Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 13 Jul 1900, p. 1

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lhe llld Reliable Drug Sine. Pure Paris Green, Insect Eowder, Fly Teison Dads. Headquarters for SPECTACLES. Opposite the post-office. D. GOBLD. Lytle’s old stand. -..__.__._..4 Professional Cards. LEGAL. d MCLAUGHLIN & MCDIARMID, ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc., Lindsay and Fenelon 'Falls. Lindsay Office: Kent-St., opposite Market. .Fenelon Falls Olfice:0ver Burgoyne & Go’s store. The Fenelon ‘Falls office will be open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 3%” Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. McLsuanm. F. A. McDIAnMrD WILLIAM STEERS, ARRISTER. Solicitor Dominion Bank William Street, Lindsay. A. P. DEV LIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &c. 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. MOORE & JACKSON, BARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. or- fice, William street,Lindsay. A. JACKSON F. D. Moons. MEDICAL. DR. 1-]. H. GRAHAM. â€"-M.D., c. 1L, M. a. o. s. Eng, M. o. r. a 3., Own, r. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSIGIAN, SURGEON 85 ACCOUCH- eur. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. ‘ DR. A. WILSON, --1u. 13., n. c. P. a 8., Ontario,â€" ' HYSI'CIAN, SURGEON a ACCOUCH- cur. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. ‘7 DR. D. GOULD, . Graduate Toronto University, Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ont. Office at Drug Store. Residence, Franc1s street west. E. P. SDIITIâ€"I, ETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist Graduate ofOntario Veterinary College Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria by. appointment of Dominion Government. Office and address â€" CAMBRAY, ONT. DENTAL. Dr. NEELANDS, 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. Colton writes Dr. Neelands 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 S10. 3%“ Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month; Call early and secure an appointment at. 'H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and alloother anaesthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. A set of Artificial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. TIEW MEN IN THE OLD STAND. The undersigned, having bou gbt Mr. William Golden’s Livery business on Fran- cis street east, have put in New Horses and New Rigs, _ and will do all in their power to retain Mr. Golden’s patrons and gain many others_ 3%” CHARGES VERY REASONABLE. Calls attended to day or night. MUNGEY & THOMPSON. Fenelon Falls, Jan. 15th, 1900. 49~ly. _.__. BATTEN DOORS. YVIRE DOORS J. T. THOMPSON, Jr., CARPENTER. Jobbing attended to. Wall Brackets apd Easy Chairs made to order. Wonkshop on Lindsay Street, Near the d, T,B. Station, Fenclon Falls. iug to control the entire products and lorcmg the people to pay them more Or do Without. That is what labor does. we: snuenvon to MAKE All lines of our jewellery and watehmakin g business ‘ RELIABLE. We are particularly careful in the selection of the gold of which j" we make our ENGAGEMENT and WEDDING RINGS. We appreciate the confidence i placed in us, as shown by the very ‘ large share of trade we have com- trenath in the hidden )arts is the ke .. mended for so many years and g. S o 1 y WE DON’T INTEND to ldse it 3 note of a good Shoe. V now. . Without it the shoe can not be comfortable. 4 side: ' It wants only what in creates, while the capitalists create nothing and want what others create. It was this blind spirit of the capitalists that made the black people chattel slaves, made it a felony to teach them to read or to agitate for liberation. It is the cap- italists who have no regard for the rights of others. They swindle and defraud each pther just as readily as they do the working people. But they are united on this one point : That the public is a field for exploitation, and they are op- posed to anything that would curtail their privileges of fleecing it. It is as if mankind were a great herd of wild cattle and they were free to captureand You can always rely on what But labor has this much more on its" Weak spots cause unevenness under the foot, which is painful to the wearer. When one weak spot wears out I the Shoe is doneâ€"4011c piece of poor material or workman- ship spoils the whole Shoe. - So a Shoe, to give the greatest wear, must be comfortable. GOODYEAR WELEE SHOES are carton-table and strong in this hidden parts. It is economical to wear that kind of a Shoe. The SLATER SEOE is Eoodyear walled. It is made by specialists who work on. nothing but one kind of Men’s Shoes. Everybody knows that a workman who does one parties ular thing’all the time does that thing well and quickly. Every operation in the making of a Slater Shoe is per- formed by men who do nothing but that identical thing. The “ Slater Shoe,” a- specialty, is therefore better, and made with less cost, than common Shoes, made in afnctory where all kinds of Shoes are made. The saving in the cost is put into quality of material and workmanship. The materials used in Slater Shoes-â€"the hidden parts as well as those seenâ€"must be the best obtainable, because the makers stamp their name 011 the soles and guarantee the workmanship and quality, and they could not afford to do so if the Shoes were not faultless. Because of tnese reasons it Pays to Wear Slater Shoes. ‘ Price $3.50 and $5.00. Sold by .r. a... sarcoma. Fire Insurance Agent, representing - the Northern and Imperial of England. he ’s Year Tailor 39 It you ask any particularly wellâ€"dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” invariably he will tell you ‘ TOWNLE Be one of the number, and call and see what he: is doing for the Spring and Summer. His prices are right, consistent with first-class style and workmanship. He makes no other. Just received a stock of that enjoyable tea, “ Salada,” of the following kinds : Salada Ceylon Green, Salada Ceylon Black, and Salada Ceylon Mixed. I 'Also a splendid line of Japan Teas. JAPAN SIFTIHGS, 4 POUNDS FOR 25 GENTS, The best value ever offered. . w. I... Bosses. I you buy from sEdhi, THE JEWELLER, The New Slave Power. N. F. Thompson, secretary of the Convention at Huntsville, Ala", before the congress- Southern Industrial ions] industrial commission, testified, according to the dispatches under date of June 13 : “Labor organizations are. to-duy the greatest menace to this government that exists. Their influence for disruption and disorganization of society is far more dau- gerous to the perpetuation of our govern- ment in its purity and power than would be the hostile array on our borders of the armies of the entire world combined. On every hand and for the slightest provoca- tion all classes of organized labor stand ready to inaugurate a strike with all its at- tendant evils, and that, in addition to this, stronger tics of connection are being urged all over the country among labor unions, with the view of being able to inaugurate a sympathetic strike that will embrace all classes of labor, simply to redress the grievances or right the wrongs ofone class, however remotely located or however un- just may be the demands of that class. He maintained that organizations teaching such theories should be held as treasonable in their character and their leaders worse than traitors to their country. Mr Thompson declared that many labor leaders are open and avowed socialist-s ; that their organizations are weakening the ties of citizenship among thousands of our people; in that they have no other standard of community obligations than what these organizations Inculcate ; that they are creating widespread disregard for the rights of others; that they are decreasing respect for law and authority among the working classes; that they are creating antagonisms between employer and em- ploye ; that they are destroying the right ofindividual contract between employers and employes and forcing upon employers men at arbitrary wages, and that they are bringing public reproach upon the judicial tribunals of our country by public abuse of these tribunals, and often defiance of their judgments and decrees, thus seeking to break down the only safeguards of free people. He also suggests the organization of employers in all lines of business as the first step to correct the evils in contracts forced upon individual employers by labor unions. I He thought public'sentiment in the South would justify the shooting of union men who interfered with non-union men at work, because it was held that a man had as much right to defend his occupation as he had to protect his life. He said also, in reply to Mr. Kennedy, that the south was holding out as inducements to the manufacturers of textiles that, if they came South, they would be free from labor strikes. There is, he said, a movement on foot to put it be yond the power of labor unions, by means- of compulsory arbitration, to disturb in- dustrial conditions. Mr. Thompson ex- prccscd the opinion that negro labor is essential to the prosperity of the South, and he' also said, that the South was very prosperous at the present time.” Such sentiments are doubtless honest- ly held by a great many people. At one time just such ideas held me. It nev- er occurs to such that organizations of capital are the real menace to the major- ity, who are the laboring people. They uphold organizations of the strong and oppose organizations of the weak! It has been only a few generations since labor. organizations in England were treasonable. Men who asked for in- crease of wages were. sentenced to prison. Such fail to see that men organizing to secure more of the wealth they create ' and doing all they can to prevent peo- ple from getting labor cheaper, are working exactly on the lines-of cap- itulists organizing to get more of the products of the labor of the people and doing all they can to prevent the peo- ple getting those products, by combin- usc as many as they could kill or catch: What capitalists want is the" cheapest labor, what labor wants is the highest wages. There is therefore a deadly conflict of interests that cannot be har- monized. Mr. Thompson thinks that union men who try to induce their fel- lows to quit work to get more wages should be shot, but he does not see as clearly that capitalists who induce each other to raise prices of what they con- trol should also be shot. The capitalists are invited to go south because they are promised ignorant, cheap negro labor, that can be controlled and made to slave for the. capitalists. Many have been moved south for this reason, and it is proposed to enact labor laws similar to those in force in Europe two hundred years ago to keep this labor cheap and docile. But the evolution of the race is not that way. Labor in this country has votes and is in a majority, and will certainly use that legal force to compel its rights. If it does not, then it is fit only for the slavish condition which Mi'.’ Thompson and his class would fasten on it. There can be no successful move- ment to put labor unions down except iflabor, which is illlt majority, gives that consent, well and good. But labor will not consent. In this country, in the next five ycars’= labor will carry the elections and will put men in office and on the benches who will carry out its desires. The machinery of political government will be taken from the conâ€" trol of the capitalists and be used for the majority~ who are laboring people. Such men and Such speeches as I hate quoted speed the day when labor shall come to its Own, by making it plain to labor what it will have to do to have its desires gratified. Compelling labor to submit to the rule of the 'minm'ity was not a diflicult task when labor had no votes and could not read and write, which latter is the greatest factor in orâ€" ganization.- This country is now, re- garding the labor problem, where it was in 1856 respecting the chattel slave problem. l'ith this great differenceâ€"â€" slaves were uulettercd, ignorant, dis- » franchised. Labor to-day is lettered, intelligent and voters. The blacks struck no blow for their own freedomâ€"the whites are striking the blows in their own favor. The blacks were in a hope- less minorityâ€"labor to-day is in a great majority, and is just waking up, thanks to such utterances as that quoted. When the politicians see that labor is waking up, that it shows signs of do- ing something in its own interest, they will leave the handful of capitalists who could not elect a dog-pcltcr, and break their necks to serve laboring people. Labor is and by rights should be king in the United States. And by the eternal it will be, and shall sit under its own roof’and factory, and none shall molest and make it afraid. Bring on your laws to make organizations of la- boring pcople treason and uphold or- ganizations of capitalists. It will do much goodâ€"more than they know.â€" Appeal to Reason. ‘ 4-. “Within the last ten years the growth of socialism in England has taken on a new aspect,” says Prince Kropotkin. “ It is not so much by the number of meetings or of socialist votes that the intensity of the increment must bejudg- cd, but by the infiltration of the socialâ€" ist point of view into the trade unionist, the cooperative and the so-callcd muni- cipal socialist movements, as well as the general infiltration of socialist ideas all over the country. Under this aspect the extent to which the socialist views have penetrated is immense in com- parison with what it was in 1886; and I do not hesitate to say that it is simply polossal in comparison with what it was in the years 1876-82.” it has the consent of the majority, and . .egrfigz‘fgiaamw aflmawétvénflsa‘wm may; ': ~ swan: neivsaevbnetwwesrw 4.4V. 'v‘n. .‘ . 753.25“. "92’s.? . g v . . .vevazesig‘ .:.. 755; ,~ , 4 m1 _; -~...Mu;.»:£~.«i- a: .3: '~ .. m. ,-. ;. fir. he. .. . )ii .1 ,5; 4.3 '1‘. J.- - :._ : 17,15“ ..'-:.v 4" ‘ < w“ :Eg’ri’féiff'u .1 .4.- 9.,» .; V‘Klpxx‘fGt-‘b‘w- » wax-g”. ., «v :7. .3, :w a ;. ' ‘E.’&+®§£‘dh=€‘ 5* ’" <'.,"vr 3' ' I w s. .- _ ... _ a . ,xf~ m 3: ‘ ' 1. A

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