Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 29 Mar 1907, p. 1

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_ .._.___'â€"â€"-â€"â€"- '/#'â€"'TL"'_ .__.. F. A. MCDI-fihlihlll). ARRISTER, SOLlGITUR. Etc, INDIE P) lon Fails. Oil‘icc, Colbornc street opposite Postâ€"ofiice. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. McluXUGllLlN & PEEL. ARRIFTERS, SOLICITORS, Bee. .‘xloney P} to loan on real estate at lowest current Oliiee, Kent street, opposite Market, rates. Lindsay. lt.J. MCLAUGHLZN. J. A. Patti. _,_,/ #â€" G. ti. HOPKINS, BARRISTER, tire. SOLICITOR FOR : urtéit’dit‘ . . .é' - . 3,3; ., We - , ’ I '- that finnoidis oasis. note was the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at to suit the borrower. owest rates on terms . eet South, Lind- Oiiices: No.6, William Str say, Ont. STEWART & O’CONNOR, ‘ ARRISTE RS, NO'l‘ARlES, Sec. MONEY to loan at. lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. other on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. Srrwanr. L. V; O’Connor, B. A _.____,___'.__â€"â€" â€" M0011 E 8; JACKSON, )ARRlS'l‘lCllS, SOlJIUl'l‘ORS, 810. Of- l) tice,William street,l.iiudsay. A.JACKSD.\‘ F. D. Moons. ‘ FEle A. NOR/FURY, ‘ PUBLIC AUC'i‘ionizen Farm and other sales conducted lll first.- oliiss order, Secure dates bel'ore adver- tising. Address, Fenelon Falls. S'l‘lfit’tllflN OLIVER, ONT. LINDSAY - Live Stock and general Auctioneer. W rite for dates before advertising. _._._____.__._â€"â€"- '_______-â€"--â€"â€"-..__ P._._. lCAL. ___________-_â€"â€"â€"â€" DR. H. ll. GRAHAM. -â€"n.n.,e. .\l., M ii. 0 s. Eng, n. c.r. .c 3., Our, 2“. 'r. n. s.â€"â€"- _ 3HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCll-l eur. Ollice. Francis Street, Fenelon l‘l-ulls. _________’__.___..._~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" on. A. WlL’SON, --M. 13., M. e. r. e 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH eur. Olliee, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. PM Bit. .l. llEiCilElL Biitllilii, n. n. o’M., u 'r we ,L.n c p ,L.n.o. s., Ediu Medulist'aud honor graduate Trinity University, Toronto. Physician, surgeon etc. Office in Queen’s hotel. Coboconk - ,._._â€"â€"â€" n. in. satires, . o. Eyesight Sgtcciaiist. I’c 'niaii-cutly Located in Lindsay. Office 92 Kent street, Lindsay, over Neill’s Shoe Store. Special attention given to examining and treating the eye with proper lenses if required. Hours 9 to 1'2 m.; 2 to 5 p. m.; or by appointment. 30. Ont. price goods b o ught ~ from pedlars. DENTAL. "_..b...- ,â€" Dr. 3. .5. sons, oEnTisT, It‘cnclon 1?:1115. Graduate of Toronto University and loyal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE zâ€"Over Biirgoyne’s store, Col- orne street DRS. NEELAilDS & llil’lilE, iirxiisrs, - Liriisir. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specillty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great. SllCLQSS. We have a complete line VillCE Bllthl'riE All!) Plfiilil. LILLIAN a. WILSON, A. T. c. M. Honor Graduate (piano and‘vnenlrof. Toronto Conservatory of Music. Gold Medalist ot‘ Whitby Ladies’ College. Voice and piano“pupils accepted. Apply at. studio, Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone N0. 20. 31-6!!! wormy fruit under any circumstances. Come, and try, and buy. VJe want our friends and customers to know that from this date we met}: :up only our own goods, and that we will in no case manufacture at any shoddy Our reputation and business has been built up on the best of ma.- terials and workmanship, and we still wish to maintain it. Hence this notice. are now so skilfully prepared that they make an excellent substitute for the fresh article, especially at this season. OF EVERY KNOWN KlND. Each has the natural flavor, and each has been kept in absolutely good con- dition. We do not handle mouldy or W. L. ROBSON. something. It matters not whether that; something is clear to the minds of tho mass or not; they demand a change; a change is due, and they are going to have it. To refuse the demand, and flaunt stolen millions in ogtcutation and snobbery, does not lesson the feeling against the rich. There are a thousand dissatisfied pooâ€"- plo to-day to one twenty years ago. There is more reading of economic init- ter by the people now in a week than there was in twelve months five years ago. it is high time for working people to rub their eyes and arise to the sitiitia tion. The rich are too blinded by their possessions to heed your needs or your wishes. A peaceful solution of the problem re- quires every effort of every intelligent worker. Don’t wait until oppression l)L!< comes so heavy as-to produce an exploé Sion. lgnoranco knows no force but brute force. If left to its own resources. ignorance may, Sainsoni-likc, pull down the pillars of the capitalist t-cinplc upon your head as well as upon its own, and involve all in a common ruin. ' But such an outcome is unnecessary. A. new and higher social order is knocks ing for admittance. Will you greet it with a glad hand or with a club ?â€"â€".‘11»* peal to Reason. ‘ . woooooo OOOOOGOOOOOog FEl‘lELllil FALLS. HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL ESTABLISHED 181T. INCORPORATED av ACT or PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL - $4,400,000.00. REST - $11,ooo,ooo.oo. ' UNDlVlDED PRFITS $922,419.81. s Silliiifls Bhiili DEPiiil'Ei’lEiiT. INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR. Deposits taken of $1 and upward. Deposits can Withdrawn on demand. a. M. amnion, MANAGE-R. 000060 300 )OOOOOOCO Get Wise. I/noticed an article in a Fort Worth paper the other day which showed that) sugar is being produced and ocean freight paid to this country at a cost; of less than one cent a pound. You pay six cents for this sugar. In other words, when you buy ten pounds of sugar you pay for sixty pounds; the value of the lifty pounds you do n‘t. got going to tho sugar trust as its profit l Sugar is pro- ducod in Cuba, under rather pi-iinativo conditions, for $1.04 cents per hundred pounds. Under Socialism, whore the, ind dustrics would be owned and operated. by the people for their own use, you would get sugar at the average cost of? the whole crop. It would cost you about- oneâ€"iiftli of what you now pay. The, saino would apply to coffee and most of the other things .you now use. But you have been trained to vote the old party tick- ets, and not to use yous own brains, much like a cow is trained to go to a. certain place for water, and you are skinned by the schemch who know your habits and prejudices. You pay dearly for your dulness. Your masters never tell yoti that you are dull. They flatter yeti, and make you think you are as wise as Solomon. 'l‘liat keeps you from any desire to learn or develop your under: standing. 't'nder Socialism you would got five times as much for your work as You get now. But do you think it is to the interest of your masters to have you know this? If you really knew this, would n‘t you want Socialism ‘? And it you did get it, do ii't you see that thoso who get this rakeâ€"off from you would _n’t, get it ‘3 When you buy a horse, do you expect the owner to tell you all its do- t'ects ? Then do you expect those who protit from your votes to tell you why they want you to keep right on voting as you have been? Your masters or.» not fools. But you are. tools, when you vote for a system by which they moi-to millions, and you get poverty for your share in producing fabulous wealth. (let wise to the situation. Wisdom will not injure you. If you read Socialism and Find out that it is wrong, you will not touch it; but your masters do ii‘t want you to find out what it really is. They tell you the horse trader's story about the other fellow's horse. It" Socialism were a mean and hateful thing, we Soci- alists would not want ‘you to study it'»- - we would want you to vote for it withâ€" out knowing what it is. But we do at do that way. We beg of you to read it, and tindout for yourself what it is. Ask your old party leaders it you shall read a book about Socialism, and see how they will turn it dmvn.~1"rc<l. D. ll'urrc'n. ' Q OOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOO 000000000 000 000 There ’s a Meaning. Do you know the meaning of this un~ rest ? Do you realize that this condition is the result of a cause, and that it, in turn, is the cause of things about to be ‘3 Do not the pograins and assassinations of Russia and other feudal nations indi- cate the breaking up of the old systems ? Does not history show that the breaking up of the same systems in western Eu- rope was accompanied by the same plieâ€" nomcna ? And does not this social unrest in America, as well as in Europe, indicate the early change that will be and must be ‘3 Look cliind the horscplay of state legislatures, the ominous discussions in congress â€"1ook behind the perfecting or- ganizations of capitalists and the. grow- ing solidarity of the workers, and see the irritation and unrest in the thought- of the people that demonstrate their dis- gust at the things that are. See the daily papers that advertise in their news columns the corrupt-ion of the ruling class. Do you not realize that this is printed because the people are demandingiiiâ€"«because they are demand- ing the truth about the system, hideous as it is '3 Do you not realize that the deâ€" mand for exposure is a. premonition of what to expect in the near future ? You know how the anti-slavery agita- tion grew and grow until it crystalized into a sentiment and force that wiped that iniquity out of existence. Do you not know that on similar lines a sentiâ€" ment is growing against capitalists, against their methods and arrogance, that can have but one eiiding‘the aboâ€" lition of the system under which the people ehafe ? Are you trying to analyze and interâ€" pret these historyâ€"making incidents g0- ing on abodt you '3 Have they any meanâ€" ing for you ? Do you think that things will settle down to the old groove, that. history will move backward instead of forward, and that the impossible will become a fact ? Do you think that the monstrous injustice of the capitalist system will over right itself without disturbing you ‘9 That was what the southern slave-dri- vers thought, and that thought was their uidoing. Had they been wise, they would have freed their slaves upon fa- vorable terms. Were the capitalists wise, they would be looking into this matter . _ that now confronts them, instead of ing to the Philadelphia North American, damning everybody who has the spirit arc devoting all their time and great; to refuse their yoke. sums of money to further the cause or The people are not only becoming un- Socialism. Among the names inontiopr-d easyâ€"they are becoming angry. And an are those of the Countess of Warwick, angry nation does things. Countess of Aberdeen, Lady Ilcnry Soni- .I,t' the ruling class imagines that it can erdeen, Lady Victoria \‘iolliers, ,l)iiehoss control the people with paper court (10- of Sutherland, Lady Francis Balfour and eisions purchased of traitors, or that it , Miss Littleton. They have quit lllt‘ll.‘ can perpetuate the division of the work- gay lives, dress in modest attire, and. ad- ing class and hire a part of the people ' dross meetings of laboring people trim to carry guns to keep the remainder in the ends of wagons or boxes in the pub: subjection, it wille surprised at the rc- lie streets. England is in a ferment ct sult of the whirlwind it has raised. Socialistic agitation. The world is pre- 'l.‘lie people have asked for relief from , e 04*.“ England in a Ferment. Thirty-five English pcoresses, accordv paring for a new birth. SEHHEGGS BEFdRTRfiEHT. on deposits from date of first. interest aiiowcd ithdrawai at the current rate deposit to date of e: compounded FfiUR times a year. Toronto and Lindsay cheques negotiated at par. FENErLON FALLS BRANCH. 3'80 OPEN FROM 9 TO'6. SATURDAYS 9 TO 9.

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