Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 18 Jul 1902, p. 1

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Professional Cards. ' ~LE3AL. __ p , RE YOU INTERESTED IN run .. . . . , . ._ r . _ :. MCLAUGIILIN. . MCDIARMID , PEEL. BARRI ,TERS, Solicitors, lEtc., Lindsay liand «enel'on Falls. Lindsay] Office: Kent-St, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls, Office : Over Burgoyne & Co’s ‘store. _The : Fenelou Fall's "office will be open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train A fromLindsay, , W'Money to loan on real . estate at lowest current rates. ‘ i a.» .l. mutating. ‘ , _ x F. A. llIcDIARMm -'J. A. PEEL. Wedding Rings, Diamond Rings. to. n. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, Sta. SOLICITOR FOR B lhc On't'a'rio Bank. Money to loan at hit/est rate-'5 ‘on t'e'iiin's to suit the borrower. Offices} No. 6, William Street South, Lind- ay, Ont. WRITE est. w. BEALL, THE JEWELLER, _;; Lindsay, v1 STEWART & O’CONNOR, I ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &‘c. MONEY to, 1‘0an“at 'IOWGSI current rates. Terms ‘to suitborr‘o\vers. 'Oflice‘on “corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. ‘ in Sumter. in. V. 'O’C‘ct'mon, B For particulars. You will save money. You can rely on what you get. Our first consignment of Slater “Shoes for Spring and Summer ‘trade has- arrived. MOORE amassed, ARR‘ISTERS, SOLICITORS, &'c-. or- ' fice,Will=ia'â€"m street, altruism. ; D. Moons. 2L JACKSON -’ .... MEDICAL. I‘Mâ€"smfiiiéchflur‘fiâ€"W The bishop of Bufialo, it is reported, is about to organize his entire diocese archy among the people. This move- ment, it is stated, isexpecled to spread to every Catholic diocese in the nation. The bishop is reported as saying that: “ The time has come for an organiza- tion under the auspices of the church All the latest styles and best qualities of leather. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-M.D.,C.M., 11.11. es. Eng, M. o. r. a s., Outta, r. 'r. M. 5.2:- - 'HZ‘ZSlCiA'fi, SHRGEQN «Sr AGGOUGH: our. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon it‘alls." social questions according to christian principles.” We are 10th to believe that any per- son of the intelligence demanded ofa prclate in the Roman Catholic church could have made the statements that Bishop Quigley is reported to have made. In the first place, no honest in: telligent man now confuses Socialism with anarchy. The two are opposite phases of a revolt against the present economic order. The Socialist would utilize all the forces of society, which are now unfairly diverted to the benefit of the few, to the common good ; while the anarchist would dissolve all ties, all responsibility and all co-operation, into an era of chronic chaotic individualism. The Socialist abhors anarchy and repu- diates it as fully as he protests against the existing order of things. It is as- suming, moreover, a great deal to imply that Socialism does n’t settle ecomomic questions according to christian princi- ples. The lowly Saviour, who was cra- dled in a manger, and who had not where to lay His head, would, we are afraid, be a stranger and ill at ease in some of the magnificent modern temples DR. A. WILSON, =-u. 3,,1u. c. P. a s., Ontario,=.- H-YSICIAN, SURGEON 8r. ACCOUCH- eur. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. Prices $3.50 and $5. '- DENTAL; na's. J. SIMS, Dunner, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. , ALL BRANCHES 0E- DENTISTRY J! L! performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. ‘ o ,' OFFICE :â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, (301- \ ‘ ., _ V orne street ,: a p a K . ,_ . . g I I \ ‘ 1 ’ .9" .A._ _ ,t if y f . . Dr. NEELIIIIDS, DENTIST, LIIIDSAI, Extracts teeth withoutpain by gas (vital- izcd 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 'hat he has given the gas to 186,417 per- ons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. '3? Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early :nd secure an appointment ASunderland latllly writes Drt.‘ ll‘IfilaadS . a a a e '8, u ll 1 9. 81‘ I ' $3.25.? Sglltnéefi «lieu? £2335... Toronto has arrived, and contains a number of and elsewhere. ' - new styles, and the prlces W111 be found lower than I ever had the pleasure of of-. ‘fering you before. His name. Certain it is that in com- passion for the poor and in contempt . for the selfish rich, and in righteous in- dignation at their methods, which work such a seething hell in the world of to- day, as they did iu His time, the Sa- viour was more of a Socialist than are ' any of His supposedly followers of to- day. To say that Socialism is unchris- tian is to challenge contradiction, and an examinati0n of the church’s influ- ence tor the amelioration of industrial evils that it is ill prepared to meet. We are sorry to see the good bishop and his church take such a decided stand on such debatable territory. The evils against which Socialism strives are world old. The church has done little against these evils in the 2,000 years during which it has had the opportuni- ty to act. Its followers of 'to-day are less christians in their attitude towards property than were the rugged, grand old heroes of the apostolic age. The bishop cannot kill Socialism until he removes the cause. Socialism is a pro- test against the cxisting order of things, which is admittedly and self-evidently wrong and out of adjustment. A sys- tem which produces Carnogies, Mor- gans, coal barons and monopolists on the one hand, and, on the other, mil- ” W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. 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. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot,Lindsay. l HAVE ' PURCHASED W. MCKEOWN’S FURNITURE BUSINESS, and will carry a. large and up-to-date stock of furniture. Am also prepared to do all kinds of ' W. L. ROBSON. Who’s Your manor :9 It you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes ?,” invariably he arria, e Makin . lions of laborers who must starve and g8 aign and g, W111 you coin their lives into bloody profits for p . the powerful few, is wrong, and is con- Repalntlng: demned by the founder of Christianity. Let the bishop and his church work to- ward tho securing of industrial peace and the abolition of industrial slavery, especially among women and little chil- dren, and Socialism, if it be evil, will fall of itself. If it be good, the ecclesi- astics, in fighting it, may be found, as was the church in Christ’s time, fight- ing against God. The church should rightly engage in industrial discussions. It is interested, or should be, in all that and to make DOORS AND SASH. ‘ TOWNLEYR _ Be one of the number and call and see ._ Pl done on . , , ’ - short mugging what he 1s domg for the Spring and Summer. 8 S His Prices are right, consistent with first-class . . .lStyle and W01jlmm’nShill He makes no other. Engagemem Rings, :9 '7 those I employed. My own living con- to fight the spread of Socialism and an- ' for the insistence upon the settlement of, and elaborate ceremonies in honor of goes to make up the life of a man. But it must choose its ground carefully, and must not take inherited prejudice for well chosen principle.~â€"Toledo Daily, News, (Rep) How Capital is Accumulated. Under the present system all capital is the accumulated fleecing of labor. Take my own situation. What little I made in the years I followed printing as a business was the profit I made off sumed all the results that my owu part of the labor produced, and perhaps more. I made money just in propor- tion as I increased the number of cm- ployees; this money was the profit oif them, and was invested in machinery, to that I could employ still more and make more. The accumulation was not possible 011’ my own labor ; ' so you see that the office, my “capital,” was what the workers produced and did not get. In my case it was not much, but it proves the position. Later, I “specu- lated " in real estate, and in the sphere in which I moved was successful. I bought property and sold it for moreâ€"r the same being possible because so ma- , ny more working people came to that town to live, and made property go up. By this process I gained more “capital.” I did not make it, did not produce itâ€" I got it legally, but morally wrong. I did not take it from any man. but from all men. But so long as capital for in- : dustry must be had, and the public will not assume the production of the things it needs, individuals must do it. and the only way they can get enough capi- tal is to take it from the laboring mil- lions by just such means. The laboring millicnsâ€"the great majorityéâ€"are fool- ish to uphold a system that makes them victims of such conditions. If I have to live under it I can, but I do n’t like ' it and would a thousand times prefer, Socialism with its public capital. Now, if the public had employed the people in the industries, the people would have received their compensation just the sameâ€"and they would have owned all the accumulated capital of the nation too. Today they own not even the pc- litical chains that bind them; they are owned, body, boots and breaches. by their masters. To put; it again 1 If the public builds a federal building, do not the workmen get their pay? And do. not the workmen, as, a part of the na~ tion, own the structure after it is.comâ€" pleted ? Now, if all the workmen were employed by the. public in the various. industries, would they not get their pay and would they not own the result of their labor when completed ? But when. they work for a private owner they get wages, but have no ownership in the re- sults of the labor when they get done. In the matter ofa public building, they do [not pay for it use after it is com- pleted; but after the private structure or machine it completed they havo to pay for the use of what they have pro- duced. It seems that even a little child should be able to see the dilfcrcnce be- tween the two ways‘ of doing things. And why the working people prefer a. system that takes a profit out of them, and then builds it into some great in- dusty in which they have no voice or ownership, rather than a system that would employ them and give them the ownership and control of all the indus- tries their labor has built up, is beyond comprehension on any hypothesis other than that they are deceived by their mastersâ€"J. A. Wayland. 0*. Freedom Approaches. Municipal ownership, or “trading,” as it'is called_in England, is taking such rapid strides in Britain that “ a league composed of wealthy and influential men, including noblemen, members of parliament, manufacturers and mer~ chants,” has been organized to combat it. Of course, anything in the interest of the common people will be combatted by the rich and “ noble.” If they were to espouse it you might be sure there was something rotten in it. They live by fleecing the poor, and are, of course, opposed to anything that will check them in their looting. But the idea that the whole people should own all the capital is gaining fast, and while the rich will try to stop the tendency, they might as well try to stop the movement of the planet. The day of freedom ap. proaches.â€"-.Ilp_pcul to Reason. â€"-. * ._~‘-...~__ Under Socialism there will never be a strike, as every mechanic will he |.\‘-Jl“‘-- iug in his own shop. 1 often for ten times as much as it cost; ,

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