Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 16 May 1902, p. 1

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_. ...marzaexédeu‘mupzmmmszWmmmaflww.amW :1'Iuvzamwuduwmaww.‘flunzn~ M- .. s. - .. -- . . 3 . 5.4 ,. Prof ‘ssional Cards. .._._. .__.._. MCLAUG l'lLIN. MCDIARM ID 8: PEEL. )ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay i) and Fenclon Falls. Lindsay Office: Kent-St, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Office: Over Burgoyne & Co’s store. The Fenelon Falls oflicc will be open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay? {fr}? Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. ll. J. MCLAUGHLIN. F. A. MCDIARMID J. A. PEEL. ______________.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &o. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- ay, Ont. M STEWART & O’CONNOR, PARRISTERS, NOTARIES, Sac. MONEY ) to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Oflice on corner of Kent and YGrk streets, Lindsay. T. STEWART. L. V. O’Connor, B. A. MOORE & JACKSON, PARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of- 7) lice, William street,Lindsay. M A.JACKSON F. D. Moons. ____._._._. MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. -â€"M.D., 0. l[., M R. c. s. Eng, M. o. r. a. s., ON’l‘., r. r. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON Sr ACCOUC'H- enr. Office. Francis Street, Fetielon Falls. DR. A. WILSON, ‘ -â€"iit. 13., M. c. r. & 5., Ontario,-_â€"- )HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCHâ€" l. cur. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. DENTAL. _______'_’___________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Di'. 5. J. suns, DENTEST, Fonelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orue street W W- Dr. llEELllllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, V. . .mL Extracts teeth without pain by gas (v1 ized air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of . . . . . ‘ t_ New York the originator of gas for extrac ing teeth.’ Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands ' s 17 per- hat he has given the gas to 186,4 ons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early : tid secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neelands that he had made her a successful fit after having eight sets of teeth made in Toronto and elsewhere. / W. H. GROSS, ENTES‘T. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all.other anaesthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. A set of Artificial Teeth, better than the average for $8 00. . opposite Wobd’s stove depot,Lindsay. SEGOHD DEVESEOH COURT “OF THE-â€" County of Victoria. ._._..â€"â€"- . . ‘ ‘ ,u xt Sittings of the above Coutt W] llibelileeld in Dickson’s hall, Fenelon Falls, ON MONDAY, JULY 7th, 1902, ucin at 1 o’clock in the afternoon. TiiTtgdziy, Jgiine 27th, will be the last dla‘y of service on defendants residing in tits coutny. Defendants livntg in other coun- ties must be 'served on or before Saturday , June let. E. C. EDWARDS, Bailiff. Fonclon Falls, April 15th, 1902. ___,...â€"â€"â€"â€"-w KAWARTHA LAKES. The TRENT VALLEY NAVIGATION 00., LlMlTED. eh .m- ma BOBCAYGEON, suntan PT., LINDSAY. str. Esturion or Manita. May'l to 31 and Oct. 1 to close of navig’n. I ' eon 1v 8 00 a.m. Arr 530 p.m. arr 10 30 “ - Lv 3.00 H Coiling at Sturgeon Pomt on Signal. Fenelon Falls agt., D. Gould, telephone Exchange. E. D. HAND, Clerk. W Dr. Neelands ‘ Rooms directly Cur first consignment of Slater shoes tor Spring and hammer trade has arrived. All the latest styies and best qualities of leather. Prices $3.50 and $5. has arrived, and contains a number of new styles, and the prices will be found lower than I ever had'the pleasure of of- fering you before. i ‘ . W. l... RQBSON. ailor 23 A he ’s Your It you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” invariably he will tell you ' -‘ TOWNLEYJ 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. 3 ARE YOU 3 INTERESTED IN Engagement Rings: Wedding Rings, ' Diamond Rings. f WRITE THE JEWELLER, .. Lindsay, For particulars. You will save money. You can rely on what you get. The Ferment. The conditions everywhere, in every- thing, seem to be in a ferment such as was never before known. in religious, in industrial, in political affairs, strife and discord seem to be holding high car- nival. At the bottom of it all is the industrialâ€"from it spring all the ills that beset the religious and political fields. Combines are monopolizing the food and other necessaries of the people, strikes are resulting in thousands of in- dustries, and the people are looking a- bout them as never before, to see what the world-wide commotion means. Pet- ty wars are being waged by strong na- tions against weaker ones, to force them to buy goods for the profit of the inns- ter class in the strong countries; .ind inside the strong countries threatened revolution is hovering like a nightmare over the rule of the classes. The labor- ing people, for the first time in the world’s history, are taking an interest, in the social and industrial conditions, and are feeling the power which a bet- ter understanding has given them. In Europe they are questioning the right of the ruler to continue the Old Order. They are meeting in the halls of .legis lation and measuring mental forces with them, to the discomfiture of the masters. A great change is taking place; to-day is diti'erent irom yesterday; to-morrow will be still different; the whole world of thought is moving to new bases; old ideas are thrown away and new ones are rapidly replacing them; labor is re- ceiving new inspirations and new hopes, and is marching from one vantage to another. The changes that have occur- red in two years might almost be said to have created a new world of action, so great has it been. The changed con- ditions almost-daze the observer. The portending changes are different from any that have ever been attempted. Other changes were simply replacing one ruler by anotherâ€"one religion by another; this means that the laboring people propose to be masters of the earth, and they will brook no other masters. They are everywhere ques- tioning the right of the masters to say how long they shall labor. what they shall receive or what they shall pay for what they buy. They are virtually do- nying the right of private capitalâ€"for they are denying the right of the pos- sessor to have absolute control. The master class, like its prototype barons of old, will contest every inch, and will thus cause labor to make a harder struggle, to go further than it would without this opposition. Labor will ad- vance from one position to another un- til its demand will be for the abolition of private capital. It does not know it to-day, but there is where it must logi- cally arrive. The next ten years will be the most momentous in the history of the human race, judged by the pres. ent fermentâ€"Appeal to Reason. 0-. Hotel Columbia. . America is earning a reputation a- broad as a' summer resort for royalty. Besides Niagara, the Rockies, Mark Hanna, Britiin mule camps and other attractions peculiar to America, we of- fer to imperial idlers special induce- ments such as no other land affords. The lack of funds so prevalent among the rusty royalty of Europe, is no im- pediineut to a triumphal trip through America. There are many Yankees, possessed of more plunder than patriot- ism, who esteem it a blessed privtlege to pay the traveling expenses of a titled . tape-worm. and our native nabobs with wealth ‘to burn itch for an opportunity to touch the royal garments, or breathe the breath of feudal atmosphere. King Oscar of Sweden is to receive a special invitation, and almost anything with a. pedigree, from the czar of all the Russias to the mountebank of Monaco, will be feted‘and feasted. The almost penniless potentate of any old despc- tism will be given the glad handâ€"tl e open purse. Even the factory hand will wave his dinner pail, full of thirty- ' cent trust beef, at the prospect of high life this summer, and all are entliusd over the attractions that bring such a superior class of people to our shores. Some will probably wonder why ex- President Kruger, or a representative of some republic, is not on the list if invitations, but all such one male m t of the same common dirt as we are. It’s royalty we want, and royalty we must have. They come high. but Un- cle Sam is not running a dollar a day house any more. The Hotel Columbia is run strictly on the European plan. Special attention to grandees, and regis tered royal stock housed in the parlor. Plain Yankees must eat in the kitchen and be very careful what they say.â€" Inky 17cc. o‘eo_â€" The World is Mad. I have just returned from the South Park oil fields. It is a great gameâ€"â€" this land grabbing scheme; and the pity of it all is that it may yet reach an acute edge, in which “gun plays" and killing will be in order. In the nature of things, as they exist today, this will surely happen. This fierce, mad serum- ble is a pathetic spectacle to one who brings to mind the fact that under an equitable system (public ownership) there would be an abundance for every- one alike. But, mark you, this state of things cannot last. Just as a sink- ing ship in an angry sea goes down, so surely will this putrid system we call civilization be engulfed. It is even now slowly sinking, and finally will be sub- merged in the tumultuous sea of an awakening public conscience, out of which will arise the Cooperative Com- monwealthâ€"a purified, glorified lin- manity. Is it coming? Millionsmtirch- ing under the banner of Socialism loud- ly answer, “ It is coming.”-â€"F. W. Eu- ans, Tarryall, Col. â€"-o*. The Cost of War. The cost of wars for the country just passed was. to be exact, $17,918. 000,- 000. And that was but a small portion of the cost, being only the wealth that was spent during the actual struggles. The cost in pensions and the desxrnc- tion of property, old soldier homes, in- sane asylums for soldiers, mhde insane by the miserable plan of settling mil- lionaires’ disputes over wealth. etc., etc, wauld bring the sum close to $100,000,- 000,000. These figures rise spectre-like out of the carefully suppi'eSSed history of the past, to remind us of the endless chain of horrors that have polluted the pages of history and blackened the souls of men. If the money that has been spent in trying to open a market in the East had been spent in old age pensions, every man and woman over 60 would be provided with a weekly stipend of $3.50. That would abolish povertv, for the very old, at any i'ate.-â€"â€"E:rclia7ign. '¢. Another Philanthropist. Another great man has come to bless the earth. This time it is the president; of the Metropolitan Street Railway of New York city. He has decided to pension all employees of his road who are between the ages of sixty-five and seventy years, (Heaven bless him!) that is, provided they have been in the service cominuously for twenty-five years. But the most beautiful part a- bout this magnanimous purpose is that the pension fund will be supplied ei- tirely by the company. the employr-is not being asked to contribute. What a miserable, conteinptible, burning shame it is that the public should be imposed upon by such rot! Every dollar of wealth the company has, wns'hnade by the labor of the employees; and if the men received what they earned, eyen under the present industrial system, they could take care of themselves in their old age.â€" Wayland. ,7 ., ) .5. ,) » _‘.\. “may .-..v 2-... . . .\ . , l - ‘ .. a .‘ ,

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