Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 16 Apr 1909, p. 1

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a 1-‘“.~4“3ikli..~<3..-,fl_ .‘.._-,;,,-,,,.,,. . x . _T wise new xiv‘. 2M '3‘: i ->¢\":'..‘ .».-. extras: .. 5-,. 1.1.. .___; -...___~'~_~:::1_e:‘¢.:~'.:": '4 '1‘.~":-:: ~51???- "~'*'~‘K“- "~' c-j'i32zil 1 ..._.111_1 . . .._11. 1 u‘.~’.,.\..-1....m-‘m - m mm M h. _t . 1, 4.». _..-,- n, r:- ~11n..<...-.~,... .- ~..‘-L.ZI.’-“; its‘; new (showman-Ar h . _ v» I l i I 4:?!’ __ ‘ amazon-1W ;- .- - 1. 1.. 1-221»: :"-':-:~;;. "Tiff, it. .“_ .. 1 ‘a “my. , 'rm :s-U'17c'Yanwr'fi: ‘f 5 5 ‘i Yawn-ta mm -1 .. 1:: swear-r x “AW :1’; ._, .. . onfinsssioual Cards. Lil-3L. F. A. MCDIAH lllll. Pitmns'rnc, somerromnie, FENE - _) Oilicc, Colborne street lon Falls. Opposite Post-other. {$th Moneyt lo loan on real estate at lowest current rates. reintnuuinu, rum. a rhi.~'|‘0N i§illlilllSTEltob SOLICITORS AND NOT- . :tz'ies. liiudsrv~ ev--r_\' Monday. Money to loan at. lowest rzztt-s ui' i=1'-~ rest. R. J Moll/menus, K. O. A. M. Futron, B. A. J.\s. A. PEEL. t} ll. HOPKINS. K. U. PARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY .} Pnblic,&c. Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit borrower. Lindsay, Ont. M OO R E 8t J AUKSON, l ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. 0t‘- iice, William street,hindsay. A.JAcKso.~ F. D. Moons. S’l‘E\\'Al’t'l‘ & ()‘CONNOR, A RRTSTERS, NOTARIES, &c. MONEY T to loan at lowest current rates. Terms t0 suit borrowers. and York streets, Lindsay. 'l‘. S's-mum. L. V. O’Cou.von, B. A Eir. s. s. stars, cherries, Ifcnclon Ivan-.5. Graduate of Toronto University and [loyal College of Dental Surgeons. . ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY ted lit-cording to the lutestimproved perform methods at moderate prices. . OFFICE :--Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- i b irne street i“ BEOdTI$TBYL k“ ~ w DR. H. A. NESBITT, h D a, D. S Graduate of Royal College of’ Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Honor Graduate of Toronto Universiry. _ Three Years practical experience. All modern improvements. Oilice over Can dian Bank corner Kent and Wi-liam stre Ont. Phone 272. DilS. NEELATDS 8t lllTlllE, carriers - Natural teeth preserved. Grown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid fits in artificial teetb. Painless extraction. Gas administered to. over 9,000 persons with great success. ________________._._._--â€"-â€"-â€" DB. SHAH PE, DENTIST TORONTO. of Commerce. et, Lindsay, will be at the _ ' . _ ' ' MCARTH'UR HOUSE, FENELON FALLS _ , _ Wed. and Thurs, Apr. 28 and 29, ,And Wednesday and Thursday of every alternate week following. Satisfaction assured-â€"Plate, Crown and _ Bridge work a Specialty. WM MEDICAL- ______________________,_________-â€"â€"- DR. H. l-l. GRAHAM. -n. 0.,0. n, n n. o s. Eng.,M. 0. P. a. 8., ' ONT., r. 'r. it. s.â€"- HYSICIAN, SURGEON c Accoucn- ear. _Oilice. Francis Street, Fenelou Falls. _______________________-__â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, succnsson 'ro on. A. wusou, RADUATE Oh‘ TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- couehcur. Otiiec, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. AU GTIONEER. ________--_â€" _____‘_~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" STEPHEN ' OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and getieral Auctioneer : Write for dates-before advertising. ‘ ' THO MAS OAS HORE. AUCTIONEER. - renews FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- class manner. Secure dates before ad- vcrtising. “aviators; __ FliiiilES TESTED. When your eyes trouble you, cause you pain 0r head- ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glasses, go to on. ll. B.AIIIIIS, Eyesight Specialist. . (over Neill‘s shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. Satisfaction gua crate. 1 . Oéfires over Dominion Bank. _ llaanch oilice open at lloi --:t_\'gco|. ‘ Solicitor for the Bunk oi i Oifices, G William street south, . Oilice on corner of Kent i LINDSAY. ‘ ‘Yg'kzh mm flucafiitfimflu wintertime Went mdhuifltamtllhudlfiudhc For Spring and Summer flaWichnflhmm w- amintiminm 233"“: ii‘. geomeweesssesesseweeeii ranteed. Charges _ niodf W D0 you want a. \ \N N \\.> mm. \ . <‘\-s \\\\\\\‘ws>t commons s\\\\\\.\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\>.\“WWW \ W X\\\)\\\\\\\\\W QR \2.\\\NNN N \\\\\\\\\\ w Wm s t yl e-something out of tne ordin- ary? , ' If you do‘, yen \\\ a Z . . H4 ought to come 1n and see our Patent Colt Invictus Shoes. You’ll say they are the handsom- est and nca'test shoe you ’ve ever , seen. them are made throughout of Patent Colt. ‘ .-..__ This patent leather is from imported Russian colt hides. _ It 1s Without exception the best patent leather made. . ' We’ve also got-patent leather shoes with dull kld tops-a leather equal to the-‘finest kid 1n softness and pliability, but more durable. ' > We have the best Canadian makes in patent leather, with narrow, medium' and full toes, both in Blucher style or Oxfords. J.L.Annoto. NR Our Stock is now complete.‘ We have‘? the newest andbest in surrmcs, PANTIN'G-Si, nun FANCY vnsrrnes. We will be pleased to have you call and see these goods. TOWNLEY Egg 1-. ‘ in” WW WWWW' WJWQWJIWQQWMWI ilmnrngmurmwrnmmw 11mm- WW . .w .u 1.‘ . . ,- , 7 till liltil Ii SHOE you set out for, in all the latest styles. We’re having things verv much our own way this season and the stock day. All you'need then 1s to come in, buy, and g0 away happy. If you see a well dressed foot it"s sure it’s been to our place. Robson & Son. shoe with lots of Some of manufactured . of profits, while the socially (govern. t i; w. '“WWWWWWFWWWWWWWm is 3k xfiu . .Jifimfl 5 . ‘it ., . . , , t eases... " settiehttiasrhec rs s s s "h' "WW 1s Winningfriends every 5:, s s it s I-‘iEfiD OFFICE} ESTABLTSHED 1817., CAPITAL - $4,400,000.00. ‘651'LV1NG55 BALE Ii Deposits taken of flit and Itct th sis s INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLlAMENT. ASSETS OVER $i83,000,000. withdrawn on dc Pt. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenclon Falls Branch. _ _. .._....._..__.._~ -_ -~~~fl'.n-1n¢W-mfl|l_-_M ,_ , 3 < . i ii 5: hi. - ' its 3 . MON TR ‘EA L. REST - 12,000,000.00 1) it; l) A 1i‘: T It! I5 1N '1‘. upwards, which can be mans. . mama "germ? a“ 0 Nation Own the Trusts machines, the trusts, that have devel- oped industry to such an extent that So you do n’t like the trusts, eh? one man can produce as much as one ' Think they are a curse, and should be “busted” by due process of law, eh? Did you ever work your brain any in an chi-rt. to ferret out the causes un- derlying the rise and growth of trusts and combines’! No’! Then I d0 n’t; think you are competent to judge the trusts; neither are you competent to work out a remedy, unless you get busy and read up a little in the most rudimentary principles of economics. Lots of you can remember when the school teacher used to move around hundred could under the old regime. You would smash all this and go back to the old methods because you have not enough brains, or at least you do not use them for this purpose, to see that the trusts are but a stage in the development of industry from which we are to' step to something higher and better. The trusts came into being as the result of perfectly natural causes , they are here to =->st-ay, and you can ’t legis- late them out of existence. \Vhen yo 1 from house to house teaching the chil- | try to do so, you are merely butting (lren at so much per head. As you look back, you find that the Standard of education which the pupils attained your head against progress. Sooner or later you Will smash your head, an-l progress \vill march light along with- was much lower than at present, while out noticing you 0r your puny oppo- the cost was greater. To-day the work has been centralized. A large number sition. T . l\ow I have a suggestion to offer. of fitl'tllllBS hire a teacher, and, in rais- As yet it is but a. suggestion, but ing the necessary funds, the commu- nistie principle cording to his ability, to every man according to his needs ” is applied. It ’s an improvement over the old sys- tem, from both the educational and fi- nancial viewpoint, is n’t it? Yet it is really a trust formed for the same rea- son as was Standard Oil, viz, to cut down the cost and simplify production. But while the Standard Oil Co. is a, v privately owned combine and in the business for profits, the school system belongs to all of you fellows, and its object is not profits, of your children. Now, can you catch I that? The privately owned combine‘ is run primarily for the accumulation ment) owned combine is operated for the common good. Now I believe I am safe in saying I that you fellows would n’t want to go back to the old way of doing things again. Yeti would n’t want your wives l t0 be compelled to take the wool, and, r turc it into homespun. And I ill be; hanged if I think you ’d care t0 weari homespun, either. Neither would you l care to rub corn 0r wheat between two l stones to make flour, when thousands, of barrels can be ground in a day in up-to- date mills. Yet these are the methods you are advocating when you swear that trusts should be “busted.” You have probably read that when so much machinery was introduced in- to the manufacture of woollen and cot- ton goods, (in the latter part of the eighteenth century,) thus putting th0u_ sands out of employment, the werkers put up quite a kick. In many places they raided the factories and smashed the machines. But the machines won out, and those who opposed their in- troductlon simply threw themselves before the wheels of progress and were crushed. Now that is just what you are try- ing to do.‘ You want to smash tl.e 73 Years in Business. in Saving Habit an when we have crowd enough we will “from every man ac- make it a demand. \Ve can ’t each own a. trust, and, if we could, to whom would we sell our products? \Ve can’t exist to-day without the trusts 3 there- fore, let us take them and operate them for theicommon good. Let us usher in the co-operative common- wealth that these “crazy socialists” are always talking about, and make the trusts serve all the people; for “the trusts must own the Nation 0r the Nation own the trusts.” , In other ‘words, “ Let the Nation but the education _ own the trusts,” as comrade WVilshil.e says. It ’s the only remedy. If you d0 n’t believe it, just read up a little. Try some of “ Cotton’s Economic Bit- ters.” They ’ll fix you all right.â€" Roscoe Fillmore, in Cotton’s Weekly. I-.- We Are Believers. Socialists are not unbelievers. They bGlIGVO that every child has a right t0 education and opportunity ; that every "' by the old clumsy methods, manufac- l man and woman has a. right to a. phwe on the earth without paying another for the privilege of staying here ; that man has a right to work when he wish- es, without having to give part of his product to another for the p'rivilec'e ' that the workers who produce all Taln; good. things of life have a rigl'it to en- 30y them. The ‘Socialist is a great be- liever. He believes that all exploita- tion and all poverty can be banished from the earth, and pledges his life that it shall be so. He believes that man has only begun to live; that when given opportunity life will be sweet and rich beyond all that poets ever dreamed. He believes in a re- ligion that will mean something for . the world, here and now; in homes for all, each a refuge and good beyond all that it has ever been ; in marriafles that shall mean love and devotion abnd happiness. The Socialists are believ- ers. They have faith. There ’s noth lug wrong with that; belief, is there 'l -â€"Cotton’s Weekly. wane.‘ ,..~_, y, ,, ' ' - '- ‘I .4 7-: 190 5's 5-“ l; e: Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000. ' ' is the’ foundation of independence- Begin savnig now by opening account with the Bank of L'ritish North America and mak- ing regular Weekly or Monthly deposits. $1.00 starts a Savings Account and interest is compounded at highest current rates. Fencldn .;Fa11s;-Branch,__ ~ W- 413511101). Manager ._-‘“_L.A-“““‘DA‘.‘-IAL“M

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