.»..-â€"s,wm.:- u....._.___. A, mmâ€-.. gumâ€"~14 - A ‘L'o‘ -:.-â€"-. -mney i H ATS Farmers ! If you want. i; r r l I l I i If it’s style you want, we have it. A visit to our Hat I 3 Department will convince you that for Style, Quality, As- , , sortment and Price, we should be called cheap, go to . THE HATTERS of FENELON FALLS . “ I I \ {t I, We have an exceptionally ï¬ne line of Men’s and Boys’ Twine in stock__ .3. l ï¬ne quality Newest Style Suits, every suit gua'anteed _ . and prices to suit eveiybody. PLYMGUTH’ . ’ts . . . BHANTFDBD l iii A visit to our Gents’ Furmshmg Department w1llcon- BED STA’B f vince you that Burgoyne’s 1s the rlght place to go for new a f“ L t. and up.to-date Furnishings. See our display on Saturday. MCCORMICK. r. > ‘ w B U E All at prices that will I I I . . 2, Three Stores_ I defy competttton. . ., ._-_. . .._._. -_ _ __.._. ‘ The Feuelon Falls Gazette. E A no u A RT s RS FOR a R a R The New “Song of the Shirt.†_ ’ Under the above heading the Chris- . _ ‘ Br d t tian Guardian says : . w e c “ There is a new ‘ Song of the Shirt’ S, ,l in New Zealand, under the compulsory - arbitration law. The employers of the (\@ 63/; sewing women in Auckland gave notice shortly after the new law came into ef- . ‘ - - , , - feet of a reducticn in‘ wages. Under In our ttnware department all kmds of Job wotk is the Old reuime of we woman who Sits D promptly attended to. in unwomanly rags, with ï¬ngers weary ' and worn, these women would have had See our Corn Planterâ€"newest thing out. :Surfcflflsemfut: t: lifg‘stt'ï¬'s \‘ ‘ C ‘ I; d e ‘ I _ ' . 1 a dingier garret. But under the com- We bought everything before the large advance whth pulsow mbiumion law ,1â€, 01,] .Song has taken place in hardware the last few months, and w111 of the Shirl ' is a ‘lost chord’ in New give, our customers the beneï¬t of it. Try us. Zealand. In this case the women s_ or- ganization called the manufacturers into court. They had to show their books and to make good every statement as to £03: their proï¬ts arhd the wages their women .' . . were earning. While this debate was proceeding in the rooms of the arbitra~ ï¬tion court, the sewing women sat secure I MWWWW ‘ in their factories, lighted and ventilated -’ § and safeguarded by the sanitary and ~ » other care of the state, and their work " went on. The sewing woman did not ' - have to strike, she could not be locked . - out, her work could not be taken from- b '* her, her wages could not be cut down, 0 x :except by the approval of. the court. % This is the new ‘ Song of the Shirt.’_†= __ New Yealaudiiswcnllcd .the “ Banner g i . Colony,†because in it. economic condi- I have removed mv Dress-making. no... to wt... they ought .0 i . 1 v , i ' :be than in-any'of" the othersâ€"nearer to ' bUSlneSS to the 1001118 Ovek LIISS what they will be everywhere in the f . 7 , ' ' . 3 V ' ' coming days of Socialism. Upholders . Vi ashbutn s mllhnety establishment. 0,. “capitalism ,, mm W New Z,“ a , 0. land is non progressive because the ob- :‘ g Street Entranceâ€"--door between sect m-vxew my“ the urcatvst gonubrthe ii 3 the thO l'ed Stores. 1 r a few at the expense oi the many. in ~ .-,,: ‘ltsearlydays attempts were« tirade by 3; APPREHTICES, WANTED... ' . ’. i'eapit‘aliSts to buy up large tracts oi’r‘land ; . ‘ V and hold them for a rise, but the would- ‘ M. E" g be “ landlords †‘werc taxed :OE-7ztlie face _ of that art of the earth. and went awa P _ y W howling.» against and disparaging the colony because they were not allowed . ‘to exploit‘the people; In New Zealand-~ ‘ _ there are no milliOnaires,‘ the‘ richest F . Lt mamâ€"who is far richer than any other f . â€"â€"being worth only half a million,» and L“ ' there are-no tramps, because any-.lab'or- _ a . . ' ' ing- man can obtain two days"work..per ‘ week. from. the. Government- at geod wages. The State â€"rthat is, the-people , . ' ' " â€"-owns the railroads, on which. school ,a. , Just received thls week an- children ride free. and which carry pas- ‘g. other 101-, of nice Baby Cm._ its‘engex: anld freight 303' :éboutdoneéthird , ,- , - . .xera esciarge in us ana :t-o ours. I “ages. that m‘e special The New Zealanders have not reached value- 'perfectiOn in the management of their A130 ExtensionATmbleS Side_ aï¬â€™airs; but that they are working to- ' b "1‘ ‘ 1B’ 1‘†’ .4 ." wards it. and setting an example that 0a“ ’5 mu ec 100111 buiteSr ought to beâ€"and in time will bcâ€"â€"fol- lowed by. other peoples, is shown by the ' t ' a ( -. L ‘ ' I; '. .i. . I carry In Stock a full hne gzlypdigpptation from the 0 Itstt m. of l’arlovtr Suites, Lounges, 7 _ __ 7 Chan's» Etc- Hang; Up His Sword. I Pleture framing 3" Spemalty" O'ur Sam's recent retirement from the If you {we in need of a Sew! Fanadlianttltrmy lipnvcd (lire Toronto Stizr . - - , 0 intro to o owing nnny rcmar's, :. 111g BI‘IEhlne be sule,and See" [which were in type for. but crowded s... K ‘ g ’ my Styles before buylng; out of, our last week-Ts issue :,. - " “ Colonel Sam Hughes has resigned A fromthe Canadian militia, andr-he means L._ it“ He doesn't say that there are three or four other armies Waiting for him. as sonic other Hugheses might do under ' ‘E u the circumstances. Colonel Iluzhes has i - ' ‘ resigned, and Canada regrets the loss aJ. l ofagallaut ofï¬cer, as resourceful ashe; l l .\ \\‘(_â€" ,, â€"~»_ ‘ Vt: ‘ is brave, and as straightforward as he Toronto at 7.5’) a. m. and arrives at... is strong in his opinions. Nobodyever the Falls at 11.45. and also viz Lind: said that,Colonel Sam didn’t love a say by the 'l'. V. N. 0033 steamer“ scrap. He is the kind of man that looks for danger. and then gets into the ï¬ring line and takes his share of it. , ‘ “ Colonel Sam was fortunate or un- fortunate enough to run against a rent- inary system. 'He forgot that the pace It endeared him to-his constituents, who admire a whole, and he spoke out. bonnie ï¬ghter. It did not endear him to the British War Oflice, which dis- trusts an innovator, and more particu- larly a colonial innovator at that. Then came his clash with General Hutton, and though Colonel Sam carried a lot of sympathy with him in his tussle with a beaureauerat, the public verdict on the whole was that he wrote not wisely, but too well, Colonel Sam's letters, which he says were for personal con- sumption among his friends, got into strange hands, and, and, wellâ€"they ricocheted. They helped, however, to make things even more lively than the war warranted in South Africa. Wherâ€" ever Colonel Sam went, therepwent the Hutton correspondence. It lay under his khaki jacket, next his heart. neatly tied with a red ribbon to signify danger.- Was Colonel Sam in Cape Town, out came the Hutton letters, and British ofï¬cers, with monocles in their eyes and ennui on their features. had to listen to Achilles’ wrath from start to ï¬nish. Did Colonel Sam capture a kopje and take Boer prisoners, he read the Hutton correspondence to the enemy, just to show them what they would be up against when they became an integral part of the empire on which the sun never sets. After a while the Boers began to recognize the Hutton corres- pondence, and would fly indiscriminately whenever Colonel Sam brandishcd the bundle with the red ribbon. The Hut- ton corresponuence did more execution among the Boers than lyddite shells. Armies that would not yield to direct attack fell back when Colonel Sam and his letters hove in sight. British Gen- erals, who could face an iron hail with- out flinching, took to cover when Colour-l Sam reached for his breast pocket. Even Bobs quailed when Colonel Saar unlimbered the Hutton Artillery, an'l Kiteh has been heard to remark that the horrors of war were nothing to the dreadful things concealed in. ColOnel Sam’s bosom. “ Altogether the l-Iutton correspond? enee increased the carnageconsiderably on both sides. and did much-to shatter: the morale of'bothv armies; Neither†Boer nor Briton knew exactly when- Coloncl Sam,.woul.d. make asreeoonais-v sauce in force, and’blotm-daylightnut-‘ot: both with his epistolary battery. The suspense was dreadful. Negotiations-‘- feause of thc- wnr_and ï¬gh'teir‘ out on the lines of thie- Hittton. wrrespondenco. when ColOncl Sam .went'bhek’to Ca’naiu. . Alter-that the war draggeddon a :year- or so, but the-heartwas our ofï¬tr. Tlie Hutton correspondence. aperva'dihg ele- ment of. daugerito «make both†sides sit up,» lmddeftdh‘e country‘s. Tlierstruggle‘ was less intense on -bbth sides-,~ been-use were actually on to forget-r the originah] 'both sides khcwv thht they and merely correspondence. If "Colonel Sam had .:'om.ai.-nedlin :Atrica-,.thc war. would have greatest number," not the enrichmentof been Show and smu'l’: AS ‘t '5' “mm day Colonel Sam will probably write a history of the Hutton correspondence in South - Albion, and .we are persuaded 4 that; along side cl ' it, then Gtieat Brier War won’t be in it.’l" The Nanette-Spend 'a Happy Holiday; . Out: neighbor,'the 1301;. Ind, is doing itsbést to boomahe ‘Kamartha .Lakr-s district as .a summer (resort, and 'thls-is’ what it said on the subject last week: “Before deciding on a place at which fto spend the vacation .thissummer, it is well to take into consideration the many advantages of the Kawartha Lakes. As aplace for camping theyhave no supe- rior.. Ber the most place, the shores are untouched by.maa.. Nature is seen in 'all her grand disorder,-there being‘no- where that artiï¬ciality which, to .the true lover of nature, often spoi-lsthe landscape.- Pure air and «water, each of which is a factor in choosing a summerâ€" ing place, are assuredain that region. 'l‘ransportation ocuhe‘lakes is amply provided by a steam-boat line plying be- i tween Lakeï¬eld and Coboconk, a;dis- tance of 7,0 miles. There is an addition- al attraction to the angler, as the ï¬sh- ing is very good. The gamey maski. nouge and black bassare there to re- ward the sportsman.†Intending patrons of the Kawartha Lakes district will do well to call and examine Fenelou Falls before deciding rosettle elsewhere. The " Cataract Vil- lage "has ï¬rst class hotels, numerous large stores, a short but wide river, with a lake at each end, running through it, delightful scenery, good ï¬shing and 1 other- attractions; and, in addition, is: l l I verycasy of access, as it may be reached dain by. the G. T. R. train that leaves of the slowest must be the pace of the ' Streets. 811.85; .Ti‘Scott, do, .3710 ; ;. lWihs .ldro‘ao, balance-rent to July 1st, . . leochsoth'er s‘to-ï¬ght: and bombs Hutton Morita. Cottages partly furnished can be rented for the season by applying to- .\l r. Thomas Robson. The fame of the Falls as a summit res m. is rapidly spreading. and the accommodation for- visitors will be increased as long as tho- supply equals the demand. Sudden Death. in Much regret was felt and expressed? throughout the village on Wednesday. morning. when it became known that Miss Annabelle Macniven had been found dead up0n her bedroom floor. about 8 o'clock, by her sister, who re- turned to the room after an absence of" about three minutes. Deceased had? suffered during the greater part of her life from neuralgia, which during the- past few years had been greatly relieved. by Dr. \Vil-on's treatment. but on the- 2nd inst. the family m0ved from their previous residence to a house on Faancis. street cast, and it is thought- she over- , exerted herSeIf. On Tuesday she had: a somewhat severe neuralgic attack and; felt unwellon the morning of her death, which is attributed to heart piailure... She was an amiable young woman, much» esteemed by all who were acquainted: with her. It is needless to say that; her brother and sister, her only relatives ; at the Falls, have the sincere sympathy; of the whole community in- their sad: and sudden bereavement.. Personals. . Judgc McIntyre, of Whitby, was atr the Falls on Monday. Mr. Wilbur Church, of Detroit, is at: the Falls visiting his sister, Mrs. Marks. DeCew. ' Miss Jago, of Barrie, is at the-'Fallsu: visiting her-.- sister, Lieut. Jago, of the » Salvation Army, and will remain for - about a fortnight, , Col. Hillgiflieï¬r and-{Mia William Mc- - Arthur left‘onrl‘t‘ed'aesday'lbr the Peace : River District, and maybe lrom home : nearly three months. vaaggi‘cnma. Fiéneldn Falls, July 2m). 1902..'. Council met at regular meeting, all 2 t be members .presen t.‘ ' Moved by MitalloGee, seconded ’by Dr. Glenlva That the more sign orders... for the fo lowing accounts : :E.-1l3roek, . safary, $52 ; F. Jackett, drawing gravel, $61.60;.Jehn Ingram, work "on; street, . $3.75; 1’. Cook, do., $2.50 ;-Jo'hn Shee- â€" hey, (30-, 54090; .W: L..Robson,charity to M5 Burley, 8779‘: Star, printing, $3", ; Gazette,-do’.~,- $23; :0; Marshalluwork on 312150; .A.‘ Terrance, .cutting weeds, 833; John Alexandeigr work .on: streets. , 82:50â€" Carried: By-law to regulate the closing of all i classes of shopswas read and passed in thc‘usual manner†Mu: Austin in the.- chain Moved by Dr‘. Gould, seconded by : Mr. McGee, That. the .clerkbe instruct-.â€" ed to have the above 'by-law advertised] by posters and insertions in the news-w paperszâ€" Carried" Po‘wles’. Corner; ; (Correspo-ndehce of The Gh’chle)‘ The State Sentina!,fa paper publish-F- ed in Dover; Delaware, U;.'S., says that! 'a saloon keeper had to fork ..over $6,000 ‘9 to the wile ol"'a .man .who was sO-badly frbzen liquor as to lose his feet and hands. It Seems strangenthat in’ this enlight-'- enedage-thcre are so many election pro- â€" tests and recounts and I spoiled ballots. There is something : Wt‘ongthat-shouldi be made right; A"-large drove-v of“ cattle of'all "ages - passcd through here last. week... They were all purchased? north of Fenelou.- Falls and were taken tooWhitby town- ship. We were told that $24 was the v highest price paid.. Mr. Thom Lane has recently ï¬nished a stone foundation under- Mr. Chas... Stroud’s' house, and Mr. R.,Colmer is . layingthe foundation for a large hog; pen for Mr. Peter Motl'at. Mr; Colmelr - has been bothered aud~l1iudercd by so. much .rain. ‘ Last week‘. there were 88 " gallons of." cream shipped from] Hall's Crossing tot Kinmount. Mr. John Gillis was back: to Kinmouuton Dominion Day, and re- ports that Graham. Bros. turned out: 19400 pounds of butter that day. Welli. done for Kin mouu t. Mr. John Moore has hadhis barn re-m shinglcd lately, andis now realv for .- dry weather. l‘he Statute Labor-is all done. but it'. does not go far enough to keep the roads . 1n goo] condition. Mr. and Mrs. Beacock . spent a few ! days visiting friends and relatives in, Cartwright. Some farmers in this Isaality cut: some hay this week, but it seems to he; ..... ._‘ A a while under the influence of.’ “u .' ,~ ,.“~‘-- ng‘.’ <