Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 22 Aug 1902, p. 1

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4.55 IIFENELON FALLS, - our. Professional Cards. MUSIC. 'Miss Violet M. Wilson, EACHER OF PIANO, THEORY AND “The Fletcher Music Method,” a kinder~ garten method for children. Pupils may enter any time from Septem- ber lst, 1902. . Studio and residence: Corner Colborne and Bond streets. LEG AL. MGLAUGHLIN, MCDIARMID do PEEL. ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc., Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Office: Kcnt-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Office: Over Burgoyne & Co’s store. The Feuelon Falls office will be open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 13$“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLAUGHLIN. F. A. MCDIARMID J. A. PEEL. G. H. HOPKINS, )ARRISTER, &c. 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. r arrived. STEWART Sr O’CONNOR, )ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &o. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. Srnwan'r. L. V. O’CONNOR, B.‘A. MOORE 8:. JACKSON, BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of- tice, William street, Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON : MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. -â€"M.D., 0. 1L, M. it. c. s. Eng, 1!. o. P. a s., Orin, r, 'r. at. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON Sc ACCOUCH- eur. Office. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. DR. A. WILSON, --M. 13., M. c. P. a 5., Ontario,â€"â€" in HYSICIAN, SURGEON 85 ACCOUCH- ' eur. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. DENTAL. Dr. S. J. sums, DENTIST, ’ Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and ~ Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, 001- orne street ~ A He studied a... g... ma..- Dr. 001..., of has arrived, and contains a number of Dr. trams, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him for 27 years. New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands new and the prices ‘Vill be found pleasure of of- hat he has given the gas to 186,417 per- ons without an accident from the gas. lo‘ver than I ever had the Other pain obtunders used. A good set of - teeth inserted for $10. 3%” Dr. Neelands . 1- ‘ 1 visits Fenelon Falls ()[cArthur House) the 111g YOU 6. third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment ASuuderland lady writes Dr. Neelands that. he had made her a successful fit after having eight setsof teeth made in Toronto and elsewhere. w. H. Gauss, 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 _averngc, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot,Lindsay. Our first consignment of Slater Shoes for Spring and Summer “trade All the latest styes and. best qualities of leather. Prices $3.59 and s5. owwéog M, 9- w, s.,”. . I J. L. Arnold. E Lfifthdsesws J. C. McKeggie & 60., (nsrsemsnsn 1879 .) BANIEERS 2 Agents: The Bank of British Ninth America. A general up-to-date banking business transacted. Current accounts, with merchants and c V a business men opened on the usual terms, - and careful attention given to the business of our customers. Deposits Received. North America,'T_oronto, and usual rate or injte‘r‘ejsmlwevd. , His prices are right, consistent with firstâ€"class * W- A- 3'5"”, style and workmanship. He makes no other. Acting Manager If you ask any particularly wellâ€"dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” invariably he will tell you 7 Be one of the number, and call and {see . - a”; kb k . ‘ " . . ' i..3§§°§‘$§§§§3’5i $3.1 £3353} 333.13. What the 1s domg f01 the Sprlng and Summer. .. v . v.7 , N-.. __ ._.__. . _. -__ ..._..._._, _.__ .. _, _.. , ARE YOU imrnnnsrnn IN ’ llill? Wedding Rings, Diamond Rings ml; WRITE SEQ. u. SEALL, THE JEWELLER, .5 Lindsay, , For particulars. You will save money. You can rely on what you get. The Sorrows of Wealth. John D. Rockefeller-'5 bald head is no longer hold. A new crop of hair, or. rather, of fuzz or down, is gradually spreading over his dome of thought When the fuzz is firmly established, it is expected that real hair will crop out, and the man of millions will be able to hold his head as high as he did before he was deprived of his hirsute adornâ€" ment. The return of the hair of Rockefeller is a grievous blow to the apologists of plulocracy. The loss of the Rockefeller hair was as milk and honey to tho apol' ogists, defenders and advocates of feu- dalism of wealth. John D. Rockefeller, the richest man in the world, going about without a hair on his head, was a spectacle to hold up to the disinhcrited calculated to make them contented with their poverty and joyous in the posses- sion of their hair. _ Why should .a man strive for great wealth and lose his hair? The moral was plain, the conclusion logical. Bet- ,ter it were, far better, it were to live in honest poverty and have plenty of hair. than to revel in wealth and have not a single hair to protect the head and eyes, the cheek and the chin, from the fierce, hot, beating sun of summer and the cold, biting, blasting wintry winds. The unhappiness that wealth brings, its cares and its burdens, its worry and insomnia, have done full duty in de- picting the misfortunes of the million- aire as contrasted with the content- ment, the happiness of the man who has not the burden of wealth to mar his joyous lot. Then Rockefeller’s bald pate loomed up above the horizon, and a new horror presented itself. Here was a man with a nation’s wealth at his disposal, and yet he was a fright. His eyebrows were gone, his hair was gone. his whiskers were gone. Who was there among the honest sons of toll that would exchange places with the poor hairless man of millions? And what. profited him his wealth? He could grow no hair with money. So the changes were rung, and Rockefeller had the centre of the stage as the hor- rible example of the misfortune, sorrow, trouble and" unhappiness that follow in the train of wealth. Rookefelloer might have gone down to his grave a martyr to his millions, had he not in an evil hour consulted a hairgrowing specialist. The doctor rubbed the Rockefeller head with a concoction the ingredients of which re- main a professional secret. He rubbed it once. He rubbed it again. And he kept on rubbing the head of Rocke- feller. At last his labors were rewarded.‘ As ye sow, so shall ye reap. Tiny sprouts appeared on the surface of the mlllionaire’s pate; then there came forth a bunch of fuzz, followed by other bunches of down, until at last the whole of the Rockefeller head was covered with a thick and luxuriant growth of I tiny hairs. And they are still growing, with every prospect of giving way to a wonderful crop of big, bristling hairs. No longer need tears be shed for the misfortune of Rockefeller. No longer need the poverty-strickenrgive thanks that they are poor, and not rich and hairless. .- The old burdens will be re- sumed. The cares, the worries, the tribulations that wealth brings must re- turn to their old-time stunts. The loss of sleep may continue an incident of riches, but the loss of hair has ceased to be wealth’s alfllction.â€"-â€"Exchange. Six Men Control the Nation. One of the most startling phillipics of the pen has just emanated from the president of the Tennessee Central rail- road, Jerre Baxter. He says that the power of the corporations, especially of the railroad corporations, has overshad- owed the individuality of the Republic. and gives columns of figures to prove that the railroad managers rule the commerce and the people, and that gov- ernment, as it now exists, is solely by and for the benefit of these corporations in their extortion of the people. He shows that six men control the nation absolutely, and (that the politiciam do their bidding as if they were hired ser- vants. Coming as it does from the pres- ident of a railroad. it is enough to star- tle the nation into thinkqur what all this merging means. Of course it is forced out of him by the process of squeezing by those more powerful; and he would be as much Ol'lpOSGd to a sys- tem that would prevent any corporation v or individual from extorting from their fellow citizens, but it will open the eyes of thousands who do not believe that great fortunes are a menace to the lib- erty of the peoplc.â€"Appeal to Reason. ._.* .__.__ What the Trusts are Doing. The enormous profits of the salt trust may be dimly imagined, when it is ob- served that on the importation of u con~ siderable quantity of foreign salt the trust cuts down its price, first $8 and then 36 a too, 514 a ton in all. in order to force the importers to keep their salt oh” the market, or sell it at a price that will discourage them from further im- portations. For years the trust has been holding up the people for many dollars per ton beyond any reasonable or conseiouable price, and the millions of people who have thus been plundered have simply been helpless, and their legislative and judicial doctors and sup- posed protctors say that there is no help for them. There ought to be some way,‘ and some way must be found, to res- train the rapacity of such a combine. If no other way can be found, we will swing into practical Socialism. the pen- 7 ple taking‘over not. only the railroads, ‘ but salt mines, coal miues and every- thing that, under present laws and cus- tows, enable a few to thus plunder the many. These trusts are doing more in a decade to bring about Socialism than ‘ all the verbal and written argumcnts of all the Socialists in the world could do in a thousand yearsâ€"Portland, (Ore) Evening Telegram. 04¢ It is the System. Speaking of the enormous revenue exacted from the American people by the Steel Trust, and the recent declara- tion of Schwab that the net earnings have accumulated at the rate of 315,- 000,000 a year, the Boston Globe, one of thegreat papers of the country, says, “ Schwab is not; to blame for these Stag- gering figures. It is the system under which he thrives that is at fault. When will the people ever wake up to the enormity?” That’s the talk. But why does n’t the Globe tell the people what the system is that will change these things? The people don’t know that they are living under a system. If you question twenty men as t6 what kind of a system we live under, you will hardly get; an intelligent answer. Private own- ership of capital is the system from which every effect now springs. There is only one other systemâ€"and that is the public ownership of capitolâ€"II). 0+9 Father Haggerty Cornered Him. Father Haggerty, of New Mexico, held adebate with a. Denver, Colorado, clergyman recently, in the presence of 8.000 people. on the subject of Social- ism. The Denver man was so badly cornered in the argument that he flew into a rage of denunciation against So- cialism, and was nearly booted out of the house, while Father Haggerty’s calm, intelligent and scientific discus- sion of the subject won the hearts ofthe entire audience and made many converts to the causeâ€"Eco. + The average weekly wages paid to female laborers of all classes in Ger- many is $2 17. Women coal carriers at the Lisbon docks receive thirty cents a day; male carriers eighty oents. ' In the Russian glass Works the labor- ers earn from $56 to 886 per year, with food and lodging in the works, ' -'~;.:. .3: s.

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