Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 15 May 1908, p. 1

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Professional Cflt'dis‘. LEGAL. . ... F. A. MCDIAKMID. ARRISTER, SOLICITUR,Etc., FENE ion Fulls.’ Office, Colborne street opposite Post-office. 5%?“ Money to loan on real, estate at lowest current rates. MCLAUGH LIN, PEEL &. FULTON ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- iirics. Oflices over Dominion Bank, 'Linds'iy. Branch ofiice open at Bobcaygwu every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rntes of interest. R. J McLAouums, K. C. A.i\l. FULTON,B. A. JAS. A. PEEK... G. H. HOPKINS. K. O. .)ARR[STER, SOLICIToR, NOTARY. -) Public, .lrc. Solicitor for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit borrower. Ollices, 6 William street south, Lindsay, Out. I W ___________, STEWART & O'CONNOR, )ARRISTE tS, NOTARIES, Sac. MONEY b to loan .at IOWCSI current rules. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. STEWART. L. V. O’Conxon, B. A MOORE 8; JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUI’l‘ORS, &c. Of- lice, William slreet,hindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JAcksox P_.‘ AUCTIONEER. FELlX A. NOR’l‘HEY, PUBLIC AUCTIONEER. Farm and other sales conducted in first- class order. Secure (lutes before adver- tising. Address, Fenelon Falls. M -S'l‘EI’HEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer Write for dates before advertising. M THOMAS CASH ORE, AUCTIONEER. -., summon FALLS. ‘ Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- class manner. Secure dates before ad- Vertising. .__._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"“'______________.___.__â€"â€"-â€"â€" MEDICAL. __________._’________.____.___â€"-â€"â€"â€"- ___________________.__._.__..â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" DR. u. n. GRAHAM. -â€"M. 0., c. M., M. u. c, 5. Eng, u. c. P. e s., . On'r., r. 'r. n. s.â€" HYSIGIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Ofiice. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. DR. A. WILSON, â€"M. 3., M. c. P. a. 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN,,SURGEON 85 ACCOUCH our. Office. Colborne Street, Fenelon .EYES TESTED. . FRAMES TESTED. ‘ When 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 Specialist. (over Neill’s shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges modâ€" crate. DENTAL. Dr. s. J. sures, DENTIST, Fenel on 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€"â€"0ver Burgoyne’s ‘store, Col- orne street DRS. NEELANDS & IRVINE, nnrrlsrs; - 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 success. W vmcr CULTURE no PIIIlO. L&LIAN G. WILSON, A. T. C. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of Toronto Conservatory of Music. Gold Medalist of Whitby Ludies’ College. Voice and piano pupils accepted. Apply at studio. Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone No. '26: ' 31-6111 w _. “wt. The Empress S hoe does not require any breaking in. You can wear it all day, shop in it, work in it, and your feet will not be tired. Women who wear the Empress are our best advertisers. You will want it in a hurry when Spring Opens up. Sowill a hundred other people. Get your order in NOW before th big rush. " Our stock of goods is the big- gest evenâ€"and has always been big. Make your choice while it is at its bestâ€"that’s now. Secessors to J. J. Townley Fenelon a1. sh - ‘ ~u : with.” ....i. - r “r - ..- .r. .J. "u are“ . ii A Ti S E E * g g On and after April 1st, 1908, the busine heretofore Carried on under the name of W. L. Robson will be changed to . ». _. . . W. L. Robson will assume the liabilities up to change of firm and all persons owing accounts to him will kindly call and settle w. L. ROBSON. 3% same at an early date. We are ~ .' MET. '9fittfihdfihfii‘. ,li‘l’li ._ s , ,I' . flit. , e . < _ .‘h $m39‘2fii‘di‘w unseat-“$9 ass â€"‘ â€"i .‘pu...,,,1 ‘: ‘p 1%.. Jim‘le midis Jrfip. 3LT .. k Wfifl‘m‘fliflL’EWZW ml is .4 A hr .‘ ,liilr . v.%$i¢§ri§w”] Faithfully yours , _ I FINDLEY A. ROBSON. is r w '3. is; 1: ___._..._. _. ‘ party. _ ganization. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 15TH, 1908. \OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO FENELON FALLS. HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL ESTABLiSHED 1817. INCORPORATED or ACT or PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. REST - $1,000,000.00. u NDlVlDED PROFITS $922,419.31 ASSETS OVER $165,000,000. SiiiiiilGS BANK DEPARTMENT. INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR. 1 Deposits taken of $1 and upward. Deposits can be withdrawn on demand. a. M. HAMILTON, MANAGER. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Beginning to Realize. Success Magazine for April has the following in regard to the Socialist party : “Both republican and democratic politicians are beginning to realize the great growth and the tremendous scope and intensity of the Socialist At first the rise of Socialism was ignored ; and then, when it could no longer be ignored, it was ridiculed. In 1900, the year when the present Socialistparty first entered the nation- al field, Eugene V. Debs, its candi- date for president, polled 87,814 votes. Four year later, Debs, again the can- datc, received nearly half a million votes. Since 1904 Socialism has been bounding forward and spreading at such a rate that the old party politici- ans, instead of ignoring or ridiculing it, are beginning to fight it aggressive- ly; and recent state and municipal election returns show that the harder, they fight it the more persistently it grows. "The Socialist party is so few years will express itself in a social revolutionâ€"Ann rl to Reason, 9 .â€"¢.â€"_â€"â€"_â€" The Greatest Man. William E. Channing said: “ The greatest man is he who chooses the right with invincible resolution; who resists the severest temptations from within and without; who bears the . heaviest of burdens cheerfully 5 who is calmele in storms and most fearless under menaces and frowns ; whose reâ€"' liance on truth, on virtue, on God, is most unfaltering. I believe this greatâ€" ness to be most common among the: multitude, whose names are never heard.” The multitude that Channing had reference to was the toiling masses who make bricks, carry mortar, dig coal, heat furnaces, drive engines, sail ships, weave cloth, sew garments, build houses, scoop out canals, bore tunnels, span streams and chasms; the many unrequited heavily-laden millions who keep sleepless vigils every night, and who offer up their lives by thousands and are maimed by tens of thousands every day; whose bleaching bones pave the track of progress all the way from the lairs and jungles of the dim and distant past to what is now vaunt- ed as‘ “civilization”; the countless proletarian hosts who do all things, make all things, move all things ; who feed and clothe and house all manâ€" kindsexcept themselves ; conserve all things and beautify and multiply all things; who, in short, have carved this world out of the cosmos and given it to man. They, though they be nameless and fameless, are the trulv great and the only great, and some day, by the Eternal, they shall inherit the earth iâ€"Iln'd. The Source of Wealth. The man who works for two dollars :a day produces more than two dollars" worth of wealth: If he doesn’t do this there is nothing in it for the emplov- er 5 and employers don’t employ uh- less there is something in it for them. It is the surplus wealth produced by the wage worker that makes his mas- tcr wealthy, and gives him more pow- er over those whom he hires. The oi» ject of Socialism is'tozestablish an ir.« dustrial system in which each worker would retain this surplus instead of turning it over to some capitalist or' corporation. There is no way on earth organized that there is no possibility ‘ by Which capital can be accumulated of any set of leaders deciding in ad- vance who the candidate for president shall be. There are no leaders in the Socialist party, in the usual political sense. The national convention, and that only, will choose the candidates for president and vice-president.” For a number of years after Social- ism made its appearance little attenâ€" tion was paid to it, and this only to ridicule, misrepresent and discredit it. In the popular mind it was usually coupled with anarchy, and the readers of capitalist papers were told that it was of foreign importation and that it could never strike root in Anericar soil. In the meantime, Socialists con- tinued their work of education and orâ€" Toâ€"day Socialism is rec- ognized as a force in the land, and the Socialist party has taken its place a- mong the national parties of the naâ€" tion. Success says truly that both re- publican and democratic politicians are beginning to realize its growth and importance. They no longer rid- icule it, nor do they dimiss it as a harmless theory, entertained only by crack-brained visionaries. They see in it a tremendous power which is still largely latent, but which in the next \captunng political power, and thereby save by the appropriation of this sur~ plus; and there is no way by which the working class can hope to obtain more than an uncertain and precariâ€" ous living for labor performed than by so rteâ€"organizing industry as to legaliy and effectively secure this surplus to the men whose labor produces it. So- cialists are organized for the purpose of doing this thing; and, if you are a workingman, you owe it to yourself to throw all your power into “the movr- ment, and contribute to its inevitable successâ€"111M, . ‘â€".o The wealth of the property~0wner who does not work is the product of the propertless men who do work. There are two kinds of unemployed â€"the million workers who are on the tramp looking for work, and the thou- sands of capitalist parasites who are paid for doing nothing. All those things upon which the people in common depend as a run-ms of applying their labor, and timrohy obtaining the material means-oi" life, should by the people in connmm be owned and operated. m ___â€"â€"â€"_â€"__-_...-_.___.___-. _.___._.___â€" ._ 1836 on g, conservatives sive bank THE'BANK cr yt thoroughly progri; .‘s’m for progressive Farlners. A Checking Account provides a very safe and convenient way of paying your bills, as each check issued returns to you as a receipt. Loan Accounts Opened with reliable farmers who require ready money at this season. Savings Accounts may be started with $1.00 or upwm-x? tcrest paid 4 times a year. Fenelon Falls Branch, In .. W. A. Bishop, Manager.

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