Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 21 Feb 1902, p. 4

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we r“ “ s 32.? is»? v) 1 l; . . v y l r l r l ./ x l ; r ‘ flmw$>WW»WWV,-wvfif_ . J. Mitigate ‘ . \_ . VA .,‘;4" ' «w. *i‘f’Tit"“' _ ., V’J‘l‘f ‘m*.'>.wM%/VWW~ WWW ‘ l l r” i i ‘ i i i i ,M ‘ . . . ~ ".0 ‘ 0 ,~ - -. ‘a'e' 9_ iv, o. to- i 4' ' (m\ m\_ ((- 1. (mt (m\~:g§9\ 7%. I! \ ’mnfilml I ’%l . v 7 The Height 1 Of PerfeCtion: Our 250. Tea. ' w. suncovus. The Big Store. . .7" gags-gr . l l' - l ,6’ we ’ I as l .3. "i \- J ude It\i 1 4'- '0 “fivfifl‘l’ll " I “.4! ’ iv gt Jan'th - .l;;» u. "up ‘ ~ 2 V ,I "l ,t, " _. K .&.\.=. J ‘ .~ .1 u ~._» . ,, W4 1 page \\.__1 Ge‘,2é\vzc 335‘“ (\ -13.».-1‘ axvz‘ ,3 \ 1 a w -_ Flu thrusts. OQâ€"Jb ,W’e are receiving our annual supply of Stoves, Which will be found of the best designs and makes and as cheap as anyone sells them. ‘ Received a stock of Fairbank’s Scales; considered‘ ahead of any other make. ’ ‘ Appointed agent for the celebrated White Sewing Machine. A full stock of Sporting Rifles, Guns, Ammunition etc. Try one of Heard’s own Hot Air Drums. The price is low and they are great savers of fuel, besides thoroughly heating your whole house. res. HERB. OVED. business to the rooms over Miss Washburn’s millinery establishment. Street E.utran.ce---door between the two red stores. MRS. M. E. CALDER. I II ./ (I! ---., 1’ lllllSES? ' ALL CASES OF - pfiEAFNESs OR HARD HEARENG ARE NGW GURABLE’ . ssh” iiiiii’ iihiii bihiiéiitiiiv. F. A. WERMAN‘, OF BALTIMORE. SAYS? 7 BALTIMORE, Md, March 30, XQOX. Câ€"‘mt.’a.u:nz : â€" Being entirely cured of deafnessnthanks to your treatment, I Will now give you a. full hi.â€"-to ry of my case, to be used at your discretion. . _ i I About five years ago my right ear began to 5mg. and this kept on getting worse, until I lost my hearing in this ear entirely. ' ’ I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for three months, Without any success, consulted a num-. ber of: physicians, among others, the most eminent ear specialist of this City, who told me that only an operation could help me. and ever: that only temporarily, that the head norsos would then tease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost- iorever. I then saw your advertisement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treat- ment After I had used it only a few days according to your directions. the norses ceased. and to-(h r: itcé five weeks, my hearing in the 1diseased ear has been entirely restored. I thank you heurtil an be to remain Ve tru ours, _ ' y g ry FY X. WERMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. new treatment does not 1' nterf'crc with your us ml occupation. “mm” “‘1 YOU BAN GURE YOURSELF AT Hi’iiliiE “‘“é‘é’é‘tim . ‘4. n'-;. ' advice f re e. INTERHA'i'liii‘iAl. AURAL GLlNlC, 596 LA SALLE AVE, SHiBAGO, Ill... 9 Subscrihe‘fcr the “Gazette,” $1 a. yam ME I have removed my Dressmakingâ€" g i i Harrows. Any farmer~ in want of a good barrow should callvand see Robson’s Flexible All Shel Harmw, Empire ill-Shel llarmw, and liananuque Palenl Spring lunlh Harrow. These barrows are among the best on the market, and I will be sold at prices that Will defy competition. Thus. ROllSGll, 'Fenelon Falls. The Fcnelon Falls Gazette. Friday, Feb. 21st, 1902. EAST VICTORIA ELECTION; Mr. Heyd on the Warpath. Mr. Louis F. Heyd, K. C., the Lib- eral candidate, is now in the field, and has issued posters announcing the fol- ‘lowing meetings : Fenclon Fallsâ€"1n the town hall on Monday, February 24th. : Kinmountâ€"In Scott’s hall, on. Tues- ‘day, February 25th. - Haliburtonâ€"In the town hall, on Wednesday, February 26th. Mindcnâ€"In the town hall, on Thurs- day, February 27th. Coboconkâ€"«In the Oddfellows’ hall, on Friday, February 28th. At each meeting the chair will be is invited to be present. . Without in the least disparaging past candidates, we can safely say that East iVictoria never had one who went into the field with better prospects of re- deeming thc riding. Mr. Heyd is a man in the prime of life, and‘of" excep- tional abilities. He is a. capital speak- cr, thoroughly well informed on all ques- tions of public interest1 and an experi- enced campaigner. Above all, his pri- vate character is as’frec from speck, spot or blemish as that of hisopponent. Mr. Carnegie, against whom no Liberal has a. word: to.say, except that he stands prepared toâ€"at any moment, and on purely party groundsâ€"aid in turning out the best Government the Province of Ontario even had. not one to be had, and the unanimity with which those present at the conven- tion on the 12th inst. adhpteer. Heyd, after hearing him 81 oak, proved con- clusively that they considered him “the right man in the right place.” He im- prcssedz himself upon them as a " fight- er,” and if those to whom he looks for support will bestir: themselves in r the coming campaign as actiVely as he will, we have no fears as to the result. It is to be hoped that Mr. Heyd’s meetings will be well attended, especially by Con- servatives, many of whom will, we doubt not, be convinced of the error of their political ways. The‘South Airican Wâ€"dr. The war in South Africa still drags along, and the few thousands of Boers in the field are fighting away as obsti- nater as every, but we are told that “ thc army estimates disclose a reduc- tion of 30,000 men-outhe pay rolls and a general reduction in the cost of the service, which. is an official indication that the Been operations are regarded as well nigh at an end.” Some little time ago we- were told that DeWet’s “last gun ”‘ had. been captured. and that he himself. had narrowly escaped being caught; but he is still'at large and will probably give more trouble. " Several small Boar reverses have been mentioncd‘ in recent dcspntches; but about 150 British mounted infantrymcn were led into an ambush and badly cut up while-patrolling the Klip_rivcr, south ‘ofJohannesberg, on Wednesday oflast week. and was at once pursued. climbed a kopje, and, while the British were following, a heavy fire was opened upon them from three sides. They were in a regular-trap, and. lost t.w.c.of.- taken at 7 30 p. m., and Mr. Carnegie I Like other Lib- ; erais of the riding, we would have pre- “ ferred a home candidate, but there was .- A single Boer broke away from t a farmhouse that had been surrounded, g The fugitive floors and ten men killed, "and several officers and forty menewouoded before they'wcrc able to fall back under cover of a blockhouse. The infantry are said to be all fresh from home and unused to Boer tactics. Major Dowel], the commander of the force, was amocg the killed. A dcspatch from London on the 17th inst. says : “ Bishop Hartzcll, according to the latest mail advices from the Cape; has been preaching with great force to Dutch and English congregations on the moral aspects of the war, taking the British side with almost passionate earnestness. and appealing to the Boer soldiers, after their heroic "resistance, to be brave enough to acknowledge defeat and dc. .sist from warfare, which could not be justified on the grounds of expediency or necessity. The American bishop also boldly predicted the reunion of the warring races in South Africa, almost as speedily as the North and South had been drawn together after the Civil War.” The Prohibition. Referendum. A prohibition bill on the-lines of the Manitoba act has received its first read- ;iug, and a referendum on the bill will be submitted to the people on the 14th of October next. The provisions of the bill would take up more space than we can afford, and they have already ap- peared in detail in all the city papers. 'To validate thc act it will be necessary for it to obtain a number of' votes equal to more than half the number polled at the approaching Provincial election; or, as the Globe says, “ the principle of the referendum is, that prohibition senti- ment shall show itself to, be as strong as . Liberal or Conservative sentiment.” Tlius, if400,000 votes are polled in the general election, at least 200,001 must be polled for prohibition, or the bill will not pass. The Gazette has always been opposed to the liquor trafficâ€"tho ‘total abolition of which would be onctof sawâ€"and will welcome with joy, if it can be obtained, even the-partial meas- " urc of prohibition provided by the Man- itoba act. We are not inclined to agree with the many leading prohibitionists- who think the conditions of the refor- .endum unfair, because it requires too. many votes to be cast in' its favor; but, rather, take the reasonable View of the Toronto Star, which says :; “ I‘n requiringthe Prohibition Act to poll half as many votes as are cast in the intervening Provincial elections, it is only necessany that less than forty per council the qualified voters shall declare in favor of it. Those who-real- ;ize what a revolution this law contem- §.platcs should consider whether it would be safe tozgi've-to-auy: lesser proportion of the people. the right to. place the Province under such slaw“ It may be 3a simpleâ€" things to write a law on. the statute book. but this- law is one which it will be useless. to pass unless it be so well supportcdlby public-opinion.that it Twill be so well enforced that it will be finally accepted‘and permanently m_ain-. Ltained as the law of Ontario.” W Lyiidilhcihdf Necessary;. i G‘ur'ueighb‘or, the Bobcaygeon Inde- pmdent, says :- “ A head line in a daily paper states lthat'the Intercolonial is not in the mark- Hill. Ottawa.” Right you are, Smifi'. If a people’s _represcntatives, secure in their position ifrom one election to another, persist in acting in direct opposition to the~known wishes of the people, they ought to-bc incontinently hanged or beheaded. ,thn all other law fails, Lynch law is ,fa good thing to fall back upon. Ask the electors of Kansas City, Khnsas,_if it isn't. SOme time ago the authorities, for the time being, of that city were about to renew a. street railway fran- icise, although the» whole? people, with the exception of an interested few, ob- jected to the renewal. Remonstrances were in vain, as all the councillors had, it is alleged. been bribed;- so. on the night upon which public opiniOn was to be set at defiance, the Kansas City council chambcr‘was visited by a “ com- pact little phalanx ”'ofresolutc citizens, ‘who took with them a sufficient number- of'ropes to hang every mother's son of the councillors if they persisted in re- ncwimz thc franchiseâ€"but they didn’t. ‘In this Dominion the known wish of an overwhelming majority of the people will be respected, and there. is no likeli- hood of’ “an axe and block on Parlia- ment Hill " being necessary ;: but there ought to be in our constitution. as there is in Switzerland, some provision». for blocking legislation that would be inim- ical to the interests of the public. Canadian Cable in. hbcrdeenshire. The rembv-al of the British embargo .on Canadian cattle is evidently still a. 'Fedderatc, the affirmative. fjet. Ifit were,itzwould. be high time . :for an axo and block on Parliameu‘t ‘ the greatest blessings the world ever iissuc, but was crowded outsâ€"HEW. 1 week. 1 last. Saturday, and on Monday some of." live question, in Scotland, as shown. by,‘ the congregwon look It to the Rector-Y'- the following item from a recent issue- of the “ North British Agriculturistfi' a paper which has strongly opposed the free admission of Canadian “ Stores ”: “ A rather curious debate for a liter» cry society, ‘ Should the restrictions on Canadian cattle be removed ?’ was held in the public hall, New Deer, under the auspices of the local literary society.. The local papers state that there was a large attendance, and considerable interest was taken in the debate. 'Mr. Milne, coachbuildcr, supported the neg-- alive, and Mr. Godsmau, of Mains bf' Mr. Milne madc an able speech in favor of his side” pointingr out the injury that Would be done to small farmers and crof'ters who. depended mainly on their stock for a. living. were Canadians admitted; but Mr. Godsman, who argued mainly on. Free Trade theories, was one too- many for him, and in the end carried the cf... firmativc by a considerable majority. The great majority of those present. were not farmers at all,'but the vote shows how opinion may goevrn in this. large cattle breeding country.” The Globe of Monday last says: "‘ Mr. J. F. Junkin, Managing Direc- tor of' the Manufacturers’ Lilo Insur- ancc Company, is leaving Toronto for an extended trip, in which business’willl. be combined with pleasure. He .will. spend two weeks in Egypt and a month in India, where he will bc accompanied-Ex by the Indian Manager, Mr. Ellis. ‘Hc- will visit Burmah and the Straits, dull- ing at Penang and Singapore, and will spend some time in Hung Kong, Shangâ€" hai and other cities in China. He will also make a tour of Japan, and will call. at several points in the Philippines.. Australia and South Africa will be vis- ited during thc tour. The route has been well selected from the ‘point of view of interest as well as of busines s.” The above was set up for last week’s; M Personals. Dr. S; J. Sims 1th on Monday for- Owcn Sound. Mr. J. H., Carnegie, M. P.. R, was at the. Falls last- Saturday. Mr. Harry Robson left» on- Mendity: for Toronto and Owen Sound. Miss Funny McDiarmidis home on: aivisit from the State of Vermont. Mr; Garvey, of Bath, New Yerk, is; visiting at- Mr. Frankotz’s on ma- ler’s hill. * ' Mr; F. H. Magee was at Betcrboro’,‘. ‘on‘ business, from Thursday of last- week: until Saturday. Miss. Bonnell, of" Bobcaygcon, was; at the Falls over Sunday,, the-guestmfs: »Mr. Joseph Robson came home-from Burk’s Falls last Saturday,_and remain-- 'edi until W.cdnesday-.. V Mr. Joseph Moms, of. TOrcnto,-was..~. on avisit to.his relatives at the Falls-.- from Saturday. until Monday. Mr. Fred. McKcowa is home from» Garden Hill, and=will remain'tuutil the» family leavetfor the North-west. ’ Mr.,Malcolm~ MacLeod, whoâ€"is now: ’Messrs., McKenzie &.Mann’s. engineer-â€" ip-chief, was at the Falls, fourths-first; time-in nine years, from Friday last un- til Saturday. His address is .“ Canada; Northern Railway oflicc, Winnipca." Miss Dickson. ‘ correspondence did not reach us until; Thursday at noon, too. late for this; week’s paper. YOUNG PEOPLE’S U Momâ€"A Baptist: Young People’s Union has just been or-. :ganized in connection with the Baptist church, and'already has 25-mcmbers.. MissAgnes Ellis is president:. To Cure a-Cold in one Day- Take-Laxative Bromo Quiniuc Tablets. All; druggists refund money ifdt fails to cure E. Wt: Grave’s signature oucachbox. 254:: A FULL HOUSEcâ€"That’s what the curlers bad at their consortia Dickson’s. hall last Friday. evening, andiievcryono; programme, which was. exceptionally. ' “T j: ._ Too LATE..â€"â€"Our Powlcs’s Corner.» present was greatly pleased. withthc‘; ' good and well rendered; and. kept the- audicnce' highly..- cntortained. for. abouts two ; hours. The World Needs Nerve. Needs it in business, in the study,- in the- household. Irritability, weakness,vlsck of“ strengthâ€"the blue feelingmwhy, theyjust. tell youthat you lack nerve. You’ll use. Ferrozonc ?" My l‘ What an appetite you’ll: get. How quickly the color will return to. your cheeks, how buoyant you. will-feel l; Wo»l;.l oficourse- you’ll work, for you will; enjoy-it. That. is, if‘:you.will use Ferrozonc. It gives nerve strength, musculan endur.. once, audiovigoratcs the bmin-splendidly.. Sold by. W. H. Robson, druggistz ' DIVINE SERVICEâ€"Mr. Hull, of W57!- clifi‘c College, Toronto, will preach in. St. Jamcs’s church, Fenclon Falls. and; St. Peter’s church, Lamb’s settlement, on.Sunday next. RcvgllirrlllacNama’ m, the new incumbent, will arrive next‘ His household furniture came a". fig, gs - sews...”- xv“? wswwww~rm ( .

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