Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 17 Sep 1897, p. 8

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Mobbed zitâ€"6:355 Valley. ! Baboon-Eldiers. s U B s C I B E _ D I R- E C T O ro R'I'P'A°N°S I W'“"“~_h , ’mn smroa or The ARIZONA mcxsa l THEY CARRY ox traumas BY Mr..th l S()CI]*J1‘IICS. , ‘ or oacaxlzsn BANDS. a ‘ "' ffihfifrswor rifiriin naccannss. nd- Diamond Tent No. 20S. Meets in tho medem Sta , True Blue hall in McArthur’s Block on the ard i first and third Tuesday in each month. i i F. AND SOME 01>" HIS EXPERIESCES. issue of our esteemed contemporary, to ries on his warfare by means ot Organ- thc e ect that we were mobbed over at‘ ized bands and calls in the forces of Grass Valley the other night, is not a l nature to assist him. The German carnard. We were at Grass Valley, naturalist and traveller Brehm wit- aod if being eggcd and shot and chased i nesscd in Central Africa fights that for four miles signifies mobbing then we l were conducted in as orderly a manner were mobbed. We were invited to go i as if the warriors had been really men, over there and deliver our celebrated instead of animals somewhat like them lecture on “ Manâ€"His Perfections and l in form. The actors in the play were i Imperfections." Of the 400 'men at. baboons, and their enemies were in one Grass Valley we don't believe there are ‘ case the traveller’s dogs, though the l The story made much of in the last Man is not the only animal who car- ll. E. Acsrix, Com. Cures the C. W. Bt‘nuova‘n, R. K. ,d \l‘LE 1 F tr Tl 1‘s l hurlâ€"31) ‘r v ,v a . s. ‘ i" l A" k (I 0,. 0 common 8‘ cry y g ‘ .2 Regular meetings held on tho ' ‘t y. g 2nd and -tth \\'cducsd:ty in each month. 1115 Of humaul ) liztll iu McArthur‘s Block. i ll. 12. .-\i's11:~'.Master. J. A. Focxram. Deputy Master. lonnnr J. Drums, Rec-Secretary. cine : oleman’s I Saussure: o - UNIOUALLKD 70H QUALITY - o a . 0.01.401 SALrAmcM 11M, CLINTDN, our. .. ‘1 . [Ll .4 Lu or U) DJ > U ill Z O ; CANADIAN ORDER OF 0DDFEI.I.0WS. l :' 'l‘l‘t‘lll Valley Lodge No. 71. Meet in ‘ the True liluc hall in McArlhur's Block on the first and third Mondays in cncll month. WM. McKBowx. N C. II. M. Mason, Y. 8., Sec. WE CAN GIVE POSITIONS to persons of all grades of ability, agents, book-keepers, clerks, farmers’ sous, lawyers, mechanics. physicians, preachers, students, married and single women, widows. Po- sitions are worth from $400 to $2,500 per annum. We have paid several canvassers 550 weekly for years. Many have started poor and become rich with us. Particulars upon application,and if satisfactory and necessary, a personal interview may be arranged. This is an honest advertisement, and if you went to better your position, write before you sleep. State salary ei- pected. Neither loafers nor tipplers need apply. The BRADLEY-GARRETSON 00., Ltd" Toronto, Ontlflfilt three perfect ones. There are more baboons were ready to fight with any knock-kneed, squint-eyed, hump-backed creature that attacked them, man only critters to the square foot in that town excepted. and he owed his exemption than anywhere else in America, and we solely to the fact that the baboons could had the sand to say so when we reached not often gain a point of vantage. The the “Imperfections” in our lecture. naturalist himself was once stoned out. Other lecturers would have lied about of a pass in a very few minutes by it and tickled those slabsided kyotes these creatures, who sprang upon ledges half to death, but we gave them facts and stones, looked down for a few mo- and came near losing our life in consc- ments on the valley, growling, snarling .qcenoe. Fourteen eggs hit us in chorus and screaming, and then began to roll beforeour wheels began to revolve, and down stones with so much vigor and .it‘seemed as if every man in towu had adroituess that the intruders took to a shot at us as we were climbing into flight. The baboons evidently knew R UIT and OBNAMENTAL T REES. 700 ACRES. Shrubs, Roses, Vines and Seed Potatoes .__-â€" ‘ 0.1.. No. 900. MEET 1N THE ORANGE . hall on Francis St. West on the second Tuesday in every month. Lewis DEYMAN, W. hf. J. T. Tuom-sox, Jn., lee-See E have the largest assortment and employ the ver‘ latest. and most improved metho s for propagating. All stock Carefully packed under our per- sonal supervision, and allnnew varieties tesred at our trial farms before being cata- logued. These are the only testing crch~ ards connected with any Nursery in thc' INDEPENDENT ORDER of FORESTERS. - Court l’hddiiiii Ko.lSE. nm on the last Monday of each month, in the True Blue hall in McArthur’s Block. the saddle. How many mounted and followed after we cannot guess, but our mule realized the situation and made no jumps of less than 14 feet. No, it is no canard. We were mobbed and driven out, and we shan’t visit that town again until we are tired of life and ready to hang. The news of the sudden death of Major John Williams fell like a blow on the town last Wednesday. The ma~ jor r. turned home last Tuesday night, drunk as usual, but seeming to be all right. and Wednesday morning he was foiud dead in his bed. As men aver- age up out this way the major was a good man. We early discovered that he fled from the east on account of em- bezzlement, but even when he threat- ened our life, as he did on several occa- sions, we never mentioned the fact to him. He wanted to run us as editor and mayor, and because he couldn’t. he was hunting for us with a gun, about half the time. We had to shoot him on three different occasions, but we al- ways shot gently and with no intention to kill, and we have the receipts to prove that we paid his doctor bill. When his better nature prevailed, he was our good friend and kept our demijohn empty and was always in our debt for borrow- ed money. We can’t say that the soul of Major Williams went straight from Giveadam Gulch to heaven, but we do lelieve that. much of the rough trail was made smooth, and that the change has been to his benefit. Mr. Silas Jackson of Pine Hill spent Wednesday night last in the town lock- up of Giveadam Gulch, and next morn- iot: he went. home threatening a damage suit against us as mayor. He got drunk and fired seven bullets into the front doors of the city hall, and as the city marshal was not at hand wo gave him the collar and marched him off. Mr. Jackson claims that the first- he knew of our presence was when his heels struck a billbOard six feet from the earth. - He contends that he was acting in ariotous manner, and that it was .our duty as mayor to have read him the riot act and_commanded him to dis- perse. He will base his suit on this, but we wish to inform him that techni- calities don’t go in this tovvn. We have always carried a copy of the riot. act in our vest pocket since being elected to tho mayoraltv, but have never yet met with a riot which seemed too big for us to suppress in the ordinary way. If we back up against something with four or fivo good men in the front row, we shall stop to read the act in aloud voice, but if there is only one man, and we can get. a hand on his collar and our knee in the small of his back, he‘s got to disperse without any further formal- ity. Mr. Jackson shouldn't be captions Over small things. M. QUAD. . .. ._.__...., __. True Business insight. The portly stranger, having been ad- mitted to tho. presence of the successful author, got down to business right away. the value of cooperation, for the nat- uralist saw two of them combine their efforts in order to set a particularly heavy stone rolling. One monkey, bent on making the most of his missile, was seen to carry a stone up a tree that he might hurl it with greater effect. On the occasion when the dogs attacked the baboons, the baboons were crossing a valley, and, as usual during a march, the females and young were in the centre, the males treading the column and bringing up the rear. As the dogs rushed upon them only the females took to flight. The males turned and faced the enemy, growling, beating the ground with their hands and opening their mouths wide so as to show their glitter- ing teeth. They looked so fierce and malicious that the dogsâ€"Arab grey- hounds, accustomed to fight successfully with hyenas and other beasts of preyâ€"â€" shrank back. By the time they were encouraged to renew the attack the whole herd had made its way, covered by the rear guard, to the rocks, one little six-months old monkey alone ex- cepted. This little monkey sat on a rock, surrounded by the dogs, but he was not long left in his perilous position. An old baboon stepped from a cliff near by, advanced toward the dogs, keeping them in check by threatening gestures and sounds, picked up the baby monkey and carried it to a place of safety on the cliff, while the whole crowd of baboons watched the act of heroism and shouted their battlecry. mâ€"â€"-â€"- The Crocodile. A FEW OF HIS PECULIAR. WAYS OF' TRANSACTING BUSINESS. There is little in the animal kingdom that can look so dead and be so much alive as a crocodile. The number of unsuspecting persons who have mis- taken him for a log and have failed to discover their mistake until it was too late to be of any benefit to them will never be knowu. In ancient times, several years prior to the British occu- pation of Egypt, some of the people of that country worshipped the crocodile as a god, there being nothing else like him. They fed him on dainties and togged him out with jewelry. In other parts of Egypt, however, the natives looked upon him as a devil. Having no firearms, they did not fill him with lead, but they managed to immolate him successfully with such weapons as were fashionable at the time. The crocodile is not so numerous in the Nile as he runs in the days of the Rameses family. In fact, be rather shuns the river now below the second cataract on from tourist trafiic. It seems impossible for a tourist to see a crocodile without trying to plug him with a revolver, and to a reptile that is fond of a quiet life this sort of thing is simply insufferable. He will not molest a man unless he can take him at a disadvantage, and so long as a man does not unthinkingly step on him, the crocodile will go his own way He ,nccount of tho annoyances inseparable ileum Paper and Picture frames w. a. GOODWIN’S, ’ I 3 o 0 “this Goods. ,a spec'am The Leading Canadian Tree Men. Machine Needles, Alabastine and Dve 38" Please callandsee my 5c.Paper %. Dominion. Agents Wanted to Represent Us. Special attention given to Park, Cem- etery and Boulevard orders. Estimates furnished for supplying entire orchards. Why buy of foreign concerns .or of middlemen when you can purchase as cheaply from us and get better value ? Our stoclt is Canadian grown and cliinatcd. _ Catalogue (English or‘ French) free on application. SinehWellinghn,lnmnlo,llnl. FONTHILL KURSERIES. lietqun its ‘ IN VICTORIA COUNTY FOR. RC: â€"'â€"lS Arâ€"z Baker Block,Kentast.,Lindsay. (KOB- PRINTING Neatly and promptly executed at the GAZETTE Ofiicc. Prices reasonable. Works Agency . Furniture, Doors, Sash, â€"â€"â€"-â€"AND-â€"â€"â€" 'UNDERTAKTNG, FRANCIS ST. WEST, ' FENELON FALLS. WWWWMWMW STILL Another consignment of those valuable presents GIVEN AWAY with each pound of Art Baking Powder just received at W. L. ROBSON’S. T. Ansrxx, Chief Ranger. Ilsitnkur SAnnronb, R. S. ‘tANADIAN HOME CIRCLES. FEM: - .' LON Falls Circle No. 127, meets in the True lllue hall in McArthur's Block the first Wednesday in every month. P. C. llcucnss, Lender. ILB. Sinvrsrsn, Set-rotary. \ RAND A..\l., 0.11. C. run SPRY f . Lodge No. «106. Meets on the first Wednesday of catch mohtluon or before tht‘ full of the moon, in the lodge room in Cunningham’s Block. E. Fnzurznam, W. M. Rev. W. Fauxcoun, Secretary CIITI)I(7IIIQE§. BAPTIST CllUllCIlâ€"QUEliNâ€"S'l‘nâ€"REV. James Fraser, Pastor. Service every Sunday morning at 10.30. Sunday School every Sunday at 2.30. p. m. Prayer meet; ing on Thursday evening at 7.30 ; Minister's Bible-class on Tuesday (fortnightly) at 7.30. NIETHODIST CHURCH â€"- COLBORNE Streetâ€"Reverend ’l‘. P. Slccl, Pastor. Sunday service at 10.30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sabbath School at 2.30 p.m. Epworth League of Christian Endeavor, Tuesday evening at 8 o’clock. Prayer meeting on Thursday evening at 7.30. ST. ANDREW’S CHURCIIâ€"COLBORNE Streetâ€"Reverend ill. McKinnon, l’us~ tor. Services every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and 7 p m. Sunday School every Sunduv at 2 30 p. m. Christian Endeavor met-ting every Tuesday at 8 p.111. Prayer meeting every Thursday at 7.30 p. m. (SIALVATION ARMY â€"- BARRACKS ON k Bond Sthestâ€"Capt. & Mrs. McClellnnd. Service held every Thursday and Sat- urdny evenings at 8 p. m., and on Sundays at 7 a. m., it a. m., 3 p. in. and 7.3011. ST. A LOYSIUS R. C. CHURCHâ€"LOUISA Streetâ€"Rev. Father Nolan, Pastor. Services every alternate Sunday at 10.30 a. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 2 p. m T. JAMES’S CHURCHâ€"BOND STREET Enstâ€" Rev. Wm. Farncomb, Pastor. Service every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 11.30 a. in. Bible class every Thursday evening at 7 o’clock. ' Seats free in all churches. Everybody tnvttedto attend. Strangers cordially welcomrd. .. _..._._...._..____._.-‘.__. URLICLIBRARYâ€"PATRICK KELLY, Librarian. Open daily, Sunday except- ed, from 10 o’clock a. m. till 10 p. to. Books ,exchnnged on Tuesdays and Saturdays from 12 11.111. till 3 p. m.o.nd in the evening from 7 to 9. Reading room in connection. OST OFFICEâ€"l”. J. KERR, POS'I‘MAS- TER. Ollice hours from 7.40 n. m. to s p. m. Mail’going south closes nt8 u.tu Mail gomg north closes at 3 p. m. NEWSPAPER LAW. 1. A postmaster is required to give notice by letter (returning the paper does not answer the law), when a. subscriber does not take his paper out of tho oillce and state the reasons for its not beingtukcn. Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsible to the publisher for pavment. I 2. If any person orders his paper'clisconâ€" tinned he must pay all nrrenruges, or the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and collect the whole w ..- fiv- Wall Paper, Paints and. 01215, Glass and. Putty. If you want the best in the above lines , ,_ _. call at . . . Nevison’s Bazaar. amount, whether it is talrcn from the office or not. 'l'hcrc can he no legal discontinu- ance until the payment is made. 3. Any person who takes a paper irorr the postâ€"office. whether directed to on name or another, or whether he is.” rulw scribed or not, is responsible for the pm- 4. If a subscriber orders his pnw-z' [11‘ it» stopped at a certain time, and the .‘pur. lishcr continues to send, the subscriber i bound to pay for it if he takes it out of 11.!- ‘ post-oilice. This prom-eds upon the grim-wt l u What I want," said he, u is a takin’ , and calmly await his opportunity- ad for bakiu‘ powder. You git me up feeds on fish, but for a course dinner he one that'll catch the public, an’ you can “Wm Nth?" have mum‘va black. Pre‘ name ver own price." forred, which shows that there 18 no 'f‘hc distinguished lituratenr was too aFcoummg for mates: even “mfmg 1“3" pm ,3; gimp. 1,, be astonished at ;, amp. i nice. His methods of capturing large mum of the kind, but thought it well .2an ,are plural, asowell as. Singular. to make some inquiries as to the pccul- :, Sometimes he Will 1'0 00 a “VG? bank. iar nuslities and special advantages of' partly COVel‘f‘d Will] 593d 01' mild. lint-ill {he gimme he was to praise, an absent-minded ncttve wanders Within “ 0h. l don't know ; we haiu't invent- rebell- HaVHfiâ€"Z grabbed hls prey, he ed it, Yet; what we want's an ad that)” Wlll waddle Into the water and there krn‘ckall these other fellcrs silly. The drown “19 Strugfllfl- He Will then 1‘ wvtlcr'll take care of itself."â€"â€"Gh€mgn d"?! hi5 Victim “Shore and burl? him in sand or mud and wait for days before he gorges himself. Celcr, the racer of the Roman Em- i happen-'3' mid Mr. C‘nrntcssel. " us farm- ’ eh 3,. ..,,;,,' m 2;, mmnmjuedy i peror Verus, was fed on almonds and ~~ lint the condition of crops makes a l “Wins. "35_ C0"?er Wish 7°53] purple dip-,.,._.,,C,.I doom} h, and stalled In the imperial palace. , “ No, El they‘re hi2. they tell us to l _ Bel‘J-‘m'n West's pram“ Plcmre “'35 ‘ be cheerful because we've not so much to lilS “ Dull! 00 the Pale Home." When i flu “d if desire same “my mngrat. i first exhibited, men turned pale until .1” as cu m " arm at" “omen {lulled ah the Eight. I that 1'. man must pay for what he uses. 5. The courts have decided that t'l'fusin; to take newspapers and periodicals iron: the post-office, or removing and leaving 1'. iftimr. -. H».-oâ€".- ‘It 3. wt't make no difference what Tlil‘. CASADA SALT . . . .‘iSSOCl.’\'l‘lO.‘J, Ctmvon, 0N7, 2 +333 Dairy and Table Guarantee prom t ( e g Plshipments. 1P I; no Contact .and - 0 S: t. A (a For Table or Dairy I use . . . . . “etccweweeeeceeeeeeee -

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