VOL. XX. AND ALL School Supp let, FULL ASSORTMENT RIGHT PRICES. Walter R. Madill, W. E. Ellis’s Old Stand. Fouelon Falls, Sept’r lst, 1892. Professional Cards. neon. 8w. . ..___._______. A. r. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-an,' Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. G. n. HOPKINS, (Successor: 'ro Mmrm & Horxtus) ARRlSTER, SOLICITUR, kc Money to Loan at. 6 per cent. Office, Wil- linm street, next to the Bank of Montreal. MOORE & JACKSON, _ Aantsrnns, SOLIUITORS, he. or. ) lice, William street,Lindsay. F. I). Moon. A. JACKSON. Mel-N’I‘YRE n STEWART, ARRIS‘I‘ERS, Solicitors, Notaries, &c. Ofï¬ces over Ontario Bank, Kent street, Lindsay. Money to loan at 6 per cent. on easy terms. D. J. Mclurvan. NOTICE. T. SrnWAtt'r. Alf Notes made payable to Jules Btu}? Agent, will have to he paid to Frank Kerr postmaster here, who holds said notes. JAS. JOHNSTON 8: Co‘ Yenclon Falls, June 30th, 189l.-â€"-19 t.f. :______._W___':"â€"-_‘_~I_ MEDICAL. mâ€"" A. W. J. DEGRASSI, M. D., ,ORONER, Physician,Surgeon,&c., tire. Residence, Brick Cottage, Wellington tact, Lindsay. DR. A. WILSON, -â€"II. IL, II. c. r. a 8., Ontario,â€" YSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- ' our. Ofï¬ce, Colborue Street, Fenelon Falls. Du. ll. ll. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University of Trinity I College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or fluxgeons of England, Member of the 091- lege of Physicians It: Surgeons of Ontario. Moe and residence on Francis-Sta“ est Fouelon Falls, opposite the Gazette othce. R. M- MASON, BTERINARY SURGEON ; llonor Grad- ' uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- rdlto, 1884 ; ll. M. 0. .\l. A. . Residenceâ€"Corner Colborne and Louisa llmts, Fettclou Falls. SURvEYoss. ""““" JAMES menses, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. 8., . Conveyancer, we. Residence, and ad- dross, FCIIQlDH Falls. ZlBENTAL. " “ l l mmT‘Z 2': ll. llAIl'l‘. I). D. SET 0!" GOOD TEETH FOR $10. Gas 3 and local anaesthetics for painless ex- tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all bronchus of dentistry. Ofï¬ce over Fairweather .k Co's store, nearly opposite post-ofï¬ce, Lindsay. DENTIST, LINDSA‘Y, till he at the “ McArthnr House," Penelon tells, the second Wednesday ot'cnch month. Mttiful and durable artiï¬cial teeth made, Mid all other dental work properly done. [my 27 years’ experience. lS-ly. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH, 189k. scion. BMW :1 l Q. 2" g. be? 5 4-3-4465 B: “3% . E3 5 if; 3 <9 0 :23 '63 J'â€" OECD A it"; a, go ill 5 <3 G) ï¬s’E lil c. m +3 g Hg g M E Es g ‘ 3.93 on 'r-l m we. [I]? Q O o z 'Encaiï¬ g cm 2 gs O < l5 4-" “OJ g Q gs as. @4151; ng. ' 23% E" 2.0 o: mace > é"; 38*†H m5 CD .. S530 2 ,3 . F-l-g‘i: co é SS E" . P > cogs,=3 g4; H do :2 3 "1 it}. at his: 09:2 =58 m 23.50 4 5‘ s“ H GEES E n a; l E"l ‘“ READ THIS. As I have decided to give up the Painting business, I will sell out my entire Stock of White Lead, ready mixed Paints, Oils, Turpentine, J npans, Furniture and Carriage Varnish at great/y rm’uccdprz'res, and all those who are in want of any of the above lines will do well to call before purchasing elsewhere. nes- Glazlng, Kalsomining and Paper-hanging done as usual. 8. N EVISON . Fenelon Falls, September lst, 189°. “0h! Momma. Willie’s tired of using poor Machine Oil.†“ Read this. Willie.†The Oils for Genuine Satisfaction for all sorts of Machinery are MCCOLL’S CELEBRAIED “mu-Gnosst LAHDINE & EYLINDEB OILS, used by the Largest Hillmen in the Country, and manufactured solely by ,MCCOLL BROTHERS & 00., TORONTO. I . For Sale only by JOSEPH HEARD In anolon Falls. ,‘°“““‘ "MW: 2 du's- W ._._..- __ I _ Write Us .30 1:... Club Terms FOR 1893 AND VALUABLE PRIZE LIST. at WILL PAY you The Finest List of Premiums ever offered by a Cana- dian Paper. DAlLY GLOBE, Morning Ed. $6.00 " N Second “ 4.00 Saturday “ 1.50 WEEKLY GLOBE MM Only One Dollar. ANYONE CAN GET UP A CLUB AND SECURE A HANDSOME PRIZE. WWrite acrimm THE GLOBE,Toronto. U H Killed By an Elk. A PHILADELPHIA ZOO-KEEPER KILLED BY AN INFURIATED ANIMAL PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 28.â€"One of the big .elks at: the Zoo became ugly at- the feeding hour last. night; and so fero- ciously attacked its keeper, John Ford of' 38th and Poplar streets, that he died in the German Hospital late last night. With two broken ribs and thirty wounds on his head and body, his sufferings were intense. At. 6 o'clock last night Ford, according to his daily custom, entered the elks' enclosure to feed the animals. “ Tom,†the largest of them, had frequently shown a vicious temper, but had never previously attempted to attack his keeper. The beast was par- ticularly ï¬erce yesterday, however, and sprung at. once at Ford as soon as he entered the gate. I , - Several minutes later ancthcr keeper passing near the enclosure heard Ford crying for help and rushed to his assistâ€" ance, having been reinforced meanwhile by several other attaches of the garden. The rescuing party found Ford lying in a trough in one corner of the enclosure, with the infuriated elk standing over him attacking him with horn and hoof. With great difï¬culty they ï¬nally suc cecded in driving the maddcned animal away and rescued Ford from his perilous position. He was unconscious and bleeding from 30 wounds in the head and about. the body.†+ Old Timers Unearthed. SKELETONS OF GIOANTIC ABORIGINES DUO UP IN INDIANA. CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 26.â€" A number of skeletons, evidently ofgi- ants, Were found on Saturday last in a gravel pit. along the high bluffs of Sugar Creek. Thus far twenty-ï¬ve skeletons have been taken out and the exhuma- tion of the mammoth remains is still go- ing on. The last. skeleton taken from the burying ground was a gigantic one, measuring seven feet in length. The femur alone would prove that the skele- ton was tltat of a giant, and the pelvic bones are twice as large as those of an ordinary man. The grinning skull of the giant had a perfect set of teeth, not one being cracked or decayed. and with an enamel as beautiful as polished mar- ble. The bones were perfect in every detail, notwithstanding the fact. that they must have' been interred for cent cries , The entire absunce of vegetable mat- ter in the soil and the perleet drainage would account for the preservation ol the bony structure. Of the whole number of skeletons thus far found only two indicate imma- ture developemcnt, the remainder repre- senting: a race of men evidently extinct for centuries. - The Maharajah's Government in My- sore is ready to alter the law so as to make marriages of girls below 10 years of age and of men ever 50 to girls un- der 16 criminal offences. . According to The London * Dain lGraphic, a Japanese laundry has pro- lduced the following advertisement: " Contrary to our‘oppositc company, we will most cleanly and carefully wash our youstotners with possible chief prices, as .r hundred; gentlemen, I} dols. per hundred." motto. No. 37. British Markets for Our Feed no? ducts. The English market. is accessible. 1 shipped fresh made creamery butter from Woodstok, Out., last. week to Liv- erpool, for 55 cents per 100 pounds. It will have cold transit all the way, with no depreciation in quality. Can you send butter from your own place, twenty miles back from the city, to the market. for les than half aceut per pound? From Woodstock to Liverpool it costs me 55 cents per 100 pounds" The market is permanent. There is an adequate demand. Englandis the larg- est importer of fruit. products in the world. Then there is a fair chance for competition in the English market, and then there are no tolls. John Brown lives in Oxford county. They have tolls in Oxford county. 'Another man, Tom Black, lives in .‘liddlesex county. where they have no tolls. John Br.mn' takes to market a ten pound basket of A butter, and it costs him on the read two cents per pound for tolls. If the butter sells no dearer in Woodstock than in London the Middlesex butter- maker would have the better chance to make marketing butter payâ€"by at least. the two cents per pound of toll money. England does not have any tolls on farm products. Then there is discrimination of the†keeuest, sharpest kind. market: will pay to-day for cheese from‘ three cents up to seventeen cents per pound wholesale.â€"â€"Discriminationl It- will pay for butter from six cents to thirty-one centsâ€"Discrimination! That.- is the kind of market I want. I do not want a. market where everybody gets the same price, whether the quality be excellent or poor. The treatment tends to discourage the efforts of' the people towards improvement in quality, which alone can give permanent success. Then there is the competition between buyers- of the keencst kind. Napoleon a good while ago said England was “ a nation of shop-keepers.†If you have a nation- of shop-keepers, they, for'the sake of; proï¬t, will compete, and that competi- tion will always push things to the verge of maximum price. England has been. called a nation of shop-keepers; she is a nation of shop-keepers and food consum- ersâ€"shop keepers to compete for, and food consumer to use, what. we have to sell. We are a nation of farmers, a na- tion of food producers. We have food to sell; they want. food to buy; they have a good, ready, permanent demand, competition and fair play; I want to go there if they will treat. me in'that way. --Prof. Robertson, Dairy Commisrt'oner. ‘ Mitchell’s entenoe. LONDON, Oct. 28â€"The appeal of Charley Mitchel, the prize ï¬ghter, who on October 7 was sentenced to two months' hard labor for brutally assault- ing George Salvage, an aged lodging house keeper, will be heard in January. Judge Sir Peter Edlen, before whom the appeal will be heard, has gained a reputation for the severity with which he deals with law breakers. He recent- ly continued with promptness a sentence imposed by a police magistrate on the pogilist Pritchard, and this point dors not augur well for Mitchell. The lot- ter's friends do not. seem to hope that the sentence will be set aside. On the contrary, their only hope is that Judge Edleu will not. impose a heavier sentence than the one imposed by Magistrate Vaughan. -0.- A Sku Farm. The oddest industry in Monroe. County, Pa., is skunk farming, and it is carried on in the eastern part of the county by M. Luther .‘lichncls at a snug proï¬t. Mr. Michaela grew weary of trying to raise corn and wheat. and turned his attention to black skunks. i'Ie captures all he can, and these out in ply after he has shut. them in a. lied; enclosed with wire netting. There are about 650 skunks on the form now, and M r. Michaela hopes to increase the name her to 1000. The proï¬t. comes from. the skins. A prime black skin is worm. $2 and finds ready sale. He will. slaughter 300 of them this fall to loosen. the cost of wintering his stock. . 0â€"... .-..-......__ The body of a young woman cut into. 12 pieces was discovered in an empty house in Paris, "France, on Saturday. 'l‘wu suspects have been arrested. , Eri Gray of lloztbury, N. Y., died in the poorhousc at Delhi, N. Y. 31:04! '10!) years. His mother lived to be l2“ years old. ’- The English '- l g l l ‘l ‘ .1 ‘M‘V‘V" NUâ€.th- I...;;. .; .__.' .._ '._.‘ Imam“; '5. . V... ,k .. A. ... h... -.A_.‘..._.. ..