Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 14 Apr 1911, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Protessional Cards LEGAL MOLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON «It STINSON. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch othce at Fenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay olllce over Dominion Bank. R. J. MOLAUGULIN, K. O. A. M. FUL'I‘ON,\B. A. JAS. A. PEEL. T. H. Srmsos. HOPKINS, WEEKS dz HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries, Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Olliees No. 6 William St.>south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- ville, Oritario. G. H. Iâ€"lornms, K. 0., C. E. WEEKS, F. HOLMns HOPKINS, B. A MOORE & JACKSON ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, 810. Of ‘ B tice,WilIiam street,[.indsay. F. D. Moons. A.JAOKson _______________._____ STEWART & O’CONNOR, ARRIS’I‘ERS, NOTARIES, Sac. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit‘borrowers. Ollice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. R ’i‘. STEWART. L. V. O’Conxon, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Successor to M cDiarmid & Weeks. Visits made to ls‘enelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Ollice Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. , W I DENTAL. ' Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, MTenelon h‘alls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal'Gollege of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"-Over .Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street _____________,_.____..__xâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"'â€"â€"-â€"-â€"“ Drs. Neelands & Irvme. llllti'i‘lS'l‘S - ' LINDSAY. Nalllll'all teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid, fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with . gl‘eaLISUCCGSS. “‘an MEDICAL. _____F___________._________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~ DR. H. II. GRAHAM. __ME_ 9,,0. u, n. a. cs. Eng.,M. o. r. a s., r Our, 11‘. '1‘. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eiir. Office. Francis Street, Fenclon Iq nlls.‘ DR. H. B. JOIâ€"INSTONE, .suocnsson To on. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVEP- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- couchenr. Oliice, Colborne stroet,Fcnâ€" elon Falls. AUCTION THOMAS OASHORE, : AUCTIONEER - FI‘INELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a firstâ€" class manner. Secure dates before. ad- vertising. ____-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" mum-unâ€" s. H. Kano, , succusson r0 . II. J. SOOTHERAN. CONVEYANCING. Frau Ixsouancn AT LOW RATES. Es'rATns MANAGED, AGENT MIDLAND LOAN Co. FARMS FOR SALE THROUGHOUT THE f COUNTY. . OF L. FICE' 9| KENT ST., LINDSAY. Miss Tana. Bedford HONOR GRADUATE ALBERT COLLEGE, Is prepared to give lessons in oil or water color painting, crayon drawmg, or g ’ I! . designing. “ The Parsonage, Fenclon Falls. LOYAL TRUE BLUE LODGE No. 198 Meets the first Wednesday evening each month in the Orange hall, Fenelon Falls. F. Ladgc, W. LL; F. Keast SL3. i i i EM gmenrtummuan i n i i i r 3 i i 3 m. What You Get . What You Give AND" Are evenly balanced here.- We try to have our goods as .good as the prices say they should be. ' p - Our experience shows us what shoes are worth. It pre-- vents'us from paying too much â€"â€"so that {charging too much sn’t at all necessary. WE HAVE YOUR SIZE OF SHOE. We have the shape that fits your foot comfortably. We can give them to you at different pricesâ€"andrnever ask you to pay any more than he very lowest price they can be sold for.» 'Don’t Forget We Sell Wall Paper. E g % t i E i I i ~ i t is E? h g i t murmur sweetener-rune refinement WWWIW’IWNW warranties can»: I is now the order of the clay. Guard your health by wearing the right kind of waterproof shoes. See our, special line S ole agents for the fam- ous Dayfoot and HI' steel‘shoes. FROM TOWNLEY BROS. Fenelon Fails. i W I g I I M IFenelon Falls Branch BANK OF MBNTHEAI, I-IEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS. BANK DEPARTMENT. l . Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can he - , MONTREAL. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT REST - $12.000.000.00 withdrawn on demand.‘ R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch ' Miss Willard a Socialist. Address Of the late Frances E. Willard at the National Convention of the W. C. T. U., Buffalo, in 1897. Look about you; the products of labor are on every hand; you could not maintain for a. moment a well-ord- ered life without them; every object in your room has in it, for discerning eyes, the mark of ingenious tools and the pressure of labor’s hands, But is it not the cruelest injustice for the wealthy, whose lives are surrounded and embellished by labor’s ,work, to have a. superabundance of the money which represents the aggregate of la- bor in any country, while the laborer himself is kept so steadily at work that he has no time to acquire the edâ€" ucation and refinements of life that would make him and his family agree- able companions to the rich and cul- tured CI The reason why I am a Soci- alist comes in just here. I would takeâ€"not by force, but by the slow process of lawful acquisition through better legislation as the out come of a wiser ballot in the hands of men and womenâ€"the entire plant that we call civilization, all that has been achieved On this continent in the four hundred years since Columbus wended his way hither, and make it the common property of» all the peo' ple, requiring all to work enough with their hands to give them the finest physical development, but. not to be- come burdensome in any case, and permitting all to share alike the ad- vantages of education and refinement. I believe this to‘ be perfectly practica- ble; indeed, that any other method is simply a’ relic of barbarism. ' I believe that competition is doomed. The trusts, whose single object is to abolish competition, have proved that we are better without it than with it; and the moment corporations control the supply of any product they com- bine. \Vhat the Socialist desires is . that the corporation of humanity shall " control all production. ififiades, this is the frictionless way; it Beloved Com- is the higher way; it eliminates. the motives for a selfish life; it enacts into our everyâ€"day living the ethics of Christ’s gospel. Nothing else will do it; nothing else can bring the glad day of universal brotherhood. Oh, that I were young again, and it would-have my life! It is God’s ,way out of the wilderness and into the promised land. It is the very marrow of Christ’s gospel. It is Chris- come a, hurricane,” tianity applied. Strength Of Socialism- now having more than 1,100,000 and ‘ seventy-six representatives. The Socialists in Holland cast 88,~ ' 500 votes at the last election, against 65,000 in 1907. The German comrades cast more than 4,000,000 votes at the late elecâ€" tion, a gain of 750,000 over 1907. ' Spanish revolutionists voted 42,0005” strong this year, almost twice the vote of 1907, and they have one represent- ative. There are almost as many Socialist votes in Stockholm this year as were - cast in all Sweden three years ago, - The mayor of Stockholm, Comrade ‘ Lindhagen, was'elected by more than“ 15,000 votes. He is also one of nearly half a. hundred representatives in the Swedish legistature. Twenty-three representatives of the working-class sit in the Swiss legislaâ€" ture, the Socialist party having gained four seats at the last election. They have about 100,000 votes. In Belgium the Socialists now have: thirty-four Socialists in the legislature. ~ In the recent Finnish elections the“ Socialists have increased their votes to about 350,000, and gained six seats in the legislature, givingthem ninety. Austria has more than a. million Socialist voters, and has eighty-seven. members of the legislature. As the result of a recent election, both houses of the Australian legisla- ture are completely dominated by So- cialists. ‘ England and Italy each has about 350,000 Socialist votes andabout for-. ty-five legislators. New Zealand and Russia have each?“ close to 320,000 Socialists, and each has sixty legislators from the Working class party. Eighty thousand Hungarian- voters cast their ballots for Socialism in the elections of 1907. _' ‘ Thirty thousand Socialist voters of‘ Bulgaria have elected eight members ' of the legislature. Luxembourg has over 5,000 Social- ist voters and several members of the, legislature. The Socialist vote in the ‘Unitcd' States in 1908 wasnearly half anili- lion. At a late election Milwaukee, a [City of 400,000 inhabitants, elected a I Socialist mayor and council.â€"Appeal. o- “The social question of today," said Disraeli, “ is only a zephyr which rustles the leaves, but it will soon be- Dizzy was not only a great Prime Minister, but a- mighty good weather prophet. Under the capitalist system you must rob and cheat your neighbor- Denmark has 93,000 Socialist votâ€" It is only a question of how far yu'l ers and twenty-four representatives in will go ; the farther the more success- the national legislature. The cause in France has acquired a love your neighbor. uartcr of a million votes since 1907, . this canitstlism I (I ful. But, at the same time, you must Funny thing, 1836‘ TE 3 75 Years in éiarséxiess. incentives to systematic saving. Capital and Reserve Over $7,300,060 What You Save rather than what you earn that decides your financial condition at fifty. The greatest help in saving is 3. Savings Account in such a strong, reliable Bank as the Bank of British North America. still further increasing a growing Bank balance is one of the strongest The result is independence. The satisfaction of Start now. $1.00 opens an account. W. A. Bishop Manager 'L\-&'~'A o ’ ~uv'vey 451:1» .. y.-- / ~. :~,4 1,. “A; .4. i nah/lax

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy