not smoothed and leveled down /with a ( harrow the. centre of the road is unfit to drive on for some considerable time. A committee of five has been apâ€" pointed by the ‘Dominion Governâ€" ment, to investigate the charges made against the Hon, Frank Oliver. are .raked after grading and th»e stones drawn away the last result is worst than the first. ‘"Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ will positively cure every case of Rheumatism, when taken according to directions. 5o0c. a box, 6 for $2.50, or trial size, 25¢c. At all dealers or from Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. In hundreds of other cases, "Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives‘‘ has given exactly the same satisâ€" factory results because "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘" is the greatest blood purifying medicine in the world. "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ the famous fruit medicine regulates kidneys, liver, bowels and skin, and prevents the accuâ€" mulation of uric acid, which is the prime cause of Rheumatism. After taking five boxes, I was entirely well again. The cure of my case by "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ was indeed splendid because all the doctors failed to even relieve me. "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ cured me. "I was a helpless cripple from Rhenâ€" matism for nearly a year. All down the right side, the pain was dreadful and I could not move for the agony. I was treated by two physicians without help. Mrs. LIZZIE BAXTER. 4a Hoxm® PrACKE, ToRONTO, Dec. 15, ‘o9g. I saw "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ advertised in ‘The Telegram‘"‘ and decided to try them. After I had taken one box, I was much better. When I had taken three boxes, I could use my arm and the pain was almost gone. Al LAST, A CURE FOR RHEUMATISN "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Cured Me" Says Mrs. Baxter. Continueq on page 3 A reliable French regulator;never fails. These pills are exceedingly %owerful in regulating the generative portion of the female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. Dr. de Van‘s are sold at $5 a box, or three for $10. Mailed to anv address. The Scobell Drug Co., St. Catharines, Ont. Dr. de Van‘s Female Pills ROBERT DUNCAN & CO.|. | 934 &. We offer 500 Paper Bound Novels, all excellent titles These books positively sell regularly at 15c and 25C each: Another Big Book Bargain Or at Stewart‘s Drug Store. Another value of black and tuscan shapes we will sell for 5oc. . Come and take advantage of this sale and you will be pleased. MiutuingEry Parrors 4 John St. North, cor King Hamilton i e Upstairs We have another big supply of . beautifully Trimmed Hats, which we are going to cut to the lowest figure, some selling at three dollars. is always attractive and popular and so are our prices. Our aim is to give the best value for the least money. ’ This is a great chance to get exâ€" TRUDELL & TOBEY 50â€"52 James St. N., Hamilton, â€" Ontario A watch good time keeper, with every boys‘ suit at $5 and over. Specialâ€"Hats and neckâ€" wear for 24th of May. Young Men‘s Elegantly tailored Spring Suits at $9.95, $14.95, $20 others up to $27.50. we are making. _ Little doubt can remain in the mind of the man who takes the trouble to investiâ€" gate that we are offering the greatest values in all Hamilton in men‘s and advantages of trading here, the splendid store service we provide, the extreme reliability of our merchanâ€" dise, and the superiority of our values, we are quite confident we should ‘not be able to wait upon the crowds that would come here for their clothes. As it is, we are kept quite busy, busier in truth than we have ever been before, and we are thoroughly satisfhied with the progress THE Hinmanâ€"Atkinson Knew the Strong Points of this store the Stationers and Printers Cor. James and Market Square HAMILTON OUR rimmed Millinery R. DUNCAN & CO. If all the Men The 2 T in this section A full line of kodaks and supplies The finest collection in the country The very BEST that can be made GAFEO. E. WALLER Pass. Agent J. G. GIBSON Superintendent The cars from Beamsvilie are due in Grimsby at 20 minutes to the hour from 6.40 a.m. to 11 05 p.m.and 20 minutes after the hour fr m Hamiiton from 7 20 a.m. to 12.15 p.m. Beamsville departâ€"7. : 11.16, 12.15â€" 1.15, 2.15, §.:15, 7.165, 8.16 9. 15 p m Hamilton departâ€"7.10, 8.10, 9.10, 10.19. 11.10 a.n:." ~12:10;â€" 110. :s.10, â€"3:10. 4.10, 5.10, 6.10, 7.1v 8.10, 9.10 p.m. Fifteen minutes after the Hour trom a m. to 10.45 p.m. Ten minutes‘after the Hour, fron. 6 Â¥. m. to 11:10 p. m. CARS LEAVE BEAMSVILLE Grimsby Station GOING EAST. GOIN Electric _ Railway MANUFACTURER OF WEDDING CAKES, 1ICE CREAM AND FINE CaANDY Weddings, Receptions, At Homes and En tertainments Supplied. Lunch Counters, Caterers 34 King St. W.., Hamuiton e P P o ie t T i 3 8 PR €OT . L# 1LLTON, has moved to a more modern ofâ€" fice in the FRederal Life Building, corner Main and james Streets, one block west and one block south of tormer office, Take elevator to Room 40. JamesCrawford AssIGNEE aND Varnuaror dlortgages, Deeds, Wills, etc , â€" drawn, Money to loan at 41g to 6 per cent. Es ates wound up and a general Insurance and Jonveyancing business transacted. 46 QUEEN St. ST. CATHARINES PLANS8S, SPECIFICATICNS, vaLUATIGNS, BLUE PRINTS. LAUVRENCE MUNRO E. A. Lancaster. Jas. H. Campbeli Noteâ€"Mr. Lancaster will be at the Linco House, Grimsby, every Wedanesday from am. to 6 p.m., except during the session of the Dominion Parliament. L4 Solicitors, Notaries, etc. Money to loan at lowest rates. Office, *"Spectator Building," Hamilton _ S. F. Lazier, K.C. E. F. Lazier. H. L. Lazier. 4 1 Barristersâ€"atâ€"law Solicitors, Notaries, etec. _ No. 6 Queen ~t * Barristers, Solicitors & Notaries No. 1 Hamilton Provident Chambers, Rughson Sts South, Hamilton, Canada, Telephione No. 652. Money to lend. Mortgages purchasea P.D. Crerar, K.C: T. H. Crerar, C. W. Bell, B. A. E Te d aeel o in To ho remreroineerman ioh y Hn’ Garrister, _ Solicitor, Converancer, Ete., Feleph ne 754. Lan S luae i UA Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, eto. Money to loan. Privatefunds. Lowest rates Bank of Commerce Building, Hamilton, x. â€" Hon. J.â€"M. Gibs . K. C.; M. J. Q‘Rielly 0 MAIN ST. EasT H A M ILTC Plans and Specifications for all classes builinjogs dInsurance Adjusted ARS LEAVE HAMILTON Successors to T. C. Brownjohn, Aivil and Mining fEngineer Land Ssurveyors, Meeâ€"â€"7 Hughsonst. <outh, d amilto Te‘enuane 1098 )ffices, 15 Main St. , I:];st,'v"- Hamilton, At SMITHVILLE every Thursday 3 JAMES ST. N., HAMILTON JOH N B. BRANT NIBSON & OSBORNKE, hidee oi ce Officesâ€"Grimsby and Beamsville Money to loan at current rates. . E. NICHOLSON. 0.A . A., T1 AZIER & LAZIER, BARRISTER:, O N FEC TIONER ANCASTER & CAMPBELL TIME TA BLE CUNNINGHAM RERAR, CRERAR & BELL, a IM db OA A Bb t LAND sURVEYOH. 4. CARPENTER B. MceCONACHIE Barrister, Solicitor, In effect from June i1st, 1910 . F. HANSEL, DEentTtist, Ham 55 Tyrrelil & MacKay MUNRO & mMmEaAD. ARCHITECTS. ARCHITECT®S sSUNDAY SERVICE PICTURES _ (+. & 13. DENTISCR Y KODAKS PHOTOS m LHD ST. CaATHARINEs 5, 8.15, 9.15, 10 15 2.15, 4.15 5.15 goIng wEstTt 6 35 a. m I 19 p.m. 5 55 p. * 3 /T <VILL WILLIAM R, MEA W. W. Osborne HAMILTON Notary Public 6.15

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