Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 5 Jan 1912, p. 8

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"'1.':-'95~'..'5~I::$1;j1‘.,:,; 3; Hui/1‘” )r '21?“ J {3112'- ."“ 1-'-'L-‘r'. 1‘1 .difg .mX‘Lâ€"Zr'i'. 4: "-v~L\N~»‘ and became a printer’s devil. Z."“.‘ n. ",-."""‘ ‘1‘ " u~ I?!“ wmmmwm‘h (11111 5:11 cs instant 1cliei‘ to the itching. , 1 “.1 ~_ " S "1' - â€" 13> . - .. 13$ i; » E - ’ x iii ‘ ; 3 a“ fr. Furs Greatiy Reduced ”for SALE 0 1‘â€" . , . 5 52 i '1' . I £1.ng 2,; danuary Clearance. g? 1 . - . stormed. “re 1101" 81% the Ladies 0f Fenelon Falls and Every man should be after these 11110 1111s in i ."1‘ 5111101111911118 00111111? 1119 opportunity 0f buying hand- Boys Clothing Sale continues, at Sweaters 11nd Sweater Coats. They are a number of s:- 11’ 5 some diam “t 2151‘?” price Sacrififle tlve “"1311. 10 01911” I the following reduced prices: lines left from the season s selling, and late arrivals E : t 9V9?) 111‘ 111 19 101139: an W1 1 113 en in View ust t1ken into stock 1 short time 100. We’ve "" II .1 I I: I 1 1 . N j q, ( 1 ( .~ 11 [ ..-. I. lime iedueed priCLs acedrdingly. Eve1y woman need- QVERGCATfi. marked them at low p1ices,but we’ re boaun'd to cle ear ‘ ‘l '2 ing a new Fur, should take advantage of these sale Raoul-1r $9 50 _ 110w $2 98 them out. It you want one come early. prices at once. There are many different F-urs ,in- ‘9 ‘ ° ‘ ' .1' :- eluding Is abclia Opossum, Mink, Marmot, American Regular $4 1111111051150: 110W 3-59 F ' $1 00 mg :1 O ossum, L 11X, Sable, Cone Persian Paw etc in Re ular $5 and $6, now 3.98 01' o ‘ _ g y y: 9 2 i 1;. It the leading styles for this season’ s wear. $3 Reefers, now - - 2.59 E 1 ' 1. You can take your choice of a number of Sweater ' 1‘ 1 ii if ' 1‘ I , " 7i; These‘a‘re Values EXtraordlnarY- If You SUITS. Coats, which were priced at $1.9 5 and $1. 50, also a j- .3 ”‘1 want to save money don’t miss them. Regular $2.50, new - 1.98 number 0f Sweaters “’111011 were 1011119113! 1311ch 11P 1' i :1 F ' l l . d I, ' ' 9 Regular $3.00, now - 2.4:8 to $2 00 ‘ ' ' g urs reoru ar rice u ) to n w 0‘ 1 ' 1 'i" 1,. ’ O y p 1 30’ o ‘30 at $"' 95 Regular $3. 50, now '- 3.4:8 For $2900 .f' . Furs, regularly priced up to $58, now go at $0.00 Regular $5. 00, now 3.98 ' ' 13 a, Furs, regularly priced up to $12, now go at $795 Odd lines of Fdncy Suits Y on can take your choice of a number of Sweater l." . I 1 priced up to $4, now only 193 Go oats, which weie priced at $2. 50 and $3. Several ,1 I, Furs, regularly priced up to $10, now go at $1.000 Odd lines of Boys’ 3_ piece combinations of 00101.3 to choose from II .' 2’. ' ' ' I . ’53 I',. SEE WEHBGW DESFLEY. Suits, priced up to $5. now 2. 9S SEE WENDQW DISPLAY. ff; ii" I FF; 'Q BE L is " 1. n is :1 ._ g1 I, CHEAPEST GENERAL STORE IN THE COUNTY. f! f, L *L‘ZTfjflmj‘i' ‘ “Z" 'm I l I I 52;: I, ’f The spring or 1883 saw mm, a 1 . ' . .. 1 gaunt lad of seventeen, pack up his? . 1 1 R01 WAUER 300" .1... hashes Array Pimple GHQ 53? A 11‘ , . West. He felt in his bones that he 3 ii 1 Sketch ofwtho_ Career of a Typical was not destined to spend his life . g estorn anadian upon the farm. He got off the train __- E Lik th â€"--I t 0 til at Portage La Prairie, one of the1 YES EVERâ€" HEEHT' ; e 0 er prom non sue. on small towns west of Winni eg, on the : managing, the Hon, Wguer Sevott Canadian Pacific Railway, livhieh was a ti t . . ll 1‘ . Watches VValtham and Ely gin, Cut Glass A large assortment . ,‘ ‘cntorcd politics by way of journalism. then pushing through the Rookies to N0 Irf'me. 3" 1“ 'd‘f'llev'th soar 01 EC; 1111 glades in "Old, , 1n the finest makes. I", 31 . igir iiv'iflr'id [LnIInier him:elf gaizlied the PacificI Coast. For five months 21:21:} 117'11'11'2'2i'1i2i'. dioré'nfiiodgiiai'iii: igoéd filled, silvei and nickel cases, 101-81 Quantities of use 1 ~ 110 o 1 9 so 8 power 0 express on he d'ove a tradesman's cart, and tie , ‘ ‘ 1 , , ‘ ' a e d b . r ‘ .‘ ‘ i ii'ur'ggi it"io yearAIin wlIIictho keriittIad folio'wing a true instinct, he ente're'il ifitf‘ié‘fm'ffig'f “0 D D D Plesm'pt'm'l ' 3' men an oy.s A" guarmteed t" ye IWSZG If“: and bean?“ ' . '. 19 o rciour. exam or no enzo th ffi 13 th M 't b Lib r 1,. - . 111 10 is in o 1 s e 1, 1 ' ltho only other Liberal Prime Ministoxi e o ce 0 9 am 0 a e 11 But our patrons find that D D 13' “Ob lGWBli‘y Nothing short Of a pen L 1 mg on 011g 'f‘ ithat Canada over had, was also an ' 7 editor, while the Hon. 'W. S. Fielding grow politically wise while wielding, the oditouai pen of the Halifax! Chronicle. A very humble position introduced 1. Scott to Journalistic life, for 11! mos 118116 0111131 than that of printer's' |devil, The young “devil" roso quiokai fly, He was soon at the "case," and ‘11. year or two later saw him mechanl- . cal foreman, With mechanical form] ananship he combined leader writing, . 1’01 in those days there were no nice distinctions between the different do» aartmems of Westein newspapers, 1'1 on you: s after “hitting" the West, .11.;1', Scott was editor and proprietor ‘ .- w--- W i i 1 HON. WALTER SCOTT R‘â€" i i l of two newspapers. There is cause! . for gratification in the fact that men i .like Mr. Scott are constantly rising 'irom the ranks to give States and I5P1-ovinces' and nations just laws and 'good government. Upon this fact the world depends for its guides and deaders. The old idea that a single1 class, an hereditary or patrician class I of the community could supply a 3110‘ '1 cession of competent law-givers has lopelessly broken down ! Mr. Scott grew up as the son of pioneer farmers in Old Ontario. His' father died when he was a baby,I ’and for that reason Mr. S ott bad to work perhaps a little harder than Iother boys. He milked and ploughed and did every common task incidental ;to the raising of stock and the grow- in; of grain. in the summer time he i went, like other children, barefooted ito the common school, and in the ' putumn. when the mornings were chil- ., .1y, he learned the trick of warming ' his feet on the patches where the soon had beeanrlu. . . ‘4..- 1 prominent among the proprietor evidently thought him a bright lad; for about a year afterwards the two went together farther West, and started a new paper in Regina,1 ithen the capital of the North- West Prailes. The next fifteen years were spent by Mr. Scott in Regina, and intermittently in the neighboring town of Moose Jaw, in active newspaper Work. He did everything there was to do about a newspaper. He often ‘wrote a leading article and set it up in type himself. It is one of hisI boasts that he is still a union printer. The years brought their return. In 1894 Mr. Scott bought the Moose Jaw Times, and the following year the Re- gina Leader, both of which are to-day. daily news- papers of Western Canada. ~.â€"¢ _.., .. . 1 A Dark Curtain That Shuts Oui - Warmth and Light, and Depresses â€"_ We were at the foot of Humbzldi _ Glacier when the sun 'bade us a final - adieu for a long winter night, not to appear again for many months to come. As though to leave us with pleasant memory of his visit, his go- reluctant to go, he lingered for alittle while below the horizon, lighting the sky with a. mass of marvellous color ingâ€"-â€"~red, purple and orange, reaching '3' upward from the white earth into the deep blue 01 the high heavens. For a time a prolonged twilight remained, but that, too, was presently lost be- bind the dark curtain that shut from our world all warmth and light. No words can adequately describe ' the awful poll of the Arctic night. It is unreal and terrible. Even the moon- light is unnatural, casting on_ the Snow . and ice, the wind- swept rocks, and the people themselves, a shade of ghastly, indefinable greenish yellow. Shifting shadows flit among moving ice masses like. wraiths of departed spirits. A death like silence preyails. to be bro- ken only by the startling and unexpect ed crackling of a glaciei with a sound of mighty thunder clap, or the smash- ing together of great ice does with a report like heavy cannon. In spite of one, depression takes possession of the soulâ€"a hopeless kind of unreasoniug depression. In tense and severe as the cold may be, any active man can stand it without serious suffering, when a little experi- ence teaches how, for that acts only on the physical being, and can be guarded against; but the prolonged sunless night has a. direct effect on the human mind which only exercise Ind diversion can counteractâ€"From “Hunting Fr -311 the Eskimos," by mm a- Whitney. , it develop into a chronic skin disease. us or \\ rite D. D D. will biing relief. ing was in an effulgence of glory, and] sonal inspection orive any idea of the quantity can wearing plate. 1 To please all tastes :tyles “e are offering. and Fine China and suit all pulses. These goods, because of their variety, we cannot even begin to describe or enumerate. Come and see them firsfitam mwfi. FOOT 0F KENT ST., LINDSAY. f' E ' binning skin, quickly diixing out all tnc disease germs, but it' is also the most do- lightful “ash for the complexion they ever used Absolutely harmless and pleasant to use. D D. l). cleanses the skin oi all minorimpuritics such as rash- es and pimples. over night, and used with the wonderful D. 1). D. Soap, it 19 eaves the slum as clear and smooth as that of a child. It 15 now generally knoun that there is nothing that can equ'1iD. D D. asa household remedy for all skin troubles, no matter what they are. We ourselves are fully convinced of the mciits of this 11 onderi’ui remedy If you have 11 minor skin trouble don’t let genfifiammiaxfimw Wfimmanag Better drop in and talk it over with at once to the D. D. D. Lnboratmies, Dcp t. F. E. 49 Colbornc St., ',i‘oronto forafree trial bottle. We know .-~. '41 4u'vv. A. J. Gould, Druggist, FENELON FALLS. Nothing as good as a fur coat’to keep out the cold. 1 have some Genuine Bargains For Quick Sale. See Them. Our Seven Colleges have been established during the past 30 D, y.e1us The largest trainers in J." S. 011th e '1'.anad:1 Owing to our connec- y . tion all over Ontario, we do better for our graduates than any other School. You may study all at home or partly at home and finish at the College Affiliated with the Commercial Educators' Association of Canada. Consider before choosing. Exclusne r1 ht Bliss Book- -kceping_ System which is unequalled. It- is Actual Busi- ness from Start to Finish, and the student keeps same books as Chaitered Banks and Wholesale Houses. Enter any time. Individual instruction Fall Term From Augus 28 Write, call or phone for particulars PETERBORO BUSINESS COLLEGE GEO. SFOTTON. PRESIDENT \u-~l._.- Next Door to H. H. Walsh’s Woolen Mill. 3 g g I 11 .1 ‘3‘ WW)?“ WW WWW WW WW “’5" 1V i. l G 01 N G THEM BETTER. Furniture delivered to your home at LESS THAN CITY P1115198 You run NO RISK. Call and see our goods. 8. S. 'Gaz’nerd FENELON FALLS. ONE ’ ‘www E. E. Log-n, Principal. i Subscribe for the Gazette. SEE OUR WALL PAPERS. tuna--

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