Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 11 Nov 1882, p. 2

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. j “a... LEGAL «kc. JOHN A. BARRON, BARRISTEWATâ€"LAW, Lindsay. Office l l 2 Agricultural and Implement Store. MARTIN 5; HOPKINS, PARRISTBRS, SOLICITORS, Arc. Mo- ) my to Loan at 6 per cent. Ofilcc,§ Kent street. Lindsay, Unt. l KS. Mantis. I’, D. MOORE. BARRISTHH, ATTORNEY, & SOLICITR and Notary Public. Money to Loan. Office, Kent street, Lindsay. lIIIDSI’ 3TH Gt JACKSON, ARRHTERS, SOLll;lTORS, 8c. 0!- ficc, William street, Lindsay. A. Hummer". ' A. J acms‘. U'LI'IARY ll: O'LEARY, , .tRRlSTEItS, ATTORNEYSLAT-LAW, Solicitors in Chancery, kc. Ofiice, Doheny Block, Kent street, Lindsay. Anna’s O’Lnkv. Ilcou O‘Lnav. MCIN'I‘YRE k STEWART. BARRIS'I‘ERS, ATTORNEYS-AT-I.AW, Solicitors in Chancery, kc., Lindsay. Office over Ontario flank, Kent street. Mo- ney to Loan at 8 per cent. on real estate ecuritirs. D. J. )lclsrrnx. Tnos. Snwanr. A LEX. A. MCDONALD, TTORNEY-AT-LAW, Solicitor in Chan- J cery, Conveyancer, kc..kc. Strietat~ tention given to applications for Patents of Lands from Crown Land's Department. Money to Loan on Mortgage Security on terms to suit borrowers. Office, Colborne street, Penelon I-‘ulls. mics... A. w. J. DEGRASSI. M. 0., ORONI‘IR, Pbysician,Surgcon,&c., kc. Residence, Brick Cottage, Wellington strect, Lindsay. War. (ICMI’T. M. D., C. M., IRADUA'I'E of lchill University, Mon trail, and Provincial Licentiate, Physi- cian, Surgeon and Obstetrician, Medical Referee to the Standard, thnix, Connecti- cut Mutual, and Equitable Insurance Conl- panies. Office and residence, in the house lately occupied by Rev. Father Stafford, at the corncrofldndsuy and fins streets, Lindsay. Du. A. WILSON. ‘ Ii. UNIVERSITY of Trinity College. I . M. B.Uaiveralty of' Toronto. Molnh. Col. Phys. and Surg., (Jnt. Physician, Surgeon and \cconeller. Otfice,Colborllc street, r'enelon Pulls. Du J. II. LOWE. HY.‘5ICI.-\.\V k SURGEON. Coroner for the Provisional County of IIalihurton. Office next door to lhe'.\lc;\rthur IInllso. Residence, the house lately occu- pied by Dr. Bryson, on May street, Fcnelon Falls. summons.”â€" JAM ES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Com rlissioner in the Q. 8., . Conveyancer. .lrc. Residence, and ad- dress, Fcnelon Falls. magma-loos. l E coxn DIVISION collar l3: TIII". COUNTY OF VICTORIA. The next sittings of this Collrt will he held on Thursday, November 23rd, 1882. CEO. CUNNINGHAM, Clerk. J A M ES J. POWER, ICENSED Auctioneer, Accountant and J General Commission Agent. Collect- ing accounts u specialty. Office, Fenclon Falls, Out. 75. PERCENT. 6.. )IONIIX' 'ITO ILEND at 6, 6} and 1 per cent., according to secu- rity, on Real Estate mortgages. Apply to JOHN A. BARRON, Solicitor, Lindsay J. HEELAHDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY. One ofthc lirnl will be at tho McAllrlllru llousu, anumN FALLS, on the third Monday of each montll. Teeth extracted by laughing gas without pain or injury. or no charge will be made. w” Office established ill Lindsay nearly fifteen years. 8 1,000 1"OI{1“EI'1‘. lnmlx Cancer Curo Depot, Coaticook, I". Q., Canada. CANCER. CURE!) without the use of tllc knife. The Only Permanent (‘urc In the World. For particulars enclose two 3 cent stamps to S. C. Smith, Coaticook, P. Q..Canadn. â€"â€"llighcst References.â€" fi‘Cl’RES SWIFT AND CERTAIN.“ [Any paper can publish the above for $5 a year. with this note and paper regularly.) -__._.. _._. ___. .._._,.__.__.â€"â€"- ._..__â€".â€". JUST ARRIVED â€"â€"AT Till-lâ€" ‘MUSIG EMPORIUM,’ a large stock of imported for the fall trade. wlllrh we are selling at close prices. Also a very fine stock of VIOLINS, CONCERTINAS and Aecordcons. of all qualities and prices. New goods for the fall trade arriving daily. w .l «If is nitrite! all (be you": Kapo- n'eln, Kent Slrvel, Lindsay. G. A. WI.- Lindny, October 4th. lssa. INSU tumors. GEORGE cunllnnuam, General Insurance and Inn Agent. mos mm. mm, l represents the following first class comm- nlcr. with which business can be transacted ! upon the most advanu terms. The Canada Permanent Loan t Savings Co. The Imperial, laureate Company, ot Lot», don. England. The Citluns‘ Insurance Compony, of Cana~ do, fire and . The [measure In one Co, of England. the (iglodoution Life Association. of Can- 3 l J BRITTO.’, WATCHMAKER. l. llllllll,’ dealer in Clocks, All Kinds, l G‘ “' awn!" l 30 day, 8 day and 30 hour, Alarm strike,&c AMERICAN WATCHES, the Best and Cheapest, IN SILVER AND GOLll CASES in the newest styles and at lowest pnces. @- I’ersons sending watches from a dis- tance formepairs, can have the amount of work and price reported on for their consid- eration, and as I do the work myself, can depend on having it done satisfactorily. Britton’s Block. foot ofKeut St.. Lindsay. NTARIO BAN K. Capital - - - - - - $1,500,000. President. ....Sir. W. P. Rowland. Vice-President . . . . .. . .C. S. Gzowski, Esq. General Manager .. .. . .. . C. Holland, Esq. LINDSAY BRA SCH. Drafts bunght and sold on all points in Canada, United States and Great Britain, and general banking business transacted. Savings Department Interest allowed on deposits of' five dol- lars and upwards. S. A. MCMURTRY, Manager. Lindsay, Feb. 16tb,1881. 50-t.f. Ellcfcllcloll falls @agcttc Saturday, Nov’r 11th, 1882. A Bonus Wanted. As will be seen by an advertisement in another column. a public meeting is to be held in Scully's hall next Monday evening, for the purpose of debating the advisability of givinga bonus to a chem- ical pulp mill, which two gentlemen. who have been interviewing our rceve and other prominent residents of the village. propose to erect near the Fran- cis street wharf, provided they receive suflicient encouragement. As we knew nothing of the project until Thursday evening, we can only briefly allude to it. ill this issue, deferring further remarks until after the meeting, at which full particulars will so laid before the rate payers. The practice ol'giving bonuses to new cnterprlses ls a pcrnlculus one, but it. exists, and without following it there is but small probability of any of the much desired mills and factories ever being established in this village. The chemical pulp mill will, it. is said, cost. 860.000 to build and equip, will run day and night. and employ at least forty men. whose wages will amount to about $1.600 per month. The raw lua- tcrial will be basswood and poplar. of' which 3.000 cords will be used every year, and during the same period no less than 18,000 bushels of quicklime will be needed. Of course sucll an in- dustry would be a great acquisition to the village. and ought. by all means to be secured if it will not cost too much. Stock Raising. Last. Tuesday morning about forty cattle, worth probably a thousand dol- lars, passed through this village on their way to the “ North Star " on the Victoria Iload, and thence to Strick- land's lumber shanty in the region vaguely described as “out back." The drovc was an exceptionally large one ; but smaller lots are continually being driven away, though very few take the direction of the ones above mentioned, nearly all being intended for city con- sumption or for exportation across the Atlantic. Where they go makes, of course, no difference to the farmers who raise them, and who get such gool prices that. the most: sleepy headed a- mong them are beginning to be awake to the truthâ€"recognist and acted up- on by their enterprising and observant brethren years agoâ€"that stock raisin: is a great deal more profitable than wheat growing, especially when the best. quality of wheat only fetches, as at present, from ninety to ninety-five cents per bushel. Tllc yield of grain is so uncertain, and its price so fluctuating. that a farmer's estimate, in the spring, of his year's revenue from that source may prove, in the fall, to have been 50 per cent. too high, which may seriously clllbarrass him if, as is generally the case ill a new country. he has to pay other debts than those incurred for run- ning expenses. But there is very little uncertainty respecting the amount. of revenue to be derived from the sale of live stock; for ifll farmer have half'a dozen heads of young cattle to dispose of, be may safely calculate that, “ bar- ring" losses from accident or disease, ‘ which are very rareâ€"they will realize a certain sum when the buyers come a- round; :lnd as prices are continually ri~illg he is very likely to gel luorc in- i send of less than his estimate. The, different agricultural papers, without all I exception, urge upon their readers the ' wisdom of raising It‘s grain and more stock. and we have been so impressed l for years with the soundness of this ad- | vice that we have repeatedly attempted , to impress it upon our agricultural friends, ~ nowing, as we do. that far too many of them do not. take any am: of. the valuable publications specially de~ vorcd to their interests. Mr. II. B. Franklsnd, who inaugurated the ex- porting of cattle to England about ten 9 years ago. said, in a recent interview with a Globe reporter. that the business was rapidly growing, the exports of this year haviogrxcccded those of 1881 by 3 at least 330.000. and he expressed the l i l conviction that “ there's millions in it" for Canadian farmers, who are receiv- :iog from twenty-five to thirty dollars more per head for their stock than when the trade commenced. Of course there has been a mt improvement in the class of animals ofi'ercd to the buyers; but they are raised to maturity nearly and thoroughbred males are becoming so widely diEnsed throughout the roan try. and the fees charged for their eer- viees are so moderate, that the first cost of a calf is very little more than formerâ€" ly, while it will sell for double as much l at the completion of its second or the! middle of‘ its third year. In the north- ern part of this county there are farms ‘ which can be had for “a mere song," and which, though not very good for grain, afl'urd the most luxuriant and a- bundant pasture. and will produce bea- vy crops of roots; and how it is that Esq, reeve, and councillors Fitzgerald, Thomson and Saudford. Minutes of last meeting read and amended. Moved by Mr. Sandford, seconded by Mr. Thomson, That. Thos. Levis be paid the sum of $2 62 for work done on streets and the reeve give his order for the sameâ€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Thomson, seconded by Mr. Sandford. That Wm. Jordan, Sn, and John Moffat be accepted as securi- ties for Mr. Geo. Cunningham for the collection of taxes for the year 1889.â€" Carried. Moved by Mr. Fitzgerald, seconded by Mr. Thomson, That: the reeve be empowered to build a culvert across the creek that runs through Mr. George Cunningham's propertyâ€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Fitzgerald, seconded by Mr. Thomson, That. Mrs. Dexter be paid the sum of 87 for charity to a childâ€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Saudford, seconded by Mr. Thomson, That the council do now adjourn, to meet at. the call of the reeve.â€"Carricd. m- Gooderham. (Correspondence oft/1e Gazette.) By thc arrival of Messrs. Trouuce 8'. Co's gang of men to lumber and let job- work, it is fairly surmised that, with it. and railway tie work, which is to be carried on by Mr. Avory, of Lindsay. quite a large amount of labour will be required ill this part during the coming winter. In view of little mining opera- tions, we shall have to be thankful for small favours. Although there are three lumber firms operating in the township, there is a large amount of supplies in the shape of farm produce for which there is no demand. Boyd & Son, of Bobcaygeon, who own some very large and superior reserves of timber in our vicinity, do not, I am told, intend to operate here this winter. Mr. Robert S. Gl'ogan paid a visit last week and drove away a large stock of cattle from Cardiff, Glalllprgan and Monmouth townships; this being the second drove he has of late taken away and, I hear, sent to Toronto. Our market. for live stock has been getting to tl low ebb. The almost unexamplcd bountiful weath- er of late has been quite a boon to far- mers raising their root crop. which is the best ever grown ill this district, and has also enabled many to make progress with other work. Though we have no agricultural society to excite our emu- lation, some very Itlll‘ specimens of roots and vegetables are occasionally seen. and Mr. Lewis Monroe has a. squash which weighs 110 lbs. from seed plant- ed in June. Ilsumxos. -â€" Tllo tootllsome little fresh water herrings are now “ run- ning.” and men and boys who have lci- sure for the sport are after them with scoop nets. On Wednesday evening we met. Mr. Redner with a pailful of them, for which he asked fifty cents, and no doubt readily disposed of them at that price. Paornssoa EDMOXDS.â€"The enter- tainment. given at. Ingram's hall last Wednesday night was a good one, but the attendance was not what it ought to have been. The professor is a capi tal ventriloquist, and many of his sleight-of-hand performances are exceed- ingly clever. We hope. he will meet with more encouragement next. time he visits this village. 'l‘uaslrsolvtso'Summonâ€"A thanks- giving service for the blessings of an abundant harvest was held in St. James's Church on Thursday evening The Bishop's circular did not. come in time to be read on Sunday lust, direct- ing that the collection in aid of Mis- sions Home and Foreign may be made at the service or on the Sunday follow- ing. Those, therefore, who were not. present at. the service will have an op portuoity of making their thank offer- ing on Sunday next. PERSONALâ€"Mr. George Ellison, civ- il engineer, whose home for the past few years has been in this village. left last. Friday for Kingston. New York, where he has obtained lucrative profes- sional employment. It was the intcn- tion of some of his numerous friends to entertain him at a complimentary sup- per. and tickets were issued for the pur- pose. but he was unexpectedly forced to depart on such short notice that the de- sign was frustrated, greatly to the re- gret of those who entertained it. Ills family are still here, but will follow him In a few weeks. ENL.\BGED.â€"Thc Peterharougll E1:- aminer came to hand last week consid- erably enlarged and printed throughout with new type. The Examiner, during the past few years, has been constantly improving. and its merits as a newspa- per cotlplcd with its unflinching advoca- cy of sound reform principles have made it so prosperous that its enterprising proprietor has been enabled to invest no less a sum than five thousand dollars in new presses and printing material. We congratulate him on his success, which we hope may increase rather than di- minish in the years to come. Tux Wu'rnzILâ€"Thoueh probably; l some of the individuals who say that last month was the finest Cetober they ever saw, speak without referring to, their memories or have very bad ones' to refer to, the weather was certainly or quite as cheaply as the old wrubs, , something almost extraordinary for the time of year. being more like May or June than the middle month in the fall men with a little capital do not. snap them up and embark in the profitable pursuit of stock raising its one of the fun things that surpass our compre- llensioo. Village Council Proceedings. Fcnelon Falls, Nov. 6, 1882. The council mct pursuant to adjourn- ment. Members present, J. McArthur, Delightful as it In, however, it will (it is to be hoped) prove fatal to Ven- nor. whose predictions were so lalsificd in every particular that if he had really knowu what the weather was going to be and prophesied the exact opposite he could not posedny have more effectually ruined his reputation than be has done. The end oflast week and the beginning of this there was cold suficient. toform ice an inch thick, but. on Tuesday morn- ing the temperature moderated and e- nougb rain fell to put a stop to out-of- door work. Since then the weather has been mild and mugg , with unfulfilled threats of more rain. PUSHING Tuem Bustxnss.â€"~Tbe pub- lic works now in full operation in this village are giving a very desirable and much appreciated impetus to every bus- iness, and especially to that of Messrs. McDougall 8:. Brandon, who are doing their very best to monopolize the lion's share of the increase. The thirty foot addition lately built. to their store is be- ing fitted up with shelves and other re- ceptacles for the groceries that are daily arriving, and a large stock of pork, flour. grain, &c., is kept in the store- house ill thc yard. They have also re- cently engaged the services of Mr. Wm. Robson, who has had several years' ex- perience in the businem; and having also put. a second delivery waggon on the road, they hope to be now able to attend to the demands of their numer- ous and increasing customers with more promptncss than has lately been practi- cable. Quasx STREPI’I‘ Bunionâ€"We have been requested to call the attention of our village authorities to the dilapidat- ed condition of the bridge on Queen-st. near the residence of the Rev. Mr. Lochead. It is true that there is very little travel along that street; but still there is some, and as the bridge has to be driven over occasionally it is neces- sary that. it should be safe, which it is far from bein-a at present. Not only is it without; a rolling on either side, but: the whole structure is so weak from ex- treme age that it yields in a most a- larming manner beneath even a light load, and it. was only a few weeks ago that a span of spirited horses became so frightened while crossing it. that they threw themselves and the buggy Into the creek below, a distance of four or five feet. but fortunately very little harm was done. The bridge is such a small affair and is so rottcu that. it is hardly worth patching up, and perhaps the cheapest as well as the best. thing to do is to pull it down and build a new one in its place. Tun Boss SPORTSMANâ€"We are be- ginning to be afraid that. Mr. Wlu. Heeley, the boss sportsmen of this vil- lage, will have to be temporarily sup- pressed by Act of' Parliament, if only for the sake of soothing the feelings of the other local sports, who, unless they are something nlore than human, can- not fail to be at. least a little jealous of his superior success. He. is such an old and accomplished destroyer of birds, beasts and fishes that we can almost. (but not quite) believe that the surviv- ing wearers of fins, fur and feathers know him by repute, and, like Davy Crockcto's coon, give up in despair when they find hinl after them. Knowing just when to go, where to go and what to do when he gets there, he seldom comes home empty handed, but gener- ally rcturns in triumph with several victims to his gun, his traps or his trol- ling line. Within the past. few days he has shot. or captured a‘wllole string of partridges, several hares, five “ lungcs," weighing from 11% to 13% lbs., and, by way of varying his bill of fare, a fat raccoon. Without wishing to be Mr. Heeley himselfâ€"for we dislike the idea ol'challging our identity, and, besides, what would become of him ?-â€"wc cer- tainly wish we had his skill as a sports- man, with as much leisure to turn it to profitable account, and no doubt many of our readers will share our sentiments. m Another Fire in Peterborough. Last. Tuesday morning about 3 o'- clock Messrs. J. \\'llyte 1"". Co.'s extens ivc foundry and Mr. A. Sawyer’s wool- len factory, which was occupied by Mr. A. Wilson, were totally destroyed by fire. together with nearly all the valua- ble machinery and stock in both estab- lishments. The origin of the fire, which commenced ill the blacksmith shop, is involved in mystery, as the works had been closed for several days, during which the forgcs had been idle. The disaster has thrown about. thirty five men out of employment, but: it. is lmped only temporarily. The Review gives the following list. of losses and insuranc- es zâ€"Tllc losses are heavy. Messrs. J. Whyte & Co. are the principal losers, as all the machinery and stock in their foundry was destroyed, and they owned the woollen factory building, Their loss on the stock and machinery ill the foundry will be about 89,000; on the foundry building, 32.500, and on the woollen factory building 83,000. The total insuranoc on the foundry and con- tents was 85.000, in the Phoenix and Royal, and on the factory 82,000. Mr. A. Sawyers owned the machinery in the woollen factory, and his loss will be $4,500. on which he has 83,200 insur- ance. Mr. Wilson had his stock insur ed for $500, and his loss will probably be 8200 or 8300 over that amount. .- Euglish ouvicts. The census of English convict pris- ons just completed shows that. of the 10,261 prisoners tbrew.*-fonrtbtI are. on medical authority, fit for hard Isbollr, and only one-thirtieth unfit ior labour quandary. sult of hard experience, and that per- haps if the viciously inclined were pre~ vented from gaining that experience in their own way before their thirty-fourth year they would insist. on gaining it af~ terward. Great Fire at Halifax. TBS PBOVISCIAL'POOR ASYLUM DES- TROYEDâ€"IBIRTYâ€"ONE LIVES LOST. HALIFAX, Nov. 7.-â€"-Firc broke out at. midnight in the eastern end of the Provincial Poor Asylum, an immense :ix story brick structure in the south eastern suburbs of the city, containing about 400 people, and at. 1:30 a. in. half the building was a mass of flames. The fire originated in a bakery, where there were twenty cords of wood stored, and the flames catching this then spread with lightning rapidity,nnd soon had that part of' the building used as ll hos- fusiou, seemingly almost out. of their senses, and the work of getting them out. was very difficult. They were sev- enty in number, many of them unable to leave their beds, and though at first it was hoped that the great maji-rity were saved. the horrible fact. has since come to light that. no less than thirty- one persons, twenty-four of whom were women, perished in the flames. The internal arrangements of the Asylum appear to have been remarkably ill-de- vised, for the hospital, instead of being on the ground floor, was ill the top sto- ry, and scarcely any provision was made against. danger from fire; besides which there was an elevator, into which the flames soon found their way and went roaring up it. with dreadful fury. The details of the terrible calamity are up pulling in the extreme, and, mingled with the thrill of horror with which they are read, is a conviction that; the dreadful occurrence is to be attributed to gross and criminal carelessness. ml in their clutches. The inmates ' rushed about. the building in great con- Tomatoos, melons and Indian corn have been successfully ripened iu the open air this year, some vegetable marrows having attained a weight: of 12 pounds each. Many fruits and other things not indigenous to high latitudes have been acclimated and made to succeed by careful culture. The threshing mu- clliue is now at work, and proves the yield to be as good as appearances indi- cated. From one small potato weigh- iug less than two ounces there was gath- ered llalf'n bushel of fine sized and well formed ones. Onions four and a half inches in diameter are to the fore, tur- nipsa foot in diameter, and potatoes just. twelve weeks in the ground weigh- iug twelve poullds and upwards, and potato onions grown by Mr. Hambruu measured eight inches around. Plough- ing is being proceeded with, and there is every prospect that little of this kind of work will be left. over until spring and that may be taken as ensuring our- ly seeding and good crops another year. Extraordinary Fact for Naturalists. The other week the servant girl at the King's Arms Inn, by permission of her mistress, toasted a Yarllloutll bloat- er for her supper, When it was cook ed she took it from the fork, put it on a plate, and was carrying it. towards the table when the fish jumped from the plate to the floor. Mr. O. G. Green- lulld, her master, could scarcely believe his eyes, when the fish began to wrigglc about the ground, and an cvct, 4 in. long, emerged from the fish and ran across the room. Mr. Greenland and Mr. Joseph Pearce, of Red I’it House. picked it. up and placed it. ill ll jug of water, where it is now. The fish was examined and inside was ll. cavity, the size of the evct, extending the length of the fish. Unfortunately the dog ate tllc remains, or it. might have been preserv- ed, with the oven in a glass vessel as a curiosity. It is evident that the fish must have swallowed the reptile when it was in an embryo state, and that. the two lived togctller.-â€" Trowbrl'dge (Eng.) Chronicle. â€"-â€"“.oâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"s Miss J enness on the Stump. A most novel feature in political campaigning is about to be introduced by the Democratic managers in the campaign now on hand. It will no- doubtedly prove attractive as well as novel, as the feature consists In a bean- tiful young lady named Miss Annie Jenncss taking the slump in behalf of the candidacy of General Butler. Miss Jeoncss belongs to the renowned family of that name in New Hampshire, and is a near relative of cvaayor Jenoess, of Haverhill. She is 23 years old, was educated in Boston, is n brunette, with black eyes, and proved sufficiently at- tractive in the eyes of the Ohioth to help to swell the opposition of Gov. Foster into an overwhelming lllajurity against him. She will probably speak in' Braintrcc and other towns duringl the week, and will doubtless addressl herself to the fair sex. with a view of improving on them the importance of having their brothers, husbands and* fathers support and help to elect. Geo. l Bulletâ€"Boston Ill-roll]. Crops Around Battleford. The Herald vigorously defends Butâ€" tlef'ord from the attacks of its enemies. 1t. declares that all kinds of graiu,small fruit. and vegetables grow to perfection. . A Puzzled Farmer. An honest Waterloo farmer is in it He Was offered only twenty i l of any kind. That part. of the popula- cents a pound for his wool. but. when he i . tioo which is between twenty-dive andl thirty-four years of age contributes farl more than its proportion of criminals. This, Sir Edmund du Cain says, may be taken as the criminal age, after which a tendency to crime rapidly di- miniehes. It is suggested that if those whose career evincca a marked crimi- under supervision until they had poser ed, say. forty years of age. a vast. deal of crime would be prevented. The Lon- wcnt. to purchase the manufactured nr- , ticle in the shape ofa pair of blankets, be was charged 86, although the article l weighed but six pounds. This puzzled g him sorely. as well it might, nor was he either satisfied or enlightened when told § it took five cents per pound to change i the raw material into blankets. " Tol whom." he enquired, “ did the balance ‘ of seventy-five cents per pound go, and 5 ifw the manufacturer in what way do farmers benefit by the N. l’. 7 " If the f ‘4 â€"______.~._____.__.._.__.~_..___.__ -._.-- .._. â€"__â€"â€"__â€" I“. SANDFO'RD, Dealer in all kinds of’ FARM IMPLEMENTS. _â€"~â€"â€"~â€"._. PLOUGH l” PLOUGHS! A large stock of John Whyte & Co.‘s No. 3 DIAMOND STEEL PLOUGUS, guaranteed to clean, or no sale. Also, two kinds of GANG PLOCGHS. Points and Soles ol difibro ent makes always on hand. Agent for The New Brantford Reaper 8: Mower, the best in the market, and guaranteed to do first class work. or no sale. Also, a large stock of Repairsfor the Kerby Reaper. RAKES. XMLâ€"339m for me flux-we“ ",3 the Wisner Rakes, which have no equals. .‘laxx‘s lllnovm Grain. Plum, salt, ma Grass Seed Sower Will be given on trill . SPRING-TOOTH HAllROWS and other kinds of Barrows. Agent for Combined Seeders. WHITEFIELD’S STUMP MACHINE, the best in the market. A large stock of ' WAGGONS, CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES on hand, all made of well seasoned first class material. Horse-Shoeing & Jobbing; a. Specialty. 38‘ A good second-hand Reaper for saltâ€"1:; $20. Has only cut 25 acres. F. SA.NDI*‘ORI), ‘ FenoIon Follow voted against tho return of Mr. Young The last. English mail boat. of tho" in 1878: but. he thinks if the contest season has arrived at Montreal. were on again he would not be so hasty. A dcspatch from Maullla states that7 And there are numbers like him.â€" one hundred sailors wero drowned dur-* Globe. ing the rccont storms ill tlloso latitudes. __ -, Hog cholera is carrying of; \vlllolg - - - droves of Wisconsin swine. ' loi Burglars m Wlnmpeg' fever is also making ravages bluoug cows in New Jersey. Terrible floods have occurred ill the central provinces of Japan, sweeping; away a number of villages, and causing the destruction of thousands of human- 0f$11500 Last week the pinkcrmn lives. Ill the south-western provinces- Agcncgu of Chicago. ,clwmohcd um, the cattle plague ls alarmingly prova~- the best organized band of burglars in 19m“ P . I I l the States had left for Winnipeg. Ex- Fig“ 998%?" fmwi “1‘30 “Mg”? trn police were employed watching the 0, ,“°"“' 0' "‘5er I)” 01"“ Pee _ 0 banks_ When the burglars found we \\llltc I‘llephant potatoes _.lst. sprlng,. bmks too We" protccm‘d they entered and obtnlllcd therefrom 3n} bushels.- the express office last "pint blew 0,30,, The secret of sucll llll enormous yield la. the safe, and took the 811,500. There a plum or “011 soil: good, Tllfiwm'on" is no clue arid the police are nou-plus- “‘1 0“" 05° l’k‘mc‘ "‘ ““c' " ' ‘ . ‘Iinnea lolis mills will this year out. scd. Tllo banks, pollcc and express of- ‘ I , fico refuse all information to the press, zgovmovmo fee“ "I l“"’b°r‘ 108'750I‘ ,, 000 shingles, and 50,600,000 lath, while‘ but the matter was “on “Old or by n the figllrzslast season were 234,245,000 feet of lumber, 86,817,000 shingles, and 49,205,000 lath. In 1870 the lumber" cut was 118,233,000 feet, and the luv cl-ellso has been quite irregular. Next; There was one wrlltlly exhibitor at your the business promises to be much. Charlestoan on Friday last, says the lame,- um“ um, Brampton B"""¢"- He “ad “will 0"" On the arrival of the Scotch express“ erylhmg “5 OI'Z‘IIKCV'HC- “WI had “be” at Leicester, at. midnight on the 12th Pr'm’s 3" BramPtO” “'"I‘ Ill-‘4 Wheat: and ult., a man named John William Rugcw now his full wheat, spring wheat, barley Iv was found concealed under a curt-i. find “him OMS had bee" “llllTCIy if: age, leaning over the axlcand having "Ol‘edl “'33 the burden Of his bflsom- hold of the brake rod, having ridden. winch he poured out to the Premium .:.H the way from London. He was cov- 'I‘llis gentleman expressed the opinion cred with mud, and stated that during “mt “'9 .lu‘lf-‘CS Wont-'1lt the"! '00 While. a rapid part. of the journey hc narrowly and that: they had been subjected to escaped [wing set on um by red hm», 39"“) PMent blei‘cmng- The Wild l-‘m cilldcrs from tllc engine. l’risoncr was very mad then and wanted to kumvllllkcn Ill-fore the magistrates and filled“ whose business that was. The I’l‘esi- l 20,... Wm, casts. or 14 days, dent nllldly Telllfll'kell that llll‘y (lid nol 'J‘Ilc rppllrt 0f an cxci‘ing contest for' "an" "Willi"! that SHIL‘lIt'd 0f brim a bed quilt in connection with a church 5mm“ 1‘ d‘ms “0" 5"3’ "Well for “’0 comes from Lucall. Two ohurcllwar-- j'ldL-ZGS "ll Oranuevillu Mid Bl'mnpmu dolls who championed tllc fair contest~ fairs to have bee" dwelmd by 5W" ‘1 outs for the coveted article became ox- Ll’iCk- cited, and first one of them gavu his~ *‘-‘ 8100 watch, then his opponent, not. to- A Big Chunk of Ice, be outdone, gave a 81,000 house and lot. The excitement. became intellso The enormous glacier, Fonor Svnrti. whvu the lll'rt champion rl-joincd with- scn, on tlle Senjen Island ill Norway, :1 8200 roll of hills and promised anotltr which is the northernmost. of its kind or $1,000 cash. The minister has since' ill Europe, will shortly, says Nature. llunlll-ll hack the watch. house and lot, be made the objcct of a remarkable en- l'lt‘.., and the Clllll'cll‘thl'lICllfi have re- tcrprise. It appears that ll lllllllllCl' of rigor-ll. speculative merchant‘- in Bergen have _-.__ an"..- .._ .. .. ............. .. obtained the right of cutting block ic: I)IGA.'1‘II. for export from its surface. Some blocks In I’l-nclon Falls, on Monday. November have already arrived a, the Inner Plucp’ 6th, Myra. infant daughter of Mr. [1. 0. Cal- :lnd as the quality of tllc ice has bet-ll 151T] _RK'"°"”'S “I'd m 'I’U'S' 'fotlnd to be good. lztrgc'slllplllculfl mpy DIAJ‘:‘{II,H). be expected. Ihc glaclor ls about'lzl) M we rowdcncu “f “m bride,‘ mother, square allies. and as the distance from on \Vcduoslny‘ Nuvcnnmriau,‘ by u,“ 11",. its border to the Hell is only a couple of .\l. Methnrell, Mr. James Melvou Silvcrthoru l "films. the ice [nay be obtained very IO MISS Sill‘llll Juno Drake, [III of IIIO villago‘ cheaply. A similar attempt. to utilize “H'c‘m’m‘ “1””- tlle glacier Folgcfoudcu wasl made some years ago, but. failed, owing to the blocks in their downward course repeat- FENELOX FALLS MARKETS" edly breaking through the wooden bore .â€" or conductor ill which they were slid “IMHO! lIIIAVI‘I’OUHUN'I' "random down to the sen, Fellelon Falls, Friday, Nov'r 10th, 1832:. Wheat, fall, per bushel ~ - $0 85 0 87’ THE EXPRESS OFFICE ROBBED OF ELEV- EN THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS. WINXIPEG, Mam, Nov. 3.â€"Tho ex. press office here was robbed last nlgllt Times reporter. .. An “ Honest ” Farmer. MARKET R E DIOR/1‘84- “ "1 fl . ' WIN-M. spring. ” - - - o 90 0 at The largest steel Fpl‘ll)! ever made In “Mp-y, I,“ bush” _ _ _ 45 65 the world has just been succmslully 10am, ‘- H . - - . 35 37 rolled at. Kloulau's steel works, l’ilts- KNEE. " “ - - - - 60 “ 62 burg. It is 310 feet long, six illcllcs,{;;‘;:’l-m”“ ‘I‘, ' ‘ ‘ ' 5° 55 wide, and a quarter of an inch lllick. l Cub‘hnécgy p" do," : Z Z An infuriated mob attempted to lynch Chiral-“l ['97 bilfill- - - - 30 35 two murderers at. Lexington, Ky., late-‘ We”: “ - - ~ - 36 40 l)‘. The military escort, it is said. with- ' "mm" P” "’u ‘ ' ' ' ' 12 13 . lor- :«el ll . r l . out provocatlor. fired upon the crowd. : Egi,’ ;,L,,:)l‘f,:'el,;" j "1‘ '3’ _$7 $7 . , , killing and wounding a number of pcacc- , nay, I,” to", . - . so on to $10 on able people. A Quebec farmer, wllilc rcturningl frotn his mowing lot with his scythe! over the shoulder, was struck by light ning and instantly killed. This showed 5 The ratepayers of’ the village. of Fenclon “~th “me use we Unit-"5.; hm] “f a ; Fallsnrc rlquestcd to holds. public meeting man who lnows with a scythe ill 1882. l Concerning the insane Ilnchcstcr girl. who gets out of bed at midnight and? M 3 0 “Wk 0" We “crime or i goes to work Sawing wood in the back 13th, yard, it is said that her father deeply _ , for the purpose ofdehating the propriety of deplorcs bct' Insanlly. but UIWHSS IUGVC-‘l‘ encouraging the establishment ofn the wood pllc handy for her to get. at. l An old woman of sixty yours, residchEflchL log at Buds-Perth, has discovered the , in the village. Information regarding the most extraordinary mode of committing i WW3“ W" be “it! before ll": mall” “I wicidc yet heard “r. She bnugm Km); the undersigned. who has been furnished . . 'lh t ‘ leeches. put them It) a bottle, and went ! m um um] “guru minim“ ""3"", by l o a bathing house. Here she put tbcl leeches on her body. put her clothes on ’ mum again, and left. Ilar-lly had she goncl Fenelon Falls, h'ov'r tflth, 1882. luv. a few blocks when she fell down Illftle- l â€"â€"~---«â€"~â€"â€"â€" leesntld was thus found by a police? man, who forwarded her to an hospital? n o l On the evenlng of the 2nd last. the' For sale by private contract, on reasona- city of flu” was again Visited by a dis. ,hle terms, Lot No. 18 in the 2nd concession “Um” canflazm‘innl Mr. p; B. Eddva . of Some-trifle. containing 200 acres, about. extensive mills being dcmmyed by are. , too of which are cleared and fenced. On , . . the farm there are a 1 story cedar lot The fire, watch is supposed to have 0- I home, 35 x 3;, ft". '1“, “than,” hum. rizinatcnl from the electric light, spread barns, each to x 30 feel, a stable for eight with amnling rapidity and in an irlcrcd- ? horses. a rumor driving shed and t V"! ibly short. space of time, bullt]lfl‘,:9,:l‘rflg WM", “0"”? "I‘°v ‘ ““"”‘"“" the capitalists who wish to build the mill. JOSHI'II McAIlTIlUll, don Globe makes the observation N. P. was meant for a first‘claas joke, Which OWL-red ten newslifurouad. \vro'rc§"I"i"‘I ""k '"d “n” wen" "‘1 ‘ "m. with reference to this impractical sag» the farmer might be allswercd that as reduced to ashes. gallon that a growing d'lsinelioation to be fleeeed the sheep it was only just the 13’ estimated at. from hall's million to at uni tendency could be locked up or kept | l re,eat past crimes is probably the re manufacturer should fleece him. He . . acre orchard containing two hundred apple The "3’5 '5 ""m’w' ‘, trees, about half of which are bearing. ‘ I Apply on the premises to "Hilton dollars. ; ClthTOrIlEft Help.

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