Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 9 Dec 1910, p. 1

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Professional Cards ,. LEGAL.1 MCLAUGLI-IIN, PEEL, FULTON it. STINSON. - ‘ ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies. Money to' loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch office at Fenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay office over Dominion Bank. R.J MCLAUGHLIN,K. C. A.M. FULTON, l3;~.-A.» JAs.-A. PEEL. T. H. STINSON." HOPKINS, WEEKS d; HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND 1 Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. 'Ollices No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- villo, Ontario. 0. H. HOPKINS, K. C., . F. HOLMES HOPKINS; B. A _MOORE et'JAUKSON 7 AitlllS’l‘ERS, SOLICITORS, &c. 'Of lice, William streel,bind,say. Ffl). Moons. ' A. JACKSON , ____________________ STEWART & O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &0. MONEY l; to loan at lowesl current. rates. Terms to suit borrowars. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. . 1‘. Srswsm. L.- V. O’Couxon, B. A M LEIGH "R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY B Public. Successor to McDiarmid & 'Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment, Money to loan anpgReal Estate bought and sold. Olhce Rent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. DENTAL. ' WWWâ€".â€" , Dr. .3. .5. Suns, DENTIST, 'Fenelon-Falls. Graduate of'To'r‘onto University and. Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne‘s store,VCol- ' orne Street Y . ____,__________._.â€"â€"â€"â€" ' Drs. Neelands & 'lrvine. lIENl‘ISTS - - LINDSAY. Natural teeth'lpreserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid fits in utificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas ‘dministered to over: 9,000 persons with great success. ‘ W , MEDICAL. .DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-n. 0.,0. n.,‘n. 3. cs. Eng.,n.c. r. a 5., ONT., 1*. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 85 A‘CCOUCH- ‘eur. Office. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. _ M DB. H. B. JOHNSTONE, SUCCESSOR TO DR. A. \VILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ollice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. _ AUCTIONEER. -' THOMAS OASHOBE,’ ‘ AUCTIONEER» â€" FENELON FALLS. l Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- , class manner. Secure, dates before ad- vertising. ‘ Notice ntLQreditOrs. In the estate of the late James E. A. Shea, late of the township of Fenelon in the County of -Victoria, Farmer, de- ceased. , 7 . NOTICE is hereby given that all persons having any claims or demands against the late James Edward Albert day of November, 1910, in the said town- ship of Fenelon, ' post prepaid or deliver to the under- signed, solicitors herein for Henry Raby sand James H. Byrnell, executors under “ C:"itfili‘e will of the said deceased, their names and addresses and the full partic- ulars of their claims. , .TAKE NOTICE that after the twenty» ' fourth day of December, 1910, the said éi’éé‘cutors will distribute the assets of said deceased among the persons en- ftitled thereof,.having regard only to the claims of which they shall. then have had notice, and that the said executors will not be liable for the said assets or any p'artfithereof to any persons..0f whose claim they have not then receiv- '3' notice. ‘ , ate'd at Fenelon Falls this twenty- " '-fliurth day of November, 'A. D. 1910‘. McLAUGHLIN, PEEL, FULTON & S'rmsou, - » . ‘ ~ Lindsay, Ontario, s: _ Solicitors for‘the Executors. , i Branch~ olfice of McLaughlin, -Peel, ‘=Fulton & Stinson, at Fenelon Falls, over Terrill's Store, every Tuesday. ‘ - C. E. WEEKS, ‘ Shea, who died on or about the seventh ' are required to send by _. ENOWW Brings us a week nearer Christmas, the merriest time of the yearâ€"- And, by the way,‘ have youj .- busicst and bought'your Christmas Groceries ' yet- . I Not abit too early to“, .éthink about it, ,We‘ have everything ’ in the groceryline you can think of. iii-.‘All the . best quality and as fresh as we ' can . possibly get. them. Of course Our pricesâ€"Willgbe - right. . A 0. L. ‘ ARNOLD. _9 ' ‘FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9 YOUR CHRISTMAS GROCERIES. ’ ~ ‘ ‘ If there is one time more than another that , you should surround yourâ€" , self ‘ with extra quality , .fresh groceries, it is at Christmas time. > there ever was ‘a time' that. you should deal at. the leading grocery, it is, now. i - v ' ,~ .- iFGo‘od' Groceries Is »‘ -' , "our Specialty. Robson & Son We carry a complete line of the latest overcoatings and ‘suitings .and making them up at as low _ prices as ai'e'-.consistent.,witli good goods and 1 first class 'w‘orkman’ship. " 4' .' ‘. Leave your measure with ' .j_ . .Townley 0‘ And if i O - ,' . "Fenelon. .Falls'. . all point to another partial collapse of - gmen of business are wont to congre- - tions andnewspaper articles may mean -murder news and diverse- proceedings ‘ will reek its awful fury on you and militia it are. o K ‘ MONTREAL. ESTABLISHED 1817 INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT $14.4oo.oo'o'.oo. REST .- 12,009.00030 ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. .1 I. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT; ' 'Depo‘slls taken; of $1 and upwards, which can be. I . ‘ a..withdrawn--on demand. ' - “ M. JVHidmill-ion, Mgr. Fenelon Falls [Branch CAPITAL - . purpose of making articles for use, but ' for the purpose of selling those articles, at a profit for the owner. h ' The gwhole of our present industl'l2L1 fabric consists of buying and selling- ‘Even you yourself buy and sell when ' you get the chance. _ You have Only one thing to sell, that is your {Sewer of labor or your life’s energy, and you I must sell it day by day in order to buy thecheap food and clothing you must have in order to live, and rent the miserable tenementthat, you have . ' been-taught to miscallna home. You" _ {must sell yourself day after day, week ' " after week'and year after year to the other .class; the class that holds the ~ deeds of. ownership to the land and machinery of production. And when: you sell yourself you are forced by t-l’e-- competition ofthe labor market to: câ€"H l. cept the price of an existence, becat ser? there are always sufficient men'out 0f7 ' ' a job who are. willing to work for an A I existence if you'refuse ; and you krow it. The price of an existence means at ' _ the present time that you can exist on- . about one-fifth of what you produce ;_ I or, in other words, if what"fyou and , your Class produce sells an average ‘ i' of ten dollars a day,"'each‘ one of you . gets on an average two dollars a day for;the glorious privilege of working in .a musty dungeon ten hours‘ each day. ' The class who own the means of life will only let you work when the cani, make a profit ; and they can on}: a. profit while they can continué . 5 .7 . the goods which“ your labouh 5mm? ’ g3; ” duced at more than your cos’iig’qéifirist-fi _en0e, «01;. what you have rec? "wager. If you haVe received-frigid? only enough to buy back one-fif ‘5 what you have put on they} -~‘ capitalist must find other-buy order to dispose of the-goods fiifi‘d; _ The Remedy For. Hard" Times. i The signs of the'immediate,_future the present 'system of industry; Not many moons ago the financial journals, that keep tab on the business pulse of the United states, Were warning the financial magnates to sit tight and watch their credit. In the city of De- troit today 16,000 people walk the streets because the owners of a certain automobile factory cannot’_find pur- chasers fer their wares. Everywhere, on the railway trains, in the street. cars and in the hotel lobbies, -where gate, one hears the following dialogue: â€"â€"“Well, Bill, how is business?” and the resPonse inevitably comes back: “ Going to the dogs entirely,” Fellow- worker, to: you, who do no- thing ‘in your life but work unceas- ingly in order; to ekeout'a'miserable existence, which you have been mis- taught to call a living, these conversa- nothing, so you think. But if you paid as :flmuch attention to the plain every-day facts of life as you do to the with which you. dope your brains from. the daily papers, you would soon be- gin :to realize that these rumors fore- tell a stormon the industrial field that your class. I Do you know that, decade upon de- cade, you and every one of. your fellow workers all ever the (civilized 2) world have been creating vast amounts of wealth that you and they do. not enjoy? Do you know that the. reas- on you do not enjoy the greater por- tion of what you produceds because you work for ‘wages'.l Do you know that the reason you work for wages is . because you and your class do not own the means of life? If you do notknow these facts, it isr-high‘ time you did. It is up to you to study the industrial world thrcughlyour own eyes, instead of looking'at these thinga throtgh the dust-begrimed spectacles ofi'the capi- talist class. ‘ , Go into the factory, mill or any othâ€" er industrial establishment, and you see. giganticplmachifnery racing along untiringly, at the behest of the worthy worker. I suppose you think these machines are running and assisting -you to produce wealth for use. If you do, it is time for you to clear ypur mind of such deception. While it is true that thearticles produced by'you and your class-with the aid of this machinery may in many oases be use- ful articles; still that is not the object tern, keep the m'arkct‘clear and" yourself employed ; and theycap‘itad is not now, and never will bah. ' find otherbuyers to keepthé clear. In fact, the capitalist * ing “lessgfable to keep the mark every day, as shown byqu 5‘25 ally incifeasiigg’number ofs‘unen , and the even-“increasing freque'n ‘ - hard timesi’tiSo, 'when the goofiu‘a stacked‘on the shelves you are th'r0wn-" out of work. Then your wages cease; but when you are threwn out offa job, ’ do you ask the capitalist to give ymfifiy", , ‘3' back the stored up wealth you hard”, W ‘ , created? No, you go about like the, _"‘~" ., . 5:" advertisement labelled “ Gold Dust, -' K ' a ', v r, Twins,” saying “ We want more work.” ' 3 ; ’ j ' If you would only step to think a. .§.;....:3'. ’ i _ ' .0. bit, it is not work you want, it is a ' ' ' for which the machinery does your living; and the reason your livinggis; f a , bidding. The machinery, the factory 'no longer visible at present is n4 "‘ “ ‘ ‘I , ’5‘ and all the accessory means of life be: you have worked too much. Fellow ' g ‘2? worker, get wise, and vote the reins 05%“ government and the means of life inlaid?“ ' your own handsâ€"Lorne Cunning-ha .' 3 long to another; and-this other per: mits you to work for what it costs you to purchase a bare livingâ€"not for the 1'. rec ease or y ,, ’ - 74Years in Business. Capital anngeserVe Over $7,000,000. ,. n. l ‘_ - _ maybe opened by two members A JOB-'10 ~ "of a family. V , Account Either may deposit or withdraw z _ _ '“i' _ " . . ‘- money on his or 'her own sig*r'izi-~'“’.lz' ture alone, so that either may do the banking, as? is most ’ ‘ convenient. j. ,, ' , . = . - X 55.1.00 'opens a Savings Account Interest compounded . '- .. at highest, current rates. Money may be withdrawn at i any time. 3 Fenelon‘ Ii'alls Branch . 5, W. .A. Bishop, Manager 3

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