Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 11 Jun 1909, p. 1

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I’rofcssional Cards. LEGAL. F. A. MCDIARMID. ARRISTER, SOLLGITOR,Etc., FENE B 1011 Falls. Office, Colborne street 'opposite Post-office. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. MCLAUGTILTN, PEEL & FULTON ' ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- uries. Offices over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch otiice open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J. MCLAUGULIN, K. C. A. M. FULTON, B. A. JAS. A. PEEL. , G. H. [-lOPKlNS, K. O. )ARRTSTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY " Public, ac. Solicitor for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit borrower. Ollices, 6 William street south, Lindsay, Ont. MOO RE 81. JACKSON, ‘)ARRIS'1‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. orâ€" 1) fice,William street,hiudsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON STEWART &. O’CONNOR, WARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &c. MONEY l) to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 'l‘. STEWART. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A "'nEui‘nL." E99. 552:. J. QHEES, EWTBST, E‘enclon $321115. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY ',-perfornled according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street ,______________________â€"â€"~ DRS. NEELAllDS’ d IRVINE, DENTESTS - Natural teeth preserved. bridge work a specialty. artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with 5: great success. WW MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-M.D.,O. n, M n. o s. Eng.,n. (LP. a. s., Own, F. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Office. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. DR. H. B. J OIâ€"INSTONE, soocnsson TO DR. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. , Office, Colbornc street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTION EER. STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer Write for dates before advertising. THOMAS OAS HOBE, AUCTIONEER - FENBLON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- class manner. Secure dates before adâ€" vertising. l m, nmnmmuuauamaummmmmnmn EYES TESTED, FRAMES. TESTED. When your eyestrouble you, cause you pain or head- ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glasses, go to on. In. annals, Eyesight Specialist. (over Neill’s shoe store), Lin (1 533* - On't. satisfaction guarantteed. Charges modâ€" era .e. W00 FOR SALE. The undersigned is prepared to deliver wood to any part of the village at any time. Hard or soft wood 4 feet long or cut to order. . All kinds, of green _and dry wood bought at highest price. M. WHALEY. DRESSDIAKING. The undersigned is prepared to {under- taken]! kinds of dressmaking. 1n the latest styles, it Mr. Webster-5, next to the Baptist church. “48* - ' ',_MBS, M. Lowrnnu. LINDSAY. ‘~ Crown and Splendid fits in I ON F0 There are different ways. of economls- ing 1n footwear. To buy cheap, badly made shoes is not economy. But to buy good shoesâ€" high class shoes, is economy. It is impossible to use high grade materials for cheap shoes and make money. possible to use the best machinery and employ the best workmen, because it wouldn’t pay to do either. " But when make. making high grade \. ME, Our Stock is now FANCY gun... 1‘; :15 W'KWfifi ' t3; ’ .2' .3" NWT Elmme Jltjmlli’flttjfilf '39“! 1355!”: Malt JW Jim} ml new . .‘llur. Jalllmnniil’uun. mll'lamflnzfik o"? F. 1., And it’s also im- " you buy _ _ buy the highest grade shoes it’s posmble to )lllur. millinmllliutgflmufimt nillnnall'lirrpxlllhnyldlnt mflmjhflrfii‘iwfl Jnlllln “ZS... ? in an lllfiltEY OTWEAR‘. When You buy Icheap shoes you buy cheap material and cheap workmanshlp. ARNOL’S shoes You buy the best materials obtainable, labor of the highest skilled workmen and the very latest and up-to-date methods for, shoes. J.L.ARNOLD. __S'Z_-_.___J 91 lieu-flu mlllllmdllhuuill’mfillim aillimillivmfillhmfit mnmqnfihum Wmflhr adllmofiluud’ilumiflfn Jrlllhr. :nllllnnmillim Jillian-E For glaring and Summer complete. We have the newest and best in SUIT-IRES, PANTINGS, AND VESTINGS. We will be pleased to have you call and see these goods. TOWNLEY BROS.- â€"-. J’WWWWWWE'WWWWWW memoranmwnrnnrnwww awarrniirnumw WWW mull’llmiiilfimuullhiLrHMmmllhuflmmhr hi ,.1 you set out for, in all the latest styles. We’re having things very much our own way this season and the stock is winning friendsevery day. All you need then is to come in, buy, and go away happy. If you see a. well dressed foot" g you’re sure it’s been to our place_ you ' '1. mlfifllllLWIE Jim! 1153,11"! JIW'JIWIL’ jflwffitfiiWFJIMWJflmE I. fill lllllfl ill Sliil fig 5% :iiliinmrfilu lb; or?” :rd'lr WV “Wuâ€"unnumâ€" Es ’51“: "W5 a William”: an up. Am: I-XEAD OFFICE ESTABLISH ED 1817. CAPITAL - $14,400,000.00. ASSETS OVER $183,000,000. SAVINGS BANK Deposits taken of $1 and withdrawn on demand. R.*M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Br _.. Capitalists Unnecessary. Capitalists are becoming unnecessaâ€" ry. Capitalism is its own grave digger. In times past, in the beginning of the capitalist system of. production, a man would work with his own hands, using his own tools. He would be nothing but an artisan. As custom came his way he would employ other men and work with them. come a sort of foreman, and his in- creased income might be put down to his directing ability. Later on, he would buy machinery and appoint a foreman to do the work and keep an eye on the laborers. He would man- age the business, but do no manual work himself. Later on, as business in reased and the business became bet- ter organized, he would employ a man- ager, .while he himself would retire. At this stage he becomes useless to the business, and his revenue is now derived from] 0\Vnel'Shlp Of the Inill alone. His income may be still consid- ered as a sort of old age pension, as a reward for good work done and his due. \thn he dies, however, and his heir inherits, the new owner becomes a dead weight on industry. He has never done a day’s work in the mill. All he does is to draw a large revenue and to spend‘it on himself. ’ d Other mills have been built up in the same manner, and other heirs have inherited the title deeds to them. These mills become consolidated ; ex- penses are cut down, and the revenues going to the owners are corresponding- ly greater. :Thus is created a. rich idle class who live in luxury because they own the machinery of production at which men must labor. They do noth- ing useful. Their mills are run by salaried agents, and the commerce of the country goes on without their aid. As industry becomes more and more settled and as better lines of commerce develop, still more and more men are thrown out of employment and into the class of the idle poor. The actual workers must work harder in order to hold their jobs, because the idle are clamoring for work at the gates of the factories. As the rich live on divi- dends and dividends depend on trade, the products of the mills must besold for the rich to get their incomes. The poor cannot buy for lack of money, and so the rich are constantly threat- ened with reduced incomes. The whole system has become outworn and a new system must take its place. The rich own the means of produc- tion, which they’must often cause to cease working because the poor are too poor to buy. The poor need many things which they themselves could produce, did they but have a right to work in the factories. Under the present system, were the poor allowed to work in the factories to make goods for themselves, the .rich would not be able to get their dividends, as the mar- ket would be out from under them. 73 Years in Business. The Saving Habit 'ftl’l INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. He would now beâ€" I \foremen and superintendents, just as ?% E E i y .‘j - MONTREAL. :- REST - 12.000.000.00 .' DEPARTEIENT. upwards, which ,can be ~ «.1 u. t.-.c;..~.~:..~~-_rg~...,. - «a .;. -. â€".; ~ «m- Thus the factory owner would kerp their factories closed or limit the outâ€" put, while the poor would go hungry and ragged and shelter-less. The only remedy is for the governâ€" ment to take over all the means of production and run them in the inter- ests of all the people, without regard to dividends.â€"-Cotton’s \Veekly. * If we Were n’t 80 Blind. Although Geo. M. Pullman has been dead a number of years and the heirs- to his great fortune were imbeciles, the Pullman company has doubled its capacity since his death, and is now valued at double what it was at that time. This illustrates forcibly the fact that the captain of industry is no longer necessary in the business world. Once a gigantic monopoly is establishâ€"- ed it runs on and on, irrespective of who is the nominal head. Rogers, who for so many years dominated and di.--' rceted the great Standard Oil inter» ests, died in New York a few days ago, and it did not cause a ripple on the financial sea. Standard Oil stock did not drop a. penny in price. The work is carried on by the great army of skilled men, directed byeompetent before. Some day seciety will wake up and discover that it can get along very well without paying such an error" mous tribute to the men whose genius has built up the great corporations . which now produce and distribute the- wealth of this nation. The Appeal does not belittle the debt which sociea ty owes to such men as Rogers and Pullman , but it does not believe that: society should be enslaved forever be- cause of this debt, which has long since been cancelled. The trust to-day is merely a perfected machine. It is as much an invention as the linotype or the electric motor. »Yet the g0vw ernment recognizes that it would not be just to society to give the inventors- of the linotype‘ and the electric motor a perpetual patent to the creations of their brains. Even the Chinese} are wise enough to provide that, at the expiration of a. certain number of years, the property of a railroad emu poration shall pass into the handsof the government. If we were not so- blind we could learn a valuable lesson from this practice of our Oriental brothersâ€"Appeal to Reason. I .‘9 If there must be soup houses and bread lines, it is the idle who ought; to be put on that kind of fare, and not the workers. During the dark ages the serfs used to suffer the pangs of hunger in years wlm the crops failed 3 but during this-enlightened age the “wage plugs” are in danger of starvation only when the world’s market is fairly glutted withwealth. This sounds like fiction, but it is not. or Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000. is the foundation of independence. Begin savmg now by opening account with the Bank of . - British North America and 'mak- mg regular Weekly or Monthly deposits. $1.00 starts 3. Savings Account and interest is compounded at highest current rates. Aas-Feneloin' Falls Branch. ' W. A. Bishop, Managers-7 ~ _\r*~.-w mike-“W .v‘b‘v's'WW ‘ i 4 - mA‘V .‘l. i. t o. .‘1‘- "v‘ . y. ‘1 ' r i;.- _ .. y_..~"fl,‘.‘ . x - ih ' <1, W‘vo‘vfi‘” l2. ‘5 .. .‘-' ~ A .,J J». v" ' w; «ha-Kn,- "x. o .nâ€"_. s" ‘s/‘v‘by'i’vp‘w "y <‘-/" L- ‘Tv‘fi-J‘ 7‘: is "Y I 9919?? J 1 ._ . a ,5.V,l.{-)‘,41.“.(\..5..‘.r;.s..‘_a.‘,;-_, ‘_ .n.-'

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