Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 11 Oct 1907, p. 1

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1’1‘olessionul Cards. LEGAL. . F. A. MODIAHMID. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE lon Falls. Ollicc, Colberne street opposite Post-office. {sigh Money to loan on real .eslute at lowest current rates. MCLAUGHLIN, PEEL & FULTON. )ARRISTE is, SOLICITORS AND NOT- , aries. Offices over Dominion Batik, Lindsay. Branch office open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. ,,. R.J itchaounun,K.C. A.M.FuLTou,B.A. "‘3’" Jas. A. PEEL. G. H. HOPKINS, QARRISTER, 5m. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices: No.6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. ~ STEWART 8: O’CONNOR, [ ARIllS’l‘ERS, NOTARIES, &o. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. ’l‘. Srnwaur. L. V. O’Couxou, B. A ”’ _I‘i-OOP\.1C& JACKSON, _ Ai‘tRiSTERS, SOLICITORS, Sac. Of- 1 lice, William street,bindsay. F. l). Moons. A. JACKSON AUCTIONEER. , ______._..__â€"_â€"â€"â€".__â€"â€"r FELIX A, NOR'I‘ HEY, PUBLIC AUCTIONEER.‘ Farm and other sales conducted in first- class order. Secure dates before adver- 'tisiug. Address, Fenelon Falls. _______________._._._.._.â€"â€"â€" STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer. Write for dates belore advertising. _______________.______._â€"â€"â€"â€" THOMAS CASl-IORE, AUCTIONEER - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a_fi_rst- manner. Secure dates before advertlsmg l sf," MEDICAL. ___________'____..__.___..â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" __________________________â€"â€"â€" DR. H. II. GRAHAM. .T ‘ -â€"llt. 0., c. 31., M R. o. s. Eng, M. o. P. a s., v ON'I‘., r. 'r. n. s.â€" )HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Oflice. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. v ‘ s. DR. A. WlLSON, -â€"M. 13., M. c. P. a 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEONS: ACCOUCEI eu'r. Office, Colborue Street, Fenelon Falls. DB. M. B. ANNIS, Eyesight SpecialiSt. Successor to R. R. Milne, I). 0. Chloe and Parlors, 92 Kent street (over Neill’s shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. Special attention given to examining a. and treating the eye with proper lenses if required. Lenses, Eyeglasses and Spectacles fitted and adjusted. Hours, 9 to 5, Saturday evenings, and by appointment. -r DENTAL. Dr. '5. J. sums, DENTIST, FellOIOII 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. OFFICE :â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street DRS. IIEELIIIIDS. & IRVINE, DENTIsrs. - LINDSAY. ., Natural teeth preserved. Crown and ’ bridge work aspecialty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great SIICLGSS. tat taint: a} nap. LILLIAN 0.. WILSON, A. T. c. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of Toronto Conservatory of Music. Gold Medalistot‘ Whitby Lndies’ College. Voice and piano pupils accepted. Apply at studio, Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone No. 20. 31-6m r {$15K Tennis Shoes for men, women, boys and Invictus Shoe. Best Canadian made Shoe I for ' men. Be sureâ€"or as sure as you can be -â€"that what you put on your feet is worth what you take from your pocket-book. "We can help you to be sure. ‘VVe’ve a careâ€"a big care for the quality that means cheap shoesâ€" Durability. @ The quickest way to have you know what is here is to tell you, but the better way is to have you see it. - We would be glad toshow you our different lines any day. Our Grocery stock is Quaker Tomatoes 100. tin. 3 cans for 7 Corn quality ’ for 250. and 3 cans Peas freshness. srscmi. norm We want our friends and customers to know that from this date we make will in no case manufacture at any price goods bought from shoddy pedlars. 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. J. J. TOW LEY. Weather on flay You’ll find the shoes that give the best satisfation are the ones that are easiest. Shoes for comfort as well as to wear well are what we fit to yOur feet.’ You don’t have to buy foot ease and corn plasters if you wear our shoes. See our new stock and buy a pa1r. W. L. up only our own goods, and that we. c\jloo<><>o0c>ooc>00<1>00602 » FEHELON FALLS. HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL_ ESTABLISHED 1817. INCORPORATED BY ACT or PAnLtAMENT. CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. REST - $11.000,000.00. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $922,418.31 SAWde BANK DEPhBTh’iENT. INTEREST ADDED. FOUR TIMES A YSAR Deposits taken of "$1 and upward. Deposits can be _ withdrawn on demand. a. M. HAMILTON, MANAGER. O flOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 000 000000000 000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Shaw U3 The Goods. It has now been fully twenty years since the campaign of trust~busting be- gan. In the early days of the attack on the trusts they were still small. Those who were attacking them were strong and had possession of the powers of government. Every possible sort of antiâ€"trustlegis- lation that could be devised was enacted. States had vied with the national gov- ernment in this respect- During all this time the trusts have . continued to grow larger and larger, to increase in power and ability to extort prolits. Yet the legislatures and congress conâ€" tinue to enact anti-trust laws. Politiâ€" cians and parties are built upon their promises to destroy the trust. Roose- velt, Bryan and Hearst are all bidding for the next presidential nomination by telling of the things they will do to the trusts- Is it not about ti tne that we saw a sample of their goods? , Show us one “buster ” trust and we will have some faith in the remedy; Although trusts have been fined, their. officers imprisoned (or at least sentenced to prison), and they have been ordered to dissolve by courts and commissions without number, yet the anti-trust hun- ters have not been able to hang a single scalp at their belt. Trusts have sometian failed. They have been mismanaged, badly organized, over-capitalized, poorly financed, their power over-estimated, and for these and various other reasons have not been suc- cessful. But not. one trust has ever dis- appeared because of the efforts of trust busters. Yet the game is thick. It is impossible to fire a legislative or judicial gun into the industrial forest without hitting a half dozen trusts. They are with us al- ways. Thcy are on hand at birth and stay with us until the collin trust gath- ers in our ashes. Yet none of these val- ient trust hunters can secure a single specimen. ‘ Come on, President Roosevelt ; come on’lâ€"l‘e'arst and Bryan, show us a trust that you have smashed as a sample of your work. Produce one combination of capital that has disappeared and been succeeded by a host of competing firms. Point out one industry that has devo- luted back into the competitive stage. Show us a single trust that, as a re- sult of the trust-busting or trust-baiting campaign, now pays higher wages to its employees or sells its product for less money. Surely all these years should have pro- duced something. Surely if the “ in- fant trusts ” of twenty years ago were able to grow and expand into the gigan: tic, world-wide combinations of toâ€"day in spite of the trust-hunters, there is little hope that these full-grown indus- trial giants will fall before the legislaâ€" tive bean-shooters that are now aimed n'difi’fficihlefi: 'rii’iabfigak V ass or sites ESTABLIS Farmers all'ordcd every facilit Drafts bought and sold. FENELDN FALLS BRANCH. <30 000000000000 GOO GOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ-it One of the oldest banks doing business in this country. 56 Branches in Canada and the United States. Sale Notes cashch or taken for collection. Prompt attention given to collections. Savings Bank Dept.~-Dcposits of SLOO and upwards received. Interest paid every three months. at them. Should it not become evident that ithosc who are seeking to retain or obâ€" tain oliicc and power on the strength of their attacks upon the‘ trusts are playâ€" ing the cheapest kind of demagoguery? They are trading upon the carefully fos- tered ignorance and prejudice of a large portion of the population, who have. been aroused to an unthinking hostility against these great combinations of capital. ‘ Because they are more cllectivc m'1-' chines for production, they are driving," the owners of the less cliect-ive machines â€"â€"the smaller imiustrics»â€"â€"out of busiâ€" ness. But just because they are more" effective machines they ought to be use]. for allâ€"«not abused for a low. It is time to stop trying to extermi; unto the trust, and to begin to domesti< cate it. ‘ The trust cannot be busted, and it would be a calamity if it could. It can be utilized through common ownership, and this would make it the, greatest blessing of the ago.»â€"0/cz‘cagd Daily Socialist. _.._.._.____.~.ed> o- Learning the Lesson. It is not many years ago that pick-' pockets and robbers were popularly sup- posed to be Iow-b'rowcd, shabbin dress-- ed and altogether bum-looking persons.- Thcn there came a revelation. It was‘ found that thc expert and oilicicnt shop-lifters, ]_)ltl'S(Teâ€"Sll£ttCllCl‘S, conlidenco‘ mcn and porchâ€"climbers were really in-v‘ tolligcnt and well-dressed people capa-' bio of making a good appearance. This had scarcely soaked into the slow minds of the thoughtless when it began to be whispered that there Wch thieves in ollice; hat the supposedly good and great who had been elevated“. to high places were not invariably as" conscientious as was believed. It took many years for a generation of dupes to verify this suspicion, but they are learnâ€" ing. They are also getting a few lessons" in the more important fact that the graft of so-called business is so much bigger than the graft ol’ ollice that the former completely overshadows the latter. We have learned that there are ordiâ€"A nary thieves in shabby clothes, that there are ordinary thieves in good clothes, that there are “respectable” thieves in ollicc ; and we are just begin-- ning to learn that the biggest thieves of all are the respectable business men who bribe otlicials and hire the ordinary . criminals to do the coarser part of their dirty work. When this lesson is impressed, the- cause of crime and rascality will not be looked for exclusively in the slums. It’- will be looked [or among all classes, and be found in the social system that is: based on robbery, and which rewards men according to what they get, with- out consideration ot’ how they get it. When the absurd veneration for the mighty is exploded, like that other resw poet of long ago for people who were- well dressed, it will dawn on the milv lions that all men are made of the same: kind of mud, and that when all of them show the same symptoms ol.’ graft, the disease is a social malady rather than a. personal peculiarity. Then, it is to be hoped, the victims of the system that has tainted'every-~ body will be ready to cv .-'Lhrow the system and establish something; better in its place. It is not expected ‘imt the well-dressed wholesale thieves will take much interest in a change, for the pres - cut arrangement... is good enough 1‘ .‘ them, and they prefer to stand pat and let well enough alone. It is the victims of the system who will change it, not by putting individ- uals in jail, but by putting everybody to workwâ€"Ajmcal to Reason. ..0 A Simple Problem. Socialism would give to each worker, man or woman, about $2,500 a year for an eightâ€"hour day, and furnish employ- ment to each one who desired it. But those who now got millions a year would. have to work, and would get about the same as other workers; or, if they did not work, they would have no income. It is because a feyv thousand got tens of thousands a year, and even millions, that the rest of the workers get the misera- ble Wages they do. By the ownership of the jobsâ€"~e'apital -â€"those who do nothâ€" ing receive incomes that kings do not get. When the people own the means of production they will be become own- .crs of their own jobs. and will get all they produce. A problem so simple, it seems to me, any child should be able to understaml.â€"â€"Jas. A. Il’rlylmzrl. , ,.:-'. * iidd'l'ii shit-Skids. H ED 183-3. y in their banking business. W. A: BISHOP, MANAGER. K ,) ) ‘1 . 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