Dupdas .& Flavelle Brothers, Dealers in Dry Goods, Clothing, Millinery stunt; on AT not on iiiiiinsi 55. S. RITCHIE ing the whole of his stock of Staple & Fancy Dry Goods, , Hats, Caps. Ready-Made Clothing, Gents’ Furnishings d: Small Wares at [V/zolesa/c Prz'rcs for Cos/z. The Stock is well assort- (Hi in every department, and everything will be sold without- reserve, from a needle to an over coat. Remember, this 1s no hnmlmg or catch trade affair, but a genuine selling out and re- tiring from business sale. ' Now is the time for the shrewd, u irlehiwake citizens of the town and country to purchase/21’s!- z'/.z.vr goods at from .25 to 35 fer cent. less t/ztm t/zey am éuy t/ze same quality claw/(err. The Whole Stock Must be Soldl in a short time, so make hay while the sun shines. l’. S.â€"-'l‘he store that I occupy is to let, and I have twol . l houses for sale at a bargain. ‘ ' S. S. RITCHIE, Iicnt St, Lindsa SOMETHING new. (JrJCNCL‘IJENIEN, A'FT WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A BEAUTIFUL STOCK OF NEW SPRING TAILORING GOODS, Cni‘tljmst‘tl of French and English Snitings and Trouscrings, Scotch, Irish and Canadian 'l‘u't-t-tls. which Were bought early and at a low price from a large assortment of goods. um" Come curlv and choose your Spring Clothing while the stock is new, and get it Nobhy Suit, well made and trimmed. A NE.AJF li‘ICI.‘ GUAR.ANTEED. 1’rices A‘svay Dowvn for Cash. Opposite. McLennan’s Hardware. Store, Lindsay. W. MOKE OWN ' Is Selling His Entire Stock of; at and M Below Whoiesnl‘e Cost of nuuiut‘ucture. in order to {nuke 1'00)". for new}? (It-signs and patterns. Call: early angl- secure, bargains. us I an; selling- (ghcapcr thulr any dealer in the County. DOORS, SASH, MOULDINGS ETC- KEPT IN STOCK AND MADE TO ORDER. ALL WORK WARRANTED., UNDERTAIHNG ATTENDED TO IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. W. FRANCIS STREETVWEST, FE/VELO/V FALLS. l have now on hand full supplies of G050 S53, /7 ti: / n (ll‘l: 1:; V ' mm [2.77 . SHOVELS. SPADES, PICKS, AND A FULL ASSORTMENT 0F ‘1 (1} lilCUL'l‘ITRA :14 '1‘0() I... Johnston's Celebrated MIXED PAINTS and White Lead. All Brands of Machine Oils. A New Lot of Daisy Barrel Churns, the Best Churn in the Market. Too Much Stock snd'i‘oo Little Money: â€".â€"â€"...___â€"___â€"â€"â€".____â€". WILL sen. Awnvnnwn ms sen cAsn. S ! .3 Rugs. Taken in. Exchange for Tz‘nru'a-re Only. JOSEPH HEARD l Engin l t 3 last, because in olden times some of the v ; most enthusiastic of the brethren used ‘ to keep it up for two or three days; but EN'JTION !" ‘ one south of the river, two on Colborne l l THOMAS BOBSDN. IRON FBEXDER & MACHINIST, MANUFACTURER OF AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. e aidâ€"Mn link AND REPAIRS OF ALL KlNDS PROMPTLY Bridge Bolts Made to Order. Horse PO’ZUL’I‘S, Straw Critters, ATTENDED TO. and a good variety of Gencrtu Purpose Ploug/Is. A good as- sortmml of Sprz°lzg=toom Har- rows, Steel Harrozus. Iron Harrow: and [Wood Harrow: create a lively demand for ice cream, 5k three inches long a little above the lemonade, and other cooling drinks. head. The accident happened close to Some lew pcssimists, when they saw the crowd on the streets, predicted that the village would be “ eaten out." but the prediction was not veriï¬ed. The mar- shals for the day were Bro. Wm. Mc- ; Intosh and Bro. Samuel Barr, who l -â€"dressed in full regulin and mounted ion spirited grey horsesâ€"presented a ’ very imposing appearance. l g on the rampage. l l l l A Lively Runaway. On Friday last the Rev. Mr. Parker’s bay mare, usually a very gentle and . . . V amiable animal, showed what. she was is retiring from the Dry Goods trade 111 Lindsay, and 1s offer- ,3 and 3furrow Gang Plougï¬g capable of doi ng if provoked and treated the village to as lively a runaway as it. has seen since Mr. Mitchell's team went She had been hitched to one of Burgoyne & Co's. delivery waggons for the purpose of getting al load of evergreens to deck the W. C. T. U's. dining~hall for the 12th; but the ALL "F Wluc“ WILL BE SOLD AT hold-backs had been left too long, and ‘ LOW PRICES TO MEET THE TIMES. THOMAS ROBSON. Fenclon Falls. ON. mic-helm Falls Gazette. The 12th of July. There may have been, in the history of Feoclon Falls, at longer celebration o ' he 12th ofJuly than that of-Saiurday there never was a more successful one. l At an early hour in the morning the residents of the surrounding country be- gan to pour into the village, which had been gaily decorated for the occasion, there being four handsome archesâ€" street, and another, erected by the Sal- vzttionists, almost opposite the barracks on Bond street cast. In addition to these, there were numerous artistic ur- rnugements of evergreens, and flags were flying in all directions. The ï¬rst brethren to ar,rive.w.ere the members of the Glcnurni and Coboconk lodges, who drove to the Falls, and soon afterwards the train from the north came in. with the lodge from Burnt River. A special train of twelve cars brought the Emily lodges, and the next to arrive was the North Vet-alum lodge, which, came in buggies and. waggons. The. steamer Dominion and barge 1?aragon,,and the steamer Buaubomga and bargel’ulmna reached the Halls together, the former bringing the lodges lrom Dunsford. and the latter tho'sc from Bobcaygeon. Then came the Alice. Ethel and barge Lind- say with the brethren from the countv towu,,and lasr ofall the Cumbrny lodge drove in. ()wmg to the fact that the steamers stopped at the ruins of Smith «51'. Fell’s shingle. mill, where there is a splendid landing place. insteadofcoming up to the wlmrfpas was expected. the brethren who came by water found but up town. During the morning there was, as. usual, a. good deal of.marching and countermarching, with, plenty of music from ï¬fcs and drums. and band instruments; and at 2 p. m., after all had dined either at the hotels or at the numerous refreshment rooms, the mem- bers of the different lodges- assembled at the market square and. formed in the following order: 1. Lodges from I’eterhorough county. 2. Lindsay ’Prentice Boys and band. 3. Emily District and Omemee band. 4. Verulnm District, with Orange Young Britons and True .Blucs of Bobâ€" caygcon. 5. Lemon District. U. Feuclon District. with True Blues and 'l’rentice Boys of lienelou Falls and the village band. The grand procession thcn marched through the principal streets to Eitzger- ald's grove, where brief but appropriate addresseswere delivered by the chair- man, Bro. Charles Fairbairn, Bros. Feuclou Falls. Alter the speeches the procession again formed and marched through the village to the railway sta- tion, which was reached a few minutes before the departure of the train for the north. The tlnce steamers, with their barges in to'-v._.el't about ï¬ve o‘clock. I'M! r.’._ ~p.t:i.tl train that brought the , l5 1- ' 5. did not go until nearly ‘ i .t r. The buxtnrea who drove ; ~ Were not tied to time, and sunni them to do so. tee; tj. tw- ‘odgesï¬vcragin: about forty "lulu at: each. vr-rre in the procession, and at a reasonable estimate there were noon until 4 p. m. , was simply delightfulâ€"not so hot as to few waiting to welcome them, but they. received a_wurm greeting when they got; i [ crossâ€"bar struck her hind legs and away ? she l l l i l I l l l l r 1 ï¬ve thousand personsiu the village from; The success of the, c.lehratiun Was, no doubt, due in it, great measure to the weather, which. ‘ 1 he oppressive, but jus: hot. enough to_ ‘ nor, by which time Fredâ€"who proved _fll‘riday,â€"dâ€"uiy 18th. 1890. a . I l l l Adams and Stevenson of Omcmee. and , ‘ the Revs. Parker, Logan and Fraser off , ,, ,_I “My “warhuwms j,“L when it; where the woundcd hand was uressed No fewer than i and l""'1“'l "I" when Fred Parker. who was driving. hauled up on Francis street west to let another boy get. into the wagon, the went. Crossing the main street. she ran as far as Mr. Sam Barr’s cor- himselfa capital teamstcr for his age -â€"had got her sufï¬ciently under his con- trol to enable him to turn her around; but in coming back she made another bolt, a wheel collided with the sidewalk, and he was thrown out, fortunately with- out being hurt. At 'I‘womcy's corner sundry and various individuals tried to stop her, but in vain ; and, turning to the left, she gallopcd under the 12th of July arch, over both bridges and a- way out into the country not for short of two miles until she had nearly reach- ed the turn in the road leading to the residence of her late owner, Mr. Joseph Cooper Jr. By that time she was. get- ting tired and was going so slowly that Mr. Henry Renzin and Mr. Byron May- bee, who were driving towards Lindsay, managed to stop her, and she was brought back by some of those who had followed her from the village. No injury was done to the more and but little to the \vaggon,.wliich was an old one, asit only lost the seat and had one spoke broken and another loosened. Throughout near- ly the whole of her career the runaway wore Mr. D. McDougall’s coat, and it was badly used up when she parted with it. Soon after she startedaMr. McDon- gull triedlto throw it over her head, but one of the-shafts caught itnnd snatched it from him, and the windthlcw it. across the mare’s back. m w Dmtnmill the Potatodiugs that tested Junkin’aPnris green, EQUND.-â€"-A:.Sl101‘l’ time ago one of our villagers found a valise containing a few small articles, and has not yet board who lost it. The. owner can have it upon, proving that. it is his, and the name of the ï¬ndervmn be lcared at this oflice. _ W No Flies onâ€"onything,if you use our Insect Powder, “ Shoo Fly," or Wilson‘s Fly Endsâ€"W. '1‘. Jesus. ' ACCIDENT.â€"On Wednesday last Mr. W. L. Robson’s youngest son, Findley, was thrown from the pony. which he was exetcisiug in the yard,nnd had his left elbow dislocated. Dr. Wilson was sent for truth reduced the dislocation, having ï¬rst administered chloroform .to the patient. PROMPT SETTLEMENT.â€"-Mr. Wm. Stuckcy’s barn in Verulntn, which was set on fire by. lightning on the lst of July, was insured inthc Northern As- surance Company. Mr. W. E. Ellis, the agent, adjusted the loss on.Wednes- day of last week, and. on Saturday he received the company's cheque in full for the amount. Snlrnnx'rs or L‘IVE STOCK.â€"-On Wednesday of last week Mr. Henry Austin sent 16 cattle-and 30 sheep to Toronto, and just a week later be for- warded 12fcattlc and 40 sheep and lambs. With so many buyers of live stock con- tinually scouring the country, it is no wonder that meat in this village has not fallen tothe price it is generally sold. at. after pasturagc is abundant. BAD leT.â€"â€"\Vliile Mr. Charles Wise was skinning a beef's head in Mr. H. Austin’s slaughter-house, on Tucs- ‘ day last, the knife by some means siip- pcd and lhfllctcd a long and rather deep cut in his left hand, commencing below the base of the thumb on the outside and circling around through the fleshy l part townds the palm. The hloml fl nv ell so profusely that Mr. \Vlse w-zs quilt: faint by the time he got to Dr \' iou's, "rm: Prams or [maï¬aâ€"Last .‘lon- l l his father's factory, and he was helped into the phonon, which happened to be there, and taken to Dr. Graham‘s sur- gery, where the wound was dressed and covered with sticking plaster, after a couple of stitches had been put into the edges to draw them tagether. Every summer we hear or read of serious in-- juries. and sometimes death. resulting from careless diving into shallow water. and this is another proof of the danger of the practice. A DOLLAR AND Cosrs.â€"â€"0o Sutton day afternoon, towards the close of the celebration, two men from Emily were arrested by Constable Nerisonâ€"me of them for being drunk and disorderly. and the other for attempting to rescue the ï¬rst. As they were visitors and wished to leave by the special train. the recve considerater went to the lock-up. tried them there, and lined each of them a dollar and costs. The pcnnltics â€"-$4 in one case and 85 in the otherâ€"were at once paid, and the prisoners were released. KlCKEl).â€"-On Monday last R." M, Mason, V. S., of this village, ï¬rund it necessary to perform a surgical opera- tion upon a horse owned by Mr. John Willocks, of Fowler, and, as a pro cautionary measure, the left fore foot of the animal was tied up. Mr. Mason felt perfectly safe, as he never before knew a horse to kick unless both of its front. feet were on the gonad“ or floor ;_ but in this case the animal balanced. itself omits l'lglht fore foot and left hind‘ loot and'kickedl with its right hind'dcg. )Ir. Mason was struck just below. the cup of his right knee, which. he- says. feels loose when he touches it. and is. badly bruised ; but none bone was bro- ken, the slight lameness caused by the kickwill probably soon pass away. ' A.COL’L1'.K1LLEDrâ€"~On Thursday of last week; Mr. Thomas Nce'house, of Verula-m. Was coming to the malls with some horses he wished to sell ; and as a. two-years-old coltlteft inthe ï¬eld seemed disposed to brealcout and.follow its com- pnnionsLMr. Ncwhouse tied' :1 chain to one of his l'ore feet to hamper his notions. Upon being released the colt commenced to run. and soon stepped. on the chaith a link of which snapped, and the part: below it was lefton the ground. Con- tinuing his career, the animal. reached a low.spot in the ï¬eld through which a small creek flows, in crossihg which he musbhave again. trodden..ou the chain, for he suddenly pitched. fowrard; on to his head. Those who saw. him full ran up and found: that, although his neck was uninjured, one of his hind legs was frightfully broken in several places, splinters of bone three or four inches. long projecting through the skin. My. Mason, who was at once sent for and- drovc rapidly to the farm, saw at a glancetlmt it would be a waste of time and money to doctor the colt ; end, with its owner’s consent, put it to on easy and. instantaneous death by severing the spi- nal marrow between the ï¬rst and second: vertebrae, immediatelybehindthe head. The Crop Outlook. With reasonably good weather from. now untillmrvest time, the crops in On; tario will probably be up .to the average. The heavy rains have aï¬ectcd the grain in low land, but on high ground wheat nnd.barlcy look well. Oats have surger- ed from the storms, as well as fromtho ravages of agrub or. louse. The apple crap is likely to be a.poor_onc in West- are Ontario. There will be an abun- dance of hay, and roots are making fair progress. In Quebec undathe Maritime Provinces hay, oats and pens will return a handsome yield. In Manitoba and the Northwest- the crops at present are very good. In the region west of Broad» view, which is usuallytoo dry, a large quantity of rain has fallen this season. Southern Manitoba has been visited by one or two hailstorms, but it is said the damage has been light. On the whole, therefore, the prospect throughout the. Dominion is cheering. A good crop with good prices is greatly necdcd.â€"~ Globe. o..â€",. A cyclone in Arabia caused the loss of 700 lives. A cyclone struck the northernportion of St. Paul, Minn., Saturday, and it is. said 36 lives were lost. A great storm in Galicin, lasting 48 hours, has devastated the crops over an, area of 2,000 square miles. Loan company st'ilistics, as compiled by Mr Garlnul at Ottawa. show that Untarionud Quebec larch-rs last year borrowed very heavily. Henry )1. Stanley and Dorothy Ten- nant were married in \l'mtlmioster Ab- day eveniti': about 6.o'clock a. numlu-rl by on Saturday by Dean Blaiilt‘y, assist of boys. clad iuthe conventional ‘ tights, were diving into the canal jest flint: the mu 0? Slr. F. Sandfnrl had t!‘ tun", to strike ftlh ' r ‘ 0f b“"~'f 'l'H! ' 4 .tI ‘. l':’t :.. » D~fli'â€â€˜l i . IguIP-td .L'.’ .u i- "Ull ’ilfl'jl and‘llcrbcrt SIndlin. n-v- ’ , ed by Archdeacon horror and Bishop Caryl-nut. [J the House of Commom on Friday . :tl.-:,l .‘lr. i’urtni-ll.,'it'cvpu.~u t ippoint- .u t'lt Olin lm-trtl (if :t "° F '.O settle iivputcu hath". - 4: pits-pant“, ll: lreiztml: