Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 5 Jan 1906, p. 1

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VOL. XXXIII. _.._ ____. ___.~ ~_.___ “â€" OPENS A SAVINGS ACCOUNT IN THE Bank of see.“ North America. «$23 The Bank’s view of small accounts is that one more account means one more friend. Professional Cards. LEGAL. F. A. MCDIARMID. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE lon Falls. Office, Colborue street opposite Post-office. Whimsy to loan 0 11 real estate at lowest current rates. McLAUGHLIN & PEEL. ARRISTE‘RS, SOLICITORS, 8w. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. Office, Kent street, opposite Market, Lindsay; R. J. MCLAUGHLIN. 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. Oflices : No.6, William Street South, Lind- S ay, Ont. STEWART & O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY 0 to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent i T. STEWART. 1w xnd York streets, Lindsay. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of- fice,William street, Lindsay. 4 . D. Moons. A. JACKSON AUCTIONEER. STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer. Write for dates before advertising. MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"M.D., c. M., M u. c s. Eng, M. c. P. .t s.,‘ 02m, F. 'r. .u. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON it ACCOUCH- cur. Office. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. v . ,l on. A. WlLSON, l i I I -M. n., M. c. P. a 3., Ontario,â€" llYSlCIAN, SURGEON Sr ACCOUCH enr. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon flls. l DENTAL. Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and [nail] 1 “Who makes your clothes? ” Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. _ OFFICE zâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street DRS. NEELANDS 81 lRi’IllE, DENTISTS V - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great success. ' s Q i l l l l i l i i Q Q Q Q i Q Q l l i i i Q Q l Start_thegi New Year night by G o i. n Arnold’s For Your Shoes. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOO wegfigw ' / 000OOOOC‘OOOOOOOOGOWOOOOOOOOOOOQOOWOOOOOOOO OOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMOOOOO fl saying a great deal. fitted. shoes as we sell. €571.15]? wear and N0 TEAR AT ALL. Their quality is equal to their appearance, and that is If you need a pair come in and be it he of The Never get tired, because they are shod with just such The Wear and Tear Of our shoes means lots of W. 5.. SQSSQN. If you ask any particularly well-dressed will tell you IIIVELI'I Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, ably he C. i ' To W NLEvY-J Be one of the number, and call and see what he is doing for the Fall and Winter. His prices are right, consistent with first-class style and workmanship. He makes no other NOT WITHOUT HQPE 8 “There is a poor woman in this parish apparently just waiting for death to come through consumption. She has not the means to go to a Sanatorium, or she would probably be at one before this. She is still comparatively strong, walks about quite a lotâ€"drives sometimes, tooâ€" but every day, of course, is growing worse. Would there be any possi- bility of her being taken into your Home for Consumptives? It would be a mercy if she could be permitted to enter it. I would much appreciate an early reply, as every day means so much.”â€"REV. HAROLD SUTTON, Incumbent, Belmont, Ont. ~':-ls.’;.=:§,.'.:s;smge~r-" .~ .v m .",'.. '.:Y;;-.~.’.:":'t2~.‘g},‘ )1me {f 7, LII â€"-’l‘his parts of Canada. Ly ., n M. ‘ ‘.. . - 22‘.” , 3 n'l'vr’op‘;_‘.‘l:.:h. "a at”! " int”. _ <___‘ rim hf. rvg .-. «a. ll :1 w 1:. money do more good? u-oâ€" .__......_... . .~m_-W~ . ' -â€"-Contributions may be sent to Sir. WM. R. MEREDITH, Kc, Chief Justice, Osgoode Hall, Toronto, or \V. J. GAGE, Esq., 54 Front St. XV. r-euww .2'.‘ m‘wWW-zâ€" 3'53)? ’1 nvtlvrgrs‘ir‘sw , N. ~ \ "f ‘ “‘9‘ “ I TWP. walks}??? 4‘ ‘ufi’éru I~‘£.;.-.I$J~.<ws~“a 123$)“ {II The above are typical of scores, indeed hundreds, of appeals coné‘tantly coming before the trustees of the {llNo effort is being spared to meet every call. . . . Ell Not a single applicant has ever been refused admission to the Free Hospital because of his or her poverty, NE\V PATIENTS 0N \VAY '1‘0 HOSPITAL and the anxiety of the trustees to keep none waiting is shown in the decision reached a few Weeks ago to increase the accommodation by twenty-five beds. increase in patients will add heavily to the burden of maintenance and can only be covered by increased generosity on the part of friends in all Patients have been admitted from every Province in the Dominion, and it is with confidence in the response to our appeals, that he trustees believe will come from Canadians everywhere, that these adn ditional burdens have been assumed. @‘Where a cause more urgent? call to help suffering Canadians? Where will your G “ I am advised by Dr. J. D. 'Wilson to write you concernng how soon I could get my wife admitted to Con- sumptive Hospital at Gravenlnn'st, also please send me pamphlet n terms while there. I have been told that it is free, so please let me hear ‘7 from you soon as possible. I have lost two daughters, and my wife con~ . tracted the disease from our eldest “, one, who died ten months ago. I ' am a working man and not able to - pay a high rate, but still anxious to 5'_ do what I can.”â€"â€"-A. CAMPBELL, ,; London, .Ontt :3'zit‘flsl'liii‘i’m‘m“.¥£flbs:“‘v~Vimmfi-f'mt.',‘_5 .2 -. .2. .‘::_ A t: ,7 3.3.1.. Where a greater ‘Limc."r.«._”§°§‘ L: ' . . Mara. f l I ’2‘" Socialism ls n’t Practical, But This Is. By the arrest ofJohn Salinger, a man- ufacturer of' mouse-traps at No. 112 East Third street, the state factory in spectors say they have disclosed the worst case of' child slavery they have found in New York. Salinger was arraigned in the Essex Market police court by State Inspector Nash and two of' his assistants. They had with them twelve boys, ranging in age from 14 to 17. Only one of the boys could speak English, but he told the story of their existence. Magistrate Crane hold Salinger for trial in the court of special sessions on a charge of violating the child labor law. The dingy factory in which the poor boys work is known as the “mouse- trap.” According to their story, they eat and work in a little back room that is about ten by twelve feet. But they told the inspector that they did u’t have any fixed hours of toil. From early morning until late at. night they work. Their work day is nearly always sixteen hours long, and many days they put in twenty hours on their little benches, twisting and weaving the thin wires in- to mouse traps. The boys are paid very little. In addition they are given scant clothing and three meager meals a day. They eat in the same little room where they toil, and this goes on seven days in' the week. The boy who can speak a little English explained to the inspector that they were “brought'over to this country by a man they did not know.” Their parents are on the other side of the Atlantic. went to the dingy factory and began the existence that was finally to bring down the factory inspector on Selinger. But if the “ mouse-trap ” is squalid, and dark, and ill-smelling, the gloomy shanty in the rear, where the twelve boys and nearly a score of men at work in the factory sleep during the few hours they have for repose. is worse. There are two little rooms in this shanty, and in them every night the employee sleep. There is scarcely any room in which to move about. Miserable straw pallets are provided by Selinger for his workers; In the rooms there is little or no ven- tilation, and never a ray of' sunshine. Even in broad daylight they are so dark that one can barely see the pallets and the narrow lanes between them. Yes- terday there was a sick man in one of the beds. He had collapsed under Ihe strain of the work imposed on him in the “ mouse-trap.” difference to the score or more of others who slept in the shanty. 'l‘hoy occupied the some quarters with the lever racked man, for they were never out of debt to Selinger,â€"â€"Ncw York paper. .‘. A capitalst's patriotism begins and ends with a bunch of $$$$. Lots of men who claim to be seeking the truth, would n’t know what to do with it if they found it. Socialism stands for a'system under' which your purchasing: power will be equal to your producing power. The rule of the railroads not to em- ploy any one over thirty five years of age does n’t seem to have decreased the On landing here they list of wrecks any. But that made now Z, f.,r.‘.r:.in.-.,‘. r ~ ~ H-f' 5" 5x139” ‘ Seqtv'f'iv. 5;”.1"; 2 f ,‘A ddxvm." 6-“ art: xnpfi,“tr‘t.fgp.§{*fi ' rvr v1: .. . 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