Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 26 May 1911, p. 1

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VOL. XXXIX. Professional Cards" LEGAL _._. MCLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON dz STINSON. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch office at Fenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay office over Dominion Bank. R. J. HoLwesLm, K. O. A. M. Fumes, B. A. Jrs. A. Pan)... T. H. STINBON. HOPKINS, WEEKS dz HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries, Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Oliices No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- G. H. HOPKINS,'K. 0., C. E. WEEKS, ‘F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A ville, Ontario. MOORE & JACKSON ARRIS’I‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, Sic. lOf‘ lice, William streei,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON _______.._____..._._â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€" STEWART &. O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, rho. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. STEWART. L. V. O'CONNOR, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Successor to McDiarmid & Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon_Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Office Kent 80., Lindsay, Telephone 41. ‘_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-_-_3‘ w- DENTAL. W Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and [loyal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved DENTISTS 2 methods at moderate prices. nOF.F.lCE:â€"â€"-Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- ome street __________,____.__.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" Drs. Neeiands & irvine. - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a. specialty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. G:8.S administered to over 9,000 persons With great SUCCESS. .f MEDICAL. WW on. H. H. GRAHAM. -u. 0.,0. IL, is. a. c. s. Eng.,u. o. r. a 3., 0NT., r. 7r. n. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON it AGOOUCH- eur. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. M DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, SUOCESSOR TO DR. A. IVILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- eeneheur. Ollice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. # AUCTIONEER. _______________________________ T HOMAS GASHORE, AUCTIONEER. - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- class manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. ______.____ rm. 'KIDDE I succussoa T0 H. J. SOOTHERAN. CONVEYANCING. Finn INSURANCE AT LOW RATES. ESTATES MANAGED, I AGENT MIDLAND LOAN Co. FARMS FOR SALE THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY. OFFICE 9i KENT ST., LINDSAY. L -__IIJ Miss Tena. BedfOrd HONOR GRADUATE ALBERT COLLEGE, Is prepared to give lessons in oil or water color painting, crayon drawmg, or designing. “ The Parsonage," Fenelon Falls. LOYAL TRUE BLUE LODGE No. 198 Meets the first Wednesday evening ! E . it t E g e t s i» s s LWWFWWWWWWWWWWW VICTOR the _._ FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1911. i Since Shoes Were First Made No shoes were ever sold that could surpass in'any way those that this store offers you to-day. We’ve here and there, bought one line at one place and another at another. Have chosen them to suit the particular needs of our business. And from a lady’s most delicate slipper to the workingman’s heaviest and longest lasting shoe, this store feel safe in promising absolute shoe satisfaction. We don’t know what your present shoe requirements are, but we do know that if there is any advantage in a bright, new, clean shoe stock, this store offers you that advantage. ' Complete stock of choicest and freshest groceries. . . a ' Wall Paper. We have about five hundred samplesof the newest designs in wall paperw- Prices from 5c. per single roll up. o J. L. ARNOLD. DIAM*OND HALL 'A SELECT STOCK OF Musical Instruments. Agents for GRAMOPHONE AND EDISON PHONOGRAPH. Supply of new Records always on hand. Don’ t take chances. Issuer of Marriage Licenses. ; LADIES W all welcome t/ze refines memf of Style in Me .r/zoes we are s/zowzflg- t/zzs season. Tfle slack 25 constantly lez'ng improv- ed and includes t/ie later! novelties. SEE OUR NEW STOCK. i E ,5, I i I i i i g E mi. Diamond Rings, Lockets, Brooches, Necklets,‘ Clocks, Silverware, Fancy China, N o matter what the price is, a mail order watch‘is not worth price when delivered. and talk watch with us. makes and grades at convenient prices. Expert Repairing. A. NORTHEY - Come 111 We have a complete stock of all very rich- " FENELON FALLS VWWWMWWWWW i i i Iâ€"IEA‘D OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - 814.400.000.00. BANK or noN'rnI, DIONTREAL. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT REST - $12.000.000.00 ‘ ASSETS oven $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTI‘IENT. , . LDeposus taken of $1 and upwards, which can be WIthdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. FenelonFalls, Branch PRESENcfiIWINo . __ A May Be of Much Value to the Scien-r' Little Girl Was Playing With Nitro- Glycerine, Which She Thought Was Water A Plttsburg dispatch is as follows: Tripping along gayly with four quarts of nitro-glycerlne, which she thought was water, eleven-year-old Mildred Anderson narrowly escaped death along with her father and six oil well shooters, at the Cameron farm, in Washington county. Only the presence of mind of John Anderson, the girl’s father, averted a tragedy. _ Oil well shooters had gone to the Cameron farm to shoot a test well. Finding their explosive had been af- fected by the cold weather they plaCed it in two cans of hot water to thaw it. Little Mildred, who thought the cans contained only water, seized them in a spirit of playfulness and be- gan to run about with them. Circling away from the house, the child was unnoticed for a few min- utes. Then she turned her course to- ward the group of men, who, with blanched faces and wildly beating hearts, realized suddenly that Mildred was carrying nitro-glycerineâ€"enough toblow them all to atoms. ‘ it was fortunate for the well shoot- ers that they were too startled to make an outcry. As it was, Mildred neared them before they could utter a sound, then Anderson came to the rescue. . “Hello, Mildred, be careful of the water, dear. Come slowly and show daddy how to put down cans without spilling any,” he called with a smile and in kindly, even tones. “Oh, I won’t spill any, daddy," the child replied in merry accents. "See how careful I am." With mock gravity little Mildred carefully deposited the cans with their perilous contents on the ground. “See, I didn’t spill one little, teeny drp,"‘cried the child, clapping her hands, while the oil shooters and her father began at lastt o breathe more freely. ~~ . " -_;}I3fl:'.§;'” names... 80 completely unnerved were the oil men that they refused to..shoot the test well that afternoon. They said they Were afraid they would bungle the job and not escape as fortunately as they had in the morning. FRiVOLOUS DEFINITIONS Reputationâ€"What the world thinks about us; character is what our wives know about us. Gossipâ€"~The counterfeit coin of con- versation. A Secretâ€"Confidential information that one woman gets another woman to keep for her. Inspirationâ€"A word used by poets in mistake for perspiration. A Theatrical Angelâ€"Known by the company he keeps. The Leisure Classâ€"Tramps and the The Dreamerâ€"Tomorrow I made a fortune. Optimismâ€"A habit that women have of looking upon the bright side of things; mirrors, for instance. The Engagement Ringâ€"Matrimony's promissory note. ._ ‘ Rah-{V :-C.'~“ (p.49- .-,‘ You ‘â€" exudes/{film tific World Through the successful outcome of an operation performed upon Anna Windt, 18 years old, the surgeons of the Samaritan Hospital at Philadel~ phia have made a diseovery which may be of great benefit to science in the grafting of skin. The discovery is that skin taken from the body may be kept in a healthy condition for an indefinite period without suffering harm, and may then be used to replace skin that has been burned or otherwise (‘9- stroyed, and will “take hold” as well as skin cut fresh from the flesh. Twenty square inches of the right forearm of Anna Windt are. now 00"- cred with skin that had been out of contact with the body for five entire days, and kept on ice during the. time in order that it might be. preserved. Dr. 'Wayne Babcock, who has rscew d much attention from the medical world during the past few days bccause of his invention of several new anaes- thetics, made the new discovery. He tried by experiment ‘to ascertain whe- ther the theory he had held was true, and the trial more than satisfi (1 him. of the correctness of his belief. FUTURE FARMERS A National School of Agriculture for‘ the Boys and Girls of England A National School of Agriculture is' shortly to be founded here, where boys will be trained to take positions in England or the over-seas Dominions as- farmers, farm managers, and stewards, . and gardeners. Girls will be taught: dairy work, plain cooking and laundry ' work. The necessary capital has al-- ready been found, and it is the inten-- tion to secure a farm of about 100 acres near a large city, preferably London, where the work will be car- ried on under the tuition of qualified instructors. To commence with, about 100 pupils, boys and girls, will be spe-~ cially selected from the elementary' schools. No fees will be charged,- either for tuition or board and lodging. For the boys 9. course of training simi- lar to that given to Boy Scouts will: form part of the curriculum. All the: produce raised on-the farm, which is‘- to be conducted on strictly commer- cial lines, will be sold, and the schem , it is hoped, will be entirely self-sup- porting. ln cases where the value of their work exceeds the cost of main-- tepance wages will be paid to the pu~ pi 8. WHY A HORSE ROLLS Mr. E T. Daubeny, writing on this subject in “The Selborne Magazine,” says: “Horses are fond of rolling 0'1 the ground, and no animal more thor- oughl'y shakes itself than they do. After a roll they give themselves a shake or two to remove anything ad~ boring to the coat. The habit is of much service to horses living in open plains. On being turned loose, at the end of a jOurney, an Arab horse rolls in the sand, which acts as blotting- paper, absorbing exudations from the body. A shake removes the sand, the coat soon dries. Cavalrymen in hot climates sometimes put sand on their horses as the simplest and quickest way of drying them.” c. . People whose assets are all inland and stock stock often have to "sell something at. a sacrifice to meet a sudden call for money. Guard yourself against this bV keeping some money in the Savings Department of The Bank of British North America It will not lie idle 75 Years in Business. Interest added twice a year. Capital and Reserve Over $7,300,000 ...~ v. Fenelon iFalls' Fenelon Falls Branch each month in the Orange hall, Fenelon ’ . 5 Falls. r. Lodge, W. M.; F. Keast Sec. g V ‘ . w. A. Blshop’ Manager

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