Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 28 Feb 1908, p. 1

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.a,~ ,__..:7â€"p_:..:.: u , I '1'... l . l 1} 3;: l ‘,A _. ;¢-v â€" 6:2,; . . I y Marianne - FEN'ELON FALLS, ONTARIO, :EFRIDAY, r Professional Cards. LE’} AL. .4...â€"___.__.._.___.._____._. 4 _ II. A. memento. PARRISTER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE ) lon Falls. Ollice, Colborne street opposite Posthomce. [31:13" Money to loan “oh real estate at lowest current rates. llloLA‘UGl-llllN, PEEL ill-FULTON ARRIS'i‘EIlS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- B uries. Offices over Dominion Bank, riuindsay. Branch otlice open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R.J MOLAUGIILIN,K. C ‘._A..\I.FULro.\I,B. A. JAS. A. l’igtpn. _______________._â€"â€"â€"â€" G. ll. HOPKINS. K. C. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY B Public, «kc. Solicitor for the Bank of Montreah Money to loan at terms to snit borrower. Olficcsfii William street south, Lin deny. On t. _.. , p w-m- 91%.“:- .» ff“ STEWART 8.: O’CONNOR, _ )AItltIS'l‘ERS, NO'I‘AIIIES, &c. MONEY ) to loan at lowest current. rates. terms to Suit borrowers. ' 'Hlld York streets, Lindsay. ’i‘.S'rnw.tur. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A W . MOORE &. JACKSON, mamsrnns, Sonic-Irons, &c. orâ€" . l) tice,William-strecl,Lindsay. F. I). Mboue. ' A. JACKSON M/ _'â€"‘â€"_" AUCTEDI‘ BER. ‘__________‘:_._____â€"~â€"-â€"â€"â€" FlfllllX A. NORTHEY, PUBLIC AUCTIONEER. Farm and other sales conducted in first- clnss order. Secure dates before adver- tising. Address, Fcnelon Falls. .____________‘_______â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-' STEPHEN OLIVER, ' LINDSAY - ONT. Irive Stock and general Auctioneer. Write for dates before advcrtIsing. ________________._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" 'l‘ HOMAS CASI‘IORE, V _ ’r‘nNELON. FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in. a first- class manner. Secure dates bctore ad- vertising. . W”! ‘ MEDICAL. M. DR. H. II. GRAHAM. â€"â€"u. 0.,0. n, n n. c s. Eng, M. c.r. .t s., ONT., r. 'r. M. s.â€" I)FIYSICIAN, SURGEON 8: ACCOUCH- ___________._._â€"-â€"â€"-â€"v enr. Oflice. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. " . ____________________._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"- DE. A. WlLSON, -â€"I.I. 3., n. c. P. a 3., Ontario,â€" ' / ‘i IlYSlClAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH eur. Ollice, Colborne Street,,l<‘enelon ianlls. ' . EYES tissue, recurs TESTED. ff. When your eyes trouble you, .Y . ~.“cause. you pain or head- ‘ 3.3;" ~ ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glosses, go to Vinma. s. errors, ‘.a Eyesight Especiaiist. (over Neill‘s shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. .‘Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges modâ€" crate. '_____.___‘___,__._____â€"~ 3 ' . I‘ I 'Dr. s. .I. mess, harms-r, Fenclou Xi‘alls. Graduate of Toronto University and (Royal College of Dental Surgeons. I ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"-Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- ornc street ‘ DRS. NEELlIlIDS & IRVINE, nnsrlsrs, - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gus administered to over 9,000 persons with great sucress. fi>in__fl_0_ ____, w u______‘___________, v' IIOICE CULTURE AND Pure. LILLIAN G. WILSON, A. T. C. M. ,f' Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of ‘-"'l‘oronto‘ Conservatory of Music. Gold . Medalist of Whitby Ladies’ College. Voice .nd piano pupils accepted. Apply at. studio, Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone 319. 20. Office on corner of Kent . 31-6In - "-.".‘\. ‘ EngELm 1 '- Kee theniwarm, too. Any care that you give yOur feet at this time will well repay you. - " "'- ;'.I» “.1. '1 I"? .‘ - ;-;'-" "if ‘2 j" «tau 3, f 4"“ t '- din-ms. w .- .. .. d. .- < :2 .- â€" A maxim says that if your, feet are right you are all right, A good deal of truth in it, toog: There are felt shoes, rubbers," overshoes and moccasins here, that .will fit any foot. They are new goods. strong and durable. Put a pair on and your feet. will never guess that the wea- ther iscold or the ground wet or Slushy. ' Prices always right. W ' WEI Silt iii SE You will want it in a. hurry when Springopens up. So will a. hundred other people. Get your order in NOW before the. big rush. Our stock of goods is the big- gest everâ€"and has always been big. Make your choice While it is at its bestâ€"that’s now. TOWNLEY BROS. Successors to J. J. Townley, 'Fenelon Falls. rheumatism rsnttnsapi * I g M im“ ‘ .li -“ . "fir ; IfiIiâ€"itfili at; 1 as $2 mn®fi men‘mfi § - W ‘ Are now so skilfull prepared- that. they make an excellent Sub' cu , ' ‘e stitute for the fresh ar- ticle, especially at this season. We "have a. .; complete line of every known kind. Each has the natural flavor and each has been ‘kept .in 3‘ absolutely good condi; tion. ,We‘ handle the 1r ml: who: 373:: If!“ 1min Jim-Inga. ,‘uilllnr,_ " WW 3’35!“ will“ 3’43": ’5!" L W. L. ROBSON. \oooooooQooooooooooOOooeaocoooooooooooooooo best Come itnd' try and buy, } ' oooroboooocéoooooOw fl warren, FEHELON FALLS. HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL ESTABLISHED 1817. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL '- $14,400,000.00. REST - $11,000.ooo.00. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $922,418.31} 9 i i ASSETS oven $165,000,000. % I SAVINGS BANK. 6 DEPARTMENT. :6 INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR Deposits taken of $1 and upward. Deposits can be- withdrawn on demand. --â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€" Q R. M.‘ HAMILTON, g ' MANAGER. ' g . 0000<C>oo<>00000<>0000 War vs Industry. “ The number of deathfs in battle in all the foreign wars put together during the last ccntury,and a quarter, aggregate considerably less than one year‘s death record for our industries.”-â€"â€"-Prcsident Roosevelt’s Message. Think of that, will you, you who who are so glib in telling of the advantages and prosperity of the American work- ingman ? Who is it that constitutes this tremendous (loath roll? Is it the coal barons, the railroad magnates, the steel and iron kings, the mine owners, the trust manipulators, the bankers, law- yer, doctorss or capitalists ‘3 Who is it that is always pill) 011' the firing line -1' the danger line â€"to receive the death blow? Who is it that always occupies the safe positions, either in battle or in~ dustry, directing those who are to be killed to go to the front and face their doom? Who is it that, after the battle is won, or the duy's killing in industry has been succeSSl’ully accomplished, re- ceives all the honors and all the spoils ‘3 There is no need to give audible an- swer to these questions, as everybody knows that the common manâ€"the work- erâ€"the honest toiler and producer-â€"is always, either in battle or in industry, placed on the altar and compelled to run all risks of life and limb. For this risk he is given a pittance from the gain made in the fightâ€"just enough to keep him alive, so that he will be able to risk his life again the next day. An exploitcr of industry risks his cap- ital (or the capital he can control,) and for this risk ho is entitled to take every- thing the man who risks his life pro- duces. A general in battle risks his rcp- utation and position, and for that risk he is entitled to take all the credit and all the honor due to the men who risked their lives to win the fight. Humanity has not advanced for from animalism. The biggest hog still first gets his 1111 of the swill, and then lies down in the trough. We have simply thus far suc- ceeded in making animalism a little more refined. ‘ The mawldsh, drivclling sentiment about the “ value of human life " shows up in its sickening absurdity when a risk is to be made. When the lives of the masses, or property, or both, are to be risked, the risk must always first fall 0 l the lives of the masses, to save the property which is in the possession of the few, who do not risk their lives to save it. For in the saving or creation of property the risk of life does not come on him’ who owns or will own the prop- erty; but the owner pushes forward, 11]. war or industry, the helpless, forced by want or law, to go to the danger point and put up his life in the interest of property in the enjoyment of winch he who risks his life has not nor ever will EBRUARY 28m, 1908. ). ___‘...-.., ,_ remuneration than just sufficient to keep him alive and in working order. And, later, when the man who risks his life to create or'savo property, dis- covers that he must make a light on his own behalf against the tyranny of the man whose property interests he has fought or labored to protect, he simultaâ€" neously discovers that all laws have been framed in the interest of that props crt-y, by the cunning turn of which a- gainst him his life is placed in jeopardy. Truly, the sacrcdncss of the lives of the poor is a joke to make the iznps of hades lztug11.â€"T/ze People, Akron, Ohio. a. What the Depression Means. The industrial depression is world; wide. The Socialists have been telling you for years that this would happen to you; but you did n’t think they had sepse enough to know anything. This depression is because all the machinery cannot operate all the time, for it would produce more than could be sold. No in; dustry would stop if the owners could sell at a ,profit all the goods they could make. Men who get ten dollars for prod ducing twenty dollars’s worth of goods cannot buy back the goods they have made; and when the owner cannot sell all his goods he shuts down his ma- chinery wholly or in part. That is what this depression all over Europe and America means. paid twenty dollars for producing twen- ty dollars' worth of goods, all the goods would be bought and Used, for the many millions of work people want the. things they have produced. Capitalists, work- ing in all countries with improved ma- chinery, all hunting for the world's mar- kets, are affected alike. Hence this worldâ€"wide distress. Machinery has been so improved in every country that this condition has now become chronic, and this depression will never let up. It is here to stay as long as the machinery and capitalist owners stay, and it will get worse and worse. Nothing but 80* cialism-â€"selling the products at the ac- tual cost of producing themâ€"will relieve the depression. I know the world will not have this now; but I know that when the people have suffered a. few more years and become desperate, they will accept it. We can wait that timo‘ with absolute confidence.â€" Wayland. They ’Il Use Their Brains. . rThe newspapers of all the'cities bear witness to the number of homeless and unemployed men who have crowded into the centers of population, and are puz« zliug the overworked dispensers of charâ€" ity. Plans are being prepared in New York City to establish a colony of the unemployed somewhere in the country as a means of removing this large num- ber of dangerous people from contact with good and desirziblc citizens. Los Angeles is sending advertizing matter all over the country between the Pacific coast and the desert, notifying tramps to keep away under pain of punishment. When all the cities and all the country refuse a place on the surface of the earth for the man discharged by his master, the unemployed will have to get oil the earth, whether they have wings to travel with or not. But it is likely that, before General Otis convertsthe world to his theory that the unemployed. are in that condition from choice, the tramps will begin to use their brains, and devise means of making the jobs that most of them would use if they could.-- Appeal to Reason. u+ot An Insane System. Six million pounds of beef, flour, pota- toes, butter, onions, rice, tobacco, etc., will be consumed by the United States fleet in its journey to the Pacific Ocean. If we can destroy ‘sullicicnt quantities of the products of this country in miliâ€" tary manoeuvors, we can stave on“ the the unemployed problem for yet a feW years. How insane is the system that; makes it necessary to destroy wealth in order to find employment for the work- ing class! Docs n't it strike you that) it would be'mnch better if we should reâ€" - turn these vast stores of provisions to the workers who dug these products from mother earth, and put the soldiers and sailors at work building parks, school-houses, homes for their families and beautiful things for their wives and children to use and wear ? This is what Socialism proposes to do.~â€"Ib. 0+0 In olden times the vcnal sold them- h‘wd any lmrbv and for the creation 01' :sclves to the devil ; but in modern times saving of which he will receive no more .aln ' they got a. better price from the trusts. TTAI. AesETs oven ‘ $50,0oo,ooo SAVINGS ACCOUNTSâ€" given special attention. A deposit of $1 or upward starts a Savings Account, on which the highest current rate of interest is paid or added to the principal every 3 months. 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 )withdr‘aw form of account. Fenelon Falls Branch funds, making a. very convenient V W. Bishop, Manager, If the workers were ~

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