Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 6 Dec 1907, p. 1

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":5 hit-b. ,. can; r-olessional Cards. A,,.’/ .;___ _-..__ ’_‘._>.._._.__-__ __.v.__-__ LEElL. .._~~__â€"v_..;._._..__..__.__. F. A. MCDIAIUITD. ARRlS'l‘ER, SOLICITCR,Etc., FENE 8 Ion Falls. _D(Iice, Uolbornc street opposite Post-office. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. . . -4 MoleUGIILIN, PEEL &..1+‘,UI.'1"ON. Paanrsrnns, SOLICITORSAND norâ€" ) nries. Offices over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch office open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J MCLaUGan, K. C. A. M. FULroN,B. A. Jas. A. Past... M o. n. norKINs, ARRISTER, so. SOLlCI'I‘OR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to 10,,“ at owest rates on terms to suit the borrower, Offices: No. 6, William Street South) mnd_ say, Out. 7 . ,STEWAM a common, )AltRIS'I‘lCltS; Nt)’l‘.-‘.I‘.IES, 8w. MO‘NEY l) to loan at lowest current rates. ’lerms to suit borrowers. ()Ilice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. ' 't‘. Srswmm L. V. O’Conxon, B: A noonn a JACKSON, WARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, Sac. 0t“â€" ) lice, William street, Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. Jacuson anorronsna. ______________.____â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€" FELIX A. NOlt'I‘IlEY, PUBLIC AUCTIONEER. Farm and [other sales conducted in first- class order. Secure dates before adver- tising. Address, Fenelon Falls. _____________’___.â€"â€"'â€"- STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer. i«\‘aite for dates before advertising. M THOMAS CASIlORE, AUCTIONEEIL - FENICLON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in tutti-st- manner. Secure dates bel‘ore ndverttstng. Dlt. H. II. GRAHAM. â€"M. o.,c. n, M n. c 3. Eng, no. r. a s., 0N'l‘., F. 'r. M. s.â€" )ilYSIClAN, SURGEON 8r. ACCCUCII- enr. Otfice. Francis Street, 1‘enelon l'ulls. _____________.._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" DR. A. WILSON, â€"â€"n. 3., n. c. r. a s., Ontario,â€" on HYSICIAN SURGEON 8; ACCOU I.) cut. Otlice’, Coiborne Street, henelon FLi/fi EYES TESTED. FRAMES TESTED. \Vhen your eyes trouble you, cause you pain or head- ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glasses, go to DB. M. B. ATHENS, Eyesight Sp eciaiist. (over Neill's shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges mod- crate. P____________________________â€"â€"â€"â€"- DENTAL. ff Dr. s. J. suns, DENTIST, Fenclo-n Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"-Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- OX‘flB street DRS. IIEELIII‘IDS & IRVINE, nnxrisrs, - 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 sucress. it our to this thirdâ€"Pith 0. LILLIAN (5. WILSON, A. T. c. M. Honor Graduate (piano and_voeal) of Toronto Conservatory of Mustc. Cold Medalist of Whitby Lndies’ College. T nice and ’ piano pupils accepted. Apply at. studio, Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone N0. 20. 31-6111 g00d deal of buying and 0X- collection to please you than . mi? ..e«...:t 5;- gttnh ‘ Harri Before buying your Christmas Groceries, consider both qual- ity and price. 6 We have done some thinking ‘ poet to have a little bigger we have ever asked you to look at. We would like you to notice the prices of what we are offering, always rememberâ€" ing that they are the very high- est grades of goods that it is possible to buy. 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 pedlars. Our reputation and business has been built up on the best of ma- terials and workmanship, andwe still wish to maintain it. Hence this notice. J. J. Townnsv. All OLD RELIABLE GROCERY STIlRE is pointed out by the oldest inhabitant as the best place to buy your Xmas Groceries. ‘TVe have a carefully select- od stock. We continue to as- sure you of this as we have done in the past. RELIABILITY IS OUR MUTTO 000 000 000 000000000 000 000000 000 000000 . od of tyrants has never been productive - 1- .._,.__. $000000 0000000000094 ‘ HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL‘ ESTABLISHED 1817. INCORPORATED av ac-r or PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL - REST . UNOIVIDED PROFITS $922,449.81} 514.400.000.00. 311.000.000.00. Q FENELON FALLS. g Q Q, SAIIII’IGS BANK DEPARTMENT. INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR Deposits taken oi $1 and upward. Q Q Q 0 Deposits can be 9 Q Q Q withdrawn on demand. R. M. HAMILTON, MANAGER. 5000 o<©0 000000 000 000 Why Jails Are. Jails and prisons are as logical to the capitalist system as are the cages to a menagerie. There are men, as Well as beasts, who can ’t be snubbed with duty dope, but insist on saying and doing the things which should be said and done, regardless of consequences. The asses and sheep of the social monagerie can safely be left at large ; but the untamed and untainable must be locked up, lest- they destroy the privileges of the mas- ters. The mouths of unterrilicd agita- tors have by no other means been so efâ€" fectively closed as by inclosing them within walls of masonry; but this mothâ€" ol‘ more than temporary results. Shut- ting the month generally has the effect - of opening the mind. The man who can- not talk has the more time to think. In the solitude of unjust confinement, more than one victim has found the proper conditions ‘under which to analyze the purpose of the oppressor, and to go forth. better prepared to renew the atâ€" tack on predatory privilege, whether from the rostrum or the scall’old. B it the capitalist is short-sighted. He plays his game to win what is in view, and. leaves the problems of the future to future solution. Lock up the agitators who interfere with business. Hang a few of them, to impress the fate of the disturbcr upon the thoughtless; give the capitalist interests present relief, and let the deluge come after we have moved on. Such is the logic of capital, which may seek life for its vota rics, but; prepares death for their posterity. , Since capital cannot conveniently lock 11p all its movable possessions, it locks them out and locks in the individual who threatens them; thus separating the capitalist and his from those who might separate him and his.~ Those who out- wardly conform to capitalism, but so- crotly purloin property, must be discip- lined and made to observe the rules of the system as well as the agitator who operates in the open. The petty thief goes to jail as well as the revolutionist, and for the same reason. Both are lack- ing in respect for property, and the pur- pose of the jail, under the capitalist system, is to enforce respect for proper- ty, for its owners, and for the system by which its owners get it. The jail is, therefore, an economic in- stitution, and functions‘in the hands of I the ruling class to keep the worker at work with his hands, and prevent him from working his headâ€"â€"particularly his mouth. Strange to say, the working class builds the jails and occupies them 1 for the reason that the keys are car- ried by the ollicial representatives of the wealthy ruing class. To be an en- emy of property, or of those who own property, is as disgraceful as it once was to be an enemy of the kingdom or of I the king. To steal from those who have already stolen, (’1' to agitate the illlt'll‘ tion of capitalist robbery, is as treasr n-' able as it once was to speak alight; against the king, or, in later years, to aid the escape of a negro slave. The B )ston Tea Party laid its seditiors hands 011 the source of the king‘s rove- nuc, which is yet an unpardonablc sin. John Brown stole the black slaves wi.o were the propurtyol" certain “ desirable ” citizens. This also is treason, for which the incendiary Kansas agitator wont to jail and to execution. It is a fact that, in the real adults of men, property is the most- sacred of all things. It is this fact which condemns capitalism and makes Socialism necessary. Deep down in human consciousness is the growing conviction that human life deserves more consideration than the property it creates, and that the creator ol’ wealth is of more consequence than the class of individuals who make noth‘ ing, but take the most of everything; and the jails and prisons are doing their part toward the dissemination of this , revolutionary idea. Together with in~ junctions and lockouts, militia and man‘ ul’acturers’ associations, they are awakâ€" ening a class-consciousness that will un- derstand the why and wherefore of these capitalist institutions, and will abolish prisons by abolishing the system which makes them necessary. Jails are the infallible indicia of the social process- With any approaching change of an established condition, the prisons inva riany become populous. In- quisitions mark the passing of every in- iquity, whet-her ccclesiastic, economic or elseâ€"kind. Tiberius did not differ sent ially l'rom Torquemada, and there is small choice between the methods of Ramoses the Great and those of Rooseâ€" velt the Grotesque. During their ascendcncy, despotisms have least use for dungeons. Only in the desperation of decadence do they resort largely to jailsâ€"pillars always of tyran- uy‘s tottering power. Prisons are simâ€" ply symptomatic-â€"â€"the visible inanil'cstan tion of a moribund conditionwthe inevi- table efi‘oct ot‘ a discernible cause. Thus the presant campaign. of opp res- sion and suppression which. is crowding our prisons with Socialist agitators inâ€" dicates unerringly the culmination of capitalism. As in nature ripeness is necessarily succeeded by decay, so it is an inexorable law of the social organi- zation that declension follows maturity. This fact is essential to the integrity of. the evolutionary purposesufl'ancz‘s Ill. Eastwood. .4)»:â€" The. Wastes of Competition. When the industries are owned by all the people there will not be a dozen small, crude, expensive plants turning out the same product; but instead there will be one scientific, fully-equipped plant doing it for the benefit of all. Laâ€" bor will not be wasted in duplicating plants, when there are plants in plenty to furnish the product; neither will Iaâ€" her be wasted in having some citizens spending their time in travelling to in- duce the people to buy of a certain fac- tory, or advertising to induce the people to change the channel of their demands. System will replace inpustrial anarchy, and peace, plenty and pleasure will smile upon you and upon your children and their children forever. Wake up! The world moves and needs you with it. One of the tremendous wastes of soci- ety. that costs the people hundreds ( f millions annually, is the vessels of vari- ous kinds and character used in getting the products to the people's homes for consumption. Under Socialism, where every home would be built and made convenient for all possible uses, con- ditions will be made whereby the goods can-be delivered in such permanent ves- sels that none of them would be des~ troyed, but returned to the source of supply, where they could be thoroughly cleaned and rinsed, as milk cans now are. But where the necessities of the people force them to buy in all kinds of odd amounts, and where they have to live where gathering up is not practicaâ€" ble, all this is wasted and service renâ€" dered unnecessarily costly. You will do things right when Socialism is establishâ€" ed, and most of the labor in handling goods will be savedâ€"Ammal to Reason. .4». If the present policy of capitalist per- secution continues, decent men soon will have to go to jail to find congenial com~ panionship. Even as “the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church,” so are. the sul'~ ferings of persecuted Socialists the strength and sustenance of our Rightâ€" eous Revolution. I836 TOTAL ASSETS OVER $50,080,800 SAVINGS ACCOUNTSâ€" given special attention. A deposit of $1 or upward startsa Savings Account, on which the highest current rate of interest is paid or added to the princ1pal every 3 months. 1 Deposits may be withdrawn at any time without notice. ' JOINT ACCOUNTS may be opened in the. name of two persons so that either may deposit or withdraw funds, making a very convenient form of account. w. L. Fenelon Falls Branch-lg 0 W. A. Bishop, Manager. ~‘L-";-.. v‘v; , ~’>u. ‘owmwxwwbw - -»’\.~J~‘v.\.v x . I ‘ \sz . , - ynrwwfx/wxx/ I

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