VOL. XXV. Professional Cards. ‘ [l Home. (IRWIN A. MORSE, Organist Cambridge Street Methodist I Church, Lindsay, Music Teacher. At - Brooks' Hotel, F‘cnelou Falls, every Tues- R ï¬.’ 5 G day. Terms moderate. 32- .‘ ‘3’; a Daily Globe and Mail 35c- gent-St., opposite Marla-LC Fenelon Frills 1 - lie: ve urgo' .5: o’ 50'. 1 PeriFdn‘i-lotgl’aillg otlidenewill bes oliehe- ever;E month, MCLAUGHLIN & MCDIARMID, ARRIS'I‘ERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Penelon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Monday afternoon from arrival of train i from Lindsay. as?†Money to loan on real [estate at lowest current rates. R. J. McLAUGuux.‘ I“. A. McDIAanm. ' l l . , RARRISTEII; f£t£::-:J5I?I:W, Solicitor i in Chancery, KentStrect,Lindsay. FENELON FALLS. G_ H_ HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &C. SOLICITOR FOR I the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Otliccs: .\'o. 6, William Street South, Lind- ' say, Out. MOORE & JACKSON, i);\ilRlS'l‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, 8:0. Of- i) ticc, \V1lliam street,[.iudsay. coon H J ' E‘URE‘I’I‘URE li;:;.-;:‘$‘f:.::::in?“- moat. ls always cheap furniture in DEA“ WILSON, the long run. Looks better. â€"u.3.,u.e.r.&s.,0ntario,â€" We“ Gives better Sét‘fï¬lrffstgtf28333.; satlsfaction. I have the best. “Us, ’ and largest stock of furniture of all kinds, from the best manufacturers in the province, consisting of __AT_.. Du. u. n. GRAHAM, "t RADUATE of the University of Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity _1\ledical School, Member of the ltoyal College or Surgeons ot England,.\lemhcr of the Col- Eege of Physicians & Surgeons of Ontario. Oflice and residence on Francis-St. West' Feuelou Falls, opposite the Gazette ofï¬ce. â€"DlNlNG noon FURNITURE, ._nnnnoo.\1 til-ITS, ~â€"E.\.‘~;Y CHAIRS, â€"-ltOCl{l-‘.ltb‘,' ~LUUNGES, â€"â€"smtzln1.\nns, _srlu.\'cs AND MATTnASScs, â€"-I(l'l‘UlllS.\' I‘llltNl'l‘UltE mu kinds), i. '51. Ills-XS ON, ETERINARY SURGEON; Honor Grad- uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- ronto, 188-1; II. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Fenelon Falls. ‘ 1"]. I’. SNII'EII, E'I‘ERINARY SURGEON and Dentist. Graduate ofOntario Veterinary College. Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria by ' appointment of Dominion Government. Chloe and address â€" CAtlBltAY, ONT. L. DEYMAN. witâ€"‘1’“- SURVEYORS. and prices are away down. Repairing and all ordered "work promptly attended to. w“ Undertaking in all its branches. “w†dAMES DICKSON, SECOND DIVISION GGUBT P L.Surveyor,CommissioncrintheQ.B., F Tm, Conveyancer, 830 Residence, and ad- -0 , dress, l’enelon Falls. County of V’lctoria. M 4:-.-___.-_-- DENTAL. The next sittings of the above Court will [no held in Dickson’s hall, Fenclon Falls, .. __.._~__-_-._.__.____.____ on TUESDle NOVEMBER 9lha1397: Dr. IlEELllllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, ummcncingtt ll) o‘clock in the lorenoon E‘mtcts meâ€, without min by gas (vital- l. ‘ Friday, October 29th, will be the last day g 1zcd lltl‘l) llgtllllnlsltlt d bi1 hmil):0r“‘:.)'{‘u_::11103i ‘ ‘ ' ‘ ‘1" ‘ " *1 lie stuiie t1e gas umer . J , ct servrce on detendants l\.§ldlllg in 1h.†' v . I ‘ M ‘ ‘ . - oountv. Defendants living in other coon-1 New York, the Ol‘lglllltot of gas forqeatltacit ties niust be served on or before Oct. 2411). . iug teeth. Dr..t,olt011w11tes Dr. 1 LC out 3 A i E D I‘M-D lthat he has given the gas to 186,417 per- b' “NEON, ' I l ’ Isons without an accident from the gas. B‘mm.’ Clerk i Other pain obtundcrs used. A good set (11f I "H "‘ '7 l:\ll(5 I ~‘- “ . " 189". item-1h lt):Clit(l tot blCl. 13$†l)t.1ee Fenelo‘) LINE, hem hm, ‘ lvisits Font-Ion Falls (.\IcArthur House) the _- u I , third Tuesday ot‘cvcry month. Call early W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. l . . , - , I Mr Wm. B. Ellis tmvmg "ï¬n-«erred hâ€. The beautiful Crown and Bridge workl Insur‘mc†nusmcss m mi“ 1 3‘" Preluer practised with success. Gas and all other E N S {I RANO El. - l N “he rig.“ on a†Class“ M Waverly aianaesthetics for extracting teeth without r r ' ’ 5.713 1{utesi aiu. A re! of Artiï¬cial Tor-(I1 better than t At ‘ (A J LO‘V( h lihe average, for 5% OI). todms directlyi ' - - - lo 1 osite Wood’s stove depot Lindsay. Nonebutlirst-class Britishandganadiani ll’ "___~___’ i Lompames represente . i “ll HART, L. D' s. s 3.33-- a e r ‘ >1cuTY‘ snror Goon TEETH ronsio. Gas 1: Al‘h‘l 1 1‘01 and local aumzihcties for pamless ex-l "Aver-v10“. mms' iii-acting. Satisfaction guaranteed in all i .1 branches of deu1istry. , James Arno“! ‘ (mice over Fail-weather I: Co's store 3 i “ VIIâ€"Infâ€"NT‘W: " nearly opposite Hu- nost-otlice. Lindsay The “ Fcnclon tails hatctte i - .-_- p is printed cvrr)‘ Friday M the other, on ; INSURANCE. the corner of May and qucls streets. -,..____.._- . we». .. -.--s__:__.,, h . . . , ‘ _ ) sunscmrrtox 51 trnmn .tmntm ’1‘0 the, 1 ubhgc, “‘ °“° "",‘ “"-flit:this?“ M l HE ROYAL magmas lNStTRA_.\'(‘E l long “l “w i I Co. has amalgamated wrth the Alliancel AdvertiSingJJutcs‘ of England. giving insurers the secunty or, pmfcumu‘t nr business cards. 50 cents ' $25,uu0,00o and the s-tme good policy. ! ‘1 'J‘ .\"..+ :1 purlinepermnum. J‘)IIJ AL‘TI 16" I . cm“ W" “M rm ‘ l" ‘ t‘ H “‘0 agent for the Qneerrof Eng t 2 unucpcr ‘ m: {ï¬rvï¬igiï¬raiflgi}“3.621,â€; land and i‘aledonian of Edinburgh. Capt i tion. outmc s )_ . _. , 1.“, upon reasonable terms. A†_ ‘ l p I can pay ten dollar! .1 all ordinary kinds “entree: neatly, cor»; weekâ€. a. a lad»: 't‘ mate.- -. 413w. reï¬nement" no“! u“! “ “mien†9†‘ ""1 (ac: m sp all no! I'm - 1'1 « good ca 15!. R,D.HAND, 1-, u ;_ ssnorr, t‘n.~..nt..,Uut. . [’rarrirm. Casual advertisements, , the ï¬rst insertion. and; > MlC'Jllll‘inf(l,$13,010,340. 2 ___.........__â€"â€"â€"â€"- MILLIHEEY hilLLliiERY WALL PAPER WALL PAPER AT THE LOWEST PRICES. XXXX Window Paper. . Fancy Goods. Materials for Fancy Work, Toys in Great Variety. Stamping Done. Eggs Taken in Exchange. XXXX ass. assist. w t Solicitors for “Canada, an e I an Encyclopedia ofthe Country,†in ï¬ve Royal Quarto Volumes. No delivering. Commission paid weekly. A canvasser reports his ï¬rst week making,r over seventy dollars protit. THE LINSCOTT COMPANY, Toronto. YOU WANT THEM. WE HAVE THEMâ€" GOODâ€" CHEAP.‘ 4 CALL AND SEE. dEthE MAME. THE WEST SIDE STORE. t t 1 t son a titan!!! lnrout‘ boauutnl bulk “flown, geta l‘atentâ€," What irotitahle to irrci t,":.nd l 'l'rlzeson Patents'.At vice tree. l'etnnooercw MARION (‘2 I'JTARION, EXPERTS Temple linildlng. 145‘; St Jinn-s St.. N'nttcat Tnconiy ï¬rmot Grrhma liz-rimrs tutti-Itemi- nlon trauma-mg ntcut butluess cactusiuly I LINDSAY Marble Works R. CHâ€"EtitBERs ifs 5 prepared to furnish the people of Lind say andsnrrounding country with MONUMENTS AND HEADSTONES, both Marble and Granite. Estimatespromptlygiven on ullkinds oi cemetery work .v Marble Table Tops,‘\'ashTops, Mantel Pieces. etc., a specialty. WORKSâ€"In rear 0 the market on Cam- bridge street,opposite Matthews‘ pu:king house. Being a practical workman all should see his designs and compare prices before Pnrcbssiugelscwhere. RDBT. CHAMBERS. North of the Town Hall â€" TDW‘I'H‘ENKLVONDIKE. The following interesting letter was sent to Miss Maud Buptic from her brother. Mr. W. Baptie. and published in the Lakeï¬eld News .' Sheep’s Camp. Alaska. Sept. 281b, 1897. My Dear Sister,â€"\Vc are camped at Sheen's Camp DOW. Strickland and I leftSkaguay in a life boat for Dyea. which is six miles. and the trip cost as $10. That night we slept in a tent on hay with a team of horses. It rained for three days (you can see by this paper). In the morning: two teams hauled us to Flinnican’s Point, at two cents per pound. and as we have 2,900 pounds you can ï¬gure what it cost. us. We put our tent up over a pool of' water and covered our stuï¬' up with was. Strickland went to Dyea to see Indian packers about taking our stuff in on horses. Each horse carries about 200 pounds. I got some brush, made a bed on poles to keep me out of the water, loaded my gun and went to bed In the mornintr after breakfast Strick- land came with the Indians and four horses. We pulled our tent down, and what we needed most we packed on the horses and left the rest behind to be packed. We_ each started behind a horse with a stick. It was an awful journey, some places the mud coming up to the horses’ girths. Then we would be up on the side of a moun- tuin with a path eighteen inches wide. I counted twenty-three dead horses on the trail which had slipped and fallen down the procipiccc. There is not a place at Stony Lake half as rough as any one part. of' our trail. Some places it is so steep down the mountains that we have to put a rope on the horse’s toil and hold it back to keep it, From slipping down, and in manv places jump oil" rocks four feet high. We have to ford several streams and climb mm" dead horses. You must l‘etnmubv‘l' that we are in mountains the same as the Rockies. There are mountains on both sides covered with snow. Sometimes we are high enough to be in Iln- ~11â€! and again weiare so Far down in il- ravines that we cannot see the tops of the mountains. Well, we arrived at Sheep‘s Camp at dark. which is eleven miles from Flin- niuau's Point, and the point is five‘ miles from Dyco. It was too late to pitch camp, so we not sleeping room in another camp. We covered our stqu up with the tent. In the 11101‘uiufz when I got up it was raining very hard. I pulled the tent off our stufl and found my grip gone, which I had bl‘mlfl'ht along to carry our paper and small stuff in Our paper was all wet. The stuff missng was my toilet set and several other things. We were one hour trying to find a place to pitch our tent. The ground is very mucky, and we’ hm! to pitch it over a pool of" water, walk one mile to get poles and two miles to :zw‘ wet wood. We had an awful rim: it) get the fire started. I was blowing it it :md Strickland was sitting on a h 7: singing “ Home, Sweet Homo." 3' on have no idea of the hardships we in†to go through. After. we got our t1 up I had to {:0 to Dyca. I Iclt Sim-.5. Camp at two o'clock, had sixteen min-.- to :10 in the rain. mud to go through, and rocks to climb over. and got there at 7.30 o’clock, very hungry. A man gave me tea and I slept that niazht in his tent with him. I went to the In- diuu’s tent in the morning, but he W115 not up. I got him up and limml out that he had his horses to be shod. but he had no money to pay for it. I then told him to drop the contract and I woull pay him for what he had done. I then gave the contract to a wl-ite man at the same rate as we had to pay the Indian.~ The white mm is a hustler. and we will have the $1qu packed in to. day. From here we have to take it v I I | D | .1 .y' ‘ y. ..' . ‘. four miles to Seahs, 'I‘qen we pay “3 i t .t h 1114.. nm, with us, for fear we are caught in a storm crossiner the summit. It is snow- ing: very heavily now. We are ca'upcd in a place where a sad afl'air happened a week ago. So much rain had fallen that the water Ionscned a part of the mountain and started a landslide, which buried 11p tents and killed several men. and de- stroyed a great deal ol'stuff. We intend to more from here on Friday if'all goes well. and camp 011 the other side of' the summit until our stuff Catches us. Then we will move again. On Sunday when I was down to Dyea I called for mail, but .nouc had come. We have hard~ ships to no end to contend with. l have put in two days with one meal each day. I get so hungry and tired sometimes that I would give anything to be home for a good dinner. But. then I cheer up and look ahead. When I get home again I will be able to tell you better about the trip. I have plenty of warm clothes. a fur coat, and long rubber boots, and everything that. is needed. There are hundreds of‘ mm along with us, some of whom are get- ting discouraged and starting back, having; no money to carry them through: It will cost about thirty cents per lh. to pack our stuff before we get to the lake. October «MLâ€"We are still at Sheep‘s Camp, and I will tell you a little of my life here. You would naturally think this is quite a town by this. letter head. It is the letter head of one of two houses. built four logs high with an old canvas for a roof‘. They carry on a dry goods and erocerios business. We have all our stuff packed up. and Strick- land went over and got the paper for two hits cents). We have eight. loads of our stuff over the summit, and are waiting for a fine day to take the rest over. which is now in camp, and we are rather crowded. We did our own baking, flap-jacks and dried fruits. Sometimes we \vould get tired of our own making and buy some. It is cold and snowing. We woke up the other morning with the tent noarlv full of' snow, so we picked up our stall ready for packers. left it in the tent and movel “Vt'l' to on hotel. 'l‘hcre \Vet‘u cracks in the flvor and walls an inch open. Men were sleeping on the floor, and we almost froze to death. Next morning we went to the bottom or the summit to get men to pack us over. but it was so much no one would venture. There are drifts of' snow eight feet deep. tents buried up. and-the horses have no food and are freezingr to death. It is a shame to see the poor animals. The men camped at the foot of' the summit have to carry their wood four miles tlll'nllull four feet o.‘ snow. From here for twequ miles on our trail there is no Wood. ' People haw 'n -~n frozen in the summit this fall. W: i HOW] to stop here till men pack t-dz‘ mull over Liar: summit :u (h'ater bk 1, two IllilC‘S. 'l‘hcn we will ~l'it’i. only in the morning I with our lo: 1:1 salt»: t1l-xnl:~z.s and tents, ferry over (burr-r lake. where we can not our ou-Iit. with us. 'I‘hwe is many a t1ian’vmlin._: out. his oath: and going; ‘ back. broke. 'l'ho packers are selling some ..i‘ the man’s outiits to get their couwl are 11:. liter ten. lira, night, it, wr a six}: To so; as -: ‘illll'f our lmls male. Sit-ir-1.2:inl and I got three beach 3 to t'- .‘fi on to hop -:< off ’l'v' flu. .. It w w much lr'ftt't'. You rid not sl‘p m: the flwr for in»: midi: arom. l, 'l'1ey \vcr- Ivor: on top w" LllU It'lhh-s. There are A! Maseru «'i 'm'l l l.» A, law-Joins, doctor r, prom-lint“. Woks z.‘ I dint of all travla-s. I-Z i< a hard ntllt. thlv are sitting i1.t mp of tla: st» 1-: it» u tli«.nn’~,t-lv:» 1.21 I I had to 31 our to t'."tl‘ll] 1n r' several tines w:.il:::1vritin_'. I lznn'x t» watch m~ "ll‘\“.("' {15. dd ‘2:'.‘ l':tt ': ti- ll'N-w, so I 'I|I mt ' par. I often Win": the people u‘.‘ Imkrficial 1 Iv ,‘yg ~ ~,‘ “NH-9i 1-.‘ .1 , .- iv- l"! It re'.‘ --‘:-'.; its crnts for men to pack it over the sum- l :1." i=1! Ill :nil- nimml .5 111:, 111it on their books. It is a. dangerous E IN“! "‘1‘ " ll' â€â€ "fr" “"1†"(5 lit“? job, four il‘t‘t of “now and no 3mm] b fill Emits: rr-w iii 1.1": fl“ . ;' «Hi-5 . around. Then we ferrv acro-s I‘ .:ter '5 'l W- ":"3 lJ ""1 i. "’f l"’_" 1, ‘t. "W" ‘ Lake for two cents a pound, and from i llv 04".: tilt-re .n Ull .1 .1. am] there we pack to another lake lr r four: .' iJ‘l' t Motif" :An'v: p‘wd duff» cents a pound. g '2' Hi t‘ftro "(HIS * l; f :I! luv . 31.)â€. When we not to 'I‘ui'h we intend :ol \"l "’" “'3': l' WI" '"""‘ I" l ’ ll" "Ull- bnild a In: hug and wi- par [I cry. 1-H] -’ “(UHF-Hi1â€! me in all the bug: u‘tl to‘ll 'durin! the‘wiuter we will build ’l but i H Ԡi “In “"733†“‘llPllf'V‘" lc‘l“ I to run down the Yukon river li-it wr- ‘lll “"51 ‘ 10 W“ “ii-h?†I ‘1’†i" L3†have a long and rough road to y. um"; T32l‘ll- 5" WI»! “‘3 ROU'j‘I‘l‘C for tlr: hull-re we start to build a log cabin ;prcsctxl- ’ I Stricklmd and I intco/l’to fry :1 q 1:1: ~ 3 “ v BANE“ iity of bacon, and buy hrcarl wlich: ~-«â€"~~â€"--- -â€"â€" Cnsts us 50 come a loaf. and take along: In a math 0? r‘mt'and church the with us From here. There is no wool i othc‘ day a man tunnel no vigorously a‘onr: the trail, m we will strap a buu- ' duri =3 th sermon that he diglocated dic- of a on our backs and take along l 1m 3m. .- Eta