Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 11 Mar 1910, p. 1

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Professional Cards MCDIARMID, WEEKS & O’NEAIL I ARRIS'PERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies, etc. Solicitors for’Couuty of Victoria. Money to loan on real estate at lowast rates of interest. Oflices oppo~ site Pym‘s Hotel, Kent street, Lindsay. Member of firm will be at Fenelon Falls every Tuesday. F. A. MCDIARMID, W. .1 . O’NEAIL . McLAUGH LIN, PEEL &- FULTON ARRIS'l‘ERS, SOLICITORS, AND NOT- nries. Offices over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch ofiice open at Bobcnygeon erery Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J. McLAUGuLm, K. C. A. M. Fumes, B. A. , JAs. A. PEEL; r r C. E. WEEKS, G. H. [lOPKlNS. K. C. )‘ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY ) Public, rim. Solicitor for the Bank of Montreal. borrower. O:ficcs, 6 William street. south, Lindsay, On t. MOORE it JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUI'I‘ORS, 810. Ofâ€" lice, Willinm slreet,Liudsny. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON STEWART & O’CONNO R, ARRISTERS, NOTAllllCS, &c. MONEY I to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit. borrowers. Ollicc on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 1‘. Srnwanr. L. V. O’Connou, B. A DENTAL. Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Ironclo n lfillls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY V performed according to the latestimprovcd methods at moderate prices. OFF‘Ithzâ€"Over Burgoync’s store, Col- orne street Drs. Neelanlds & lrvme. IIENTIS’I‘S _ 4 LINIISAY. annrnl teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work especially. Splendid fits in ‘arlificinl teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with ' great. Bur-PBS. MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"u.n.,c. M., x n. c s. Eng.,u.o. r. a. 5., 02112, r. 'r. u. s.â€" 1)HYSICIAN, SURGEON In ACCOUCH- cur. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, SUGGESSOR T0 DR. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Acâ€" coucheur. Oflice, Colborue street, Fenâ€" .elon Falls. . AU CTION BER. ‘ THOMAS CASHORE. AUCTIONEER - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- class manner. vcrtising. I In Jewelry \Ve carry a large- and well . selected stock. Our prices are as low as you dwill find any- where. ' It Pays I To keep your watch in good order. It it needs cleaning I . . Money to loan at terms to suit I Secure dates before ad- TH son: BILL Is , BIG ENOUGH .gf When the money is as wisely ,‘j spent as it possibly could be. It takes enough money, goodness ‘T knows, to shoe the household, without ’ wasting any on experimenting. Because you are experimenting. unless you are dealing in certainties. Yes, there are such things as shoe certainties. t/ Shoes that are known to be such . and suchâ€"because they are built that. 9‘ yYou are wise if you deal in shoe 6%,: certainties, and to do that you have but to make a. practice of coming t here for all your needs in footWear. O I ‘ Don’t fOrget our Ladies’ Dongola. l Blucher Bal. at $2.00â€"The best ever. o , J-lu ARNOLD. Like ours provide whole- some eating. We continue to assure you this as we have done in the past, we. won’t stand for humbug goods. Reliability is our motto. Tzfifizficfiufirfififi nannnhnfiah‘mmma :5: NOT Too EARLY To think about your needs .in Spring Our assortment of goods for this clothes. We canishow them to you any day. ‘ _.‘%@ ingrained;,a‘w'ip.,,_5, I I _.-‘ ‘ ' Ax _. ~1ié .\ @l 3135’ i O I fibril/i 3 .1: 3 .45 1 I v 1 _\ r 15.} V-‘.\ t: -_0 O ’ Q 3935 0 355 I I 5 I .-..-“ ,/é .. r. - .. .wnwwe I ' A HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL . $I‘,‘O0.000.00. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on demand. Fenelon Falls Branch ', Ni, :1 MONTREAL. - REST ‘ 12.000.00.000 The Artisan. In former times the workman own- ed his own tools with which he pro- duced the necessaries of life. The shoemaker owned his last and owl and other tools necessary to make shoes. The small printer owned prim- itive presses with which he turned out small papers. The transporter of goods owned his horse and waggon to transport the goods made. The weav- er and spinner owned the loom and spinning wheel he used. The worker civned the tools with which he worked, and got all there was to be got from the product of his labor. But the giant machine came into being. The awl and last went. The primitive printing press went. The teamstcr was replaced by the railway and the engine. The hand loom dis- appeared before the power loom. The new machinery was no longer capable of individual ownership in the old sense. A modern printing establish- ment costs hundreds of thousands of dollars. A railroad costs a hundred thousand dollars a mile to build and equip. The cotton mill is far beyond the pocket of the average man to ac- quire. The huge machines replaced the small tools. "The small tools were owned by the workers. The big ma- chines were owned by the capitalists. The old worker, owning his tools, got the full return of his toil in primitive society where there was not slavery. With the giant machines the worker no longer got the full reward of his labor. He had to surrender part of the product of his toil to the owners of the new machinery. With the evo- lution of industry the artisans were completely driven from their indepenâ€" dent position, and had to seek work from the machine owners. The ma- chine owners, therefore, had the whip hand of them, and drOVe ahard bar- gain. They took from the wage workâ€" er all the results of his toil, and gave in return a wage that would just keep him alive. At the present time the machine owners, through their owner- ship of the machines, are taking from the workers four-fifths of what they produce. New occasions teach new duties. But these duties are learned slowly. The workers have endeavored to right themselves ‘by organizing in craft unions and by raising wages. But- with the raise in wages the machine owners raised the price of the products of the machines, and the workers were no better off than before. The work- ers are now advancing by returning to an .old idea. They are seeing that, just as the old artisan owned the email tools and was independent, so the modern workers, must own the giant machines, in order to be free I836 .1 3h 74 Years in Business. THE BANK OF 1 Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,00i may be opened by two mom :ers bcbcngs who do nothing; and then form themselves into vast armies and to get the full return of their labor. They are crowding into the socialist ranks, and are devising ways and means for the proletarian control of the machinery of productionâ€"Cotâ€" ton’s Weekly. Monkeys Compared. Suppose you were traveling in Afri- ca. and should see a colony of monkeys in a cocoanut grove, and a few large- monkeys compelling all the rest t0? bring cocoanuts to them, while they, the few, enjoyed themselves in the shade, giving back only enough cocoa~ nuts to keep the workers alive, while quantities of cocoanuts were going to waste; and whenever a monkey “ got gay” and demanded more cocoanuts to keep him from starving, the large: monkeys denounced him “as undesira- ble,” and, if this demand was repeated' . too often, killed him. you think of them ’i Now, suppose these same monkeys should chance to travel in the United. States, and see millions of human be: ings digging coal, catching fish, smelt- ing iron, sawing lumber, making shoes, dishes, pianos, books, or raising farm products, and then handing all these: things over to a. few other human (’1). What would and navies and defend these idlers with their lives, and then teach their offspring that such killing is patriot ism; erect hovels for themselves and palaces for the idler-s, and, with faces and hands turned toward heaven, beg the idlers for. a chance to eke out a miserable existence. If the monkeys saw all this, what do you think they would think .of the people? They could n’t help but think the American species of monkeys are fit candidates for monkey asylums for the feeble- minded. If not, why not? The human is the only species of animal on the face of the earth that , permits millions of its own kind to‘ starve while surrounded ,with plenty and to spare. \Vhab a travesty on civilization; and then to think that we, the Socialists, who know how to betterthe conditions of humanity, must suffer with the rest, because we are unable to change it without your votesâ€"W. Ries in “ Men and Mules.” 0-. The men who talk most of the dig: nity of labor never try to be dignified in that way. Ninety per cent. of the people fail under capitalism. ‘Shows the system is impractical, does n’t it 2. When labor leaders eat with capi- talists, it is a sign that the workers will have to patronize so'up houses. You give your votes for a clod of common clay, and then fall down and worship the ideal of your own making. .â€" 191i) ii Amen: :9! i *j . 3 ’1 0,. repairing bring it here. «i purpose will be‘found complete and up-to-date. A JOint 0f #1 filmillh ‘ Your Inspection cordially invited. Account »» Either may deposit or with. raw * * W ' money on his or her own 5 :na- ‘2 ' ture alone, so that either may do the banking, as is i<)St .' JOHN SLATER. «I ’ “Tim”- S ' H ‘ “ 1.00 opens a aVings Account. Interest compm. ded ‘ . TSSUER‘OF MARRIAGE LICENSE” : K at highest current rates. Money may be-withdrn l at 3% vv arm Vfivvwm nnx'r noon TO POST-OFFICE. any time. FEIELOI FALLS. Fenelon Falls Branch, A. Bishop, Me, lager i a i l 3

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