VOL. XXIV. Professional Cards. P ,“ï¬fsâ€"sâ€" B. nacmvsn. ' BUGS ' . IIH~IIHCtI0u gI‘eII 0D and I MUSIC. .._.___ I at moderate rates. For terms apply at the I |residence of Mr. R. B. Sylvester, “ Mary- ‘ borough Lodge,†Fenelon Falls. LEGAL. MCLAUG HLIN & MCDIARMID, BARRISTEBS, Solicitors, Etc., Lindsay _ and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: APPLY TO Kent-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Office: Over Burgoyne &: Co’s store. The Pension l’alls office will be open every Monday and Friday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 38‘ Money to lean on real estate at lowest current rates. 4‘- l R' J' MULAUGHL'N- F. A. McDusum. EHHHEH’S Bu Hills"; ' A. P. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-ab-Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. At the Fenelo’n falls Drug Store. July 2nd, 1896. G. H. HOPKINS, ARR-IST-ER, 8:0. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest’rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices : No.6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of~ fice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON. W MEDICAL. DR. A. WILSON, â€"â€"n. 3., it. c. r. a 5., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 8: ACCOUCHâ€" eur. Office. Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. W LOT FOR SALE. The west half of Lot No. 3, south of Bond and west of Colborne street, Feuelon Falls, containing a quarter of an acre. For terms, etc., apply to MRS. BELCH, Lindsay street. --l‘2tf ISNAP! Only Two , Baby carrlages DR. H. H. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the Universityof Trinity Left. . . . College, Fellow of Trinity Medical . , 't ‘ School Member of the Royal College or Thebe go and are Surgeoiis of England,Member of the Col~ offered at cost. A genuine lege of Physicians & Surgeons of Ontario. bargain. Don't miss it. Office and residence on Francis-St. West F‘enelon Falls, opposite the Gazette office. A large and complete stock of everything in the furnlture R. DI. MASON, ETERINARY SURGEON; Honor Grad- line' uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- ronto,188~t; R. M. O. V. M. A. N0 TrOUble to Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Feuelon Falls. Housekeeping E- P. SMITH. ETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist} Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College. when you buy from L. DEY- Oflice : Cambray, Ont. MAN, the leading furniture dealer and undertaker. SURVEYORS. ~_____________________________.._â€"â€"â€"â€" S’EGDND DIVISION COURT ~01? THE“- County of Victoria. JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. B., . Conveyancer, the Residence, and. ad~ dress, Fenelon Falls. _____________.__.___â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~ DENTAL. W The next sittings of the abOve Court will be held in Dickson’s hall, Fenelou Falls, ON MONDAY, SEPT. l4lh, 1896, commencing at 10 o’clock in the forenoon Monday, Sept. 3rd, will be the last day of service on defendants resxdiug in this county. Defendants living in other coun- use must. be sen ed on or before :llg. 28th. He studied the gas 11nd†Dr. 001mm of 5' Nsvmox’ E' D ' AND’ New York, the originator of gas for extract- Bnlllfl- Clerk iug teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands - F that he has iven the gas to 186,417 per- Fele‘ou Fans, Jill) hm, 1896. sons withoutgan accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of V I i teeth inserted for $10. 3? Dr. Neelauds .I. N S 0 visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"-â€" third Tuesday of every month. Call early ' and secure an appointment. Dr. NEELINDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him for 27 years. Mr. Wm. E. Ellis having transferred his Insurance Business to me, I am prepared to take risks on all classes of property _______________.______...._â€"_â€"â€"â€"- AA: Very Lowvest Rates W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other anaesthetics for extracting teeth without , l pain. .4 set of Artificial Teeth, better than “- F-‘XRA‘I- PR01)ERTX the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood's stove depot, Lindsay. None butï¬rst-class British and Canadian Companies represented. at very low rates. ld., w H. HART, L. n. s. The “ Feuelon Falls Gazette†A see or coon rssrn rousio. Gas and local anxsthetics for painless ex- tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all is printed every Friday at the office, on the corner of May and Francxs streets. branches of dcmisuy. ‘ N IAIEAR IN ADVANCE . Oï¬ice Over Fuirweather 8: Co’s store S'BbiE‘crethopersweek will be added as ’l “"‘y °l“'°5â€e “m 9°9“°“‘°°* (“mm-V or o . long as itremains unpaid. 1 Advertising Rates. Professional or business cards-50 cents per Eine perunnum. Casual advertisements, 3 cents per line for the first insertion, and: 1 cents M7 ll!" ft" “"1" 5“1‘5°‘l“°m "15°" ' RB ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE 2:01. Comm“! b.“ ll": 39““ m†5"“ 0’. Co. has amalgamated with the Alliance ’95-“ “P0!) '“mubl‘ tel-“‘5' ‘ tEugluud. giving insurers the security at o =$.‘5,000,000 and the same good policy. of al‘. ordinary kinds executed neatly, cor- rectly and at moderate prices. 3. D. ll A ND. 'I'rq-riuor. INSURANCE. '1‘0 th e I’ublic. W Also agent for the Queen of Eng- i:.E t‘aledoninn nt‘Ed‘nl‘r'gh. Capi- 2...t .Iil i‘ Si" "1‘31" .., v. e. P . FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 318T, 1896. Tonourd lllllllilllilllPllHlllflN 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. Office in the McArthur Block. H. J. LYTLE, Manager. McLAUGllLIN d: MCDIARMID, Solicitors. :TEIEL I ’3' VEIVREENROPIEBEEFLEVEEIEHG gums ,. ,2 ' 1m ONTARIO Win: FENCING co.. L11; Piston. Ont-no. TIIE l‘IcDIULLEN FENCIN â€"AND-â€" POULTRY NETTING ARE THE ever made or sold in Canada. You want only THE BEST for your money. Don’t waste it on poor imitations and cheap sub- stitutes, but ask for and buy the Mcliullen goods. They are unequalled for FARM, LAWN or POULTRY fencings. No snow drifts with McMullen’s fencing. For sale by hardware and general merchants. General Sales Agents: For Ontario and Western Provincesâ€"The B. Greening Wire 00., Hamilton, Out. For Quebec and Eastern Provincesâ€" James Cooper, Montreal. 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 Boots 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. He quit en IN ‘YICTOBIAP COUNTY FOR Bum Paper and Picture Frames â€"IS ATâ€" W. A. GOODWIN’S, Baker ’tBlock. Kent-st. ,Lindsay. l ‘, lArtists’ Goods 8 3pecialty. l ‘ J0ll.\' Al'STlh',:lgent , l t usehine Kean“! “wasting and DVB have characterized the whole of the l a Row and litter of nine pigs. We may alcol Works Agency. ï¬l’lease calland see my 5c Paper. I perity, the many being taxed to support .â€"_â€"â€". (Front Reynolds's Newspaper.) We pointed out some weeks ago the real issues of the election in Canada, and we showed how the Canadian Cou- servative party had perpetuated its power by jobbery and fraud. Bud as is the record of the Conservative party in Canada, we did not, we confess, look forward to such a splendid victory as Liberalism has achieved there under the vigorous and enlightened leadership of Mr. Wilfrid Laurier. It is, perhaps, too much to say that the reign of cor- ruption is absolutely at an end. for the abominations created by old Sir John Macdouald and fostered by his Conscr- vative successors, die hard ; but certain it. is that a tremendous blow has been dealt. the corrupt forces of reaction and vested interests. The funniest incident in relation to the election is the charge of one of the organs of that political impostor, Sir Charles Tapper, that the elections were won by the Liberals by fraud. As an instance of the Devil rebuking sin this impudent charge (and which of course is absolutely false) is without parallel. The main result of the election is to turn a bi}.r Conservative majority in the Dominion Parliament into a minority of thirty-six, which is equivalent to one of nearly 100 in our own House of Com- mons. The great factor in the victory was the vote of the French Canadians, who gave their support to their com patriot, Mr. Lauricr. Now, this is a remarkable fact, for this reason, that [the French Canadians are Catholics, and that the Conservatives fought the elections largely by an appeal to Cath- olic feeling on the Education question. It will be remembered that that ques- tion came to an issue in Manitoba, whose Government refused to establish separate schools out of the local taxes. The Conservatives were for coercing Manitoba by the Dominion Government, in which case Manitoba threatened secession from the Dominion and join- ing the United States. The Conserva- tives thought they could secure the whole Catholic vote of Canada on this issue, but they have been completely foiled, the great Catholic Province of Quebec casting its votes overwhelmingly on the Liberal side, notwithstanding the pressure brought to bear by the priests and their emissarics. Canada has shown, therefore, as Ireland has shown, that men maybe good Catholics and yet politically independent, and we congratulate the French Canadians on reading that lesson to the world. The other great question, besides the power of clericalism, on which the elec- tion turned, was the tariff. The Con- servative party has built up a system of high tariffs around Canada which has worked fearful havoc on Canadian pros. the few. Canadian population has been almost stagnant. She has laid herself open to the attacks of American high- tariff advocates who have naturally adopted the policy of retaliation, and her hastily-started mills, artiï¬cially brought into existence by protection and without any population large enough to make an effective demand for goods, have in many cases closed, throwing people on the streets. Immigrants have found no work to do in Canada, and pauperism has increased. At the same time high-tariff legislation has produced the usual effect of corrupting the Gov- ernment, the rates of the tariï¬' being determined by the pressure which vested interests can bring to bear on Parlia- ment. Now, the voters of Canada have at length risen against the corrupt and rotten ring which has so long plundered their country, and a man'of honesty and capacity is at the head of affairs, with a large Progressive majority bo- hind him. Mr. Laurier will ï¬rst give all clerical reactionaries to understand that. while there is religious freedom for all. there will be no peculiar favors for any religious sect. He will next tackle the tariff problem. and while he cannot, in the nature of thiigs. intro- duce Free Trade all at once, he will gradually reduce the tariff, and try The Liberal Victory in Canada. lb“ Frown ‘0 Such shut proportions. Will not be further su‘uliczi bv jobs and subsidies in connection with railway corporations. as has been the use during the eighteen years of Censuva- tive rule. In short, there is now once more a fair prospect before Canadaâ€"a country which has been sorely tried. robbed and misgovcrucd during (‘nu- servative rule. We trust, however. that Mr. Luurler will not degrade himself an the outset by stooping to receive the “honour†of knighthood, as Loni Aberdeen proposes. o - ..-..____. ___ Accepting the Inevitable. Those who have been at home sinct electim‘ day may have failed to notice how kindly the result has been accepted by the beat elements of the CUIWOI‘VH live party. Returning: after a month‘s absence, which began in the afternoon of election day, every phase of it stems fresh and interesting to me, while it is an old story at home, and people h:th ceased speaking of the change of .‘liuis‘ try. If one asks a Conservative friend, “ Well, how did the election suit'you '.’" almost invariably the answer comes, “ First-rate. We had to have a change. and probably we put it off too long." Nothing shows such a good healthy cou~ dition of public sentiment as the willing- ness of a large majority of a party which had been so long dominant, to retire from power and purge their or- ganization of the . improper elements which were controllingr it. Certainly hereafter it cannot be said that public opinion in Canada is apathetic and in- caple of being aroused Another notice- able thing is the failure of anybody to offer to talk about remedial legislatimi. It is quite evident that the people of’ this country got a thoroughly sufï¬cient; dose of that compound of politics and religion, and when any one endeavors to start a discussion of what Laurier will do about it his audience is apt to tnovc away or stare at him in asto'i‘: ment. Nevertheless it is a live question, and one that may be embarrassing to the new Government. I have a letter before me asking for aforecast of the Government's poli.-_-:. I cannot claim to be in their couli leucc, but I will venture to predict thit Mr. Laurier had. and has, a definite scheme, for the settlement of this vcxatious proposition. It will be noticed that the new Government is partly made up of Provincial Premiers, who have [cog been unswerviugly devoted to the doc- triuo of provincial rights, and the other members of the cabinet have one and all been committed to the contention that in certain matters the autonomy of the provinces must not be attacked. Is it necessary to go any further than the examination of the records of the members of the Ministry 7 No matter what the contention of constitutional hair splitters may be, it appears as if a phalanx of Provincial Rightcrs has been organized to guard Manitoba from the attacks of' the Remediailsts. After the prairie province showed itself so venal as to elect supporters of Tapper, one might for the moment say that it; deserves to be afflicted with Separate Schools, but such a suggestion would be manifestly improper. This is not, and never has been, the fight of Maui- toba alone; it has been a fight for right and to safeguard our institutions. Even if Manitoba asked for Separate Schools now, it would be an unrighteous thng to grant them, for such a policy would render nugatory everything that has been done and shame those who had been the champions of Provincial rights and freedom from ecclesiastical control. I think the people of Canada are quite justiï¬ed in resting in peace and feeling reasonably certain that no political purâ€" ty, either in power or out of it, will ever again assume to be Champions! and henchmen of a particular religious dc:- uomin.ition.-â€"S. in. Toronto Star. » â€"o-o -â€"- Miss Millard of 'l‘cddiugtou, ling†has been in the business of buying and selling anything for which there is a market for about 15 years. She has dealt in horses, oil painting, insirunt‘ml“ of science and torture, playing cards, especially to impmve the condition of pearls, old fashioned firearms and fans, Canada by securing some kind of recip- rnc1l arrangements with the I'nitcd States. By so dolor.r he will not only sundials, carriage gates, lot-cs, hooky, autographs, coins, mr'laln, antiquczâ€"in fact, there is no end to the list. She enrich Canada by increasing what must once bought a church. and also houuht always be to her the most valuable and sold the gates of Hampton Court market. but he will also help to put an a palace. With the late li‘rnuk Marshall. end to the constant biokerings between ; editOr of tho '* Henry Irving Shah-- the United States and Camda which 3 speare,†she traded a sapphire ring {,1‘ She ha? a great fancy for curios, and her Cu' 61' expect that the Canadian debt, which l tion includes some very rare articles: i Conservative regime. : O ‘3 . o.,.....â€" my, .- . A W . l . M M‘.†M ,....._..,..!A ,4-Aon.‘MM~ A.~.Aw -. “AMâ€"am“. 'WW‘ “5. I, w p.».« .m. a V-. -AA-.A_