Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 3 Feb 1893, p. 1

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'1 ‘J i, 3 .....«..,._..<,m r l I l i 1-3 ' " v 22 ..l 111 s o .l b!) : I. _ E -;3 Q :3 .. a: S . .3 U2 '2 jg g "To :33 5 - o . g ?> re: 3 - \ 5“ r: .L g :3 ’ I by I.“ I 3 U .3 » a .5 . cc 2:: g b .2: r o a "g . o .3 o ' E . o =4 8 E '8 r: .2. r-« m "as? LEGAL &c. -A.‘l’. nuv LIN, v’ ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor '8 in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. HOPKINS 8r. (‘llISHOML (Successon 'ro Mufirm & llortuss) " ARRlS'l‘l'Ilt, SOLlCl’l‘UR, are Money to Loan at 6 per cent. Ollice, “ll- ‘liam street, next to the Bank of Montreal. "8. ll. HOPKINS. D. H. Cmsuotn. MOORE & JACKSON, AthlS'l‘lCRS, SOLICITORS, &c. 0fâ€" , lice, William street,Lindsay. If. D. lloouc. A. Jncnsoa. MclN'l‘YRE & STEWART, ARI’JSTERS, Solicitors, Notaries, 8w. . ) Ollices oVer Ontario Bank, Kent street, Lindsay. Money to loan at 6 per cent. on easy terms. «0. J. hlclsrvns. ' NOTICE. All Notes made payable to JAMES BEIAY Agent, will have to be paid to Frank lxerr post-muster here, who holds said notes. JAS. JOHNSTON Sr. 00‘ l'enclon Falls, June 80th, lSQl.â€"-l9 t.f. m... --~' 71- â€" - mam. m_~~_:~.~ A. \V. J. lltztlllASSI, M. D., ORONEll, Physician,Surgeon,&c., «be. Residence, llrick Cottage, Wellington tract, Lindsay. r r..â€" T. STEWART. DR. .-\. WILSON, â€"n. n., u. c. r. .e 5., Ontario,â€" fiYSlGlAN, SURGEON 3.: ACCOUCII- our. Ulliee. Colborne Street, Feuelon Falls. lllt. ll. ll. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University of Trinity Coliege. Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College‘ or Surgeons ot England. Member of‘lhe (lol- kge of l’hysieiaus 3e Surgeons of Ontario. Oflice and residence on Francs-Stu“ est 'l'uelon Falls, opposite the (Anette office. R- .M- MASON, ETl‘IltINAltY SURGEON ; llonor Grad- uate Ualario Veterinary College, To- ‘ronto, l-r‘h‘t ; ll. .\l. O. V. .\l. A. . Resitlt'nt‘râ€"l‘m‘nt‘t‘ Colborue nud Louisa “reels, l~‘enelou l-‘alls. SURVEYORS. ;.L;â€";;_L_‘;w . _.__.::::’:“_-â€":â€" J an us ntcnsox, P L. Surveyor. Commissioner in the Q. R, . Cont-.yam-er. kc. Residence, and ad- dress, l-‘enelon Falls. ' DENTAII. m'7m7:._ ll. HART, L. D. 8. SET or GOOD TEETH ror. sto. Gas and local tlltA‘Jllt‘lltS for painless ex- tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all hunches of dentistry. Oflice over Fairwenlher & Co's store, nearly opposite post-office, Lindsay. w. H. Guess, DEN 'l‘IS'l‘, LINI)S 113'. till he at the “ 1!e.\rthnr House," Fenelon falls, the second “'«dnesday ofeacb month. hau‘ifitl and durable nrtilicial teeth made, a! alt other d‘nlal work properly alone. at”)? yeus’ experience. ls-ly. ’ FENELON FALLS, ON TARIO,HFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3RD, 1893. l l I I l l l y l l "-5 g, to: lo ' o ' €05,953, E’s-E“ g ,2- as «:3 we as. 2:21, :5 BESS? 23502 to DEC) 9 68:35:, J 50+; '2 QH'OO COSâ€"d Ill, . :1 0 <9 6 figacHCS 93:35:50 ngFG 9’ P-l H I £33532 <E’TOCE E .‘:>>§, « 0635.275 3 ogdmg Ere-to)? <_ .523" s-«QD- +£3>§>35 _ pd _ 23g 3. 2'25“ was r: “Er/2'8 (Octâ€"n, ..._. a gem, Eh -:t>§°. I' -C d. .613 c: orâ€"l s... C2. U) dom heard a. complaint, and you h We have purchased largelyin Ernalfl E3 :1- 99 B- r "‘ 'c‘s“ -s m5 :9 cu ' :' (I) V .m 5s 3 33s EF‘ 0 .‘ m c0 4; c... O 55 CD ~2QDPU O'H 'U 'Unâ€"IIQ >1. CD $632+: :2... egg; J: 6'53 do) *‘ on: g Enfia 01>»? i “93'; . 8wfim : o-Qo q; ~â€"’.O.. JAE-3:30.); was)? avdot>=~ C30 :1 _ ofi’20 5338.3 .P‘ k Boa _§gâ€"Q 8:32.)» diwsa maze ‘0 0- $3 0933:!) @1398 qâ€"t:>cflcs GOODer 0?;‘7‘ uâ€"a _, espâ€"e 7““de van” 5.5,: .51 "5’4 8 ,9,» Eng 0.00:, ‘G‘qm 9:”) «morocco 4:73 CD - ’1'“ doorâ€"i 0‘“ m CSQDOOF-t (DC/3005 02.2173 0 so...“ ,0- »“N-‘of’g 009:3 3 fid>5~ g'gcocsm H 505.3 C5 " flied ~ ‘0'“ - Sisâ€"73 'â€"‘ a - wsmrJQb-l Q) f: o "5‘39 "3â€"â€" ~ :2 ng'“ o g; d notcdo :69... m .. mCSSQ-‘w . H“ cs w c6 wsfis>ggug k; xsopâ€"gd #2.. Ho'; msfitmoo; g gofifie’osaao E @whgggk pwagj‘ a <®SB®+~$8QOD m” Pooâ€"2N H9959 i’hHa-DO $361013?» CHRISTMAS GflflBS. MW @. Newޤ~9®m has just received the largest stock of Christmas Goods ever of- fered in Fenelon Falls, consisting of Christmas & New Year’s Cards, Stationery Perfumery and Toilet articles, Dolls of all descriptions and sizes, Toys, Vases. Fancy China-ware, Musi- cal Instruments, such as Violins, Accordeons, Concertinas and Mouth Organs. Also, a Very large stock of Pictures and Pie- ture Frames, and a fine assortn'ient of Gold 8: Silver Watcher, Mugs, Brooches and other Jewellery, Pipes, Wall Papers and Window Blinds, all of which will be sold at t/ze Lowest Living Prices. Call and inspect the stock, and you can hardly fail to find something to suit you. Fcnelon Falls, December 2181:, 1892. “0h! Mamma. Willie’s tired of using poor Machine 011.” “ Read this. Willie.” The Oils for Genuine Satisfaction for all sorts of Machinery are MCCOLL’S CELEBRATED LAlilllME & GYUWER its, used by the Largest llilimen in the Country, and manufactured solely by MCCOLL BROTHERS do Go, TORONTO. For Sale only by JGSEPH HEARD in Fenelon Fails. l l i Abolition of Poverty. THE ADVANTAGES OF THE SINGLE TAX SYSTEM. The city hall was well filled on Thurs- day night with citizens desirousof' rc- cciving instruction on the Single Tax theory, which was clearly expounded by Mr. Louis M. Post, of New York. The question of taxation is the lending question in the province today, and there is no question, perhaps, in the whole range of human activities, cou- Cerung which the people of this city need more enlightenment. Mr. Post is a clear, logical and extremely careful speaker, as a man should be whouuder- takes to instruct. others in reasoning on the relation of man‘and his environ- ments. It is a mistakenns he pointed out. to supposethat political economy is a dull science;it is one of the most interesting studies that can be pursued, t. as it deals with affairs in which eVery man is: interested. Starting fromr‘the firstelementary principles,~ he‘ showed that all health was the result of labor applied to land, and with the aid of , simple but ingenious diagrams made his meaning so clear that the youngest person present could follow him with case. . Briefly stated, taxation is one of two kinds. namely, direct or indiréct, or straight and crooked. After explaining and illustrating the system of exchange and co-opcration by which the business of the world in production and distrib- ution is carried on, and also the nature and functions of money. he proceeded to analyze the land problem and the questions of wages and rent. He showed that under primitive conditions all the product of labor on land went to wages. But as land taken up and brought into use. the difference between the value of the least productive land and the most productive went to rent. The constant tendency, therefore, was to depress wages and raise rent, and the more valuable the land became the more labor had to pay for its use. It is this insatiable demand which drives labor farther and farther into the wilderness, and withholds land, even in the centres of crowded cities and in the most fertile regions, from occupation and cultivation. The speaker showed how, in obedience to the same law, all mechanical inven- tions, all the application of the powers of nature, which should do so much to alleviate the common lot of man, leave the wage earner as poor as ever, while wealth, the product of labor only, goes in the form of rent to those who do not labor. Thus it is that. in every com- munity those who work are poor, while those who have secured the right to tax labor, under the law of land monopoly, are rich. Both city and country, how- ever, require money to defray the cost of government and of public illlpl'Oth ment. in looking about. for something to tax, is it not plain that the fulfil which has been created by the industry of all should be drawn upon? All property which is not. land is from labor; then why should labor be taxed, while land. which gets its value from labor and pours most of the Wealth produCed by labor into the hands of monopoly in the shape of rent, pays only a small propor- tionate part ofthe general tax? Rather should it not pay all the taxes, and thus giro hack to the community some share of the value the community has bestow- ed upon it? An acre of land in New York city. in cettain parts. is worth $15,000,000, yet not one-half of the site of that city Was occupied, though the tenement districts were crowded. That is where single tax would come in. lt would take that portion of the value of land which the owner did not make. It proposed to tax land values onlyâ€"the Vacant lot as much as the improved one. This would again throw open the land f'dled on- Saturday. No. 50. An Extraordinary Case. A TORONTO ASYLUM l PATIENT LIVES THREE MONTHS AFTER SWALLOWXNH KNIFE, FORK AND SPOON. It will be remembered that some. months ago a patient at the provincial asylum for the insane swollowed a num- ber of articles of‘cutlery, which for some time apparently caused no evil results, though it was known that. the ultimate effects must be fatal. The unfortunate victim was William Tucker, aged 23. son of Rev. S. Tucker, a retired Metho dist minister living. on Henry street. That for several weeks no disorder developed from the extraordinary ‘con- ditions under which Tucker was living is considered most remarkable, and the case will be carefully reported to all medical journals. On Thursday last. however; the un fortunate‘muu-wns seized with inflammation of the bowelsfiand At the.post .mortemexnminntiou held on Saturday- morning CO‘roner‘-“Lyml, 'Dr. - Robinson, .Dt'.',,Young' nbd ' ticsistuut, Dr. Uaven and Dr.‘_. Wcir, who performed the post mortetn, :were , present. a It was found that. the knife and fork had been swallowed handle first, the‘spoon bowl first. Of the three articles the spoon was. the only one that followed the regular course of digestion ; that is, out; of the stomach through the small intes- tines iuto the rectum or large, intestine. The spoon was found in the stomtich with its bowl lying near the entrance of the small intestine and much corroded or partially digested. The knife and fork, however, caused death ; they had taken the short course to the rectum and pierced through the lower wall of the stomach, making a large gap. The passage was made handles first, however. The action of the gustic juice had cor- roded the knife to a great extent, its blade was like a wafer, and at the end the juices had eaten into it; untilit was in the shape of a. hook. The fork was almost intact. The knife was inches long, the spoon 635 inches, the fork 7;. inches. The post mortem also revealed a triangular piece of glass about. seven~ eighths of an inch in width in the trachiu or breathing tube. So little inconvenience did Tucker suffer from the articles he had swallowed that be frequently Would jump up and down to let the oxher patients hear them jingle as they came together.â€"Globc of Man- day. ' o‘ofi‘fi A Bad Earthquake. THE ISLAND OF ZANTE TERRIBLY SHAK- EN UPâ€"MANY LIVES LOST AND MUCH PROPERTY INJURED. ATHENS, Jan. 31.â€"â€"The Island of Zautc was shaken early this morning by an earthquake. In the town of Zaute many houses were wrecked and the occupants ran in their night clothes into the Sll'cOt. 'l he roof of the prison tell in and many prisoners were wounded. The guard was doubled to prevent pris- oners escaping and to suppress disorder consequent upon the panic among them. The walls of the prison, which had been sprung and cracked, were braced. The hospital was shaken partly from its foundations. All the floors settled and the roof sank several feet. The attend- ants ran from the building, and were induced with difficulty half an hour later to return and help move the patients to another part. of the town. Two hours later the town was shaken by repeated shocks. llou<es fell in all quarters, and the prison became so no- safe that many of the inmates were. removed. The people in a panic fled from the houses and crowded the streets and the market place. Seores of fum- ilies left the tmvn to camp in the fields on the outskirts. Many dead bodies to labor. restore the natural (.‘qual rela- i have bee" l'OU'ld l" “‘0 mills. and 10“ tions of men to earth, and abolish ; “V “mm “m "UP‘W‘L‘d ‘0 have been H" poverty. least resistau -c."â€"-Kingslon News. -0 A live cottonwood tree with petrified roots is growing near Atchison, Kan. " Labor follows the line of PM“) 5‘?"“'I'ClY-d _‘ 10 get urt tet' ctul 5. It has been impossible The government has sent out. troops with tents and pro- visions. â€"â€".¢~«w ~o . . -.._..._._ In a hovel near l’arkersburg, W. Va, Terrific gales have swept over the John Michael's wife and three children west eons: of Norway. It is reported that 50 fishermen have been drowned. It is estimated that the great canal proposed to run from lake Superior to the Eric will cost at least SEUUHMMJOU. The largest cantilever bridge in Am- erica is to bu constructed over the Blis- ~i~sippi river at New Orleans. It will cost 850110100. George lluber defeated George llo - n »! Loon by, five lengths in Mon 3 New to the 'l'hames for the sculi- -‘ 4.; .;.....;_;; n uship of England. were discovered from-n to death. A fourth child. an infant, was found alive. A gang of counterfeiters are at Work in Luncashirc, Out.. and have limited much "queer stuff" They are male iug quarters and half-dollars, and, it is said. they have a dollar picCc out. While suffering from delirium on Wednesday John B. lli-jvlu, a Bohemian ex-prit'st at Baltimore, killed lilo two enildreu with an axe. Tue madman seizrd a gun. jumped from a wound story window and escaped: i

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