.t, ï¬g,“de gallï¬ @MMID. VOL. XXIV. FENELON FALLS, ONTARI o, FRlDAY, APRIL 10m, 1896. No. 8. RE GLDYEH, TIMOTHY, ALSIKE, FOR SALE AT THE FENELON FALLS DRUG STORE. ii. .I. LYTLE. March 12th, 1996. SECOND DIVISION COURT â€"OF THE-â€" County of Victoria. 'Ae next sittings of the above Court will be held in Dickson‘s hall, Fenelcn Falls, ON TUESDAY, APRIL 28th, 1896, c miiiienciugat 10 o’clock in the forenoon Frl'lzl", April 17th, will he the last day of service on defendants residing in this conntv. Defendants living in other coun- tics must be served on or before April 11th_ S. Nsvrsog, E.D.HA.\'I), Bailiff. Clerk [[F‘euelon Falls, Feb. 24th, 1896. '1‘0 the Public. HR ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE Co. has amalgamated with the Alliance of England, giving insurers the security or $25,000,000 and the same good policy. JO IIN AUSTIN, Agent W Also agent for the. Queen of Eng- 'and and Caledonian ofEdinburgh. Capi a1oombined,$45,000,000. IN S URANCE. Mr. 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. IS" FAlirVI I’ROPERTY at very low rates. James Arnold. Fenclon Falls Local Board of the Peuple'sfluilding and loan Ass’n, or London, Ont. T. Robson, President; Dr. FIJI. Graham, Vicc~Prcsidcnt; J. '1‘. Arnold, Sec-Trens. ; M. II. McLaughlin, Solicitor, Lindsay; F. McDougall. Valuator; Alex. Clark, Dr. A. Wilson, M. W. Brandon, J. H. Brandon, Directors. ' DO YOU WANT to invest a small amonntcach month where it will be safe and yield you good returns in 75 years? CAN YOU AFFORD TO SAVE 2c a day for 75 years and get $100 16¢. a day for 7; years and get $500 We. a day for 75 years‘and get $l,000 I LITTLE AND OFTEN PILLS THE 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- , Professional Cards. MUSIC. .___..._._-â€"__â€"â€" MISS B. IIAONIVEN. Instruction given on ORGAN and PIANO at moderate rates. For terms apply at the residence of Mr. R. B. Sylvester, “ Mary- borough Lodge,†Fenclon Falls. LEGAL. MCLAUGHLIN & MCDIARMID, ARRISTEBS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fenslon Falls. Lindsay Ofl‘ice: Kent-St., oppoiiite Market. Fenelon Falls Ofï¬ce: Over Burgoyne 6r Co’s store. The Fcnelon Falls ofï¬ce will be open every Monday and Friday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 38" Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. Mchoan. F. A. McDuamn. M. H. McLAUGan. A. P. UEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chancery,KentStreet,Lindsay. * G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &c. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Otlices: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. MOORE A: JACKSON, ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, 82c. Of- fice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. Jacxson. MONEY TO LOAN. I have recently had a considerable, though limited,sum of money placed with me for loaning on farms at Five and a-halfper 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 1olicitor work is done at my oï¬ice,insuriug peed and moderate expenses. Allan S. Macdonell, Barrister &c., Lindsay MEDICAL. DR. A. WILSON, â€"-u. 3., u. c. r. a 9., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON c ACCOUCH- enr. Ofï¬ce. Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. H. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University oi Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or ' Surgeons of England,Member ot the Col- lege of Physicians & Surgeons of Ontario. Ofï¬ce and residence on Francis-St. West Fenelon Falls; opposite the Gazette ofï¬ce. R. M. MAS 0N, ETERINARY SURGEON; Honor Grad- uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- ronto,1884; R. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Fcnelcn Falls. E. P. S lVIITH, ‘fETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist; Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College. Ollice : Canlbray, Ont. SURVEYORS. JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. B., . Conveyanccr,&:c Residence, and ad- dress, Fenelon Falls. DENTAL. Dr. NEELINDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- thing 0m 0f U19“ “limingsr 3â€â€œ 8° 10119: . ized air) administeer by him for 27 years. will their spendings go into the hands of those who do save, and war 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 any of the above named oilicials, at Fonclon Falls. â€"39-lyr. __ W - , 9 The “ Fcnelou Falls Gazette ‘ is printed every Friday at the otlice, on the corner of May and Francis streets. BEBSCRII‘TION Si A YEAR IN ADVANCE, or one cent per week will be added as long as itrcmuins unpaid. Advertising Flutes. 3 Professional or business cards. 50 ccntsi per line pcrnnnum. Casual ldrcrtisemrnts,l l I cents per line for the first insertion, and, 3 «pt: per line for every subsequent inscr-i tion. Contracts by the year, half year or llc studied the gas under Dr. Colton. of New York, the originator of gas for extract-l iug teeth. 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. a? Dr. Ncclands visits Fencion Falls (McArthur 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 anmsihetics for extracting teeth withont' pain. A set of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average. for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood's stove depot,Lindsay. i H. HART, L. D. S. TORONTO llllllllllllllfllll’lllllllllll Authorized Capital, $2,500,000. Subscribed Capital, $630,000. J. K. Kerr, Q. 0., President. E. J. Davis, M. P. P., Vice-President. Geo. Dunstan, General Manager. Fenelon Falls Branch. Accounts opened and deposits received. Interest allowed at highest current rates in the SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Drafts issued on all points. Exchange bought and sold. Notes discounted. Special attention given to the collection of sale and other notes. Ofï¬ce in the McArthnr Block. H. J. LYTLE, Manager. MCLAUGHLIN A- McDmnmn, Solicitors. IF YOU llllN’T WANT ., FIIHNITDRE DDN’T BUY IT. \Vhen you do want it, L. Deyman has the latest designs, the lowest prices and a complete stock. Our Baby Carriages will arrive in a few days and will be sold at your own price. Watch for them. L. DEYMAN, The Leading Undertaker and Furniture Dealer of Fenelon Falls. MISS NELLIE SLATER, DRESSMAKER. Work done by the day or at home, BOND STREET EAST. 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 purâ€" 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. In par an I IN VICTORIA COUNTY FOR Room Paper and Piclue Frames -â€"IS ATâ€" w. A. GOODWIN’S, What Shall Our Young Men Do. One of the puzzling problems of the day is how our young men are going to make a living. What; employment is there for them? Once a good eduea- tion would procure its possessor a fairly remunerativo employment, and the pos- sessor of a degree from a university would command a position that lifted him up high in the social scale, and put him into a desirable pecuniary position. This is all changed now, a university honor man is often glad to take a beg- garly sum for his services, that in other days would hardly be accepted by an ordinary mechanic. Any clerkship or school offering three or four hundred dollars a year is eagerly sought by 80 or 100 applicants the moment it is known to be vacant, and hundreds of men in the ranks of the various profes- sions can barely make both ends meet by their professional earnings. Speak- ing on this subject the Canadian Elec- trical News for March says 2â€"â€" Every department appears to be over- crodwed, and the problem of a choice of a career is becoming more and more difï¬cult of solution. The rapid devel- opement of the past few years in the application of electricity has turned the attention of parents and young men in this direction. and there appears to bca widespread belief that this is the most promising: ï¬eld for the future. Mr. Henry Flov, in the Engineering Mas:- ozine for January, in an article entitled “ Are we Educating too many Electric- ians?†gives the result of an extended inquiry among graduates of engineering schools as to the extent to which stu- dents of electricity graduating from these schools have been successful in , obtaining employment at rcmuncrative salaries. Referring.r to these enquiries, Mr. Floy sums up the matter thus :â€" Coosidering the table of total results, which may. be taken as a fair indication of the recent graduates in electrical en- gineering, it. will be found that while a’ greater per cent. of the graduates in electrical engineering secure employ- ment, as compared with other graduates, yet the fewest. relatively, secure em- ployment in the line of work for which they had studied, that is. in order to get employment they had to take posâ€" itions in which their electrical knowl- edge did not count.†Many get em- ployment in electrical and civil engineer- ing through the influence of friends. Everything is over done. The last batch who passed the civil service ex- aminations must. in the course of things. wait till the last decade in the 20th cen- tury before their turn comes. There are thousands of teachers who will never get schools. All the professions are over-flowing. The drug shop used to be regarded as a fat thing, but that also is overdone. For every vacant clerk- ship there are at least three hundred ready to gobble it. There is a long list of certiï¬cated inspectors of schools anxiously waiting, like Wilkins Micaw- her, for someone to drop out or for something to turn up. It has been. cus- tomary when everything else failed, or when the person tailed in everything else, to golinto life or ï¬re isurance, but this ï¬eld no longer furnishes standing room, except to stand and starve. Judg- ing from the numerous quack medicines in the way of speciï¬cs for heart failure. catarrh, kidney troubles and all other ailments which affect humanity, one would judge that a whole army of dis coverch had invaded this interesting ï¬eld. The conclusion of the whole matter seems to be, that the day is over for getting large salaries without taking cl? ooe’s kid gloves, and that a good mechanical trade or muscular power to do a fair day's work of unskilled labor will be more likely to enable a man to earn a living than the so-called respect- able clerkships and professions. 'I‘hc mistake of necessarily connecting educa- tion with professional life, or that physical labor and ignorance must necessarily go together, has done untold mischief in the world, and it is time the mistake was fully corrected. Those who are not content with this must patiently wait till the new woman comes along to earn their bread for them. -9". A 19-year-old boy in London has just been ï¬ned 850, with the alternative of two months in jail;for falsely repre- A Fearful Weapon. THE GUN INVENTED BY A BIONTREU: MAN CAPABLE or FIRING 260,000 snors A MINUTE. New York, April 6.â€"-â€"~Tll0 Herald says: A native of Montreal has invented a gun which he conï¬dently believes. when it it is adopted by all nations, will make war impossible. It all that is claimed for it be true, this gun is certainly the most remarkable piece of ordnance in existence. A description of the piece is furnished by M. Som- mery of Montreal, an agent of the in- ventor, who recently returned from Washington after giving an exhibition of the weapon before M. Patcnotrc, the French Embassador, and the military attache of the Embassy. The most rc- markable feature of the gun is that no explosive is used and that its missiles are projected by an agency the nature of which is a profound secret, which, without noise or smoke, is' capable of discharging the almost incredible num- ber of 260,000 shots a minute. The gun in general appearance resembles a ï¬eld piece of the modern type. A little forward of the breach is a funnel, down which the bullets are passed into the gun as fast as two men can pour them. Underneath the gun and between the wheels is placed the mechanism by which the propulsive force is generatch The presence of the pressure guagc might be taken as an indication that compressed air is the mysterious power used. The mechanism is put into ac- tion by simply giving a slight oscillating movement. to the trail by means of a lever worked by two men, the trail being geared direct to the mechanism. The power of the weapon seems to vary greatly with the length of the piece, one two feet long giving a muzzle velocity of 864 feet a second, while for the nine- foot form the amazing velocity of 3,752 feet is claimed, the bullets in each case being half an inch in diameter. The inventor insists that his principle can be applied to cannon of the largest size. 0. Over a Precipice. London, April 6.â€"What might have. proved a most serious accident occurred to-day on the railway from Llanbcris at the foot of Mount Snowdon, the highest mountain in Wales, to the top of that mountain. The railway was inaug- urated to day. The ï¬rst train reached the summit without mishap, but, when returning. the engine jumped from the track on that part of the line where the grade was steepest. The engine went over a precipice and was smashed to pieces. As it left the rails the coupling broke, and it was this alone that pre- vented a frightful accident. The en- gineer and stoker jumped from the engine and escaped. The cars started down the grade at a tremendous speed, but they were supplied with poworful brakes, which checked their speed and ï¬nally brought- them to a standstill. In the meantime some of the persons aboard the train lost their heads, and without hccding the warnings given them jumped from the cars. They were all severely injured. A second train that was descending the moun- tain crashed into the rear of the ï¬rst train and smashed a car into kind- ling wood. Just prior to the crash the occupants of the car had quittod it. - ‘â€"o. o 7 -~..._.. Frillbwed by Wolves. The Buckingham Post says: Mr. A. Page want through a thrilling ex- perience recently, while in one of Mac- lareu's lumber shautics. under the fore- mauship of Mr. J. Miller. One ex- tremely cold morning Mr. Page, with a number of other tcamsters, was drivin: alonga road with a big load of logs when a bloodcurdling sound greeted his cars. Shortly after, a large (leer emerged from the thick forest and with a bound attempted to leap cvcr r. sleigh, but its strength havingr been abort: spa-ct, the poor animal sank exhausted. and rested just across the load of logs. The deer was being pursued by a pack of hungry wolves. Mr. I’ugc called to his companions, who were soon: ‘IISIIUICC‘ behind. The walrus by this time had arrived, howling and ï¬ghting. JpOD the scene, and with hon-cs. tcamstt-r and deer, no doubt the ravenous pack ex- pected a royal feast, but the rim-4y ap- AA‘AAA'AA- AAAAAAAAALAA'A‘"-‘mw as. .. .< i“ “- 2am. He had been reading "The cued the beasts, and they >(‘Jlupfl’l'lfll off .advemures of Sherlock Homes." and in through the woods. After recovering from his fright. Mr. Page tom. an use and dispatched the deer, and it was found that the hind (mortars bud been eaten away by the wolves. less. upon reasonable terms. OF G $ , SET . 000 TEETH FOR 10- Gas“ Artists’ Goods 3 S ccialt . JOB PRINTING and local anaesthetics for painless ex-i p y .I all ordinary kinds executed neatly, cor- rncting. Sttisfaction guaranteed in all “ Machine Needles, Alabuï¬ne and Dye I rurly and at moderate prices. branches of den'IS‘U-fl Works Agency. 3,0,HAND, ionic: over Fuirwcather & 00': store Wider. nearly opposite the post-003cc, Lindsay fll’leau calland see my 5c.Paper. the hopes of equalling him had had cards printed with the false dc-ivznation, but was arrested on his ï¬rst trying to Baker'smock,Kenbstumndmy, ,senting himself to be a detective scr- , pearaccc of the other twain-inn» fright- investigate a case. A AmAMAAAAAAAAA‘AAA A - AAA--- “AAAAAAAAAA‘MAWAAAA‘AAAA‘AAAAA‘AA‘A‘ - A A A A A A