Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 2 Dec 1898, p. 1

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- .. v» “hs'al'TWQO-. _ on W] m as on If your sight is failing have your eyes tested and get a pair y of glasses from our new stock. ..â€"__â€"â€". School Books, Stationery, Toilet Articles, Perfumery, Pure Drugs and Medicutes. 1 Try our Perfection Head- IIIIE t: i. t The Old Reliable Drug,r Store. Prolessionul Cards. MCLAUG IILIN 8'. MCDIARMID, ARRIS’I‘ERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Office: Kent-3L, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Oilice: Over Burgoyne 8: Co’s store. The I’enelon Falls otlice will be open every Monday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. WMoncy to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLAUGHLIN. 1“. A. )IcDIAtotfi). A. r. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor B in Chancery, Kent Street,Lindsay. G. H. HOPKINS, ARIIISTER, &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 S; JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, 5:0. Of- fice, William street,Lindsay. F. I). Moons. A. Jacasox DR. A. WILSON, ~31. n., n. c. r. a 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON it ACCOUCH- cur. Otlice, Golborne Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. D. (v‘rOULDs Graduate Toronto University, Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Out. (mice at liytle it Co.‘s Drug Store. R051- dcnee' Francis street west. ' 1). SMITH, 'TETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College. Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria by ~appoiuttueut ot‘ Dominion Government. “thee and address â€"â€" UAMBILII, ONT. m4 ...â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"- ‘ MUSIC. 08?“?! A. MORSE, Organist Cambridge Street Methodist (‘hur‘cln Lindsay. Music Teacher. At brooks" Hotel, l-‘euelon Falls, ever Tues- day. 'l‘ertnsmoderate. 3‘1. wst}itvisrorts. -.--â€" - " 1, An in“ DIL‘KSON: 1) L.Sur\'e_\‘or. (“ennuissiouer in the Q. 13., , CotivevauCt-r.kc Residence, and ad- dress. Fenciou Falls. DENTAL-H ‘ llElILAlIDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Euracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ited airl administerrd by him for .1 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Lolton, ot New York, the originator of gas for extract-v i‘ " ‘t'lll. iliiituhe has given the gas to 136.417 pet“ sous without an accident trom the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set ot teeth inserted for Stu. £3“ Dr. Neelaads visits Fenelon Falls (MeArthnr llonse) the third Tuesday ofcvery month. ( all early and secure an appointntcn‘. win. enoss, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work ractised with success. Gas and all other} amesthctics for extracting teeth without p,” A set of Artificial Turk, better than the awrnge, for $3 00. Rooms directly ppposite Wood‘s stove depot, Lindsay. Dr. Coltou writes Dr. Net-lands: A LIST OF WHAT 1 WE HAVE IN Fall and Winter Footwear. ALL FIRST QUALITY GOODS. Women’s Felt Buttoned Boots. t. u Lined Laced Boots, “ “ Buttoned Overshoes, “ “ Lowâ€"cut Overshoes, H “ Slippers, “ Wool lined Rubbers, Women’s and Misses’ Overgaiters in cloth and kid, from 500. up. Men’s Buckle Overshoes 1 “ LOW-cut Overshoes, “ Wool lined Rubbers, “ Felt lined Laced Shoes, _“ Felt Elasticâ€"side Shoes, Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Rubbers, all styles. These goods will be sold at the closest possible prices. Call and O l. l.. ARNOLD. inspect our stock. Fire Insurance Agent, representing the Northern, Imperial, and Phoenix of Hartford. WE CM HABDLI’ SPdhE l'lhiE To write advertisements, as our trade this season has opened up better than ever. Instead of telling you a. lot in this paper, call and see what we are doing in Suits and Overcoats for the We will make it worth your winter. while. \_/\/\-/\/\./\./ /\ A-AAAP‘ JQHN .l. TQWNLEY. , ho Dominion Governments t :Last Requisition for Too I I I Called for SALADA Ceylon Tea or its equal, thus showing the standard value of SALADA. TAKE NOTICEâ€" The only place you can , purchase this Tea here is at l l t . I l llW-r. L. Fenelon Falls. stare the country of the Khedivc in the face, for upon the Nile Egypt depends as much as the human body upon the circulation at too blood. It. is of so. preme imp rtttnce that the control of the Nile lrom Victoria Nyauzzt to the Mediterranean should be under one rule. The lives. the prosperity, the very existence of the natives depend up- on the regular trausmis>ion of water from that distant centre to Alexandria: Sir Colin Scott-Moncriefi states that a civilized nation on the Upper Nile could easily build regulatingr sluices across its course or at its outlet from the Victoria Nynuza and control that great sea as easily as Manchester controls Thirl- mere. Once dam the Nile and the oc- cupants of the upper reaches could either flood Egypt or cutoff its water supply at pleasure. Moreover, the law of nations would permit every nation the right to control the waters of its territory as necessity or policy demand- ed. With an enterprising Government be- low Khartoum, Ezypt may be said to ex- ist on suti‘erunce alone. For sanitary rea- sons also it is necessary that Egypt should own the Nile, seeing that pollu- tion at the sources and the consequent increase of zymoitic diseases lower down the stream could not be prevented were the native tribes under the control of nationalities divided by many interests. It will be seen, therefore, that England's stand is a perti-ctly logical one, and that France has no more hope of pos- sessing territory abutting the river than she has of acquiring a naval station on the Thames. .__.__ .-..-.___.._ . __ A Buried Fort. A New York World special from Sioux City, Iowa, says: Buried a dozen feet under a Nebraska sand hill, twenty miles west of here, the remains ofastone fort have been discovered. Inside the walls the searchers found a rcsentative that the trafiic opposite the quantity 0‘ human bones and fragments . . ot'arms and armour at least tww centu- Manstou House IS about half as much ‘ . . .. ries old. The ntterns ot' the wen one again as It. was fifteen years ago. And . p. h .4 . and armour indicate that the owners it Still grows. . were Frenchmen or S aniards thou'vh A low facts are better than reams of p ’ P . . there 18 no record of any settlement in assertion, so the representative stood on . . , . \ . thts region at so early :1 date. I‘lie find the porttco of the Lord .Iztyor s palace ' . . was made by John Ilammond, a farm- aud ccnsuscd the vehicles as they surged ' . . . er, who stumbled on one corner at the through the narrow cut. immediately . . . ‘. _ . , . tort while excavating for a drainage opposite the MMISIOD House. [‘he time ' ‘ . ditch. Stone is a rarit in \Iorl- chosen was high noon. The record for F l y L h mstcrn Nebraska, and Hammond was the hour reads : so tnuch surprised that he carried his LindSay’s New Optical Business. Is now in full working order and doing good work. Already many who were discouraged are deriving the benefit of scientific and accurately . fitted glasses, that only a qualified Optician can supply. , Consult my Optician freely. It costs you nothing to try. He may " preserve your eyesight for years, though of course to consult him before -.._ you wear glasses or injure your sight i. would be the best. HERBERT BEALL, Graduate Optician , WITH GEO. w. BEALL, ,,. Lindsay, Jewellers, Opticians and Engravers. London’s Surging Tide. FACTS ABOUT LONDOle CONGESTED TRAFFIC. London’s trafiic contiiues to grow more congested. The Police Commis- sioner’s circular to van drivers and drztymen has had no appreciable cfl'ect. Blocks are as frequent; as ever; pro- gression as slow. A member of the city police force told a Daily Mail rep- ’Busses ................. . ............ 63 . . . investigation further and has now an- Hansmns ................... 550 - . _, .. covered an area about 100 Ieet by -(lO Drays and vans...... ........... 004 - , - . . . . feet in extent. I‘he fort itself is built Private carriages and four- , . 0.. of hard red sandstone, much like that wheelers ........... -00 . , . so extensrvey qutuned now at Sioux _ . V ,1 ) ’l l walls are about three ,9 Falls, S. l.‘ c . Total'lOIIODC. I u C I O O I II...'..II..1’94‘ .The number hf Veh‘des that c9:ch fit'teen I'cet high, with small towers, evi- xmlhhle P359 the Mahsmh house, 30”“: dently for sentries, at intervals of twun- ca-‘it and we“: “Grill-505 thew-rom- S'W' ty or twenty-live feet. The armor in- [h‘rty's‘x- At “must owmg ‘0 the cludes a halt'dozen breast. plates, two bloom 1” Cheap-“dc 0" OWNS-"e the or three steel caps and an orion, or hel- thka the l'oad,way Wlh be all but de' met, ot' the pattern much worn by Span- sened- The“ bus and “h d‘hY "hd ish and French soldiers in the fifteenth Vahv “‘1'” 1'0“ PM“ lh’Ohc alsordcmd and early'part of the sixteenth ccutn- mass. The numbcroi busses that pass “us. A” n,- uwm are badly msm, 1“ the hm“ hm c‘lp‘lble OI 50‘”th 16: and in most of them many holes are 848 Pers‘msv and the (I‘mâ€"VS can hhhl eaten completely through the. mom}_ from one thousahh to hrlehh hundred ADIODLI the weapons are several two- tms' It 1’3 Shhime‘” transport for “h handled swords, the head oi what was I I .b‘ ‘I . "~' a “my COIPS- . 0”“ ltj‘thlh of the c“) “ evidently a battle-axe, and the wheel- Stl'eam 0f mlth 3‘ hhd'dhy ‘5 that hOlh locks and barrels ol ancient ltlu-‘kuts. ibus and hlmsonl are occupied',‘\h amp l The bones are much scattered and ty ’bus is a rarity; a crawler is seldom from “,0”, it Would he impowlblc m seen.~ On the other hand, the untJortty say how “hump. me for, was Harrismwl of tho drays have light loads or none. ‘ n ‘ ' Some twelve or fifteen policemen con- trol this tide of traffic. “With an ex- perience extending over twenty years," says an old policeman, “ I do not re- member a singleperson being killed opt posite the Mansion house. When the subways are made, in my opinion, they will only be used by old women and cripples."â€"London Daily Mail. I â€"-o----. Severe Storms in England. The recent comparativer mild wea- ther which has prevailed in Uri-at Ill-itâ€" ain has been interrupted by a thorough blizmrd in many parts of the country, especially in the north. wlwre the snow drifts have been seVeral [bet (let-p. Three men perished in the snow in the highlands, a train was blown olI tl»: rails near Tralee. Ireland, unmhei'~ oi -â€" . fishing boats have been lost. many Ii~ - 110M100» NUV'I' 27-â€"Tlle Pllyswal crmen have perished, and the Iridt bearing of the ADEIO-lhl'mmh CODIFOVCI" l mail boats or cross elmunvl mail M-rt‘it'~s --_._. - r» r â€"- W... Why Lord Salisbury is Tenacious. r . v- I . . . , l sy regarding the '.\IIC has scarcely been were “Hurrupmd m- 5.,,-1.,u.1y ,1,,,,,.,.,,,,. touched “pm since the Fashoda affair , 'I'he Belfast mail boat Was twenty hour-4 loomed upon the international llOrIZOU- I making a trip which is usually ace-nup- A f-il‘lhce at this' Side or ‘he Willem» lished in six hours, trains liavc Imru however, will immediately explain the ; snowed up in several pine”, and, gutter. (CDGCIIS or [DC British Government in , ally. the snowstorm is considered [1) demandIUf-Z the entire COUl-I'Ol 0f the‘ have been the worst {hr many years. head waters of the Nile. What docsl The severe storm reached as for south the Nile mean to Egypt? It simply as the Mediterranean. where a French means the difference between a desert. transport bmnd for 'I'unis was oblige-I and a smiling, rich and fruitful land. to return to Toulgo in a damaged con. Let the sources of this grand river p835 ? dition. She also reported that some of into the hands of some nation whose in- 3 the recruits on board of her were km“, , terests are apart Irom Egypt. Grant . or injured during the storm that such nation might, for pnrporcs of irrigation, as she undoubtedly would, divert the course of the stream or de- crease its volume, and disaster would l month as her share of the estate. -â€"â€"--- o o o« The widow of George M. ’l’ullma’l. the car magnate, will receive 89,000 a

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