turn J.€.ermm‘1muw “.3155 Mn 1-: «Li:- ::‘:. .:.. :~ rum. 1;. 3.2x: <mam1¢mï¬w . . “:2: ix,‘ The Old Reliable. lliug Slum. Euro Paris Green, Insect Powder, Fly Poison Tails. Headquarters for SPECTACLES. Opposite the post-ofï¬ce. n. GOULD. Lytlc’s old stand. frotessional Cards. LEGAL. MGLAUGHLIN & MCDIARMID, ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc., Lindsay and Fenolon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Kent-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Ofï¬ce: Over Burgoyne & Co’s store. The Fenclon Falls office will be Open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 3%†Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MOLAUGHLIN. . F. A. McDmnnm _________________._.________ WILLIAM STEERS, ARRISTER. Solicitor Dominion Bunk William Street, Lindsay. A. P. DEV LIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street,L1ndsay G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &c.i SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices : No. 6, William Street South, Lllld- say, Ont. _______________________._._. MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, kc. Of- fice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON ~._____________________.____._â€"â€" w MEDICAL. WM “ DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-n. n., e. M., ma. 0. 5. Eng., M. o. P. e 9., Own, r. 'r. n. s.â€" ‘HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- cur. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fcuelon Falls. DR. A. WILSON, â€"M. 3., M. c. r. s 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN,‘SURGE0N a ACCOUCH- eur. Ofï¬ce, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. __________________________ DR. D. GOULD: Graduate Toronto University, Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ont. Ofï¬ce at Drug Store. Resrdence, Francrs street west. W E. P. SMITH, ETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College: Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria by appointment of Dominion Government. Ofï¬ce and address -â€" GAMBRAY, On'r. DENTAL. Dr. NEELllllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (Vital- iced air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing lceth.. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands that he has given the gas to 186,417 per- sons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. W Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArlhur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all_other anaesthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. Asst of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove dcpot,Lindsny. ___________.__.______â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"- NEW MEN IN THEOLD STAND. The undersigned, having bought Mr. William Golden’s Livery busmcss on Frnu- cis street east, have put in New Horses and New Bags, and will do all in their power to retain Mr. Golden’s patrons and gain many others_ W‘CIIARGES VERY REASONABLE. Calls attended to day or night. MUNCEY 8t THOMPSON. Fenolon Falls, Jan. 15th, 1900. 49-1y. .,_-â€". BATTER DOORS. \VIRE DOORS ,J. T. THOMPSON, J11, ' CARPEN’JL‘ER. Jobbing attended to. wall Brackets and ‘ Easy Chairs made to order. - 'orkshop on Lindsay Street, Near the to LB. Station, Echelon Fails. M r to make room for New Fall Goods. For the next Thirty Days we will offer every line of at greatly reduced prices. This will too an Opportunity to) get some of the BEST @0003 FM LITTLE MONEY. .F. L. ARNOLD. Fire Insurance Agent, representing the Northern and Imperial of England. Who’s Your Tailor 9‘ If you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes? †‘ will tell you C . ' TOWNLEY-’ Be one of the number, and call and see what he is dOing for the Spring and Summer. His prices are right, consistent with ï¬rst-class style and workmanship. He makes no other. '2.ny he Invarl Just received a stock of that enjoyable tea, “ Salado,†of the following kinds : Salada Ceylon Green, ' Salada Ceylon Black, _ and Salada Ceylon Mixed. Also a. splendid line of Japan Teas. JAPAN SIFTINGS, 4 POUNDS FOR 25 GEETS. The best value ever offered. w. nnosson. , we annenvon to MAKE a All lines of ourljewellery and .. watchmaking business . RELIABLE. We are particularly careful in if the selection of' the gold of which we make our . ENGAGEMENT“ and. museums. nines. We appreciate the conï¬dence 5' placed in us, as shown by the very :5 large share of trade we have com- if mandcd for so many years, and 3-,; WE DON’T INTEND to lose it 7": now. . . = You can always rely on what you buy from 653. W. BEAU. THE JEWELLER, Lindsay. Editorial Stage. (From the Taranto Star.) As the evidences of the near approach of the Dominion elections increase, the case of the Mail and Empire becomes duily more curious. The leading Con- servative paper has created a scheme of' politics entirely its own,‘ in the midst of which it tears around to its heart’s con- tent, nobody outside thc circle of its trained renders being able to make head or tail of the proceedings. The ordinary man reading the political editorials in the Mail is as, perplexed us would be a baseball player watching two foreign- ers playing chess. The fact is, the Mail makes a kind of a drama of' politics, assigns roles to the. public men of the country, writes “parts†for them, causes them to say whatever will suit best, calls them an and oil, and daily has the hero triumph and the villain die to slow music. The melodrama is performed daily by the same characters, and is always the some except that the conversation is changed quite a bit to create variety. It is a patriotic melodrama, and al- though it is announced as founded on fact, this is but a display of modesty. as the work is purely imaginative. The hero of the piece is a “ political cracks- man †of‘ patriarchal age, who. having been found out, was transported for life, but, wanting one more crack at it. ~ceks to have his sentence commuted at the end of' four years. The play re- presents him as a changed man ; in fact. another man. He has not only abandon- ed his horrid past. but has substituted for it a new one. He comes on the stage disguised beyond recognition, and hymns are sung to his alleged virtues. A young man from the West, of‘ notable parent- age, who had been lured from his hap- py home and was four years ago bau- ishcd as a confederate, bursts on the stage in the second act disguised to represent his Father, who in‘ his time had been a popular ruler of' the people. The two, in disguise, give a song and dance, promising the populancc every- thing on earth. With the young ma , are four attendants, two to help him carry his father’s shoes and two to hold his father’s hat over him so that it will not fall and cage him beneath it. The villains of' the piece are the wit- nesses on whose evidences the men were banished four years ago. It is neces- sary to prove them villains in order to procure their banishment in turn. They are represented on the Mail’s editorial stage dressed as foreigners and speaking a foreign tongue, and sometimes pigeon English. They are shown sneaking about the stage putting poison in their own food,so wholly base are they. They have a lot of' followers or comrades. but all are shown as being in the power of' one small man, depicted as a terrible- ‘clmractcr, who walks on all-Fours and breathes hoarsely through his care. He also cats children, and the grass withers where he takes his course. Those villains are represented as scl- ling a lot of products grown by them- selves and others to Eigland, and the Queen is represented coming on the stage and offering to pay them for more for their goods than she has been doing, and more than she will pay anybody else. They decline. This is a great scene. Implored, by Her . Majesty to let her pay them double ‘the‘ regular market price for their goods, they still ‘rcf‘uro, and, pressed for their reason. ethere'is wrung from them the miserable udmisdon that they hatc tho peopn- and wish to do them all [-OSsiblx: harm. This is where the grand spectacle of zhn. day occurs. The berm-s rush forth, ln'I-‘Ill'; offer to accede to the Queen's wish s, whereupon the royal ‘uny ~\\‘00ll.~ m h joy. the villiuus arc mezzoi and box .d by the attendants and the curtain falls an a happy stage until the next day’s pe '- f'ormu'nco. The M nil. in f'uct, is having a haunti- f'ul time all by itself in politics. Stare~ ments are ascribed to Liberal leaders that were never uttered and which have been denied over and over again. The approaching campaign is represented to Mail readers as hiuging upon the question whether Canada shall ‘ac- cept †a preference for her goods in the British market, the idea' being cou- reycd that Canada could have this to- morrow morning, only that Sir Wilfrid Laurier declines to accept it for some reason connect-ed with the {hot that he is of‘ French decent and has a colleague in Mr' Torte whoâ€"(sensation)â€"was in Pariathis year. Sir Charles ‘l‘upper is spoken of as' if he were a sporless and pcrl'cct states- man, without :1 very long row of'f'amilior yesterdays behind him. Hugh John Macdooaldis spoken of as it' the earth would tremble at his coming, so pure and powerful is he, although he came during the last general elections and no special phenomena attended his travels. Hugh John Macdonald has toured Ontario before without causing earth- quakes, and we believe the people will think that the Mail is overWorking the “ Pa †business in connection with this middle aged gentleman. V But the Mail is certainly .having quite a time in its own toy political ï¬eld with its waxwork ï¬gures. 0-. Squeezed Out of Workers. â€" At Cleveland, Ohio, were married a man and woman on the 7th of' last month. The gills from the man to the 'woman in diamonds, pearls and other childish gew-gaxvs cost half a million. The pay for these tinsels, these things of’ ostentation and ignorance, was squerz- ed out of working people in tho shape- of proï¬ts. Would the world not be brighter and happier if' these sacrifich of‘ the Workers Wore put to Some useful purposeâ€"something that the workers' could enjoy? Now, mind, I am not Wrathy at- the man and womanâ€"they were only using in their ignorant, child- ish Way what the workers wiliingly pcr~ mitted themselves to be squeezed out of; The fault lies with the deeper ignorance of the workers, who fail to see the in- justice when they are the victimsof‘ the system of' private owuership of capital. That those who profit by the system do not study the right or wrong of it is not to be wondered at, but men and women who suffer by itâ€"they should at lcast be expected to study the reasons the workers are always poor, while those who do not perform any useful labor are wealthy. But when some one with a ï¬ner sense of justice appeals to the workers to read and think, the Workers at once look upon him as an eneniy and make life a struggle and a bane to him. â€"â€"J. A. Wayland. . __â€"_. O . An Offer Not Accepted. Huntington, the corruptionist, offered $700 aneuymously for an answer to the “ Mun With the Hoe,†something that- could be used to break the force of that great poem, and keep the stupid f’ellow‘ contented with his position as bmlhcr to the patient ox. He was afraid to offer it under his own name, and it was not discovered who made the offer until after his death. Deeds of' evil Sock darkness. “ The Man with the Hon †will live when Huntinglon will be for- gotten. It is needless to say that the offer was not paid, because no one with the ability to refute the poem could be louud. a“ A despatch from Vienna says that the manager of the Orphcum will offer ex- l’resident Kl'ugcl‘ $1,000 a. week for six weeks to lecture on the war in South Africa. it is now stated that a conservative estimate of' the loss of 1ti by the tidal Wave at Galveston is 6,500, and that’ property to the value of between $15,- 000,000 and $20,000,000 wasdcstroyed. At least 112,000 out of' the 141,000 Pennsylvanian coal miners are on strike, and the number is increasing daily. The men think that the cold weather will force the mine owners to come to terms. ' ‘uwcg , . ..A._.. ,_. ..< ,'.~ A to ~ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘.«‘1,",~;..,."/"Z l: .« ,.-...~>‘.- :r. .~ n... w o .;,.7~.,.,.-,,,bwbgwh,.. ., ,. , .r . .1 r... c z, . , u » ta,_â€<-r‘"¢ v 21 . .;:}é:.‘.:~:'2J-.g.£ 331‘ e- a. .. 3.35535) . . 5.3.“: ..,-~ .5,- ; 'Enï¬-Eifr’†ï¬kmfalfl‘mt’T'ï¬â€˜ - «:5. his ..,. . 05%,“ < V. .4... {$2, .,_«_.~. y.