Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 16 Jul 1909, p. 1

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i y t i t i l i l . are: ntszmum<mu.y-a ..:* ' 2.. .‘zv'i'w = .-,-.uxnvm:g”~®£{¢;dmfiflflfr¥firw‘fic. - its. males. . . . I) EXTISTS um Baptist church. VOl . XXXVII. Pro {basic uul Cards. LEGAL. F. A. thDlAlflll l’). ‘) ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc, FENE ' «I l) lon l-‘all-i. Otlicc, Uollmrne street, I opposite Post-office. Money to loan on real estate at. lowest current rates. MOLAUGHLIN. l’l‘ll‘lli & FULTON L 'V)ARRIS'l‘E'H, SOLICITORS AND NOT- _ ) nries.‘ ()flices over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch office open at Bohcnygeon awry Monday Money to loan at lowest] r xtvs of interest. “ R J Melmumnnadx’. G. A.M.FULToN,B. A. T JAS. A. PEEL. G, ll. HOPKINS, K. O. '.: )ARRlS'l‘ER, SOTJICITOR, NOTARY '3‘ Public, &c. Solicitor for the Bank of! -’ Montreal. Money to loan at terms to snité 3: borrower. Oliiccs, 6 William street south, ' ;; lnxxalsay, Ont. MOORE SI, JACKSON, ; Pannm'rnus, SOLIUI'I‘ORS, &c. orâ€" . ) lice,William streetJJindsay. F. l). MoouE. A. JACKSON STEWART Sr O’CONNOR, ) ARRIS'l‘EltS, NO'l‘AlllEa‘, &c. MONEY j' ) to loan at lowest current. rates. Terms, ‘ to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent I‘ and York streets, Lindsay. 1‘. Summer. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A m DENTAL. " """"""""" ' ‘ Br. .5. 820.85, ENTEST, 170:: 01,011 1?ng15. 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€"-Over Burgoyne’s store, 001- _ orne street ' _________________...__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" DRS. NEELANDS 81 IR ’iliE, - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work aspeciilty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great SllCl‘GSS. W MEDICAL. DR. H. [-I. GRAHAM. -â€"M. 0.,0. M., M n. c 3. Eng, M. e. r. c s., Own, F. 'r. n. s.â€" HYSIOIAN, SURGEON 8t ACCOUCH- cur. Office. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, succussoa 'ro DR. A. WILSON, ‘ RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Olfice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTIONEER. srnrnun OLIVER, LINDSAY ' - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer Write for dates before advertising. THOMAS CAS HOB-E, AUCTIONEER. - FENELON FALLS. sales of all kinds conducted in a first- class manner. Secure dates before adâ€" vertising. EYES TESTED, rninrmrsno. When your eyes trouble you, cause you paln or head- 3 ache or if your glasses re- i i 2; i i :- 1W... n.u(u-‘.v1n:3t$'::~.3'3- .. ,. . ,...<. . Buy Your Footwear tics] and Save Money. Right now is your chance to get really. good shoes at a considerable saving. We’re selling the balance of summer styles at a reduction to sell quickly. Anyone looking for good shoes and lair treatment will find both here, with ~ never anything inferior for the sake of a cheap price. ' Your complete satisfaction comes before any censideration of profit. ' We want your trade next year as well as now. ‘ ' J. L. ARNOLD- __S'2__ Jami: .mllllmtdhcnu‘fhud‘lhr. alihudlhtmtfimflu Jflnuuifltmllmfllfim mflmflmxflgifiuc nillumulihcatmtmllhmmfl’l’nulfkim For Spring and summer. Our Stock is now complete. We have the newest and best in surrmes, PANTINGS, AND FANCY vnsrmcs. We will be pleased to have you call and see these goods. TOWNLEY BROS. I‘ll" UWFWW‘ WWT‘WW WWWW WW?”pr W'TWWW‘IW WWWWT‘: quire changing or you need new glasses, go to v 9‘ s. D B I a I l A N I :W 1W Eyesight Specialist. (over Neill's shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. satisfaction guaranteed. Charges mod- “ crate. p __ _.__ n-.._.A 4' -____ WOOD 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 out to order. All kinds of green and dry wood bought at highest price. I. WHALEY. â€"_._â€"â€"â€"_-â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"__ DRESS DIAKIN G. 51:2. .15.. :‘tfiafi The undersigned is prepared puder- take all" kinds of dressmaking, .mthe latest styles, at Mr. Webamp, next ,to ' tuc- Mas; u. Jan: “I flulrfiugflm flmflu gum 16%: Ilia-1t; V W W W “WW” W353“: CEREALS For the warm wea- ther breakfast we have all the good and tried kinds. There are so many varieties that we can hardly enumerate them. _But whatever kind on like best is here or you. , Robson} Son. GROCERIES AND, BOOTS AND SHOES. ‘ . \ ' ., ,. ’ l - I, ‘ , n3: ' mi ‘3‘: WWWWWWWWWW 1 fin? tastiest sumac. xur FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 16,19C9. (“NV ,s‘:_,,... .K. J .,: ;, .,_, "r NHNL‘umJfliimlz Jflm’. nullltcmflunulfhmdlflnc Juflmpfiégggm mamnlhmflln . i 8 3 6 "‘ 4 *- -- ~. new 3 »â€" us: »> .,:.. A .~ HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817. CAPITAL - $14,400,000.00. - DIONTRJCJ-XL. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. REST - 12.000.000.00 ASSETS OVER $183,000,000. Sxâ€"XVINGS B ANIi D EPARTBIEN T. Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch. mm The Man with the Hoe. This blank verse poem first ap- peared in the San Francisco Examiner, and The Literary Digest said of it at the time: “Not often among the verses that make their first appear- ance in the daily press do we find anything that demands such attention as Prof. Edwin Markham’s ‘ The Lian with the Hoe ’ has aroused. The poem is an interpretation of Millct’s famous painting by that name, now in Cali- fornia.” THE MAN WITH THE HOE. Bowed by the weight of centuries, he leans Upon his hoe, and gazes on the ground, The emptiness of ages in his face, And on his back the burden of the world. Who made him dead to rapture and despair, A thing that grieves not, .and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? ‘ ' Who loosened and let down his brutal jaw ? I \Vhose was the hand that slanted back this brow ? .. . Whose breath blew out» the light with- in this brain? Is this the Thing the Lord. God made and gave, 1 To have dominion over sea and land, To trace the stars, and search the heavens for power ; To feel the passion of Eternity? ‘ Is this the Dream He dreamed who shaped the suns, . And pillared the bluc'firmament with light? Down all the stretch of Hell to its last gulf There is no shape more terrible than thisâ€" , More tongued with censure of the world’s blind greedâ€"â€" More filled with signs and portents of V the soulâ€" . More fraught with menace to the Universe. What gulfs between him and the Seraphim ! Slave to the wheel of labor, what to him Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? What the long reaches of the peaks of song, The rift of dawn, the redding of the rose ? Through’this dread shape the sufi‘ering ages look ; Time’s tragedy is in that aching stoop; Through this dread shape humanity, , betrayed, Plundered, profaned and disinherited, Cries protest to the Judges of the World ; A protest that is also prophecy. O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, Is this the handiwork you gi vc to God, This monstrous thing, distorted and soul-quenched ? How will you ever straighten up this shape 3 Give back the upward looking and the light, Rebuild in it the music and the dream ; Touch it again with immortality 3 Make right the immemorial infamies, Pcrfidious wrongs, immedicablc woes ? O masters, lords and rulers in all lands,- How will the Future reckon with the Man ? How answer his brute question in the hour \Vhen whirlwinds of rebellion shake the world ? How will it be with kingdoms and "'Wi'th kingsâ€" VVith'those' who shaped him to the thing he is, . \Vhen this dumb Terror shall reply to God i " " After the silence of the centuries? 0‘. Keep on Working. The country farmer has no use for Socialism. He doesn’t want any of these new fangled notions. He wants the privilege of working for his own living. He, wants the, privilege of get- ting up summer and winterbefore the sun, and of working like a nigger fourâ€" teen hours a day. He wants the right to wear old clothes and drink skim milk. He wants the right to let his wife do the work of three women, and of having his children work like little niggers chasing cows and feeding pigs. The railroad barons who charge high freight rates on the farmer’s goods rub their hands in glee and say, “G0 it, my good man.” The railroad barons live in fine houses and travel by automobiles. Their wives and chil- dren travel to Europe in the summer, and the niggerâ€"working farmer facts the bill. The grain elevator'and millâ€" ing barons rub their'hands in glee and tell the farmers “Work, you- beggars, work.” They take the profits and say the reason they get their big divi- dends is because of their superior ability. Our advice to the farmers is,“VVork, you beggars, work.” Don’t listen to the Socialists, who want to lighten your burden a little. Keep on work- ing, and give your wife, if you are real prosperous, one new dress every three yearsâ€"Cotton’s Weekly. ‘oâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€" _ To steal is human, to finance divine. The unemployed problem is the master problem of this age. The dream of yesterday is the vision of to-day, and the vision of to-day is the reality of to-morrow. ' Si] 73 Years in Business. I Account ' convenient. ' THE BANK OF Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000. may be opened by two members of a family. Either may deposit or withdraw . money on his or her own signa- ture alone, so 7 thateither maydo the banking, as is most $1.00 opens 3. Savings Account. Interest compounded 7 lat-highest current rates. time; Money may be withdrawn at 'Fenel‘o‘n Falls Branch, ' W." A. Bishop, Manager : , “a, 4.: . ."‘A“‘_‘AA

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