srignsz “WE HAVE THE FOLLOWING, WHOLE, OR POWDERED: Cinnamon 'Clovcs 331‘:th 'Ging-cr Curry Ttu-rncric Nutuleg _A)ID.‘_ Pepper, \Vhite, Bane-k and Red. QUALITY: “THE BEST.†‘H. J. IiiTL‘E. Fenelon Falls, Sept. I741), 1895. 5VSECOND DIVISION COURT ‘â€"â€"OF THE-- County of 'Victoria. The next sittings of the ab0ve Court will he held in Dickson’s hall, Fenelon Falls, ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8th, i895, “commencingat 10 o’clock in the foreuoon Friday, Sept.'327tli, will be the last day of service on defendants residing in this county. Defendants living in other coun- vties must be served on or before Sept. 22nd S. Nsvtsos, E. D. Ilasn, Bailiff. Clerk Fenelon Falls, July 16th, 1895. 1‘0 the Public. V BE ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE Co. has amalgamated with the Alliance of England, giving insurers the security or $25,000,000 and the some good policy. JOHN AUISTINPIfgeat. 36" Also agent for the Queen of Eng- land and Caledonian of Edinburgh. Capi tal combined,$l5,000,000. 1N SURANCED. )lr. Wm. E. Ellis having transferred his Insurance Business to me, I am prepared to take risks on all classes of property At Very Lowvest Rates None but ï¬rst-class British and Canadian Companies represented. 3%" FixRDI PROPERTY at. very low rates. James Arnold. Fenelon Falls Local Board of the Penple’sBuildingandloanlss’n, 01‘ London, Out. T. Robson, President; Dr. II. II. Graham, Vice-President; J. T. Arnold, Sec-’l‘reas. ; )I. ll. McLaughlin, Solicitor, Lindsay; F. McDougall, Vlaluator; Alex. Clark, Dr. A. Wilson, 'M. W. Brandon, J. H. Brandon, Directors. DO YOU WANT to Invest. a small amountcach month where it will be safe and yield you good returns in 7§ years? V__ CAN YOU AFFORD TO SAVE 2c. a day for 7:} years and get 8100 We. a day for 75 years and get $500 30¢. a day for 7.} years and get $1,000 I LITTLE AND OFTEN PILLS TIIE PURSE. Do you want to buy a home with the money you now pay for rent ? So long as the masses of the people do not save any- thing out of their earnings, just so long will their spendings go into the hands of those who do save, and rusr are the capi- talists. This is why the few own the houses and the many pay the rent. FOR FULL PARTICULARS call on or address anyof the Mom named ofï¬cials, Fenelon Falls. " â€"3‘J-lyr. 'l‘he “ Fenelon Falls Gazette†is printed every Friday at the ofï¬ce, on the corner ot‘May and Francis streets. Sl'BSCBIP‘I‘ION SI A YEAR l.\' ADVANCE, or one cent per week will be added as long as itremuins unpaid. :deort ising Rates. Professional ul' business cards, 50 cents per line per tttztlltlt. Casual advertisements, 2 cents per tion. less. upon reasonable terms. JOB PRINTING- of all ordinary kinds executed neatly, cor ' rcctly and at moderate prices. I E. D. HAND, ' Proprietor. l Otï¬ce: Over Burgoyne .lz Co‘s store. M tng teeth. . . . . . e or 00. 8 cents per line t -: the first insertion, and l me “"33 ’ f $8 no.» for every subsrqucnt inser-l Contracts by the year, half year orl Professiona’l Cards. MUSIC. Instruction given on ORGAN and PIANO at moderate rates. For terms apply at the l'lrcsidence of Mr. R. 8. Sylvester, “ Mary- :anlï¬ce borough Lodge,†Fenelon Falls. l ' LEGAL. MCLAUGHLIN I'll. MCDIARMID, ARRIS'I‘EBS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay l and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Kent-St, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls The Fenelon Falls ofï¬ce will be open every afternoon from arrival of train from Lind- say. REF“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest. current rates. R. J. MCLAUGIILIN. F. A. McDxanmn. ltl. H. MOLAUGan. A. P. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-atrLaw, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, .Scc. SOLICI'I‘OR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowestgates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofï¬ces: No.6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. or. ï¬ce,William street,Lindsay. ' F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON. MONEY T0 LOAN. I have recently had a considerable, though limited, sum of money placed with me for loaning on farms at Five and a-half‘per cent. Parties wishing to borrow on these terms should not delay to make application. Large amounts of funds, at slightly higher rates, according to security. In most cases aolicitor work is done at my Ofï¬ce, insuring gpeed and moderate expenses. Allan S. Macdonell. Barrister &c., Lindsay MEDICAE A. W. J. DEGRASSI. M. D., ;ORONER, Physician,Surgeon,&c., Ike. Residence, Brick Cottage, ‘v‘elliugton treet, Lindsay. DR. A. WILSON, -â€"--n. 11., M. c. v. a s., Ontario,â€" IIYSICIAN, SURGEON I; ACCOUCHâ€" eur. Ofï¬ce, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. 1â€"]. n. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University of Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons of England,Member of the Col- lege of Physicians lit Surgeons of Ontario. Ofï¬ce and residence on Francis-St. West Fenelon Falls, opposite the Gazette oflice. R. DI. DIAS ON, ETERINARY SURGEON; Honor Grad- uate Ontario Veterinary College, TO- ronto, 1884 ; R. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Fenelon Falls. E. P. SDII'I‘I-I, TE’I‘ERINARY SURGEON and Dentist; Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College- Ofl‘tcc : Canlbray, Ont. JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. 8., . Conveyancer, kc Residence, and ad- dress, Fenelou Falls. DENTAL. Dr. NEELINDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administerrd by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ‘ 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 SW. 38“ Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment. It. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other antesthetics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artiï¬cial Teal/t, better than Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay] H. HART, L. D. 8. SET OF GOOD TEETH FOR $10. Gas and local antestheties for painless ex- tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all 5 Actual cost .... . . .. {Loss at least .... branches of dentistry.) Ofï¬ce Over Fairweather I: Co's store pearky opposite the postsoflicc, Lindsay Jobbing attended to. Cost to country . . . . u,I Contractors’ proï¬ts. . 9 Loss to country, after Curran bridges, esti- Actual cost . . . . . . . . Loss to country Two revisions of Sheik’s Island Little Rapids Actual cost . . . . . . . . . . Unpaid claims . . . . . . Excess . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tay canal, estimate.. Actual cost...... Excess . . Campaign St. Charlesbfa'tidlimf West Side Store. At this time I desire to call your attention to my new stock of Boats and Shoes, which has been selected with great care. Prices and styles will be found all right. My stock of General Groceries is the best that can be pur~ chased, and my Teas speak for themselves. - Everything usually found in a ï¬rst-class grocery store in stock. Call and compare prices. I will please you. Produce of all kinds bought and sold. GEO. MARTIN. HOUSE, SIGN AND DECORATIVE PAINTING PAPER-HANGING, ETC. The undersigned respectfully informs the residents of the -~village and its vicinity that he has returned to Fenelon Falls after several years’ experience in the States as well as in Canada, and is prepared to execute, m 'rns nt-zsr srvnn AND AT nonsuars PRICES, all work in the above lines with which he may be favored. .W Orders left at S. Nevison’s store on Colborne street will receive prompt at- tention. (Chas. H. Hevison. Fenelon Falls, Aug 7th, 1895.â€"26tf H E AD QUARTERS IN VICTORIA COUNTY FOR. Room Paper and Picture Frames , $535.? lit“..“ï¬â€˜f.‘:::.°,:?..‘:. trill; â€"IS ATâ€" W A. GOODWIN’S, Baker’s Block, Kent-st., Lindsay. Arlists’ Gonds a Specialty. Machine Needles, Alabastine and Dve Works Agency. WPlease calland see my 5-e.Paper. BATTEN DOORS. J. T. THOMPSON, Jr., CARPENTER. Wall Brackets and Easy Chairs made to order. \VIRE DOORS Workshop on Lindsay Street, Near the G. T. It. Station, Fenelon Falls. Boodling Revealed in One Parlia- ment. Cost to contractors of > _ works built by Lar- kin, Connolly 8; Co. deducting fair proï¬ts $700,000 Senecal's commissions on Printing Bureau ' contracts . . . . . . . . . 50,000 mated cost . . . . . . . . 122,000 Government commis- , sion estimate of rea- sonable cost . . . . . . . . 160,000 430,000 270,000 Voters’ Lists under a useless Franchise Act Dam, loss to country . . .. Lock, estimate . . . 450,000 125,000 44 .000 200,000 90,000 246,000 343,468 contribn. tion recouped by sub- sidy to Lake St. John Railway 25,000 the lntercolonial, l4 miles, estimated be. tween $130,000 and 140,000 1,750,000 1,000,000 Total 1055 . . . . .. $3,219,469 New York is †Dry.†NEW YORK, Sept. 22.â€"â€"There is not a doubt that: the saloon people have cap- itnlated. A few saloons were open to- day to the friends of the keeper, and, in some instances, to his enemies, for there were a few arrests; but the saloon keeper who braves the law has found out that it does not pay, not only be- cause of the penalty if he gets caught, but because the people have become odâ€" ucated up to the fact that, if they do not want a long chase and possible pun- ishment at the end of it, they had betâ€" ter provide their liquor in the house on Saturday, and this they are doing more every week. It is doubtful if this city has ever seen a mid-September Sunday like tO-day. The heat and the excise enforcement combined served to make the 0in look like a desert or a town stricken with the plague. There was a large exodus from town, the steamboats’ which had not discontinued their trips carrying great crowds. The Bowery was deserted, and on Broadway at’3 o'~ clock there were counted just twenty persons from 34th to 23rd streets, and these looked as if they wished they were somewhere else. Few of them were New Yorkers. The rest of the streets were on a par with this, and New York appeared to be deserted. There is no doubt that. the police have won, and New York is “dry.†The better enforcement of the law was di- rected towards the Turkish bath estab- lishments. Until today these places were not interfered with. On Saturday afternoon ofï¬cers in citizen’s clothes vis- ited each Turkish bath in the city, and warned the management that; they must. not sell any drinks on Sunday. It. wasé useless for them to plead that they ran a hotel, and that each man that came in rented a roam, and that he was enti- tled to be served on that account. The police said simply that the managers did not have a hotel license, and that ended the matter. â€"-â€"â€"~-o Tried to Destroy His Sight. AUBURN, N. Y., Sept. 22.â€"Ever since ’ Oliver Curtis Perry, the train robber, A been in u morose mood, varied by freâ€" quent outbursts of violence. The most. desperate her he has ever attempted was committed on Tuesday of this Week, but, through the rcticence of the prison ofï¬cials, it has been kept a secret until now. He procured a short stick. through which he thrust two saddlers’ needles the same distance apart as his eyes, and then, holding this peculiar instrument oftorture.iu his hands, he repeatedly prodded his eyes with the sharp points. A keeper heard the commotion in Per- ry’s cell, and he promptly put a stop to the horrible self-punishment. , He took the weapon away from the crazed man, and reported the case .to his superior oflicer. Prison Physician Sawyer at- tempted to make an examination of the bleeding, lacerated eyes, but Perry was obstinate and would not submit. Ho begged to go to the hospital, but the prison authorities would not listen to that. proposition. They knew of Perry’s desire to enjoy the comparative freedom of the hospital, where his chances of escaping would be materially increased. So, instead of being taken there, Percy was removed to one of the isolated cells in the new building. Here he was put under the influence of chloroform, and a careful examination of the injuries was made. It was discovered that the needle had not yet destroyed the sight of either eye. but the unruly patient resists treatment so persistently that in- flammation may develop, and the result will probably be blindness of one or both eyes. I A Skeleton Found. HAMILTON, Sept. illâ€"While exca- vating for a cellar near 52 )Iagill street. one of Contractor Faulkner's men yes- terday morning dug' up a human skel- eton with a fractured skull. Alfred Green, the workman who unearthed the bones, stuck his pick into the skull about two feet below the surface. Cm» tinuiag, he found the Other bones buried in the sandy loam, and putting' them to. :ether formed a complete skeleton. The frame was that of a person of large stature. Coroner White's examination showed that the remains belonged to a luau. 'l‘hc j.ws were big and square. The skull was ofordinary size, the fore- head low and receding, and the back of the head well devel rped. Over the left l mm...â€" FENE‘LON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27TH, 1895. police effort to day towards a: temple was a fracture of long standing. The bones were dry and devoid offlo‘h. Interment, it was concluded, must. have taken place from six. to ten years ag-n A few years ago the locality, which is near Vinegar Hill, was a resort for cockï¬ghtcrs and such like, and it is . thought that the man was knocked on the head at some sporting bout and quietly laid away. The lot was till a few years ago owned by Mrs. James Jones, DcGNSSI street, Toronto. Ni inquest will be held and the bones will be interred. The Fury of Vesuvius. FOUR FIERY STREAMS ARE NOW I‘LOW‘ ING FROM ITS CRATI-IR. Since the renewed activity of the, volcano Vesuvius changes made by the volcanic forces have become very evi. dent. Two new eruptive craters have. _ opened up on~ the northwestern side of the cone below the former summit. At ï¬rst only a little lava flowed from the new rents. During the ï¬rst week of July one of these rents increased in size until it reached to the foot. of the cinder cone. From this crevice a lava stream of nearly 200 feet wide flows with great rapidity toward the hills of Crocella, and has by this time crossed the road from the observatory to the station of the cable railway. A heavy rain of ashes accompanied this eruption, and has continued ever since. A great number of sightsecrs are coming to Naples to admire the wonderâ€" ful spectacle of Vesuvius in activity. The last report‘s announce that. four ï¬ery streams are now descending the sides of the volcano, of which the One flowing towards Rosina. has already deâ€" stroyed two vineyards. Prof. l’olmieri of the meteorological observatory had two immense stone walls built for lllu protection Ofthc buildings. It is feared. however, that this protection will be too feeble to withstand the enormous pres- sure brought upon it by the stream of lava which is overflowing the crater at that point with a thickness of at least 20 feet. The heat is now almost on bearable. The largest eruptive crater has formed in the †Atrio del Ottvallo.†the saddle between Vesuvius and the, Somme. The lava flow from this orator has formed by this time a large like between the Cello dol Savatore and tho military rifle rouge. Next to this new crater two cones are forming and stead- ily rising. 'l‘hey emit immense sheaves of flames, which cast a red glow over all the surroundings. A peculiar phe- nomenou, never before observed, is the whistling sound emitted by one of the craters, resembling a locomotive whistle. It seems that. the seismic forces are not, particularly active this year. A new crater has formed on the eastern side of the Etna and further volcanic eruption; are announced from Stromboli.â€"â€"â€"(,.'m-. Philadelphia Record. »- ~ -â€"--â€"-o-o ~ ~- â€" Cuban Affairs. Cuban affairs are followed closely in England, where letters from the island are constantly appearing in the press. The situation is regarded as critical for the Spanish Government, since the mon- archy cannot survive the loss of Cuba. or even the grant of home rule to Lllt'. island. Marshal Campos is supposed to be making a tremendous ctl‘ortto overrun the country with troops and stamp out the rebellion quickly. The ï¬nancial difï¬culties in Madrid are great and render the raising of a new Cuban loan almost impracticable; yet that. is the only method of paying for the enor- mous expenses of the war. One phaw. of the Cuban question is never discussed publicly in England; that is, the rela- tions of the island to the United Status- the only market where its chief crop- cao be sold. In private this branch of the subject is not neglected. One of the best known Colonial Got’el‘nm‘a in the British service is freely quoted as expressingr his surprise that the Univ-«l States does not adopt a policy which will lead to the annexation of Cuba. The Irmllon Globe prints a (lo-patch front Shanghai, swing that the Bl'lll‘ll Cl‘llly't'ï¬ Acolas. Spartan. liinhow and Cumming ;t'-"§C'lllbll:tI unexpectedâ€; at the. outer an Image today and subquentiy pi'.)C-":"Ic‘tI to You; 'I‘ce Kin: river. The a. moment r: is made in cons queue:- of threats havin; bran male aminst rOI'L'ljfllL'l‘S l‘t':ltll;-;_’ l2: (lit) illugriur "f :Im Empire. The Chin-’4! “ulcers. the de- spatch odds, are urenlv excited my: the action taken by Great Britain fur the protection of her suljccts.