D TIMOTHY, RED CLOVER A“ ALSIK .â€" â€" ATâ€" THE DRUG STORE, FENELON FALLS. LOT FOR SALE. The west half of Lot No. 8, south of Bond and west of Colboruc street, Fcuclon Falls, containing a quarter of an acre. For terms, etc., apply to . MRS. BELCII, Lindsay street. â€"â€"l‘.ltf Punt ure. NOW, As HERE- TOFORE,IHAVE A LARGE STOCK OF‘UPJKLDATE GOODS.AT PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES. Steel Runners to ï¬t any style or make of Baby Carriage. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 14TH, 1897. Professional Cards. MUSIC. BOOTS, Instruction given on ORGAN and PIANO at moderate rates. For terms apply at the residence of Mr. R. R. Sylvester, “ Mary- borough Lodge,†Fenelon Falls. LEGAL. MCLAUGIILIN & )chIARJlID, BARRIS'I‘ERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Kent-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Ofï¬ce: Over Burgoyne St Co‘s store. The Fenelon Falls ofï¬ce will be open cveny Monday afternoon from arrival of 'train 5 from Lindsay. 36" Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLAUGULIN. F. A. .chtAnxm. A. P. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street,Lindsay. G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, tire. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofï¬ces: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, Ace. Of- ï¬ce, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. Jacxsox. MEDICAL. “DR. A. WILSON, -â€"n. 3., u. c. p. a 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Ofï¬ce, Colbornc Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. n. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University 01 Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons of England,t\lember of the Col- lege of Physicians d: Surgeons of Ontario. Ofï¬ce and residence on Francis-St. West‘ Fenelon Falls, opposite the Gazette oï¬ice. R. 1‘1. ~AVIAAS 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. SLIITI-I, ETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist. Graduate ofOntario Veterinary College. Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria. by L] appointment of Dominion 'Govcrnment. SECOND DIVISION COURT â€"â€"-Ol-‘ TITS-â€" County of Victoria. The next sittings of the above Court will beheld in Dickson’s hall, Fcuelon Falls, ON TUESDAY, .lULY 13th, 1897, commencingat 10 o’clock in the forenoon li‘ridav, July 2nd, will be the last day of service on defendants residing in this countv. Defendants living in other coun- ties niust be served on or before June 26th, S. Nsvtson, E. D.ll.\xo, Bailiff. Clerk Fcnelon Falls, April 29th, 1807. thanNcn. .\lr. Wm. R. Ellis having transferred his insurance Business to me, I am prepared to take risks on all classes of property .At Very Loavest Isatcs None butï¬rst-class British and Canadian Companies represented. Ba" F4111}! PIEOPERTX' at very low rates. James Arnold. Ofï¬ce and address â€"- CAMBRAY,,ONT. SURVEYORS. JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. B., . Conveyanccr,&c Residence,and ad- dress, Fenelon Falls. DENTAL. Dr. NEELANDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands that he has given the gas to 180,417 perâ€" sons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. 36' Dr. Ncclands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment. ____________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other anaesthetics for extracting teeth without pain. -4 set of .-lrl{n'cinl Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly Opposite Wood's stove depot, Lindsay. H. HART, L. n. s. The. “ Fenclon Falls Gazette†A SET or 6000 TEETH FORSIO. Gas is printed every Friday at the ofï¬ce, on the corner of May and Francis streets. i SI'BSL‘RIPTION 81A YEAR IN ADVANCE, l or one cent per week will be added as I long as itrcmnins unpaid. [ I i Advertising llntcs. Professional or business cantsuso cents per line pcranuum. Casual advertisements, 8 cents per line for the ï¬rst insertion, and: 2 costs per line for every subsequent inser- tion. Contracts by the year. halt year or; less, upon reasonable terms. l JOB PRINTING of all ordinary kinds executed neatly, cur- rcctly and at moderate prices. 3 fray-rider. l l R. D. HAND, land and Caledoniau of Edinburgh. to l and local anmsthctics for painless ex- tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all, branches of dentistry. Ofï¬ce over Fairweather k Co’s store nearly opposite the post-ofï¬ce, Lindsay INSURANCE. ’1‘0 the l’ublic. l t l IlE ROYAL CANADIAN lNSifllANCI-I Co. has amalgamated with the Alliance ‘ t England, giving insurers the security 01-; a $25,000,000 and the Same good policy. JOHN AI'STlNP’lgcnt [6' Also agent for the Queen of Eng-v (Tupi . l combined,‘5 t 3,0odfleo. SHOES, RUBBERS. YOU WANT THEM. WE HAVE ITHEM- GOOD- CHEAP.§ CALL AND SEE. GEORGE MARTIN. THE WEST SIDE STORE. HARNESS. If you want ï¬rst-class single or double light or heavy Harness or anything in that line call at NEVISON’S new harness shop, between J. McFarland’s grocery and Wm. Campbell’s dry goods store. TRUNKS AND VALISES kept in stock as usual, and also a good assortment of fly nets and buggy dustcrs at low prices. WTry a bottle of Harris’s celebrated harness polish. It is a new thing and you will be sure'to like it. Agent for Pianos and Organs. Fenelon Falls, May 20th, 1896.â€"14-1y BATTEN DOORS. WIRE DOORS J. T. THOMPSON, J11, lCAliPENTER. Jobbing attended to. Wall Brackets and Easy Chairs made to order. Workshop on Lindsay Street, Near the G. T.It. Station, Fcnclon Falls. Hmmmmmmm- Send a stamp forour beautiful book “Howto get; a I’atent"," What proï¬table to invent "and ‘Prlzeson Patents' .Advicc free. Fees moderate MARION & [WAR] ON, EXPERTS Temple Building, v35 3: James sn, Montreaf. The only ï¬rm of Graduate Engineers Lathe Domi- nion transacting patent business exclusively ‘VAXNTEDâ€"Young women and men, or older ones if still young in spirit, of undoubted character, good talkers, am- bitious and industrious, can ï¬nd employ- ment in a good cause, with $60 per month and upwards, according to ability. Rcv. T. S. Linscott, Toronto, Ont. LINDSAY Marble Works. slii R. CHAMBERS 31’s ' is prepared to furnish the people of Lind say and surrounding country with MONUMENTS AND llEADSTONI-IS, both Marble and Granite. EstimatespromptlygiVCnon allkinds of cemetery work. Marble Table Tops,WashTops, Mantel Pieces, etc., a specialty. WORKSâ€"In rear 0 the market on Cam- bridge strcct,oppositc Matlhcws' pa:king house. Being a practical workman all shculd l see his dcsignsand compare pt ices before pnrehasingelsewhere . RDBT. CHAMBERS,‘ North of the Town llal “ QUEEN VICTORIA; Her Life and Reign"â€"Great historic work: st-lls at sight to thousands. dnccs it to Canadians in glowing words. Easv to make $2 \ a week, some inuke twice thaf. Many make more in spare time than (luriugday at regular mapluyment. This i vrar‘s Great Scxagenary Celebrations are booming it. Books on time: prospcocus free to canvassers. Territory going fast. The BRAl)l.l-Zl'.lI.-\RRETSUN Co. Ltd. Toronto, Ont. Lord Dutl'crin intro- ' l l l “Bangor. Institutes. A last evening's paper reported that. the Collegiate Institute Board felt in« clined to reduce the fees by ï¬fty per cent. According to the paragraph named, these fees run from twenty-three to thirty-three dollars, and school books cost ten dollars additional. Why should not pupils or parents pay from twenty- threc to thirty-three dollars a year if they desirea primary university course? Without doubt, ninety per cent.‘of those who take such a course in the Collegiate Institute would be much better oï¬'with- out it, for they are very likely to be no- ï¬tted for such pursuits as those in which their parents have found a livelihood. and will be unsettled and dissatisï¬ed until they get some profession or “ soft- handed business.†If this sort of thing cannot be had at home, or if a profession appears unproï¬table, these young people go elsewhere, and we lose the strength and activity which would accrue to us as a country, if they remained with us. Instead of the Collegiate Institutes cut- ting down their fees they should put them up. From ï¬fty to seventy-ï¬ve dollars would bea proper ï¬gure to charge for the instruction given to a pupil. If the cause of popular education is to be furthered, then grant halt‘a dozen Col- legiate Institute scholarships to each Public school, to be competed for by the brightest pupils. We have too many Collegiate Institutes now, and the trustees in charge of them, instead of trying to ï¬ll them by cutting down the fees, should promptly shut up some of them and raise the fees in whatever ones are left. When we get too much sugar, tea, coffee, cotton, woolens, steel, or anything else, we shut down the mill. Just now, we are over~loaded with over-educated, yet halt-educated youngsters, who can- not ï¬nd any thing to do, and have simply been spoiled for working in the ordinary avocations of life. The prop- er thing to do is to shut down some of the factories, raise the fees, offer scholar- ships ns prizes in Public schools, and stop spoiling children for attending to the only tasks they can ï¬nd. It is our prising to think that men who have been appointed or elected trustees of these institutions so signally fail to un- derstand the signs of the times as to suggest the cutting down of fees. One would think that they had nothing in view but the ï¬lling up of the schools. They have many other things to look at. Our homes must be ï¬lled, house- hold work must be done; impulse must be provided for a generation, which must ï¬ll the vacant lands and explore the vacant areas of Canada. This can- not be accomplished by an educational pauper-ism, which provides something for nothing, and turns out a generation of weak-knead and hopeless nobodies. Of course, there are exceptions to such a general rule, but these exceptions can be found by offering scholarships in the Public schools. We are always willing to say “ God bless you " to those who win, but we as a nationality are strange- ly and almost criminally foolish when we encourage every youngster to toil up to the point of defeat, humiliation and despair. The majority of mankind was made to work, and only those who distinguish themselves in fair compe- tition in the Public schools should be assisted to go any further than the Pub- lic school. It is all wrong, and is doing harm to the country, instead of good. and is costing an immense sum of money. Let those who go to the high schools pay the cost of their tutelage, except in the instances where they come up to this entry way to the University by scholarship.â€" Toronto Star. - No Rum in Maine. The New York World says : There was a time within the know- lekge of the present generation, when, in the Pine state as elsewhere, 21 man could obtain a glass of liquor at leisure. Now, how changed! Nowhere within the borders of that eastcrmost common- wealth is a drop‘ of ardent spirits or malt liquor to be had. Not even in the hidden recesses of hotel bars or the mys~ terions bottled precincts of the drug store can auzht unlawful be found to gratify the thirst of man. i This is a condition of things the en- (‘DlIL’S of the Raises law point to as im- pending over New York. Let these on- croachments upon our personal liberties proceed, and it will be but a little while crc liquor is completely shut off in New York as it is in Maine today. There was a time when that rocky state saw liquor as free as it has all along been with us. Little by little the Prohibit- ionists cngraftcd their laws upon tho statute books, until what is the result ? That not a class of liquor can be had anywhere within the borders of Maine. This absolute triumph of prohibition is what the opponents of the Raincs l-iw discern in the future as menacing New York. MAINE vs. onto. Here are ï¬gures that tell their own story and convey their own lessons : Maine is thoroughly committed to pro- hibition. bin is a license state, ï¬lled with distilleries, breweries and tnyriads saloons. Maine challenges comparison of the prosperity of its common permit) with that of the common people of Ohio. In population, indeed, the latter state for outstrips her. Population of Maine, 661.086. Population of Ohio, 3,672,816. That is, Ohio has ï¬ve-and-a-halt’ times thc population of Maine. Never- theless, Maine has far more savings banks deposits than Ohio. Deposits of Maine, $53,397,590. Deposits of Ohio, $34,606,213. Thus, though less than one-ï¬fth in number, the people of Maine have more than half as much again laid up in the savings banks as the people of Ohio. Or, to put the fact in a different torn), were the amounts deposited in the savâ€" ings banks of Ohio divided equally among its people, each person would re- ceive $9.42. But every inhabitant of Maine would carry away $80.77, were each to receive an equal share of its deposits. Pity “away down East." if you will, because the open saloon does not: invite their workingmcn to spend their wages for drink. Take one more fact into consideration; that while twenty-nine states are more populous than Maine, only seven surpass her in the aggregate of savings bank deposits, and then decide whether the licensed saloon is friendly or opposed to the ï¬nancial prosperity of those who work for their living. 0+9- Air Line to Duluth. RELIEF SAID TO BE NEAR FOR. MANI' TOBA FARMERS. Winnipeg, Man , May 7.â€"-\lr. Rich- ardson, M. P. for Lisgar, wired his paper, the Tribune, last night as fol- lows :â€"“ Premier Greenway has re- turned from Toronto and Col. McMil- lan is expected in a couple of days, having gone to Collingwood with his wife. Mr. Greenway goes to New York. He paid the city a hurried visit the day after his arrival here ten days ago. The fact is the Premier has a big railâ€" way deal on with New York capitalists which, ifcarried out, will mean more to Manitoba and the west. than free trade. and all other conceSsions combined. lie is negotiating for the construction of an airline to Duluth on such terms as, if adopted, will bring joy to the hearts of Manitobans. For a guarantee by the province of railway bonds, the total amount of interest of which will not exceed a hundred thousand dollars annually, the company agrees to con- struct and operate a line to Duluth and guarantee a maximum rate of ten cents: per hundred pounds, not per bushel, on wheat from Brandon and even points to Duluth, a reduction of a dollar and thirty cents per ton on coal. and a reâ€" duction of twenty-ï¬ve percent. on all incoming freights. ’l‘he immense ad- vantages of competition to Duluth OVt’l‘ Fort William is that cheaper heights are available from that port, as scores of boats drawing twenty feet ply to that port. There is no comparison in the advantage of having competition to Duluth as against Fort William. Then when the Parry Sound Railway is com- pleted, as it will be this summer, than: will be complete competition with tin.- C. P. R. from the west to Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec and the Mar- itime Provinces. Men who know of ill-s scheme say it is the golden opportunity of the west to secure a complete deliv- erance from either railwav monopoly or oppression."â€"â€".llrmtrcul ll'itnrss. -â€"â€"â€" o-.â€"â€".â€". .. ._._._ 36" Come and see the fancy straw Saih - ors at Mrs. )chougall's. l The death is announced of .‘It--. Bridget .‘lclluzh, of Cltssic (il-rflilrk, l County Donegal. who was probthlv llu' oldest woman in the three kingdom» Mrs. McHugh attained the use of 113 i years on the 24th of December last. A Sunderland lady writes Dr. Nacho l- l that he had made her a successful {it after having eight sets of teeth made in Tor.)th and elsewhereâ€"43d obi. l l l l l l l l 4 l l 1 l I l l l t