‘Perci'val 8t Son’s new Steel I-Iarrow;_ Tlie‘bulls, and whiï¬le-trees are all steel, and not e-made; -tooth Cultivator, withhis new. thing in the-market. Seeing. d have aalook. row~â€"â€"the only. steelzwhiï¬le-tre Peter Hamilton’s new Spring improved Seeder, is ahead of any is believing. Come an T/ze C/zeafesz‘Sz‘Ore-z'u Me County for an. Kin-ascr- suitcase unaware. Always on hand, a large and var Wiixed, Paints, Paint Oils 8e.White.. Lead .. all of the best quality. btoves, Tinware, &c., Cheap as the Cheapest. onit. be of "much If I‘can’tplease you‘i‘ntheeabove li‘nes,.it.w Joseph Heard. use for anybody else to try. . Fenelou Falls, March 15th,.1893; a» a s s a s . {10$ .E". m m 91 O Ilâ€"I' A... .4 OH 312 :3 0 DH . >-1. .â€"--d a: .63 Fr-t +2 I!) 0) â€"¢â€"?._ .3 . G) H pâ€"-4 +3.. '4 O Shapes. Ribbons, Flowers, Lanes. 1 Wire ' Trimmings and Ladies? Underwear, 1 Dress Goods, Deiaines. Prints, L i- we have the Latest Fash . Thane on. hand.a.number_ of Men’s, [Boys’ andYonths’. gig , Now is. your time to. get. These goodsarc Which I‘ Will‘sell‘ at cost raters tea. as I‘ do not wantto carry. them over a good Over-coat cheap. All New. and. of tlie'Latest $ty1’es, and made by one of the besthousesdhthe -Dominion., ~ALSO,â€"â€" is. Large I Stock of Boots and" shoes ' at’priCes. to suit the times. Groceries, Crockery and. Glass-ware. ,1 A full line or the best goods to be had always on hand. i. January . Eeuelou Falls, ‘7- Dry Goods, erou rag, amnesty, ‘ A manner, Mr. Arnold in the chaif if I Gall and errawodde- s went'with the s to-thc ann aud‘wliile there Miijor Siim Hughe ateur soldier 1T6 the Farmers of ' Fenelon, Veruiam-&.Somerville:. M other am drill at Kingston, metiwit‘h ‘ treatmen wormwood to. his pro ~ Sam’s grievanc 1 in the H c, which he states spirit: urdcr, is that non- at lengtl 13am still‘agent‘in this locality for . . . commissrcucd‘ oflice The Massey-Harris Go... and farmers will do well to call and see my line 0 where. on my part, as they h for over 25 years~and a abreast of the times in improve: Call and See Them... and be convinced for yourselves. stock consists of- The Massey-Harris New Wide Open Binder, 5 and 6 feet out. The Toronto Mower. The Brantfordall'ront andnE Mower. ‘ The Wiener Com The WrisnerSi The Massey-Harris the best on w clips, teeth a bolt 1n the Whole har- camps, : rage be continued stadof the 45th B “Annually,†favored with the"specta majors, captains strutting around d swords and along d disciplined in attaliou . “'thc‘nation is sic of coloncls, .Ousp‘zj. if; else- m-meut f goods-before pu-rcliasii hese goods! need1 no co ave been in use re this year fully nents. he says,- and lieutenants with crowns and boots, being military camps sergeants from the per-' And again : “ The peo- ig contribute lly for the- loned per stars, an drilled ran by corporals and mancnt corps.†I of Canada will not 101 f aimillion dollars annua -commiss of the perma- ' among the-‘tcnts of" 5- My 'ple hal fun of having a few non or commissioned ofï¬cers MFG“ ' lnent corps 'swagger‘ the brigade camps.†Poor Sam ! boiling over.'with indignation. f his importanceâ€"an MS P. by an “ administrator-“by .usur- r of a pedigree, the the promulgator of ore all, a fullâ€"blown way to Kingston strut, and land, so adjourn to meet next regular meeting ied‘ stock‘ of ‘ bincd Drill. ngle Drill. Cultivator in four hecls,- with or grass seed sewer. No wonder he is fairly Fancy a man 0 purchase, pation, the proprieto parent of prodigies, photographs, and, ab r all the in. his annual snubbed; belittled-- he A. Cfof 'his‘ insigniï¬cant, but corporal- with a swagger. caused by such it is not at all dless sections, without seed box and The Sharp’s Rake. ing Tooth llarrcws. f my own-make. r new» Thanking ,my numerous on em for past favors, libug to that Tshall do my utmos continuance of their patronage. THGS. RQBSQN. Fcnelon FallinMvarch 8th, 1893, M The Fencicn Falls Gazette;- a _____,-_____‘._.â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"' Friday. Juljr 14th, 1893: A Tragedy at the World's Fair..- Spr Ploughs etc. o 1,,aj0,-__goi,,f 5mm" to indulge them†:therevbeieg to ‘speak, taught t militery duties by an .“ permanent]? Under the delirium exasperation as this, surprising that S cf grammar and ‘says 2 imbecile policy, inaugurated ars the Reformcrs were in power, y the Cou- . d tapeï¬ï¬‚d passed through'the Falls last Wednes- .assurc t to merit a' am becomes regar ~“ Oiving tothe during the few ye and foolishly perpetuated b servntivcs, the "expense conucc military have) efï¬ciency course is liable slip while -writi so gross a one as off his gramma cause or another ; an simply to show that badlyrattled by the he and others were an ston, but of which he is the only one difï¬culties, re ted with the obtaining of has (instead militia force Anybody of to make an occasional ng hurriedly, but not the above unless he be ticnl_ base from - some d'we point it out he must have been outrage towhieh bjected at King- t'ar as we know, to complain in print. . certiï¬cates liast Menday afternoon the mammoth the cold storage» warehouse at the Chic -World’s Fair was desrroyed by ï¬re, and a considerable numberx-of persons, the of whom were ï¬remen, were death or killed by jump- ng from the building to avoid the flames. It was at ï¬rst statedzthat nearlyforty lives had been lost, but there is now a iis‘ will prove to have course uninten- Thc dead'so far injured as are removed, many are buried fthousands wont or longer reduced “2'0 and officers. majority either burned to strong hope that tl been a great, though of tional, exaggeration. number twelve-and: the fatally two, but, until. the rui there is no telling how in them; and as tens o to Chicago to remain a week and had no acquaintances in the city, 0 see that theymight be dead "before their d ‘make house ,as W. __._.'._ The Glorious Twelfths. The Clerk of the weather appears this to be“ down upon’ ll as the Methodists. 110‘ 7 Fenelon Falls: ’ the Orangcmcn Wednesday, that the Meth- ad to be ed- year as we the 5th inst., was so wet odist Sunday school excursion h fortnight, and on W tlie.12th, the weather was just as forenoon; but it' would take a cyclone, to stop n'lorious twelfth,†boring at Bdbcay but there it is easy t for a considerable time‘ friends would grow. uneasy an enquiry. about them; built entirely of woe Y CALL The ware oned for- a d, was .250 feet nd the main part The ï¬re was dis- f the cupola, and amcwork around ‘y caught County .At- he returned postp hesday, bad in the a deluge, backed 'up by the celebration of: so there was'a big gat geonrthough noth hvould ’have been if 168, YOU was long, 150 feet wide, a was ï¬ve stories high. envered at the mouth 0 it is supposed that the fr the mouth of the huge chim from a defect in the flue. Dewart of Toronto, w from Chicago on Tuesday, says: “ The-last thing Lsaw yesterday as I was on my way to the train horrible holocaust in wh ï¬remen .lost_-thei saw the Wilding the r in and the men were a some distance away, an around some interv I. . MCDOU Mmh. ing like w the weather had been The Maple Leaf and barge were ; but as prevented them from 87...Ellis’s wharf, f the village,-and he advertised icld un- as the xehange. Jim ï¬ne. to have left the Falls at 8 a. m. logs.~in the river coming beyond Greene it mile from the centre 0 rain was pouring down at t hour for departure, they were 1 til 10 o’clock, by which time, cleared somewhat, a fair eard,‘and ed about 1 p. m. was no more rain, ng enough to keep a he would otherâ€" as the majority s, at any rateâ€"want inducement. than an 0 run the risk of get- T‘lie deï¬ciency was, of course, in the number of spectators, not of brethren, for the ï¬re that=burns inlthe bosom of an 0 Blue or a Young of July or the 12th 0 kind that can be ex quantity of water. uali innrchings-and counter followed by no es, and the cclebr have been-a-esuccess pated in it; but dividual in the d calf, which c'nrolle the Bobcaygcon lodge, chto be ejected from the marched in the proces gravity and decorum of- man present. W ncil ‘Proceedi'ngs.. torney home me ite the Lad ken was the the poor When lzï¬rst oof had not fallen twork. Iwas d'when I had ening build- l.- tower had‘collapscd, centre of the building f angry, devouring ï¬reman»: had been. fellows lost their a miserable It was built inv ich o Silks; Nets, Tips, etc. We would r. lives.‘ and old, to see them. ,Eggs ta weather had number of passengers \vere'on b ’Ca‘ygcon was reach After dinner there but it had lasted 10 good .n]:1ny.at homo w wise have turned out; of peopleâ€"adult stronger Orange procession t ting soaking-wet: \ . . ,lun‘ried \ings: the centre rand the whole , was one vast mass -0 flame, in which the engulfed. The poor lives in trying to save Yankee advertising ï¬re-trap, e immense structures, tower, which ance, and Hercules Iron .W ng scale, but, like he World’s Fair buildings, it ï¬mmable material, and id of it the vast where the some one of thee alive-storeys high, with a presented an imposing 'appear advertised the Company most of. t '"was builtof in once the ï¬re took. he s in the centre, d machinery for manufactur~~ served as a dra ught I-iwas all throuth. and was much in; f manufacture- Apart frerm the loss for the orks rangeman, a True ’ on .a dazzli 2th of Briton on the 1 1' August» is not' the yinguished by .any There were the us marchings, at and appropriate speech- ation is declared to by \ alhwho ~pauticié. the most prominent in- ay’s' proceedings was a d itself. a member. of. resolutely ‘rc'fusâ€" ranks, and th all..the the eldest Orlangc- bpcn spac engines an ing ice was situated, so fan the flames. the building one day, tcrestcd .in the pro ing artiï¬cial ice. the loss is a serious one, ales, butter and perishable at; required : storage, either.- preservation, These 0058 O of life, lwines- and . produce th for test: p were store were exhibits which ha judged, and in most inst now be replaced.†urposcs or for “on “'1 d in the building. d ,not yet been anees cannot Village Gnu 'EXcuasrou.â€"-We are rc- hat the Forestch by the steamer ll lake on Wednesday, n’t you .forget it. are will .be' out in Council met pursuant to adjournment at the call of the present, the reevc, Austin and .Brandon. meeting Austin gave not of council he would introduce to renew. note for 8200 due in the on the 6th instant. d passed in the usual Fennsrnns’ quested to announce t will run an exc , Crrnzdclla to 13:1 August Stirâ€"an Posters giving partieul a few days. w. 'r. Hellebore, Paris Ely Paper just rec-e1 rccvc; members llors Arnold, Minutes of last Mr. ursion 0011110.1 and conï¬rmed. ice that at this meeting a by-law d do read , RLAND, t‘ A. '" t -l Twonley,s Block. Junl 111 has a fresh s on ot‘| Green, luseet Powder and ved. (ï¬re him a call. Dominion Bank Byda’w read an Moved by J: H; Brandon,seconded.i by‘ T‘. AirStin,‘ That the following acv nor ount‘s be"pai-d and the more give his he orders for the same :Lâ€"Robert' Ruther- ‘ t that was gall and fordr 5 ‘days work on streets, 37-50; 0, ~ ud and-liaughty‘~ Wise, do. do., 36 25; Robert Jackett,. do. Colborne street, $l0 ; xdo.‘, do. dmiu on Francis 'street‘, 35; do; dds-dd; on A market Square, $3 75; do., team andl ‘ 2 men 14.};days on Bond street, 35; do:- 1 man 3 days on 'do , $3 :60; dd; work; i 11; days south of river, $1 85; Joh’n‘ M‘agce, cutting woods on streets, $4 ; - Dickson St Valentine, advice re Napanee : Paper 00,-, $10; iPatriek Kelly, salary‘-‘ as sanit‘aryinspector. $24; E. D. Hand; advertising court of revision, $2; do, .‘ board - of health notices, 5 months, $4. ; ; ‘ John- Jones; salary» as constable ‘ one' .modth,’ 512-750; James Dickson, draw-r jing plan of village, which is now in the : registry ofï¬ce at Lindsay, $4.0; Wm."- Jordan, hal'f‘yea'r’s rent of hall, $25;; J. Twomoy jr., meals for tramps, $".â€"â€"â€" ‘ Carried. - . Mdvadiby J: ll.- Brandon,‘seco‘ndedi by J. Arnold, That the street 8: bridge? cenimittee ask for tenders for gravclling. streets andrbuilding sidewalk on Bond! street east, coinmencing at creek and- extending as far as the boundary. Also sidewalk on Dufferin street. ‘ Sec notice’ of’tenders in 'postofli'e'e and Gazette.~~ Carried'. ' I Moved by-Mr. Brandcngseecnded by -' App Mr. Austin, That the council now: 9"â€" hing or at cell of- the reciteâ€"«Carried; 4 Mrs. W: H; Robertson of Pcterbor‘o" isrisiting her-relativesaï¬â€˜the Falls. Mr. Fred. Washburn‘, termed-v- as resident of the Falls, but new of Guelph, \vus here for a few days". Mr. llabris, ofvthe Mi-nden Echo steif, .- day on I his way to Bobcaygcon, and. paid the Gazette af'riendly.-visit. - 4 Mr. George Whrd, who has been at-‘ tending the high school at Campbellfordi 'for--‘ some time past, is‘ here' to spend a month or so of the summer vacation. ’ Mr. Henry Junkin of Mariners. came = .to the Falls on Saturday with his young: son and daughter, whom he left to spend the holidays with their relativesi here, . returning; himself on Monday, morning. i ' ,_ Mrs. Farncomb (wife cf"the Rev.“ Wm. Farncomb of St. James’s church) .- lelt the Falls-on Monday last, and will sail to-morrow from-New Yoi'k3=t'ei 'SCot-i land with her mother, whose physician? has perscribed a sea voyage for the ' beneï¬t of hcr=failing healt-h.- ' ’ Mr. George A.‘-J0rda'u, Police Magisv "x, trate of- vanco‘uver, left»the Falls on: ’ Monday, morning, after spending . about a month at- his home‘ in -h‘c'nelon.' At; the Rossin House, Toronto, he was captured and interviewed by two news ' paper rcporters‘,-. with results that‘ appeared ‘in the columns- -of~‘-the~-Globc" and Empire. . Mr. Joseph Heard, who came from; England to Canada 24 years ago at the = age of 23, left yesterday morning for at trip :to athe-ï¬old -country; and will sail. - from Montreal to-morrow on the Sar- dinian, the surgeon in which vessel'i’s a.- brother of Rev. Mr. Farncomb, who gave “ Joe " a. letter of introduction to I him.‘ As Mr. Heard intends to take a: run through eIreland and Scotland, as‘ well as to visit his,-relat-ives in England 1 and to be in his store again very early in September, he will have a pretty‘ lively time forthe next two months.‘ He will be in good company going home, . as the earl and countess of Derby and.» suite will be his fellow passengers.~ P‘owles’s‘ Corners; ___.â€"â€"â€" Correspondence .of the Ga zettc» I Mr. Wm. Parrish of Oshawa is at?- present visiting friends and relatives. Mr. John Cullis is still agent for the ! Massey-Harris Co'. and has made some big sales in binders, mowers, rakes, cul- tivators‘ and drillers. , M r. W. Simms started for the North» - west on Tuesday. Mr. John Simms,‘ Who has been therca little over two - years, is expected home. . . llaying is in full blast whenever it not raining- There are some very good . crops of hay; Mr. John: Willock .has= ' timothy. hay. that=will :give two and a. half tons to the acre. Quite a lot of. clever that has been cutzlately will be ota an inferior- quality. owing :to frequent; showers; Mr. John R. Ingram started for the ' World's Fair last Monday and also to: visit his sister, Mrs. C. lt‘lerding, and after holidays will commence duties in4 Toronto where he has accepted a good position. Mr. C. Ward and 1amin of. Cobourg arrived a few days ago and. i will spend a few weeks at the old home-~- stead, Mr. John Cullis’s. James McMillan, the oldest man. in Kentucky, died near Baremcll, Ky., on Sunday. He was born in Virginia in. 1776. I V. l i l l x i