VOL. XX. '5‘ in I p“ - O J . *0 O 4 >5 '30 I :_ *3 â€" ,,_, .: H a +3 .5: . '12 U o 5 - :1 Cl 3?. r E - 5 m C3 7 >> “a .2 3 E o :8 o s ’3 o -' 2.2. 2‘0 m D I 0 Ce C0 " >> a: O t-a r: L, 3 C3 I m d +3 ‘5 O is is 3 .2: o 8 5 3 go b) 4.; B m 0†F-_‘ :4 O a . Pd 8 g 33 ° : e r "5 ":3 m C o 2 IH 3 c3 I ‘3 m 53 ° .2 ' O a on ’S O '-‘ i-l O Q) a :2 g a) .3 E so 3‘ = O CD :3 is _ ._._.._.._- __ _ -____-._ 3 +3 Professional Cards. lg ~ +9 9.0 m s s LEGAL &c. ,: as o A. P. DEVLIN, so 8 o PARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor o g Q) ) in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. g_, ,3 pg 63 Q +3 HOPKINS & CHISHOLM, a, U) For 0 (Secessscn 'ro Mmrm A: HOPKINS) B g g: 4: AnnterR,SOLtCtTOR, to Money 0 :3 m to Loan at. 6 per cent. Oï¬ice, Wil- +9 a Q) liam street, next to the Bank of Montreal. ‘ ‘33 o a rd E. ii. llorxms. D. H. Ornsncut. g o g MOORE a JACKSON, m a: 60 ARRIS‘TERS, SOLIUI’I‘ORS, ch. Of- Q 4:3 ) tice, William street,Lindsay. m o F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON. n g :1 "m C521 MctN'rYnn & STEWART, ,, H ft) 0 ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries, Ste. F: ‘ Otlices over Ontario Bank, Kent street, 0 Q Lindsay. Money to loan at 6 per cent. on 0 4,; easy terms. >3 a D. J. llelxrvnc. T. Srewanr. 5 4; O w G.) 3-1 fl 0â€"1 o... s... A‘J Notes made payable to JAm-zs Ban i’ g Agent, will have to be paid to Frank Kerr 0 Pg post-master here, who holds said notes. m as. JOHNSTON e (30- H é; Penelon Falls, June 30th, 1891.â€"-19 t. . E MEDICAL. m .g (0 A. W. J. DEGRASSI, M. D., m g .E Ol‘tONER, Physician,Surgeon,&c., &c. m CU c3 Residence, Brick Cottage, Wellington 0 p0 treet, Lindsay. . g 5 DR. A. WILSON, i i q; ,5, m â€"-u. 11., u. c. r. s 8., Ontario,-â€" a o YSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- our. Oflice. Colborne Street, Fenelon B Fells. Do. u. n. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the Universityoi Trinity G College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons of England, Member of the 091. lege of Physicians ti; Surgeons of Ontario. Odice and residence on Francis-St. \Vest Fonelon Falls, Opposite the Gazette oilice. R. M- MASON, ETERINARY SURGEON ; Honor Grad- uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- route, lSSl ; R. .\l. O. V. .\I. A. . Residenceâ€"Corner Colborne and Louise. streets, Fenciou Falls. smwmmns, purchasmg elsewhere. -mm JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor. Commissioner in the Q. 8., P. Conveynncer. kc. Residence, and ad- dress, lienelou Falls. mm; " ll. HART, L. D. S. SET OF GOOD TEETH FOR$l0. Gas A and local antesthetics for painless ex. tneting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all branches of dentistry. (mice over Fairweather k 00’: store, ’ ~ opposite post-oï¬ee, Lindsey. rt. enoss, .IST, LINDSA‘Y, "It be at the “ McArthur House," Penelon Fails. the second Wednesday ofeaeh month. Beautiful and durable artificial teeth made, cud all other dental work properly done. Nearly :7 years' experience. l6-ly. M Oil.†-v Ms W†GR..OCERIIEGS_ gars’, Teas and Canned Goods always on hand. ~ i FAMIL A full line of Sn Feneion Falls, September lst, 1892. 1n. barga it 133. 7 Try our ‘25 cent Tea 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 apans, Furniture and Carriage Varnish at great/y reduced/inks, and all those who are in want of any of the above lines will do well to call before ’ H. AUSTIH’S OLD STAND. 01' c: IVEN AWAY line Hundred and Forty-one Handsome Photographs In One Grand PICTURE All the Conservative Members of ~ @Parliamentm lncludin extra large size photographs of Sir Johni Abbott, T‘rcmicr. and Sir John Thompson. leader of the House of Commons, surrounded b the Cabinet Ministers. andlg'rouped on either si e the members of the House rom every Province in the Dominion. making a total of 34! splendid photo- ' Kr: . I; every one a. perfect likeness. great picture is a reproduction by Photo-i] mvurc process on per plate of the picturer presented to Sir John Thompeomby the Conserva- tive Members during the last session. THE ORIGINAL PICTURE. OOIT OVIR .500. . Tint Erma; has secured the copyright to repro- duce this Grand Picture. It is printed on I ecinl plate paper in photographic inks, and is 3 eet 6 Inches by 3 feet 4 inches in site. nndmnitcla splen- dtd picture for framing. A key giving the name of “ch member and constituencyrcpreeented is tinted on the margin, making attainable work ot'rc orcnce. NO EXTRA CHARGE Will ho mad. for em. Grand Ironclqu but It will b. GIVEN FREE 1'. Ivory lubeorlbor for the Weekly Empire FOR 1893. Tun Wizva Estan in without doubt the best Weekly for $1.00 published in Canada. containing r1 page: of latest news of the day. S ecini depart. ments on Agriculture, \Vomnn': mpirc, Our Curiosity Shop. Old \Vorld Diar V. tho latest Sport- ing Events, etï¬ Only One ollar per year. Sent to any a ress in Canada or the United States. Every subscriber will get the Premium Picture as 3 Present... . . .. Send In your subscription at once, or order through our local agent. Address: TH! EMPIRE, Toronto. Ont. HEADQUARTERS IN VICTORIA COUNTY 'FOR Roam Paper and Picture Frames -â€"lB ATâ€" W. A. GOODWIN’S Baker’s Block, Kent-313., Lindsay. :3 Artists’ Goods a Specialty. Fcnelon Falls, June 23rd BEE“ Glazing, Kalsomlning and Paper-hanging done 8. N EVISON . “0h! Momma. Willie’s tired of using poor Machine “ Read this. Willie†Tho Oils for Genuine Satisfaction {or all sorts of liachincry are MCCOLL’S CELEBRATED LABDINE & BYLINBEB illLS used by the Largest Hillmen in the Country, and manufactured solely by MCCOLL BROTHERS & 00., TORONTO. For Sale only by JOSEPH HEARD ln Fenalon Falls. 3 i i Machine Needles, Alabastine and Dve Works Agency. W Please call and see my 5:. Paper. Lindsey, April 2nd, 1893. David Chambers, General Blacksmith, Francis-st, Fenelon Falls. Blacksmithingin allits different branches done on short notice and at the lowest living prices. Particular attention paid to horse-shoeing. Give me a calland I will guarantee satisfaction. 45-ly. BESTVALUE. â€"â€" Fast Colored Ging- hams for 10c. Fast Colored Mus- llns for 100. Fast Colored Prints for 10 cents. it? The freshest Goods in the village at Wm. Campbell’s. Ohio and Maine Contrasted. â€"â€"_.. BY REV. A. J. CHURCH. liquor business condnees to wealth and prosperity, and that Prohibition ret:.r~is its growth and wealth to a large degr e. influences men to vote for license. '1‘. 8 best refutation of this monstrous doctit is the facts. Ohio and Maine furnish a good lesson in the line of this inquiry. Anyone would guess on the instant that Ohio is vastly the richer State. Yes, it ought to be! I supposed it was till this examination opened my eyes. It is its own everlasting shame that O. to is poor. Her brewers and distillers are rich. Ohio is as central as it can be to the nation; Maine has an insolntcd, awkward location in the northeast cor- ner. Ohio has a mild, salubrious eliâ€" mate; Maine is much colder. Ohio has rich, easily tilled soils; the down- enst State a hard, niggardly surface. . Ohio has in abundance all the be>t minerals; Maine none but granite and ice, yet Maine is rich and Ohio is poor ! These States have about the some ptr ceutagc of people who live by farming, and likewise of those in other industries. In Maine, 92.38 per cent. own their own forms; 71 per cent. in Ohio. A ' number of Governors have in the last: ten years voiced the grief of Ohio farm- ers because they are so generally and heavily mortgaged. Governor Burleigh said in his message of 1890 that no State in the Union had so little property under mortgage or so much money loaned out of the State per capita as Maine; and added, there are whole counties in which there is not a form under mortgage. In the State, 78 per cent. of farms are free from mortgage. Maine is out of debt; Ohio's obligations exceed ahuudred millions. The sav- ings banks furnish pretty searching criteria of the ï¬nancial vigor and reserve forces ot'a nation. In Maine these in- stitutions have 843,000,000 on deposit for 132,000 owuers; in Ohio they have $17,000,000, with a much smaller per centage of depositors. Maine has 650.â€" 000, and holds to each individual in her banks 866! Ohio has to each of her 3,200,000, $6! So this State, which is the tip end of every tippler's sneer because of Prohibition, with all natural advantages against her, has eleven times as much cash in reserve for each person's use as her rival, with location, soil, climate and natural re- sources in her favor. Both States have a sturdy, enterprising yeomaury, and make generous provision for their men- tal, moral, and social developemeuta- 3 Why, then, should the wcukrr be lilO‘ stronger? There is but one answer to this enigma: Prohibition. Forty years ago Maine put her ban on the grog-soops: and, in spite of' the most unscrupulous and satanic eiiorts ut' wholesalers, retailers, politicians and the devil, they have very largely rcduc~ ed the sale of these noxious beveraues; while brewery and saloon have slunk out. of sight. In ’84, by a vote of‘thrce to one, she put into her Constitution her anathema on the drunkard factories, and there it is to stay till the nation be- comes sober enough to follow suit. Ohio chose, under the lead of statesmen who sneer at Maine’s fanatics, to foster the liquor trade. She has had 100,000‘ ~ drunkurds all the time thclast 20 years; she has buried a million in this horrible condition, and the six or eight million. whom she would have it' as rich as Maine, have gone to debauch her child- ren, gone to push them into beggary' and crime, into poorhouee and jail. and ï¬nally into eternity, under the balcl'nl eclipse of sin and shame. An equally telling refutation oi this serviceable old fraud can be drawn from the contrast in those twin States, Kan- sas and Nebraska, in the work of Pro- hibetioo as compared with high iiCL‘llt-‘t‘, by the revelations of the census ol'1890.. A more impressive one could be written of the poor little State I live in. SAN J on, COSTA RICA. A Pougixkt'epsie young woman is suing the Central Hudson railroad feta 840,000 became the man to whom tsim was engaged was killed in a collision on the railway. A two-matted bout carrying wood, having six men aboard, Was caught in n l N. C. The men regained the boat, _ , l the water was freezing. and during t whirlwind and capsized below Nowburm‘r night. three of them died irom exposure. Suchribe for the a Fendontmm other man undertook to swim Falls Gazette,†only $1 a year liu advance. inshore and perished. lsufl'ering the two remaining men were After 15 hours rescued. The persistent assertion that the r“ ,.