Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 28 Jun 1907, p. 1

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Proicsgionul 'Cardrs. - Lenin. Ti . .._..__._ _ l F. A. l‘leDlAltilID. PARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc, FENE' ) lon Falls. Oliice, (Iolhornc street opposite Post-office. {figmiioncy to loan ‘ ~ on 1'eal;:estute at lowest current rates. NeLAUGllLIN, PEEL FALTCN PARRISTERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- ) aries. Otiices over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch oilice open at Bolicaygeon every Monday. Money to loan, at lowest rates of interest. R.J MCLAUGHLIN,K. C. A.M.F.uxrox,l3. A. ' JAS. A. I’nut. . ,G. H. [10 i’IiINS, i)ARRISTER, Sec. SOLiCl'l'i'il’v FOR ) the Ontario Bank. Money to loan gt owest rates on 'lcrnisto suit the borrower. Otlices: N0. 6, William Street South, hind- say, Ont.» ' STEWART 5:~ O’CONNOR, BARRISTERS, NOfi‘L‘lilllES, 5:0.“ MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Uiiice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 'l‘. Srnlwmrr. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A mouse EafJAUKS-ON, _ )ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, 660. Ofâ€" fice, William street, Lindsay. _ F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON ,._. ‘ AU CTIBK EEK . FELIX A. NORTIIEY, PUBLIC AUC’J‘IONEER. Farm andother sales conducted in first- class order. Secure dates before adver- tising, Address, Fenelon Falls. | firm”... srnrnnu orivnu, LINDSAY - \- ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer Write for dates before advertising. ._____.__.__.â€"..__;-.._....__ MEDICAL. DR. 1}. H. GilAilAl-vl. â€"-M. 1)., o. u, n a. c. :3. Eng, :1. C. r. & 3., . ONT., r. 'r. n. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUOII- I 11eur. Ollice. Francis Street, Fenelon “a s. ' ~ DR. A. WILSON, â€"â€"n. 13., M. c. r. a. s., Ontario,â€" 1)HYSICIA~N, SURGEON it ACCO'U'Cll F lfur. Ollice, Colborne Street, Fenelon a s. ' « ‘ DE. as . . fi9d§§85, Eyesight Specialist. ’ Successor to 1%. ii. Milne, ii. 0. Office and Parlors, 92 Kent street (over heiil‘s shoe store), Lindsay r- Ont. Special attention given to examining and treating the eye with proper lenses if required. Lenses, Eyeglasses and Spectacles fitted and adjusted. Hours, 9 to 5, Saturday! evenings, and by apponitinent. DEI’I ‘AL. Dr. s. J. slats, nonwsv, Fonelon 'Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and [loyal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES GE DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. 1 OFFICE Iâ€"OVEL‘ Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street __________________.__.____.â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"- DRS. llEELillBS ii illillllE, DENTISTS, - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specially. Splendid {its in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great sucwss. VfliEE VCilLTtiiiE Mill Pill-NO. LILLIAN c. wnscu, A. T. c. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of Toronto Conservatory of Music. Gold Medalist of Whitby Ladies’ College. Voice and piano pupils accepted. Apply at Studio. Dr Wilson’s residence, or telephone No. 20. 31-6m V, Quaker ». _ "I, Grocery _ L Tomatoes stock is . ‘ 4. 100. tin; unsurpassed 3 cans A ’ ‘for Corn quality. and 3 cans Peas .zi freshness. for 250. r~that w eat you put on your feet is worth what "you take .from- your pocketbook. ' "We can help you to be sure. We’ve a careâ€"~23. big careâ€"for the quality that means cheap shoesâ€"- Durability. goooooooooooMJOoooog wevwwdét-owwvwww wwoomw-ow . I -V o 0 £33.13 ' 0 is: o v ‘ ‘ See ° . I i '5 o the Tennis 6 Q InVlctuS Shoes 8 HEADOFFICE . MONTREAL, c k}: » ESTABLISHED 1817. Shoe. for Q INCORPORATED BY ACT or PARLIAMENT. 0 ° CAPITAL - »$14,4oo.ooo.o . g Best HIGH? v g 0 REST -_ $1,000,000.03. O Canadian. \VOll‘lel‘l, I g UI‘JDIVIDED PROFITS $922,418.31. 2 made . boys Q I p Q V1,; Shoe pand 1.5, o o . . . . ‘o‘irls. if!" ' O . Q for a - » g DEPtlllt’lEl‘ll'. . o 0 INTEREST ADDED FOUR: TIMES_A VE_AR ‘1". is; - ° ' o I p I t _ M g p Deposus taken of $1 ° if ' ‘ ' Bo sure-or assure as you can be " o ,1 and Upwaldi * , Q ‘3 The quickest way to have you, Tu- n‘ -g, 1,, i v , knoxv “516$ 1'3 here *3 to you, , . vulsed more or less with the universal '» - impulse towards democracy. In Russia it is the most fearful, but not the most forceful. Turkey has had to concede a ‘ constitution. ' less. Japan is imprisoning the Social- ists, and the tremendous increase in the Socialist vote in England, Gerinany,l France, Belgium, Holland, Italy and but the better see it. Jay is to have you 3% 'We would be glad to Show you our differentlines any day. I Our We want our friends and customers to know that from this date we make up only. our own goods, and that we will in no case manufacture at any price goods bought from shoddy pediars. Outreputation and business has been built up on the best of ma.- terials and workmanship, and we still wish to maintain it. Hence this notice. KEEN:- to wear the shoes to be had here. They are right in quality and style. SHOE MAKING in its highest development is “I apparent in every department '"’ “ . of this store. The shoes rep- . resent the acme of style, comâ€" fort and durability. You cannot fail to be interested if you call. i... RGESON. Spain, to say nothing of the tremendous public agitation concerning predatory wealth in this country, ought to serve notice on all intelligent people that something is doing in this old world dif- ferent from any other epoch in its his- tory. That democracy is destined to conquer all forms of tyranny that spring from the private ownership of wealth (and all tyranny springs from that alone), . for 20 7 , is patent to all who are ’ not very ignorâ€" ' ant. The rich and powerful are dunking. The recent spoechof Roosevelt shows " that he sees the danger verygclcarly and p knows that unless he can check the growing tyranny of private ownership ‘7 its days are town He says plainly that the greed of therich must be Checked if private capital is to be maintained. He believes in skinning the people with profits, but he warns his pals that they must take less atatimcor they will, arouse the people, and then the people will refuse to rccogmsc their right to take any. They are told that it is bet- ter to reduce their tribute than to risk ’losing all tribute. But his action-will 'Depcslis ' can be Withdrawn on demand. MANAGER. - OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO g l), R. u. HAMlLTON, Q ~ i W, Gaining Ground. Every nation on cart-11 is toâ€"day con- Clhina is becoming rest- not stop the world-wide movement to do away with the tyranny of capitalism. The people have advanced far enough in ‘by a class of capitalists. the means and the incentive to carry on their game of r ibbery. Men untempted do not fall. The only way is to take: = away the. temptation, and that can only be done by taking away the conditions] ~ 111 which men profit by bribery. Poor" men never bribe; they haven’t enough personal interest or wealth to pay out sums great enough to corrupt pu‘nlic‘ servants. When people declare for an: industrial democracy; when they say that the industries of every nation shall belong to the people of that nation, and that those who consume must also help ‘to produce, then none will have that great power of private wealth to corrupt the public service. Toward that end' society is tending. The movement in this country is not for political or religious 1ibcrtyâ€"â€"wc* have thatâ€"but for industrial libertyw ' And industrial liberty is not possible with the private ownership of the. jobs The man or" men who own the jobs own the men who own no jobs, but must work at some job or starve. The men-who own the rail-- roads, banks, elevators and mills, not: only own the men who must work in' them, but they own the farmer, for they’ control his products.- They put the -‘ price‘on everything the farmers buy. or > sell. Tho farmer is therefore no more independent than those who work for‘ . wages, and, if a tenant or mortgaged serf, not so well off, as he has to workV longer hours, has a lower standard of .. living, and bears all the responsibilities of his vocation. The ordinary wager slaves have none of the worry, except that of getting or holding a job. ' The recent phenomenal rise of the- Farincrs' Co-opcrativc and Educational [Union and Society of Equity. with nearly a million and a half of members. gained. within three years, is evidence that this protest against existing conditions has reached the farmers as well as the labor unions. The same impulse is behind both organizations. That impulse is, consciouslymr unconsciously, towards industrial democracyâ€"th abolition of the. private ownership of capital. Iknow that most of them will deny it, but that makes no difference. Most of the colon- ial fathers would at first have denounced any man who said their agitation against - King George‘s tax on tea was directed toward wiping out royal rule in the col- .' onios '-â€"but it was. When the anti-slavery agitation first began to gather force, few of its members realized that it would finally abolish chattel slavery ; they wanted to restrict it. But it abolished the so-called divino institution. And nowall this frenzy and agitation over wages, hours, Commissions, bribery and graft is simply the expression of that growing protest that means the , overthrow of the capitalist. system from , which these evils flow. Probably the , greatest» factor in the ultimate abolition. of capitalism will be the actions of cap« italists themselves, just as were the ; bullâ€"dozing tactics of King George and his partisans, and the actions of the slave oligarchy. I-Iad these met the people half way, and had they reasoned and discussed the matter fairly, both would have fared. infinitely better. But that- could not be expected, because ’ wealth and power have always been die- ' tutorial and always will be ; and Roose-I velt’s attempt to get the rich to see the ' danger their system of profits is in will be. as futile. They are hot-headed and domineering, and cannot be otherwise. ‘v‘c Socialists are as certain of that new tion on the part of. the rich as we are 0t" their contemplation of the capitalist system to see its ghastly results, and more and more people are waking up to rcsistence against its extortion and cor- ruption. Millions of people now see that all crime and corruption come from the owners of great wealth. Whenever a case of bribery is exposed they can see that the owners of rich corporations are the ones who have paid the money to dobauch the public service. if aSan any other result of the system. The future is assuredly for Socialism; â€"1-rc(l. I). li'arrcn. ~ .45.”;â€" An Alias Wanted. What Socialism needs in America is an alias. The term " Socialist " is the flglit~ ing word of. American politics. A month.- ago’a Philadelphia newspaper proclaimâ€" Francisco is debauched, the papers tell ed a creed which was mcrol y a practical, how the franchise holders paid $750,000 application of the Golden Rule in neighâ€", out of their robber tills to do the do- borly relations; but In subscribing to it: bauching. If a state legislature is the paper called it Socialism. bought to pass laws for a. corporation or were fireworks in the evening. And there Respectâ€" sell a senatorship, the papers disclose able and orthodox people wrote angry the personality of the boodlor-â€"and the letters to the editor, dcnouncmg him for money always comes from the rich. The teaching SocialiSm ; rich are a. menace to the freedom of the an infidel, a destroyei people, just as kings are a menace to the denounced as an anarcl he was branded as 7 of public peace, list and a disturb~ freedom of a people. They are of the or of trafficâ€"mil because he had Called same character and live off the people in the same way. There has not been a case of bribery their creed; his creed Socialism. And it was not So- cialism at all, as Socialists recognize it was indiv1dualism apâ€" in any state, city or public contract that plied simply to the Golden Rule. The rich men have not caused. Who would term damned it. If a man wou ld state a. veto money into the hands of the rich if proposition in geometry and declare it the rich did not offer the bribe to have There is no use trying to get work to prove the pr honest men in oilioo so long as great fore it thought to dispr 1th is permitted, . Socialis1n.â€"â€"le American. it done ? concentration of wea to be Socialism, tho world.would set to oposrtion false be- ove that it was ESTABLISHED 1836. One of the oldest banks doing business in this country. 56 Branches in Canada and the United States. Farmers afforded every facility in their banking business. Sale Notes cashed or taken for collection. Drafts bought and sold. Prompt attention given to collections. Savings Bank Deptâ€"Deposits offiLOO and upwards received. Interest paid every three months. FENELDN FALLS BRANCH. u. A. BlSHflP, lumen. W, .N .. ‘23.“ ' Jr. a . it“) ..- '.A

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