Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 9 Oct 1903, p. 1

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ARE YOU INTERESTED IN llES? Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings, ' Diamond Rings. ‘1'? _ W. EALL, THE JEWELLER, I Lindsay, :, For particulars. You will save 5'13 money. You can rely on what you get. In RECEIVED IN SUMS OF one I Dollar ' AND UP’WAnDs. INTEREST PAID on COM- POUNDED TWICE A YEAR AT fo Bank of British Earth America, ' Fellelon Falls. R. A Rflfiii‘dfiflfl, Manager. Labor’s Coming cenques’t. (Address by Thos. E. Will, Ph. D., d President American Socialist College, to Wichita Workingmen on day follow- ing Labor Day, 1903 ) As we watched the mighty march of Labor yesterday, we noted on its ban- ners the mystic words, “Labor Omnia Vincct.” What mean these words? Labor conquers all things. Labor has conquered many things. It has. paved these streets, erected these buildings, stretched these wires, laid those tracks, built these electric cars, grid-ironed this continent with steel highways, exploited our mines, tilled our fields. drained our swamps, irrigat- LEGAL. ________ ____.___.â€"___a F. A. MCDIAHMID. ' ARRISTER, SOLICITOR-,Etc., FENE- 8 ion Falls. Oliice, Colbornc street, opposite Post-office. 3&3” Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. 1‘ M CLAUG El LIN & PEE l1. ay, Out. ______________________â€"â€"â€"I STEWART St O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NO'I‘ARIES, Sec. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. STEWART. L. V. O’Cosxos, B. A _______________,__.__._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"- MOORE (it JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. 0f- tice, William street, Lindsay. F. D. Moore. A. Jacxsox â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-‘::’: MEDICAL. y’â€" DR. H. H. GRAHAM. --M.D., o. 31., M. n. e s. Eng, M. o. r. e s., 0NT., F. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSIGIAN, SURGEON St ACCOUCH- eur. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. / DR. A. WILSON, ~ --M. 13., M. c. P. do 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUOHâ€" cur. Olfice, Colborne Street, b‘enelon upon his uppers; the builder of palaces vegetates in a rented shack; and the creator of railway lines and palace cars rides the bumpers or counts the ties while tramping for a job. The genii of toil, whose patience and skill and sweat have created a world, have not where so I ’ to lay their heads. And, while workers want, idlers revel in unearned wealth, FOR THE and give costly funerals to their dogs. H Why should the producers of the CRITCAL BUYER. world's wealth possess no wealth ? Consider some parallels. Yonder is an engineâ€"a mighty factor in wealth ,_ Call and examine them. They will meet your every requirement regarding style, quality and prices. production. Does the engine acquire ' W. L. ROBSQN. property ? By no means. And why not? Because its produce belongs not to itself, but to its owner. Here stands a horseâ€"strong, hand- some, efficient. Day after day it does its master’s bidding. It aids in producing Wealth. Does it' accumulate wealth for itself? No. And why not? Because its products belong to its master. And what of the slave? Is he not a wealth producer? Manifestly so. And ##0## Dr. S. d. Sims, EDEEdTBST, 1venclon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFIOEzâ€"Over Burgoync’s store, orne street 'ff #â€" Dr. llEELllllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him tor 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of Why not? Because his products belong not to himself but to his master. And so with the farmer and wage earner. 'l‘oil as he may, heap up wealth as he will, The grain he sows another reaps, The wealth he earns another keeps. And through the years of active life he may toil like a Sisyphus, accomplish like Hercules, and die a pauper, to be buried in the l’ottcrs’ Field. And why is this? Because, as in the case of the engine, horse and slave, the worker’s product belongs not to him- self. but to his master. But is not the wurker compensated for his toil? Yes, and so are the en- ). -_ 1-- . .. . ... 7 « ___.. 001- It. you ask any particularly vvellétlresscd man in Fenclon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” invariably he will tell you hat he has giv . ous without an acct Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. 3%” Dr. Neelands Be one of the number and call and see visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the 7 Each must receive enough to main- tain its productive energyâ€"to keep it going. In addition to this, slave and wage earner must receive enough to dent from the gas. century,” nearly a...bundred years are showed that the laborer received but a subsistence wageâ€"the sum that will sustain the life of himself and family. The Republican party in the Unite-I States in 1900 conceded this principl~.~. countless forms it paraded before the. wage-earners, as their share in a lie- publican victory, the “full dinner pail " And what is a “full dinner pail“? Th9 reward of the slave and the work- man; the Wage that will maintain them and their families, but leave them noth- ing over. Where lies the way of escape? In abolishing, at one and the same time, at once and forever, both master class and servile class as such; in prohibiting rever the appropriation by anyone of the product of another’s labor. Work- er which nature freely gave to all, and the -, capital which the labor, skill and saving of all have produced, must become the property of all. to be operated by all for the good of all. When this has been done, labor will have achieved its tri' umph, and the prophecy which it- to- day bears about on its banner will have been fulfilled. 3 must own their tools. The land. 0“ No Crises Under Socialism. Practically all of our crises have been no to over-speculation, over production and extensive crop failures. And hotv would Socialism be able to. remedy these? It would remove the first of these three causes of crises by removing all possibility of private speculation. It is true some ventures would have to he made by the nation, just as risks are now taken in the development of the postal department, the educational sys‘ tem, etc. But speculationâ€"the delibe- ate attempt to make one’s own gain from the [OSses of anotherâ€"would have absolutely no place under Socialism. Neither would socialized industry ev- er suffer from extensive over-production. . ' ERS SOLICITORS Sac. Mone etl our deserts, dotted every hillside , _ , , , ,- on real estate at loivest currenbi; l and valley with hamlets and cities, Phat ‘5 511011 3' Slmple and _eVld°nt file“ " ,‘r . rates. Office, Kent street, opposite Market, whitened every 593, with the 31,113 of as to Scal'cely need ?xpla‘:atm“~ I'llSteild é LindSflY- commerce, and made the desert blossom of “ huf‘dl‘ed factorms a“ pmduclnii 9h“ 1 ii » I [LII-.MCLAUGHLIm J, A. Post. as ,he mac. The conquests of Labor same ktnds of goods, and so duphcmng it :, , [ifâ€"rd“ “0 man can number. each other’s products and encroaching" g G. H. HOPKINS. Bu, one win" Labor has not com upon one another’s markets. both pro- " )' ARRISTER, &o. SOLICITQR FOR quered. It has dot conquered poverty. ducilon and dlsmbutwu would be m" j' theOntariotBank.t sitlltzllffi’ctgolfligvett The WUH‘ of want snaps at the heels and Egnllgscdeinbf:l‘iffiglizicl, iandfthorc would i; : owest rates on erms o 1 . A " . - , .. , - , '.r_- u. r, as on (1' over- I' - . y : Offices: No.6, William Street South, Ltud- 11133:“? htall: 3:318 Ziosll:i0ng“()ilsn;tll;:)yaend duction (arises. Industw \v_,,,,,1_qu§ptiy , in tatters; he who has made shoes goes demand‘ msmad OF oommuilliy iltwmpt' ‘ ing to create and force it. Crop failures at. pro-out fall most heavily upon a few farmers, and then spread in widening circles of less evil efi'ects through all other classesâ€"mer- chants. shippers, manufacturers, and the laborers associated with each. Un- der Socialism the farmer wonitl be paid for all work faithfully done, whether any crops resulted froth it or not. Un» der such conditions a failure of crops would mean a small ltlSS to everyone. but a serious loss to no one. Instead of a series of blows, disabling in turn to each branch of industry. there would be a slight lessening of profit allaround, and no crisisâ€"Prof. Clark E. Pcrsim ger, University of l'l’isconsin. 0-. Australian Land Monopoly. Australia is perhaps as much in-the grip of land tnonopoly as any country in the world. It is a land of vast spaces practically unusedâ€"unused not because of the want of rain, but because some Falls. _‘â€"â€"__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"'__â€"’ I I l ‘ v. I , ‘. . ._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"/â€"/ does he lay by property, build himself a “1‘13th hm?) has the legal P‘IlVlleflq Of DENTAL. home, and accumulate a bank account Pl'evem‘lw ‘V‘mld'be Settle.“ from 94mm: out of his products? Certainly not on the land where there is a bountiful rainfall and splendid soil. The verv heart of the country is picked out for sheepwalks, whilst our farmers are drivâ€" en into the arid deserts, where they nev- er should go for the next hundred year=, if ever. Travelling through to Mil- bourne and Sydney, one passes through miles and miles of beautiful country-â€" locked up in vast estates. The British investors wonder then, with our lines passing through these man-made des- ct'ts, why our railroads do n't pay. In is the realization of the evil of this con - dition of things that is promoting, from one end of Australia to the other, the cause of land value taxationâ€"Gram- fin'd Vtztghlm. v - -' ' i ‘ for extract- hew York, the originator of gas Y N ‘ a I “ ing teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. I eelnnds g . a . gine‘ horse and gave. M-. en the gas to 186,417 Per" ~ ‘ ‘ - ‘ ,d l I? , / -‘ . . 5’.‘ And lmW 3-110“ 13 the WW“ 0 9301 " (Janarla wants 30.000 tneohantcs,’ n? 4 ‘ says a Birmingham, England, newspa- per, through which F. B. Ball, Canada's commercial agent there, made the above lying assertion. At the moment when ";/v 'y 5-‘ pa .-v_ ' ha...» -._(M<..x~’>pw~ - 4 . a I. , i ‘ 1’2 - vxx‘um "-" v" " “V‘s/.Wv“ «sx-v-wwowmxixâ€"VWNRf, , w . â€"-'.‘.". . . _ 3‘1- ss'. ".w; V ‘-..t\,‘v~.v .~ :r ‘u tar v -'m 1. Call earlY , 3. . . ‘ ‘1 ' I . 1' ~ , ' 2 {am .1530“:inpggoizgmgf“ What he 1s d01ng lOI the Spttng and Summer ASundcrlandlad)’ writes Dr- New“ His prices are right, consistent with firstâ€"class that he had made her a succelssfulgt‘iglstfiig ’ ' s e in - l 1 T . If huvmg eight set oft eth mate Style and WOllxnlalnshlp. £19 Illakes no Other. and elsewhere. maintain their Progeny. that the "‘09 0f the intzrview was reproduced in Toron- workers may not pGFlSh. alld idlel's thus to, there were hundreds of skilled me- be forced ‘10 take their P151095“ chanics idle at the Son, and no Canadi- ‘. This doctaiue is not new. Ricardo. an manufacturers were biddino for their ’2 “ the greatest economist of the 19th services_._-Sociul Justice, 0 ' i N “hi-t?»- .

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