es “‘0 using B it our W. R. “ Stop that dough by Spruce and Wild Cherry Balsam: For sale only by all forms of Coughs and Colds. Aquaâ€"uâ€" -Mm-...-._-_..-..__ .. .__»..____._ _., Professional Cards. .. -.-_._--__._4 LEGAL &;c. ,__..__.__.._..___._.._.__ A. P. ouvm‘u, ARRISTER, Attorney-atâ€"Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. HOPKINS & CHISHOLM, (Successor: T0 MARTIN & HOPKINS) ARRISTER, SOLlCl’l‘UR, &c Money to Loan at 6 percent. Ofï¬ce, Wil- liam street, next to the Bank of Montreal. G. H. HOPKINS. D. ll. CuisnoLu. MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, so. or. (it (3, William street, Lindsay. F. D. .‘noonn. A. JACKSON. V MolNTYRE & STEWART, ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries, &c. B Oï¬ices over Ontario Bank, Kent street, Lindsay. Money to loan at 6 per cent. on easy terms. E). J. Molarvnn. T. Srnwaar. .___â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"d NOTICE. All Notes made payable to James B?“ Agent, will have to be paid to Frank Ixerr post-master here, who holds said notes. JAS. JOHNSTON ll: Co- Penelon Falls, June 30th, 189l.-â€"19 t.f. :‘Lâ€"- MEDICAL. A. W. J. DEGRASSI, M. D., _ORONER, Physician,Surgeon,&c., the. Residence, Brick Cottage, Wellington tract, Lindsay. DR. A. WILSON, â€"â€"x. 13., M. c. r. a 5., Ontario,â€" FYSICIAN, SURGEON st ACCOUCH- al cur. ,Ofï¬ce. Colborne Street, Fenelon ls. DR. H. H. GRAHAM, RADUATE 0f the University 0t Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity Medical - School, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons of England,Memher of the Col- lege of Physicians It Surgeons of Ontario. Chloe and residence on Francis-St. West Fouelon Falls, opposite the Gazelle oflice. REM- MASON, ETERINARY SURGEON ; Honor Grad- uate .Outario Veterinary College, To- ncnto, 1884,11. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Corner Colboruc and Louisa streets, Fenelon Falls. Wm summons. ' Hm...“ __ JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. 13., . Conveyancer, &c. Residence, and ad- dress, Fenclon Falls. Bruins. W. H. Gross. Dentist- The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other anaesthetics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average, for $3 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. ' n. HART, L. D. s. BETOF GOOD Tim'rI-Ironsio. Gas and local anmsthEtlcs for painless ex- tracting. SEtisfaction guaranteed in all branches of dentistry. Ollice over Fairweather & Co’s store, nearly Opposite the post-ofï¬ce, Lindsay. t sale, ; everything must go. l C s Q Q h d «.- fJIslia ES?‘~‘ ill OUR bilgllllligg. and werwill sell our entire stock of Boots and Shoes, Crockery and Glassware A? 7:35 We have decided to make ‘u accessing}: is is a genuine 0 Th Fenelon Falls, April 12th, 1893. AT COST FOR CASH. ~DEALEB IMâ€" Paints, Glass, Oils and Putty, English, Canaâ€" dian and American Latest Designs in Hall, Parlor, Dining-room, Bedroom and Ceiling Papers, At Prices to Suit Customers. frOm 50. per roll up to 50. per roll. MW WWW OIL-PAINTED snnnns, Crockery, Glassâ€"ware ct“ Fancy Goods. Pictures Framed to Order a. Specialty. WM Paper Hanging and Kasomining done in the village or country. Fenelon Falls, March 20th, 1893. . ‘-'-'.»v '.'-‘.."L“.:-.' .-. r." ' :‘vo'a CORRESPONDENCE. To the Editor oft/1c Fcnelon Falls Gazelle. Dunn Slurâ€"â€" -.Permit me to transcribe the last paragraph of an editorial which ap- ppared in the Victoria Warder of the 29th a t. : “There will be wigs on the green before the Home Rule Bill becomes law. It is meant. to be the _ beginning of the disrup- tion of the British Empire and must be sternly met. A few hundred lives now will save tens of thousands later on.†The above language is only susceptible of one interpretation. ls it any wonder the ‘ $§'\-¢Ay£h'nf 2k if ‘3 u <- OWE-4* .. "i h ‘ ' arena; 1 “»"v\"i‘-‘-â€".‘:'33-"lfv'-’- ’ "." 1' lies of Manitoba, but by the Dominion Gov: ‘ernment, of which Mr. Hughes is an an» swerving supporter. The supreme court reversed the decision of the court in Mani-l toba, and the government of that province. appealed the case to the judical committee of the Privy Council in England. Who do- ‘fended that appeal? Not the people. of Manitoba, not the Roman Catholics of Man- itoba, but the Dominion Government, 0t which Mr. Hughes is an unswerving sup- porter. The Privy Council reversed the de- cision of the supreme court and declared the Act to be within the jurisdiction of the Manitoba Legislature. _ This decision, one would naturally sup- pose, would have ended the matter, and militia Md ‘0 (11'0" 5* H03 at “10 Pomt 0f caused the curtain to drop on the last act the bayonet. in Ireland the other day, or that an attempt should have been made on the life of Mr. Gladstone, when Cir-ministers of the Crown and other leading lights in the conservative ranks in England are per- ambulating the country inciting the minds of the rabble to rapine and anarchy, and a leading light- in the Canadian House of Commons is openly councilling the sacrifice of a few hundred lives uowin order to save tens of thousands later on. The Gladstone government staked their political existence on Home. Rule for Ireland in 1885 and fell. When the appeal was made to the electorate last summer the only mention was Home Rule or no Home Rule. That, and that alone, was the only plank in the platform of both parties. There was not an electorin the length and breadth of Great Britain but knew this, and the ver- dict of the people was clear and distinct in favor of the measure. What mattered it whether the majority was 43 Or 143, the majority of the nation voted in the afï¬rma- tive. The people of Ireland overwhelming- ly so. Both Scotland and Wales also gave a substantial majority in its favor. Eng- land alone, of the four divisions of the Em- pire, declared by a very much reduced maâ€" jority from the previous election, against it, and it is a well established principal in the British constitution that the majority must rule. At the earliest possible moment the new Ministry introduced the measure, and it has successfully run the gauntlet of its ï¬rst and second readings, by as large a majority as its most sanguine supporters anticipated. It is the veriest twaddle for the Tories to say the people did not know what they were voting for. Who ever heard of a statesman having a bill printed, all its clauses and provisions set forth and scatter- ed broadcastiover the country before it is ï¬rst laid on the table of the House? And moreover the people of England had the bill of 1885 on which to base their judge- ment as to what. the new one would be. The bill has yet to carry in the House of Commons on its third reading. 11; has then to carry in the House of Lords. It has then to have the sign manual of Her Maj- esty the Queen attached thereto. It will then be one of the laws of the British Em- pire. And what is the duty of all loyal subjects? “ Honor the Queen and obey her laws.†Who ever heard of a law that was univer- sally approved of? How many laws have we on our statutes that were not opposed by a large minority of the people, and because they had been so opposed have the minority the right to rise in open rebellion and say we shall have none of them. If such were the case, then indeed this self appointed champion 'of civil and religious liberty might well say the British Empire is on the eve of disruption. But why all this dread of Home Rule in Ireland by our Canadian Orangemen. Oh! they say, if it becomes law Catholics will rule Ireland. They are careful not to note that one of the clearest and most pertinent clauses sets aturest all danger on that score. They also forget that an enlightened public opinion makes any such class legislation now an impossibility. ' But those same gentlemen have no such dread of Roman Catholic domination in Canada, provided always, of course, that those Catholics are good Tory Catholics, while a Grit Roman Catholic is unclean and something to be avoided at all times and in all places. A few years ago when the Reform party elected Mr. Laurier their leader, a shout of exultation went up from the Tory camp, “No fear of the Grits get- ting into oilice now with such a leader, The people of Ontario will never tolerate a Roman Catholic Premier. Who have they elected to that oflice? A man who was neither born nor brought up in the nurture and admonition of the Roman Catholic Church. A man who, when both body and mind had attained the full vigor of manhood, abjured the Protestant faith of his fathers and threw himself into the arms of the Church of Rome in order to save his soul from perdition, and one of the very first of the drama. But no, what is the Dominâ€" ion Governmcut now doing? lVith the advice and consent of Mr. Hughes and the other awfully ultra-Protestant Orangemcn of Canada. they are constituting themselves into a court to sec if they can by any manâ€"’ nor of means devise some scheme forsettin g; aside this Privy Council decision and im- pose separate schools on that province in spite of both government and people‘. This is, we believe, the first instance in our colonial history where a government; has attempted to set aside a judgment of the Judical Committee of Her Majesty’s Privy Council, the highest court in the Brit~ ish Empire. And in _whose behalf is the attempt being made? In behalf of the. Roman Catholics of Manitoba. By whom is the attempt being made? By those aw- fully Protestant, those awfully loval Orange Tories, Major Sam Hughes and Controller N. C. Wallace, the very men who are open“ 1y inciting the people of Ireland to war and bloodshed for fear of Roman Catholic domination there, and telling them that the sacriï¬ce “ of a few‘hundred lives now will. save tens of thousands later on.†Yours, . , ANTI-HUMBUG. Fcnelon Falls, May 2nd, 1893. “Mm__ ..._- The New Cunarder. NEW YORK, April 29.â€"The Cunard steamer Campania, which arrived to-day from Liverpool, is the largest passenger vessel afloat, her dimensions being : Length over all. 625 feet ; breadth, (35 feet; depth. 41 feet. Her measurement is nearly 13,000 tons. The engines are said to be the most powerful and perfect; of the kind evcr constructed, develoviug 25,000 horse power, by steam generated from 13 boilers, heated by 100 furnaces ' furnaces. The masts and funnels rake at the. same angle, giving the vessel a yachtâ€"like appearance. The two _fuu- nels are each 26 feet in diameter, and an idea of their immense size may be realized when it is said that more than 20 people took lunch in one of the sec- tions when it was lyipg in the ship yard ~on the Clyde. The Campania has accommodation for 450 ï¬rst cabin, 2'50 second cabin and .600 steeragc paeâ€" sengers. A-.â€" The J aps at Chicago. The Chicago correspondent of the Urillia Packet says: “ The floor of this great building is covered with booths built ' by almost every country representing manufacture, and all of the most elegant designs. But the quaintcst of all is that of Japan, pagoda-sliaped,ancl there are dozens of Japanese workmen engaged in itâ€"- funny looking little follows, with handy legs, encased in skin-tight blue cloth panties, cork sandlcs on their feet, held in place by a strap over the second too, loose at the heel, loose at the heel some- thing aftcr the fashion of the Canadian snow-shoe, blue fore and aft cap, with peak and earlap, and a blouse, alSt) blue, reaching to their knees, and with a great white cross inside a circle in the middle of the back and the balance of coat covered with strange device: of the tea-box variety. Their carpenter tools are funnier yet. The saw the dead image of a butcher's cleaver. only thin Of course, and made on directly Opposite lines to the ordinary saw, as it cuts On the “ draw back †instead of the “push ahead.†They rip or cut off with the newspapers to boom his name was (pie self same weapon, and can walk through a. same ultra Protestant Victoria War er. Mr. Hughes and his brethren oppose Home Rule in Ireland ostensibly for fear of Cath- olic domination. What is their record here ? Who gave to Canada the only Roman Cath- olic Premier she ever had? The Orange Tories. Who gave the Roman Catholics of skclp. Ontario separate schools? The Orange Tories. What are they doing to-day for the Roman Catholics of Manitoba? Fight- ing the battle for separate schools against their Orange Liberal brethren. Three years ago the legislature of that province passed a public school not, and made provision against the establishing of separate schools. The act was carried before the courts in Manitoba to test its legality, and by whom? Not by the people of Manitoba, not by the Roman Catholics of Manitoba, hilt by the Dominion Government, ofwhich Mr. Hughes is an unswerving supporter. The judg- ment, of the court sustained the act., The case was then carried to the supreme court. By whom was this done? Not by the pee- t‘plc of Manitoba, not by the Roman Catho- board as quickly as the next one. Their hammer is also a diminutive affair, and they will hammer industriously at a nail for ï¬ve minutes that our big Spike. hammers would knock orit ofsightin Olin They are very quiet, and instead of gathering together like our Canadian workmen do, especially when the be»; is absent, they appear to get as tar apart as possible, and as fast as a worlunan puts up one piece he will procued to paint it red, blue or yellow, as the miso. requires. They are a great marl; lul‘ the newspaper sketchists and a constant source of wonder and amusement to tilt: visitor.†+¢ Terrible drought is reported in many parts of Europe. In England and Lisa many. especially, serious apprehensions are felt, 4.“