Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 14 Aug 1896, p. 1

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W’v'1A‘S‘“â€"I d Us - V “ WMMHBMHEE patina ‘ l J i he diuretic. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUG. 14TH, 1896. NO. 26. Professional Cards. W_.____ VOL. XXIV. MISS B. MAGNIVEH. " f'lnstruction given on ORGAN and PIANO ~ i g at moderate rates. For terms apply at the ’ l residence of Mr. R. 8. Sylvester, ‘~ Mary- ” iborough Lodge,” Fenelon Falls. “ WE FIX "ii ” l E l n , MUSIC. LEGAL. McLAUG IILIN &. MCDIAR.“ ID, ARRIS'I‘EBS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fem-ton Falls. Lindsay Office: Kent-St. opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Otiice: Over Burgoyne d: Co's store. The Feuelcn Falls otlice will be open every Monday and Fridav afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 32?)“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLAUGIILIN. I“. A. McDmnnm. M. II. McLAUGuLm. l __________________â€"___._, I A. P. nuvnm, . ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. APPLY TO l’llililiiliiilii~ At the Fenelon Falls Drug Store. My 2n“: 1896- G. u. HOPKINS. ARRIS’I‘ER, .kc. SOLICITOR FOR M' - ~*~-~---â€"-¢â€"â€" 4 the. Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. l Others: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- l say, Out. The West half of Lot No. 3, south of' â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Bond and west of Colborue street, Fenelon Falls, containing a quarter of an acre. For terms, etc., apply to MRS. BELCH, Lindsay street. MOORE a JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. 0f- lice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON. â€"â€"l2tf A Shh? ! Only Two MEDICAL. DR. A. WILSON, â€"n. 3., M. c. P. .e 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON A: ACCOUCII- cur. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. Baby carnages Da. H. H. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University of Trinity Left. College, Fellow of Trinity Medical These go and are School, Member of the Royal College or . - Surgeons of England,Memher of the Colâ€" Oflel‘ed at cost“ A genulne lege of Physicians 8: Surgeons of Ontario. s bargain. Don’t miss 1t. Office and residence on Francis-St. West , Fenelon Falls, opposite the Gazette office. A large and complete stock of everything in the furniture line. No Trouble to Start. Housekeeping R. M. DIAS ON, ETERINARY SURGEON; Honor Grad- uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- ronto, 1884 ; R. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Fenelon Falls. E. P. S MITI-I, ETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist; Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College. . u u from L.DEY- VA hen yo b y Oflice: Carnbray, Ont- MAN, the leading furniture dealer and undertaker. SURVEYORS. JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. B., . Conveyancer, 86c Residence, and ad- dress, Fcnelon Falls. SECOND DIVISION COURT ~â€"0P THEâ€"â€" County of Victoria. The next sittings of the ab0ve Court will beheld in Dickson’s hall, Fenelon Falls, ON MONDAY, SEPT. 14th, 1896, commencingat 10 o’clock in the forenoon Monday, Sept. 3rd, will be the last day of service on defendants residing in this oouutv. Defendants living in other coun- tics m'ust be served on or before Aug. 28th, S. Nsvisos, E. D . limo, Bailiff. Clerk Fenelon Falls, July 15th,1896. DENTAL. W Dr. NEELINDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- izcd air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands that he has given the gas to 186,417 per- -â€"â€" sons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of I V S l I I4: teeth inserted for $10. 328‘ Dr. Neelands i ‘ visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday ot‘every month. Call early , and secure an appointment. Mr. Wm. E. Ellis having transferred hi Insurance Business to me, I am prepared to take risks on all classes ofproperty At Very Lowvcst 11:11:08 W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with Success. Gas and all other nuresihetics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artificial Teeth, better than 'the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. None buifirsi-class British and Canadian Companies represented. â€"â€" W FARDI IPIZOPERT‘Y at very low rates. James Arnold. H. HART, L. D. S. SET OF GOOD TEETII FOR $10. Ga8 i and local anaesthetics for painless ex- tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all branches of dentistry. Ollice over Fairweather & Co‘s store » nearly opposite the. post-office, Lindsay The. “ Fcnelon Falls Gazette.” is printed every Friday at the office, on the corner of May and Fruneis streets. SUBSCRIPTION 81 A YEAR IN ADVANCE, or one cent per week will be added as long as itremains unpaid. Advertising Ilutes. Professional or business cards, 50 cents per line peruuuum. Casual advertisements, {1‘0 tlle P‘ll)lic. I cents per line for the first msrrtion, and S cents per line for every subsequent inserâ€", HE ROYAL CANADLLV ,NSURAXCE “wt commas h}. we year' half ye“ or! Co. has amalgamated with the Alliance “55‘ upon rusonabh urms' of England, giving insurers the security or JOB PRINTING .325,uoo,000 and the Some good policy. ' JOHN AUSTIN,.-lgent at All ordinary kind: executed neatly, cor-s ’“u’ “‘d “ m°d°”“ Win" 3 W Also agent for the Queen of Eng- inud and Calcdonian MFR/linburgh. Capi- R.D HAND. Proprietor. ralcoiubiuvd,$§5,000,000.3 INSURANCE. Hilttlilliiiinltn Authorized Capital. $2,500,000. Subscribed Capital, $630,000. J. K. Kerr, Q OCH President. E. J. Davis. M. P. P., Vice-President. Geo. Dunstan, General Manager. Fenelon Falls Branch. Accounts opened and deposits received. Interest allowed at highest current rates in the SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Drafts issued on all points. Exchange, bought anti sold Notes discounted. Special ' attention given to the collection of sale and other notes. Office in the McArthur Block. H. J. LYTLE, Manager. McLAuanm & MODIARMID, Solicitors. l WOVEN WIRE FENGING WIRE ROPE SELVAGE; 191ch Ontario. TI-IE lVIcDIULLEN FENCNG' â€"ANDâ€" PilllLTliY NETTINS ARE THE ever made or sold in Canada. You want only THE BEST for your money. Don’t. waste it on poor imitations and cheap subâ€" stitutes, but ask for and buy the McMullen goods. They are unequalled for FARM, LAWN or POULTRY fencings. No snow drifts with McMulleu’s fencing. For sale by hardware and general merchants. General Sales Agents: For Ontario and Western Provincesâ€"The B. Greening Wire 00., Hamilton, Ont. , For Quebec and Eastern Provincesâ€" James Cooper, Montreal. l l l | TN! ONTARIO WIRE FENCING CO" LTD. l MISS NELLIE SLATER, DRESSMAKER. Work done by the day or at home, BOND STREET EAST. West Side Store. At this time I desire to call your attention to my new stock of Boots and Shoes, which has been selected with great care. Prices and styles will be found all right. My stock of General Groceries is the best that can be pur- chased, aud my Teas speak for themselves. Everything usually found in a first-class grocery store in stock. Call and compare prices. I will please you. Produce of all kinds bought and sold. GEO. MARTIN. Hes. quit er: IN VICTORIA COUNTY FOB Room Paper and Picture Frames â€"--18 11'â€" w. A. GOODWIN’S, Baker 'iBlock, KentnstuLindsay. Artists’ Goods a Specialty. Machine Needles, Alabastine and D76 Works Agency. Q‘Please callauiisee my 5c.Pnper. Arrogance. It is the policy of The Star to drop controversial topics after an issue has been decided, but the arrozauoe of‘ Archbishop Langeviu in claiming as his henchmen those he so bitterly opposed during the election, is too cheeky a per- formance ,to pass uumentioued. Mr. 'l‘arte has spoken to His Grace of St. Boniface in a very sultry tone of voice, and probably the prelate will cease to assume to be the mouthpiece of those who did their best to prevent the pass- sage of remedial legislation. To as- sume. possession of and suzeraiutv over everything in sight is no new policy of the hierarchy, but the electors ol' Cana- da had hoped that such an arrogant demeanor would no longer be character. istic of prelates who so recently received so sound a drubbing. Mr. Laurier is doubtless aware that he cannot. permit himself to be made one of a group of “living political pictures,” to he thus exhibited by Archbishop Langevin as a feature of his procession. The Pre- mier must be entirely devoid of politicv a1 sagacity, and has not properly sized up the general revolt. in this country against clericalism. if he permits His Grace of St. Boniface to assume that a popular verdict is meaningless, and in such an event he will deserve defeat as disastrous as his uplifting was sudden and great. The extraordinary and fool- ish posturing of the Church dignitaries was so conspicuous before the election, their complete expulsion from politicil influence was so evident when the cat» paign ended, that it seems almost no- necessary for the people of this or any other province to lie awake nights du- ring the dog days wondering whether the Premier of the Dominion was prop- erly observant of an event as evident and resounding as the fall of an ava- lanche.-â€"Toronto Star. “ Noble and Memorable.” The Montreal Witness sayszâ€"‘f Mr. Laurier’s oration on the occasion of his Ottawa triumph was noble and memora- ble. He proclaimed the birth of a na- tion. He rightly claimed for his own race the honors of the victory of hon- esty and popular independence, and de- nounced these who, after having in vain done their utmost to roam: the preju- dices of that. race to secure a vio- tory for selfish interests, were now do- ing what they could to rouse the pas- sions and prejudices of the other race by cries of French Domination and Quebec rule. The loyal Canadian will join Mr. Laurier in the hope that they may be as utterly unsuccessful in the one case as in the other. The victory that was celebrated last night was a vic- tory over race prejudices; it was a wiping out of race lines; it was the making of a united people, proud of its completed nationality. The time has come when the Canadian nation must take hold steps ahead, feeling th at con- fidence which rests in a sense of mutual loyalty. The time has come, as Mr. Laurier proclaimed, when the Canadi- an abroad. of whatever origin, will ev- erywhere boost himself a Canadian.” 9 Two Narrow Escapes. The two extremely narrow escapes of Her Majesty, Victoria, despite the pre- caution of placing guards 30 or 40 feet apart all the way from Windsor to Marlborough House, are evidence of the danger that constantly threaten us in this uncertain life. A runaway and a conflugiation added to the excitement of this excellent old lady’s holiday. Hap- pily the horses implicated in the runs- way were not attached to the Queen's carriage, and, thanks be to heaven, tin- burning window curtains were in a part of the palace remote from Her Majesty; but we quite endorse the opinion of the London correspondents. that. these two incidents may be regarded as narrow escapes, for it was only through the intervention of l’rovilence that in both instances the Queen happened to be somewhere else. If it “‘ch not that we are somewhere else when these distress- ing calamities occur, most of us would have been gathered to our fathers long ago. Let us not overlook this signifi cant fact. and let us, as survivors, be duly gratel'ul.â€"Chicago l’ost. 0. According to a Singapore paper, 60 per cent. of the cholera patients taken to the Pauper Hospital have been cured by hypodermic injections of stryclmine, while filly per cent. were saved in the General llespital by other treat- ment. Cyclists and the Law. The cyclist with his wheel has oeuv- trated the uttermost parts of the w. 2‘», and fortunately finds himself under the protection of the luv, which generally affords him adequate justice whether he is the offmder or the victim of offenders One of the rapidly increasing brittle-r- hood who was wheeling in far-off Aloe- ria was recently the chief figure in. i court incident, which, reading like an Oriental tale, gives an idea of the tunn~ nor in which justice is there meted lln was beset by a dog, was unceremoui- ‘ ously dismounted and his wheel broken, whereupon 'he cited the owner of tho dog before the civilcourt and dcmuuo »l fifty francs damages. After hearing the evidence of the wheclman and the d»; owner, and seeing the wheel and tho dog, the court rendered the following decision : “ Seeing that dogs are admittcd‘v animated by hatred toward cyclists, and naturally delight in pursuing then: ; that at. a time when cycling is so much in vOgue, it is nevertheless necessary that these animals should, like overv- body else, accustom themselves to tit-it. method of locomotion ; that cyclists are indeed included among the passengers protected against dogs by art. 4'79, par. 7. of the penal code; that, on the other hand, those who cycle are naturally ac- customed to accidents, and that the sum claimed as indemnity by the plaintiff on this head is exaggerated. For these reasons the court orders the defendant to pay the plaintiff the sum of 25 francs for damage to the machine, and the sum of 1 franc as compensation to the plaintiff for the inconvenience caused him by his fall." Solomon in all his glorious wisdom could not have given a. more elaborately erudite verdict, although our Western barbaric ignorance makes us marvel why dogs any more titan Lachine road touglis should particularly have any animosity against unodendiiig wheelmen. Still, as the Algerian canines have admittedly this prejudice, it seems no more than simple justice that they, “ like every- body else." should be allowed to OVer- come it by familiarizing themselves with “ that method of locomotion.” Again: it is not exactly clear why a man should only got half damages because he is “ accustomed to accidents," but the Algerian Solon was evidently impressed with that idea, and there is no ground for appeal. The Star simply mentions the fact for the benefit of' those Montreal bicyclists who for obvious reasons med- itate upon transferring their outings from the Lachino road to Algiers, or some other country where the Algerian style ofjustioe prevails.â€"â€"M ontreal Star,- «-0 The Salmon Pack. A Victoria, 3. C., despatoh says 1-- Although prospects for a large salmon pack on the Fraser are very discour- aging, northern cancers are jubilant, as the run up there is unprecedented in the history of the salmon industry in northern waters. According to reports brought down by the steamer Danube, every cannery from Nuns River to Riv-r ers Inlet hurl during the past two weeks more salmon than it could conveniently handle. At Rivers Inlet the run is simply beyond description. The can- neries were compelled to take off their boats, as they were glutted with lid: and had no means of disposing of theta. On the N333 the salmon were running regularly and every boat easily secured 150 and upwards. Both canneries tilt'l'e belong to the Federation Company and will easily secure a full pack. The Cascade cannery is n it in operation this year. At the Sly-eon. Itivor the cm- ueries have more fish than they can handle, and will easily put up u. lull pack. The Carlinle leads with 10,!)00 cases. The total northern puck, so tar as estimated, is 160,000 cases, with good prospects of this being increased at least one-third more. Last year's total pack in northern caoncries was 165,000 cases. Dovâ€".â€" ._. .. .-,,..._. - _. Mohammedan depositors in I’ostof fico Savings Banks are enriching the British Government, as their reliuieu forbids them to receive interest. 'l'hey insist on taking out no more then they put in. The city of Mindcu. Germany, is in trouble. Recently somebody stole lani the military hospital at that place a number of white mice which had L ed innoculated with the germs of v.n.: 2.3 contagious diseases, and nobody can tell where these dangers may .0.- in; lurking. I an, ft-:q~‘»‘>.i “Th...” ,p. p .,.K . _ .5 .nmâ€"‘s .‘r- . 1“,"1‘ - “a... - A AAAA A-AA‘MnAAAAA u... .

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