Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 3 Feb 1911, p. 8

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pvâ€" ,- 7 y Vi<wgv 'v v“ v wsfi v v.._ v.v is. T v mg): I . ‘ I l. l l b l l n- ,. b b I l b P - y u. u s 4 .J i «.. >. n- ’ n as”, I}, m. I...“ . (57231.... ' 2 Y. N- .244." - .‘. 'Jr W3.“ 5 christian Herald, says : ., joyed their hospitality, only to rise in The Real Yellow Peril. Melville D. Stone, writinng in the such a creature of your environment are you, and such is the power of the, slave conception you have been engrafâ€" ted in, that even then you may feel twinges of that thingâ€"conscience: But there will be no other way out; You must do something, or starve. Perhaps you have wondered why it- is that the socialist, who works next to you at the bench or in the pit, is so unrufiled by the slurs and jibes you and your fellow‘slaves fling at him. \Vell, I can tell you the secret of his philo~ sophic attitude. He knOWS that you must sometime awaken to the truth of his doctrine. He knows that the screws of oppressionâ€"the iron heel of capitalâ€"are constantly being tight- ned and becoming more crushing. aPerhaps another turn or two will catch you in just the proper place to make a rebel of you. He knows that, “In India, in China and in Japan, we have been the guests who have en- the morning and say to our hosts; ” You 'lnust not sit at table with us.” Be- have me, this condition cannot endure. Politically we are in grave danger. " Commercially, with their industry and 3 their frugality, they are fast outstrip- ‘a-ping us. They have ceased buying flour from the Minneapolis mills bej ~cause they are grinding Indian and Manchurian wheat with Chinese labor «at Woosung. A line of ships is run- ning from Yellow river to Seattle, bringing 72,000 tons a year of pig iron- : manufactured at Hankow and deliver- ved, freight and duty added, cheaper than we can produce it. In Cawnpore, India, with American machinery they 4 are making shoes so cheaply that the ‘ manufacturers of Lynn can no longer - celnpete'with them. The cottons and 2 silks whicli‘%.iyie one time sent to Asia are now made‘in‘apan and China.” This is the “yellow peril” then, that we workers are getting up againstâ€"a ‘peril that is even now real. In the course‘of “deve10ping” the East, the capitalist class has discovered that the w cost of production of labor-power in 'Uriental countries is much less than in America or Europe. In other words “the standard of living of the worker is Slowerâ€"they can subsist on less hay and i» oatsâ€"hence they need not be paid .: such high wages. The goodscan be manufactured, ship- gped to America or Europe, and sold at all. good profit, for much less than the 'rhome-made product. American and sooner or later, you will be forced to rebel, and, knowing this, he goes on spreading the light. In a little while, when capitalist industry has become more perfected, we expect to strike the blow that will free us. Join us or stay out, just as you please at present. Sooner or later, however, you must join us.â€"-Roscoe A. Filmore, in the Western Clarion. _.____.... __â€"_.....___ _____....’ ..-~ "g. _. ,nvu TTTTTTT TT‘TTWL IMPDHllll TTTTTL Most Successful Poultry Raiser- -â€"Tlme of day such “illegal”- acts ‘vVimngIY‘ FOrI \summer, it should always be washed . English capital, or rather international ucapital, when this discovery is made, begins with added years to exploit the I East, not as a market only, but as the homerle their manufactories. Yellow «wage-slaves must do the work that has :been hitherto performed by white labor. 'Chilla,.l_,T.-apan, India and others, until It is the practice of a large percen- tage of the most successful poultry- men to feed a part of the daily grain ration ground. grain moistened with either milk or water, although some feed it dry. A (owl's gizzard is capable of grinding GHTEN HOUSEWORK Some ,Usefui Hints as to Sundry Household Duties ..._â€"â€"â€" The‘ housewife with a regard for dust should keep on hand several sizes of soft varnish and paint brushes. So equipped she need not fear dust will disgrace her by sticking in the corners of mouldings, in the carvings of furniture, and along the edges of mirrors. The scraps of soap left from house- hold and toilet purposes need not be wasted. The former may be used to . the tiniest piece in (the soap shaker for the dish-pan, while the latter can be boiled down to a. jelly With a little water and kept for shampooing mix- tures. ' _ Many persons do not know that soda exterminates germs, so be sure to keep 4a supply on hand to be used in drains and to wash out milk bottles and wipe . out shelves of the paptrY. While a pantry need not be so care- fully watched in cold weather as in out once a Week, preferably before fresh marketing is put in it. .Scrub - and walls with strong the shelves been put soapsuds, in which has plenety of soda. . When silver is tarnished and must be cleaned in a hurry, it will expedite matters greatly to boil for a minute ln'sod‘a water that is not too strong. Later polish in the usual way. Often all that will be needed is to rub well All egg-dishes, milk bottles, glasses that have held milk, and pots in which custards have been boiled, cereal pots ..~ -â€" wâ€" ~ lwith a dry cloth. water before being scalded, and they can be kept clean with half the of- tort. In scaling a fish, hold it under the water to keep the scales from flying. land dishes should be soaked in cold done if the fish is first dipped for an instant into' boiling water. , Washing lamp chimneys by immers- ing them in water often makes them A safer way to clean them is How Dauy Grain nations are Fed by lThe scaling may be much more easily brittle. to hold them for a few minutes over a steaming kettle. Then polish brisk-‘ cow vs. AUTOMOBILE 3 When, if looking at a near object, it bécdmes W all kinds of grain, but it is generally gyesterday heathen countries without considered to be more economical to 1tllat beautiful institution “civilization” .arelnow to become hives of capitalist nindustny, .while ere long America, “the land of=the ‘free and the home of the brave”, will be the “foreign market” to be exploited'by American capital with Eheadquarters in the Far East. Now ‘this is no dream but a. very stern ‘Ireality, for these who are still asleep, to .buck .npagainst. Capital will go whor- mever awares can be manufactured to con- ?tain the very largest possible propor» ‘tion of surplus-value. If alower stan- dard:of living prevails in China than ‘31 America, thus enabling the capital- tist te-buy labor-power more cheaply, he iis geing there because profit is, of course, the goal he seeks. : Takeza look at the situation, you fel- lows who have not yet discovered wherein your interests lie. To-day, all "the capitalist countries, in other words, _‘:l;l16 whole “civilized” world, is strug- Egling for markets. All the known land that is inhabited on the globe has been embraced by this gigantic machine. No sooner does capital get hold of a Country than development begins. \Vage slavery with its mass of surplus- vaIueâ€"proiit for the masterâ€"takes Ehrflcband presently that country alSo has a surplus and is looking for amar- ket. As before, I ask you what is to happen when all these countries have mountains of surplus products for which no market can be found? Millions of men are to-day idle be- cause tliere is no place in which they can be profitably employed by the mas- _, tors. Capital goes to China, where more profit can be made. But tomor- row your condition will be even worse, as the yellow man, working in his own country, will compete against you and beat you. (Either millions of you will then be out of jobs and so, penniless and starving. A few days later the unemployed problem will have traveled to Chin-s. in the wake of capital. The ‘ye low man will flood the world’s marâ€" kets :with cheap commoditiesâ€"dirt cheap. He willthmw himself out ofa ‘job as you have done. There will bc mountains of goods, food, clothing, etc., on the market, yet you cannot buyâ€" you won’t have the price. Then, my nleiaphysically inclined friend, my fellow slave who talks about the “sacl'edlless of law and order” and other such piille, you will be hungry and shelterless with mountains of food all about you and places to be occupied. \Vilat will you (10’! All! I know well what you will do. You will have to re- Volt. You will have to get busy and take food, and clothing, and shelter from those whom you have allowed to roll you. You will have to take the earth and all its fruits. Theta will be 139 other way out. You will not commit steam or water power. idea, however, must not be overwork:- ed. A beginner often reasons that it is cheaper for the miller than for the fowl to grind the grain; but the pew- 10 be used, and experience has shown that the balance of power of functions in the fowl's economy makes the vigorous exercise of the gizzard bene~ licial. When feeding moistened ~ ground feed have it a comparatively dry. crumbly mash, and not a thin slop. Give what they will eat readily in 15 or 20 minutes. Poultrymen do not agree as to the time of day when the soft feed should be fed. Some assert that it should be fed in the morning, others at noon, and still others at night. The greater proportion give the ground feed in the morning, a large number at night, and a few feed at noon; feed at noon, however, is becoming larger. Those who give the soft feed in the morning reason that the fowls which have been on the perches dur- ing the night have largely digested the feed consumed the day before, and consequently have comparatively empty crops and digestive organs, and in order that the morning meal may be easily and quickly digested the fowls should be fed only ground and moistened feed. Other careful feeders worse gerged with feed early in the remainder of the day. It is probably a day. fed in the morning or at night. HUSBANDS AND WIVES Tempers trol their tempers. impatience and hasty words has do stroyed the peace of many a home. wife locking neat, fresh and tidy slovenly habits. courting days. self. ' r A wife will do well to, study he husband’s moods. if he is moody 0 not crossed. cue Joy into a home. W have a. part of the grinding done byiq Most of them feed the ly with a soft cloth. The soft- Ieed‘ ' erfui muscles of the gizzard are there ' The number who 1 state that if a moistened mesh is fed in the morning the hen is likely to be- .norning and take to the roost for the more important that a part of the grain should be ground than that it should be fed at any particular time In an experiment in West Virginia the egg production was prac- fically the same whether mash was They Should Learn to Control Their A husband makes a wife unhappy. when she thinks he is getting careless the little demonstrations or" affec-l . Kentucky non which were so familiar in the producing state in the Union-,but'the up by all meansLeatlniilulie keeliedhlctiherr;1 egg'cmfi in Nebraska was worth member that his wife likes to be con- $ ’000 more than the 1999" crgp Of' suited on matters of interest to him- :leprcsscd let her cheer him up; if he‘ is irritable, he must be soothed: if he use "o’f is impatient, he must be borne with. Kentucky will “Answering back" is not among the important penitry produc- rile way that makes for domestic hep. lng states of this country. if present piness. It is harmony. love. Sympathy, mmcauons ’ ' and mutual forbearance that brings which to base conclusiong,‘ A Humorous Comparison, "With 3 Preference for the Bovine ‘ A Kansas City man who has owned an automobile for a. year offers to trade it for a cow. This is encourag- ing, in showing that the “back-to-the- farm” propaganda is taking hold where it ought to. A whole lot of people own automobiles who would be better off with cows. No civilization will ever outlive the gentle and mild-eyed sister of the ox. The world sucks its life from her udder, and poetry, commerce and statescraft subsist by reason of her ministrations. She is the dumb and inarticulate savior of little chii-. Then. the friend of tottering age, and like fountain of healing to the sick. You don’t have to wind her up to' make her work, or pour her fullof water when she gets hot. . She doesn’t smell like an oil refinâ€" ' under her with a. mo‘nkey-wrench every half mile to screw up something that has worked loose. Her spark plug is always in working order and her tires are punctureless. She never “blows” out, and your wife can run her as well as or better than a. hired chauffeur; lBhe is .more precious than many limousines, and’ more beautiful to be- held than the pictures in the Satur- day Evening Post. She encourages domestic tranquility ,and makes for? virtue and chastity. No man Who- owned and operated a cow was ever, correspondent in a divorce case, or. came home to find that his wife had- ieft the dog and gone with the chant- feur. , The smell of gasoline suggests dis- ‘oyalty, but the fragrance of fresh :ow‘s milk awakens visions of peace, virtue and a holy content. It carries with it the breath of clever fields and the music offit 'e voices of happy wo- men and joy" is little children hedged _ in by love andT‘purity. A cow shed is the open door‘ to paradise guarded by good genii, and the garage is often a. sliding panel‘ggo the infernal regions. The two of them, the cow and the au- tomobile, stand at the opposite poles of our civiliza.ti6n.j and the choice we Married couples should learn to con-lmake is going to determine the‘ des- .Giving “ray to i tiny of a people. The .announcemenet‘ _,from Kansas City indicates a return =to safety and sanityâ€"Paris Mercury. A husband always likes to see his 'r . BEATS TOBACCO Nothing jars upon a man more than to observe that his wife is getting into Does Value of poult'ry Raised In Ne br'askaâ€"Kentucky, ‘Tc‘a Kentucky tobacco. if Kentucky continuesfito‘ gain in 1‘ ten years past its own poultry product its tobacco Crop annually. soon be numbered -. nu-”â€"â€". a. 'ergetic, reliable agent to take orders for ‘ PELHAM NURSERY 80., TORONTO cry; and you don't have to get doWn, \check the falling hair, and cause new hair is the greatest tobacco, I ihe value of its poultry product for the~ I"next ten years as it has during” the“ will almost if not quite equal the val~‘ are a safe guide upon G 012m THEM ONE BETTER. ’ Furniture delivered to yOur home at LESS THAN ' CITY PRICES You run NO RISK. ' see our goods. Call and ’ .lliiiii TTTTTTT TTTTTTTTT “Sill '35, § _ see them distinctly. â€" When we find, it necessary to get more light than formerly. " . then we are obliged to remove small'objects to a considerable distance from the eye in order to confused and appears to have a kind of mist before. " Which the eyes tire easily. When troubled with headache. Examination free. BETTBN BROS. - LINDSAY. Foot of Kent St- ................................................................. Wanted NOW For-FenelonFalls and surrounding dis- trict, for fall and winter months, an en- QOQGQWQ'Q Stone 81 Wellington FONTHILL NURSERIES. Acres) TORONTO, ONTARIO.â€" nursery stock. Good Pay Weekly Ouiiit Free ' Exclusive Territory. 600 ACRES lander mutation- “ syerantee to 69' Canada’s Oldest and Greatest Nurseries liver stock in good conclltnm and up to contract grade. We can show that there is good money in representing a well- knoxvn, reliable firm at. this time. Estab- lished over 30 years. Write for partic- ulars. ' PETER MOFFAT Agent for FENIELDH FALLS and adjoining country. Mullâ€"- ear snaps? For the position just ahead of you. About 1500 young men and women prepare for promotion to better things by spending a few, months ill our great schoolâ€"Shaw’s school â€"â€"The Central Business College of Toronto. Our' new catalogue will interest you. You are invited to write for it. W. H. Shaw, Pres. Yonge & Gerrard streets, Toronto. Are New Under Treatmentâ€"Husband, Too, find Been a Patientâ€"«A Tray ' gedy in Real" Life-liens? Deb: ca institution. _ THAT BALD'SPOT A story from the Maskoku Free Hospital} for Consumptivcs tells of a mother who, with her two children, is now under treat- ment in that institution. The llushalid ha} - been a patient, but the case was an ad: vanced one when the patient entered, and he has since passed away. There is link: doubt/but that the wife was infected as a. result of caring for her husband, mill now she is in the Muskoka Hospital. Her in -.. rt girl, about iivc years of age, and a boy of ten are with her, both being afiiicteli will; this dread disease. The words of the mother are puihctic. She writes: "I went to a doutor and got him to examine my lungs to see whetlu r there was anything wrong with them, and he said that the right lung was xiii-mined. A little rest, he hoped, would build me up. I have a little girl, about iiveymlra old, and the doctor says that if I could take ll"! up with me it would do her over so much good, as she is not very stmng. I have three more children, and one s-f these, a. boy of ten, seems also to he afilictcd, and it is advisable that he should entrerlile hos- pital.” These three are of the lO-i patients who are residents in this deserving institution and being cared for without Tunney nn-i without price. The sorry part of it is limb the trustees nrc carrying a debt of slum-- thinglike $40,000, incurred largely through the additions that have been made wit-El a the past year, and that have. men; then' doubled the accommodation of the Snstirrz- tion, together with the heavy cost of main.- taining so large a number oi i513} patients. Don’t let that bald spot growl Go to your drug-gist at once and get a bottle of Parisian Sage and if that don’t to grow,nothing will. i . Dandruff is the cause of baldness; dand- ruff germs cause dandruii'. Parisian rage kills the germs; erlldicis dandruff, slope falling, hair, and itching s'clllp. We will refund your money if it fails (0 do this in two weeks. Parisian Sage will cause the hair to grow, if the hair root be not dead. It causes the hair to grow thicker, more luxuriant, and puis new lile into it. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every package of Parisian Sugc. It. is sold for 50c. by all druggists or sent postpaid by the Giroux Mfg. Uo., Fort Erie, Out, on Sold and guaranteed by receipt of price. W. H. Robson. TRADE" NIARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free w ether an invention is probnbl Awntnble. ommu ic - " ’1'. . -; tlonsstrlctl canndenytal. HANDBOO on Policing I hRIAders Who ddcglfe to hfilpnt'uf Km,” 5333332; “1&3: :Egggygofifigrggagm? gvnngy rgay 381;: It elrconirl lutlons I? Mr: 0. (:0 ve . . ‘a e lairman ‘xecutive "can- ccuunouc without. a in he . g. ’ . ' 5p .' "6’ t l mittee, 84 bpadlna avenue, or to the bee- . rotary-Treasurer. 347 King street ire-it, '3 Toronto. r The Muskoku Free Hospital has ed up to its claims of nevur having I. single patient because of poverty. Scientific filtering“, . A handsomely illustrated weekly. re use: anthem” smallest? all newsdehlere. ' p p ’ "Misnmtuiu { ..-r,_:}‘.._- I: .- - 2...»: ..

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