Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 21 May 1897, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ms: SEEDS!§ l I __ ' TIMOTHY, RED CLOVER ALSIKE, _AT_ THE ORIIG STORE, FENELON FALLS. LOT FOR SALE. The west half of Lot No. 3, south of Bond and west of Colborne street, Fcnelon Falls, containing a quarter of an acre. For terms, ete., apply to MRS. BELCH, Lindsay street. â€"l‘.’.tf inane Now, As HERE- TOFORE, I HAVE A LARGE STOCK or UP-TO-DATE GOODS AT PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES. Steel Runners to fit any style or make of Baby Carriage. L. layman. SECOND DIVISION GDURT -â€"OI-‘ THE-â€" County of Victoria. The next. Sittings of the above Court will be held in Dickson’s hall, Fenelon Falls, ON TUESDAY, JULY 13th, 1897, commencing-at 10 o’clock in the forenoou Friday, July 2nd, will be the last day of service on defendants residing in this couutv. Defendants living in other coun- ties niust be served on or before June “ltith. S. .‘t'svtsox, E. D . HAND, Bailiff. Clerk Fenelou Falls, April 29th, 1897. insquNoE. Mr. Wm. R. Ellis having transferred his Insurance Business to me, I am prepared to take risks on all classes of property the \rcry Lou’cst Rates None but first-class British and Canadian Companies represented. W IFILIIBI 1’110PI‘31ITY at very low rates. James Arnold. The. “ Fenelon Falls Gazette" is printed every Friday at the office, on the corner of May and Francts streets. Sl’BSl'lllPTlON 81A YEAR 13' .lDYAXCH, or one cent per week will be added as long as itremains unpaid. .ktlvortising‘ Rates. Professional or business cards, 30 cents per line perannum. Casual advertisements, 8 Cents per line for the first insertion, and '1 Curtis per line for every subsequent inscr- tiou. Contracts by the year. half year or less. upon reasonable terms. JOB PRINTING of all culinary kinds executed neatly, cop- rectly and at moderate prices. 3 B. D. HAND. I I .‘O‘UIâ€"‘b .' or. l ’1‘0 the I’ulflic. Instruction given on ORGAN and PIANO at moderate rates. For terms apply at the residence of Mr. R. 8. Sylvester, “ Mary- borough Lodge,” Fenelon Falls. ____.____â€"â€"â€"â€" LEGAL . McLAUGnLIN a McmAnuto, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Office: Kent-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Office: Over Burgoyne dz Co's store. The Fenelon Falls office will be open eveny Monday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 3%“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. McLAuoan. F. A. McDiAnmo. A. P. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney~att-Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street,Lindsay. YOU WANT THEM. WE HAVE :THEMâ€" GOODâ€" CHEAPJ CALL AND SEE. G. H. HOPKINS. ARRISTER, kc. 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. GEORGE MARTIN. THE WEST SIDE STORE. HARNESS If you want first-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 dusters at low prices. 5%“ Try a bottle of Harris’s celebrated harness polish. It is a new thing and you yvill be sure to like it. Agent for Pianos and Organs. Fenelon Falls, May 20th, 1896.â€"14-ly MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of- fice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON. â€" memos;â€" DR. A. WILSON, -â€"-n. n., M. c. r. a. 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 8r. ACCOUCH- enr. Office. Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. Dn. H. H. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University of Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons of Englattd,i\lember of the Col- lege of Physicians & Surgeons ofOntario. Office and residence on Francis-SLWestl Fcnelon Falls, Opposite the Gazette office. ______________â€"â€"â€"__â€"â€"â€"â€"- 1%. "RI. DIAS ON, ETERINARY SURGEON; Honor Grad- uate Ontario Veterinary College, T0- ronto,1884; R. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Fenelon Falls. BATTEN DOORS. J. T. THOMPSON, Jr., ICARPENTER. Jobbing attended to. Wall Brackets and Easy Chairs made to order. Workshop on Lindsay Street, Near the G. T. It. Station, Fenelon Falls. PRUMPTLY sscunrn Send a stamp {orour beautiful book “Howto get a Patent",“ What profitable to invent ."and ’rlzeson Paton ts'.Advice free. Fees moderate MARION & MARI ON. EXPERTS Temple Bullding, 33.5 St James St., Monti-eat Theonly firm‘ot Graduate Enginm’s inthe Domi- nion transacting patent business exclusively WIRE DOORS E. P. SDIITI-I, ‘TETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist. Graduate ofOntario Veterinary College. Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria by appointment of Dominion Government. Office and addressâ€" CAMBRAY, ONT. SURVEYORS. JAMES DICKSON, L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. B., . Conveyancer,&c Residence,and ad- dress, Fcnelon Falls. _____._.â€"-â€"â€"- DENTAL. W Dl'. NEELllilDS, 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. Coltou writes Dr. Necluuds 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. W Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment- VVJâ€"XNTEDâ€"Young women and men, or older ones if still young in spirit, of undoubted character, good talkers, am- bitious and industrious, can find employ- ment in a good cause. with $60 per month and upwards, according to ability. Rev. T. S. Linscott, Toronto, Ont. LINDSAY Marble Works. R. CHâ€"HIBERS 3:4: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 unremhetics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artificial Turf/I. better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood's stove depot, Lindsay. is prepared to furnish the people of Lind say and surrounding country with MONUMENTS AND IIEADS'I‘ONES, both Marble and Granite. Estimates promptlygiven onal lkinds of cetnetery work. Marble Table Tops.‘\'ash Tops, Mantel Pieces etc., a specialty. H' L' D' 8' WORKSâ€"In rear 0 the .‘narkc' on Cam- SET OF GOOD TEETH FORSlO. Gas 'bridgc street,opposite Matthews” pa:king ,, and local anaesthetics for painless er, house. tracting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all; Being a practical workman all should branches of dentistry. see his designs and compare prices before Office Over Fairweather & Co‘s store purchasingelsewhere. nearly Opposite the post-otfice. Lindsay HOBT_ CHAEBERS, North of the Towr. Ilnl “ QUEEN VICTORIA: Her Life and Reign"â€"-Great hismric Work: it'llS at l sight to thousands. Lord Dafferiu intro- l . . . ducn: it to Canadians in glowing words. l ‘88 ROY-IL CAYADIAN INSI R.\.\'(‘F.’ . ‘ .... . . . .7 ' ' ’ . . .: sv to make >_rl a week :tllllt' make to .ce CD' “"5 “malgnmmm “uh mo 'Ulmnce I lhht \lauv make more in spare time than ‘El,,l"::gln.".d’ glam}? 1515‘"ch mic sefium-v m 5 during ul.ty".'.\t regular employ ment. This beJPUO’uUU an i e “me goo", poucy' l year's Great Sexagennry Celebrations are l JOB-v AI‘STlx-JJ’M booming it. Books on time: promo-nous 3,35- Aho 3 cm for ,1“. Queen,” En ., free to canvas-sew. Territory gpiug f.t~t. land and t‘:tlecigm:i.tn rfl'idizzli.:r::ii. l‘atii-l The lm‘lnl‘lfi‘GARRI‘TEOD (“Us l'td‘ Ital «‘oxn..7.:t;.’.. <13." 0, “.0. T Jfont“, Ont. INSURANCE. Better Days for Odette; A There is reason to believe that the days of clerical terrorism are over in Quebec. Mgr. Merry del Val will learn a good deal from the result of the Que~ bec election, and as a sequel to his visit the mandement will no longer be outn- bered among the forces in Canadian politics. Bishops and priests of the Roman Catholic church will not be strip- ped of all political influence when they are no longer free to attach spiritual penalties to the exercise ofa civil right. Roman Catholics are fond of seeking to establish an analogy between the ad- vice which Protestant ministers offer to their congregations and the orders which the hierarchy and clergy of the Roman Catholic church issue to the worshippers at their alters. There is more or lc5s of a public sentiment- ugainst Protestant ministers acting as counsellors upon questions of earthly importance. There is a marked differ- ence between the otfcring of advice from a pulpit, which hearers can either take or leave, and the issuing of a command from an alter which the Worshippers (lis- obey at. their own extreme spiritual peril. There is no ecclesiastical law by which a member of any Protestant de- nomination cau suffer spiritual penal- ties by reason of any civil not not for- bidden by the laws of his country. The same law which permits a Protestant minister to offer advice on civil ques- tions permits a Protestant bearer to re- ject~ that advice. But the Roman Cu- tholics in Manitoba and Quebec enjoy no such liberty. The church issued its commands and the machinery of the church enabled its officers to find out. whether its commands had been obeyed at the polls. So long as a bishop spoke to his people as a friend to a friend, or a priest to his parishoners as a man to his men, there was no reason to com- plain. The bishops and priests of the Roman Catholic church did not deal in advice. They spoke with the authority of the sovereign to subjects who could not disobey without incurring the direst spiritual penalties. Canada is a land of free speech, and Roman Catholic priests or Protestant ministers will never be silenced. They may be free to offer advice, which may be judicious or inju- dicious, but as a result of recent events Roman Catholics ‘nay be onfranchised with the same right to reject advice from the alter which Protestants now enjoy ofrejecting advice from the pulpit. ' -â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"o.‘¢â€"â€"â€"â€"“â€" Linked With the Past. Among the masses of reminiscences of the early Victorian period which the jubilee is bringing forth, an article on the Queen’s bridesmaids discloses the fact that three of the twelve are still alive. One of these is Lord Roscbery's mother, and another the elder ofthe Dowager Duchess of Bedford, is a sister of Lord Sackville of unlnmcntcd mem- ory. These were at. first supposed to be the only survivors, but a third is discovered in the person of Lady Jane Bouvinc, who, at that time, was the most beautiful of the lot. and, as the (laughter of the Earl of llnndor. was a notable figure in society. But she married a. commoner in 18-”, and has been living in cheerful obscurity ever since. A curious kind ofliuk with the past is furnished by a fac-slmile of the first number of the Pall Mall Gazetfic, issued this week in commemoration of the fact that the paper has reached its too thousandth number. The date is Feb. 7. 1865. and the leader is devoted to the Queen's seclusion, which is la- mented. but is still excused on account of her position and her virtues. Even more interesting is a column letter by Anthony Trollope, strongly condemning the English tendency to side with the south in the American civil war, and asking' to be allowod to print in this new paper from time to time his own arguments in favor of the north as a champion of liberty and education. - White Pine. At the close of an article on the ex- port of Canadian timber to the United States, the Mentreal Ii’ilzmss says : â€"â€" Now that the whole question of our ti:n- ber trade with the United States is up, it would be well to discuss the question whether the time has not. come for the framing of a new policy in regard to our forests; whether. for the protection of our nation ll and prOvincial interests, not for the protection of individual in- terests, the cutting down of our pine forests should not be carried out under stricter regulations laid down bylaws well enforced. be preserved in a Constantly yielding condition undercurcfulstate supervision, as in Germany, but once destroyed, res- toration is impossible. white pine industry is already within measurable distance in America. Can- ada's areas are among the greatest and richest still in existence. question of their future should be well considered and a permanent policy laid down by the Provincial and Dnninion Governments in council, after consulta- tion with all the interests affected. White pine forests can The end of tlte The whole _... . ...._. _____â€" Cheap Degrees. The business of giving titles of schol- arship is getting to be a farce in Amer- ica. It appears that all through the United States these honors may be re- ccived by nearly every one who has the dimes to put up. plies us with the following :-â€"“ We hear that the Kentucky schoolâ€"tho Normal something or otherâ€"of which we spoke a few weeks ago as selling its degrees, is actually offering to bestow them on the instalment plan. turningr no untitlc-l preacher into a Dac- tor of Divinity is fifteen dollars; for making him a Doctor of Laws it is A contemporary sup- The charge for twenty-five. Five dollars must be paid down, and five dollars each month there- after until the whole of the balance is cancelled. Whether interest is added to deferred payments, we are not pre- pared to say, but we are informed that: liberal commissions are granted to agents. Would it not be well to main- tain a due proportion in the whole busi- ness by conferring the degrees a letter at a time? The Rev. John Smith, L., would then mean that the clergyman in question had handed over the first. five dollars; L.L. would signify that he had sent a second cheque, and L.L.D. no tld show that the. whole transaction 11 id been closed.” A Martyr to Art. Mr. James Brown, the genial wicket keeper ofthe post-office, took a macadam cast. of his “ phizzymahogany ” on Sun- day last. He had been north on a sixty or eighty mile run and was coming down Rice's hill into town at. a 1.20 rate, when all of'a sudden the wheel bucked and turned sixty-live smnersanlts. Mean- while Brown had left it and was hurrv- lllLI alongr in the direction of town. llo first lit on his crown and spun round like a top for a few minutes. Then he turned a cartwheel or two, after which he cut: a pigeon wing standing on his ear. Finally he took a great leap in the air and plunged forward, alighting on his face in the centre of the turnâ€" pike about fifteen rods from the spot; where he dissolved partnership with the bike. A splendid cast of his face was taken in the mncadam. The out- line of his clear cut aqniline nose was brought out. beautifully, also the Roman brow and prominent chin, the only (leâ€" fect beingr that in the hurry to take the east mostly all the skin was wrosml from Jim's face. He is thus at present a martyr to art, and is going, around with his head in his grip, for the reason that it is scarcely presentable-â€"ll’lu'tby Chronicle. .. - ..._._-. ___. The Cruel Turk. The Athens correspondent of the Daily Chi-onich sayszâ€"J .‘I. Kalli, the Premier, showed me despatchcs and re- ports from Col. Mono. and other author- ities in Epirus, showing that fonrtm-u villages between Toulth and Kastrmka have been burned by the Turks, after all the women and children had l)-'t:t) massacred. except a few who hid in tho fastncsses of the mountains. ZdlflllL'O‘S, famous durin': the war of imlopcndcncc, and a few more who concealed them- .. r M ' - , . . y [Y . Camila“ 5 fxpon'? °l :“V'l ’le mime i selves in marshes along the shore, hnnliy . mt e States tnve risen tom L’FS t mu { managed M W, aboard ,lw Greek Ships, l h-ilf :t million feet in 1883 to three l half 4an with “mum. and pm”. Nata l ' ' ' T . . . . hundred find seven m'nmn {00‘ m “596' ‘ stone of the village of Knmartna is left. During the same perlod our exports. of Handing. . , . Y ' . g .. sntt‘u lumer t0 the thttLd .tatn...» hate I m defence of the women. who mucht 1" '5 5”] that l refuge in the Woo-'1; and caves of Mount incrsased very little. The men fought like lions . .'.. ...-- . â€"' . t tlnr..| l..s titan ten years supply of, zflongos‘ and, when chased by me pine left in Michigan, Minnesota and Turks. jumped pm,“ the prmipicca w t '2. " . . ‘ ' . . . i -\ locatile at the present rate of cutting. l am", capture and dwhononv

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy