Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 31 Aug 1900, p. 1

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,. Aâ€"‘hu'r “you” i... .. .,,. “'0 ' ' " ""“‘ - - “.2322 1“ . v .. .,‘.__ , FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31s'r,-1900. lhe llld Reliable ling Slim. Euro E’s-sis Green, Insect Eowder, Edy Feisen Eeds. Headquarters for SPECTACDES. Opposite the post-office. n. ocean. Lytlc’s old stand. Professional Cards. LEGAL. MCLAUGHLIN do MCDIARMID, Bnnnrsrnns, Solicitors, Etc., Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Oflice: Kent-St, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Oflice : Over Burgoyne St Co’s store. The Fenclcu Falls oflice will be open every Wednesday.;_at'tcrnoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 5132’?“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLAUGHLIN. I“. A. MCDIARMID WILLIAM srltnns, Annisrnn. Solicitor Dominion Bunk E William Street, Lindsay. , A. P. DEVLIN, I ARRISTER, Attorney-atâ€"Law, Solicitor in Chancery, Kent Street,Lindsn..v W ‘ o. n. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, Sac. SOLIOI’l‘OR FOR B the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofiices: No.6, William Street South, Lind- say, On t. '____________.______.__._.â€"-â€": . MOORE & JACKSON, BARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, too. Of- fice, William! street,Lindsay. ' A.JACKSON F. D . Moons. HIEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-â€"-.\i. n., o. 11., M. a. c. 3. Eng, M. c. r. a: s., - 01m, 1:. r. M. s.â€" )llYSlClAN, SURGEON dz ACCOUCH- I. eur. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. ' on. A. WILSON, â€"-ll[. 13., M. 0. Pro s., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Office, Oolborne Street, ll‘enelon Falls. DR. D. GOULD, Graduate Toronto University, Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ont. Office at Drug Store. Residence, Francis street west. _______________..___â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"- E. P. SBIITH, TETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist Graduate ofOntario Veterinary College- Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria. by appointment of Dominion Government. Office and address â€"- CAMBRAY, Ou'r. DENTAL. flâ€" â€" Dr. NEELANDS, DElljl‘lS'l‘, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of rcw York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Oolton 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 $10. 3265” Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early :.nd secure an appointment _________._.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€"â€"â€"â€"- W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other anmsthe‘tics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artificial Teeth, better than the avoragc, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot,Lindsny. ~______,___.____.____’â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- NEW MEN IN THEOL D STAND. The undersigned, having bought Mr. William Golden’s Livery business on Fron- 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_ fig” CHARGES VERY REASONABLE. Calls attended to day or night. MUNGEY 6r. THOMPSON. Fenelon Falls, Jan. 15th, 1900. to make room for New-Fall Goods._ For the next Thirty Days we will offer every line: of e This sordid; "ice are @ppowhnni‘ty “to get some of the s res nine other. as. is onerous. Fire Insurance Agent, representing the Northern and Imperial of England. If you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon _ Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” invariably he will tell you Be one of the number, andcall 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, “ Salado,” of the following kinds : ’s Your 'ws snnenvon to MAKE f3 All lines of our jewellery and watchmaking business " BELMLE. We are particularly careful in the selection of the gold of which 7- we make our '" {Manuscrisz and ' resonates nurses. We appreciate the confidence '3‘“ placed in us, as shown by the very 3,: large share-of trade we have com- ' manded for so many years, and_' WE DON’T INTEND to lose it .3 now. . You can always rely on what you buy from did. if. Edit, Tun JEWELLER, Lindsay. ff M initiate Wdrlebable. -â€"â€"_â€" . The lust for gold is likely to produce serious trouble elsewhere than in Smith Africa. Alaska will probably be the theater of the next gold war. There are gold deposits there which are said to have no parallel for richness. Eighty thousand men are preparing to go there when the ice breaks up, and as the'harvest must be reaped in three short months, there is a busy time a- head for all concerned. Much of the gold lies in the sands along the sea- shore, and as it has been officially de- cided that there is no title to any of the tidal water shores, the American cap- italist has decided to take a hand in the great game of grab. The poor miner, with his shovel and dish, scooping, single-handed, nuggets from the grav- olly sand, .must not be left in undisturb- ed possession of so rich :1 field. Capital, therefore, has decided to relieve him of his arduous, though well-remunerated, toil. , 'l‘hc capitalists of the Pacific have spent the winter in building a. fleet of powerful steam dredges, fitted with huge suction pipes. When the tide rises the miners‘rctire to wait the fall of the waters. nBut the great dredgers an- choring above the golden board will thrust their suction pipes through the waters and scoop up the auriferous sand, working double tides and all tides, put- ting 24 hours work to each day. Of course against such competition the working miner can do nothing. The 50 dredgers now ready will eat up the golden shore by the acre, leaving not even the’ tailings for the private miner. But there are 10,000 men already on the ground besides the 80,000 waiting to bc ferried over, and they are in no mood to see their prospective fortune dredged away before their eyes. The miners have their rifles, and will not hesitate to shoot. But the capitalists who are sending out the dredgers are not men who will turn their cheek to the smiter. They are plating their dredgers with iron, and among their equipment are Maxims and Norden- feldts, and other machine guns, with which, if a shot is fired, they will sweep the shore with a deadly hail of bullets. To preserve the peace, the United States government is sending 12,000 in- fantry in a warship, and an armed des- patch boat to patrol the shore and stave off the threatened war. But we may safely conclude that in Alaska, as in South Africa, the capitalist will come out on 'l‘op.â€"â€"-'1’ocsin, Melbourne, Aus- tralia. __...__L_'._-¢..'. Under Public Ownership. In Australia on government-owned railroads, you can ride a distance of 1,- 000 miles for$6.50, first‘class, and work- ingmen can ride six miles for 2 cents, 12 miles for 4 cents, 30 miles for 10 cents and workiogmen receive from 25 to 30 per cent. more wages for eight hours of labor than they are paid in this country for 10 hours. In Victoria, where these rates prevail, the net‘ in- and, freight rates ‘ cut down one-half, and wages doubled. Yet the roads pay a yearly revenue to the government of $4,000,000. In the United States, under private ownership. it is the other way. We have paid the railroads bil- llODS in land and money, and are now paying them millions yearly for carrying the mail, and yet freight and passenger rates are so extortionate. In Germany you can ride four miles for 1 cent on the government-owned lines. Yet wages are over 125 per cent.- higher than they were when the corpor- ations owned them, and during the last. 10 years the net profits have increased 41 per cent. Last year the roads paid the German government a net profit of 824,000,000. _.§. The Reformer. As we cast an eye backward over the history of the ages, and view the seas of blood through which the reformer has passed; the gibbct, the rack, the stake, and devouring flames, and such- torlnrc as only demons eculd devise, it seems but proof' positive that man is o.- crcoture of circumstances. and himself to a greater or less extent the creator thereof. The conservatism of man seems to have no limit. The tenacity with which he clings to old customs; no bounds, causing him to oppose all progress that tends to better circumstances. When- ever the human intellect has advanced sufficiently to discover that his surround- ing conditions are not what they should be; he starts out for new fields, to he met with opposition on all sides- The reformer’s pathway has ever been a thorny one. He has always been a rebel against fixed customsâ€"which are laws in the absence oflawâ€"a heretic in the church, and an outcast fromsociety. He has opposed unjust laws and cus- toms, whether established by church or state. To denounce the crystallized creeds of men, and to shatter their idols has been the unceasing work of his hand. Terrible indeed has been his sufftwing from the vengence of established power, which rests severely in its case in the possession of the best [that the earth affords. And so these conservative wrecks in human form cling to old ideas long since outgrown by the onward march of human intellect and the neces- sities of the community. I Lillie D. White said: “ To' follow the reformer on his arduous and lonely journey, must be at the cost of case and comfort, home and friends, respectability and popularity.” Few acceptor choose the rugged pathway. Fewer still possess the courage and strength to follow it to the end. To the reformer it is the voice of' truth which says: "Unless ye forsake all and follow me, ye cannot be my disciple” How many times the would-be Christian who claims to obey the author of these words is the worst and most cruel enemy of the re- formulaâ€"Reform 1 ’rcss. _. ¢ ._s._4 . . . “m-â€" The More The Bitter. C. P. Huntington, the railroad mil- lionaire is dead. He had accumulated $100,000,000 that the people of this country had created and for which he had given no equivalent. lie was a. bribcrand,corruptionist of the worst type, but be aided in coricel'itrating wealth and in that aided in producing pain in the mind of many people,‘and that pain produced thought that will help to change the system. By the way, pain is the greatest gift to man. ‘ If it were not for pain the animal creation would cease to exist. If it were not for pain men would handle fire and gradually burn away their bodies, in- sects would sap away life and no atten- safety valve of existence. The more Vanderbilts there are the sooner will the mass of men he reduced to a condition of' painful poverty and won that will cause them to in Vestigate how to rid themselves of a. condition that. produces such vermin. That will pro- duce socialismâ€"peace. plenty and pleasureâ€"Appeal To Reason. .0. The San Jose scale has been discov- \“..’5,«\.r i-.,~..._.~,..-;,l,i,,..~. tion could be paid to them. It is the . Huntingtous, Rockefellcrs, Goulds and ‘ 53.0%: '.2 ~ 1 «5;». e Jerk. ' 49â€"15” I l - sis sufficient to a. "“W‘ salada caylon Breen7 salada Gaylon Black, zlluiliefrfzrdlci‘iilitlaogils, which is anothei, el'ed 0“ apple trees in the “Stem Pal“ BATTEN DOORS" WIRE DOORS ' and Salada Geonn MIXGEL convincing proofot'the possibilityof'gov- Of London: Out- _ .i; J T Jr” Also a Splendid line of Jq’ : T ‘ cmment Without taxation. - A number of Apati'chlsts haye. been . . (pan eas. In Hungry Where the roads are arrested on the charge cfconspumg to ’ ’ assassinate King Victor Emmanuel III. state-owued, you can ride six miles for 1 cent, and since the roads were bought by the government the men’s wages have doubled. Belgium tells the same storyâ€"Jaws 3.4;.RPENTER. Jobbing attended to. Wall Brackets and Easy Chairs made to order. 'orkshop on Lindsay Street, Near the Q, lull. Station. h‘enelon Fells. JAPAN SIFTINGS, ,4 POUNDS FOR 25 CENTS, The best value ever offered. w. L. season, , ' On Monday adisaetrous storm passed over the Western part of the Province, the. lightning causing much loss by burning barns. is i: more .- " "‘ ““"""“‘4’i~‘m»‘. t 99‘“. “bums-u...“ at“. . | at... ~ ".«un

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