Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 12 Jan 1912, p. 1

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{ “3' E135. 'se 2“ *9 i. ‘ ‘. -,"‘_15 .mtnrng' 17,35, Apr: To do repair work that _003 COFFEE. will give satisfaction j; .. ,. '_ and stand the test of ' - ' time has always been our endeavour. - Has made us many friends. First of all, they were coffee customers only. Then one day they, decided to try some of our Tea. _ 1.. Watches, 2 Clocks, Jewelry, Eta, We carry the best lines. 3 scursLATEr P I Issuer of marriage Licenses. - The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. Feneton Faiis. They liked both. They are our steady tea and cofi‘ee customers. ' raisins and currants, Then they notice that our delighted---â€"and ‘so peels, etc, are good, try them, it goes. . Our. eatables aren’t good only in spotsâ€"it’s our aim‘to have them'faultless through and through.. ,That’s ahig‘h standard to set. ' Naturally once in a while we fall'below it. ' . -< arr-u. an _ ".CHJhA-‘ureu'r‘amr '.-n~â€"V'-mc Proteésio‘nal' Cards ____ _.__ _.__...___. But that’sour aim, and in attempting this we, get justabout as high an average of grocery good-- ness as any store in this country.- A CLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON & STINSON. ' P ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ) ., ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Bram-h ofliee at Fenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay oflice over Dominion Bank. R. J‘. MoLAnoumN, K. 'C. All. FULTON, B. A.- " ‘ JAB. A. Pent. T. H. S'rmson. I I I g ,1 D You may as well benefit. ' I i I i I J.L.ARNOLD. M' MOPKINS, XVEEKS It HOPKINS. 2‘; .ARR‘IS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for. the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Offices No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Ont. and at Wood- Ville, Ontario. . G. II. Horums, K. 0., . F. HOLMES HOPKINS, ,B. A ' . . ‘ - MOORE it. JACKSON - . Amus'rnas,‘ SOLICITORS, &c_. or fice,WiIIiam street,hiudsay. * 5‘; I3. noose. . _ ’ . . ‘ A. JACKSON ________ , STEWART 36' O’CONNOR, ) ARRISTERS, 'NOTARIES, &o. MONEY l) to loan at 10wesl current rates. Terms ’to-suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 'T. Srswanr. L. V. O’Connor, LEIGH R. KNIGHT. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Successor to McDiarmid & Visits made to Fenelon Falls by loan aup Real Oifice Kent St., _ Our lines-Luâ€" . . Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Wall P2 per. Also Agent for all classes of . Life Insurance. as . Weeks. appointment. Money to .Esta'te bought and sold. Lindsay, Telephone 41. i ' ' DENTAL. . . Pâ€"“WW-'â€"â€"â€"-â€"‘_ ;- ‘Dr. 3. .I. sums, DENTIST, Fenelou Falls. . . ~Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. . ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY -' performed according to the Iatest'impreved methods at moderate prices. ‘ . OFFTGE:â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- _ orue street _________________________._.â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€" .Drs. Neelands &” Irvine. 7burrisrs , Lnnisu. , Crown and 3:: Natural teeth preserved. ' Eb ridge Work aspecialty. Splendid [its in "-5 ’a. rtificial teeth. Painless extraction. 'Gas 4 administered to over 9,000 persons with great Success. ,_ M ‘ utmost. M _,______.____..___â€" DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"â€"~n. 0.,0. u., u a. o. s. Eng.,u.o.r. a 3., Out, I. ‘r. u. s.â€" HYSIGIAN, SURGEON a Accouon- cur. Ofiice. Francis Street, Fenelon ' Falls. ~ ' DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, successon T0 nu. A. WILSON, GRADUATE OF TORONTO UNlVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac-V Oilice, Colborne street, Fen- A' complete line of Jewelry in _ Watches, Silverware, etc, which we Would be pleased to have you'.,inS'pfect.'. i -4 "Special, attention? given to re-" pairing. ' . ‘ ' The Reliable Grocery Store Is pointed out by the oldest inhabitant as the best place to buy groceries. ' vide wholesome eating. “76 con? tinue to assure you this as we have ,. done in the past. We won’t stand 1’ for thmbug goods. Reliability is our motto. ‘ 00 uoheu r. elon Falls. M AUCTIONEER. fl,” _ 'I‘ ll 0 )1 AS OAS H ORE. - ' WIDNKER - FBNELON FALLS. Bales n! all kinds conducts d in a first. Secure dates before ad- . plus manner. q yea-thing. . ,i,,-._. IA.N0RTHEY._§ Reliable groceries like ours pro-_ FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY BANK. or MIINTIIEAI, HEAD OFFICE 1‘1 ON TRIBAL. ESTABLISHED 131T INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. :5 REST - $12.ooo,ooo.o ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Deposits. taken of $1 and upwards, which can be wihdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch War I War ! 1y, as long as the capitalistic class con- tinue to exploit and rob the working, class.â€"-â€"Cotton’s Weekly. _._.§. War ! War is in the air. I do not mean the war that takes place between dif- ferent nations. takes-place within the various nations be tWeen the exploiters and the exploit ed The labor war is raging in Great Brit- ain, in Europe, in Germany, South Africa, Japan, the United States and C: id W H : Labor, and the men were mollycod- dled back into work at the same old t s t‘ o- _, ,... ,. .m....-_ .52.. gloze the fact and talk about the ers and the employers. Such talk is nothing but bosh. Recently the long-' shoremen of Montreal harbor struck. ' The season was very far advanced, and the harbor was in danger of freezing. The men struck for bigger pay. The bosses were in a. quandary. They did not want to give bigger pay, and yet the ships might be frozen up government sent down a couple of up ' conduct complicates the relations be- them. This is true ; and the more the. relations are strained, the better it is peaceful and stand robbery 'kick, it is ill. But when they object, when they look their masters in the face in a defiant mood, it is well, for’ labor is awake. Such conduct as that ., of the longshoremen is liable to en- danger property. who considers on’! When Italy fights the Turks, she hombards. the city of Tripoli and des- troys property. When, in the Ameriâ€" cancivil. war, the North fought the South, Sherman marched to the sea and left desolation in‘his wake. He destroyed property. 'truction, and they weep long columns , continue to exist in Canada, internal- Salvation Army Pots. The Salvation Army, before Christ- mas, sets up kettles on the street cor- ' ners of the cities, into which generous sentimental citizens can throw money. The money is used to provide Christ- . mas grub for the poor. Last year, in Montreal, $1,000 was collected. This year only $700 was gathered in. The‘ Salvation Army lads and lasses cannot - understand this. They see Montreal financial, commercial and industrial captains piling up great wealth. They see the Montreal slums growing in ex- tent. They see McGill university get’ $1,500,000 in a single week. It puz- zles their poor bewildered brains. The explanation is simple. The great ma- jority of people no longer believe in" charity. They laugh at the idea that one set of men were made to be poor and another set were made to be rich ; and that the rich, out oftheir super- abundance, should extend charity to- the poor. We have, of course, rich: people who say this. We have preach ers (thank heaven they are getting scarce) who preach this ; but the great. mass of men do not believe it. We have the brute capitalists who hold that life is a struggle, and that the weak must go to the wall. They are the strong and so have triumphed. We have humanitarians, who hold that the employers should be more careful of their employees, and that cities should make laws against slums, etc. We have those who are puzzled at the situation and don’t know what to do. ’ Finally we have the Socialists, who point out the'remedy. Charity is not the remedy. The remedy is the introductiou of a social system where'- by the collective working class can control and enjoy the wealth they have produced. Figure out what that means, and you will be surprised to find how such a remedy will reach in- to and cure the vast majority of the ills from which we suffersâ€"mid. I mean the war that tween the two classes therein; be- , the capitalists and theworkers. tnada. The politicians endeavor to entity of interest between the work- all the inter. Happily for the bosses, the nosers-in” from the Department of . y that caused. the strike. The Montreal Star, in commenting on, the incident, declared that such ween employers and employees, and trains the good relations between or humanity. W'hen‘the \vorkers'are without a This is true; but property when war is The class war is on and property is bound‘ to suffer. The property, under capitalism, belongs to the capitalists, the enemies of the workers. War is hell ; but War cannot be abolished un- til the capitalist class is abolished and the workers become the collective own- ers.‘ So we'see sabotage in France; we see the blowing up of railway bridges in America ; and we see waste of property in times of strike. The masters yell like blazes at this des- -v “Socialism won’t work ’-’ whines the plute. If it won’t work, do you think the receivers ' of rent, interest and profit would be so frightened of it? .-. Politicians can always be depended upon to watch the revenue. They are careful both to see that plenty 'comes in and to see that it doesn’tstay in. The fact that sooiety can get/along better without capitalists than 2, withâ€" out. workingmen is known to: most capitalists. The workingmen are hav ing great diiliculty in finding it gout. of blat in the capitalist press. They declare that the workers are anarch ists and should be taught their places. 'All this because the masters are given a 'touch of the class war by their re- volting slaves. War is hell, and it will ' ‘I People whose assets are all in land and stock often haveto sell something at a sacrifice to meet a sudden call for~ money. Guard yourself against this - by keeping some money in the Savings Department (if THE BANK/0F BRITISH NEIRTH AMEIIIGA ' ., It will not lie idle. Interest is added twice a year. . 75 YEARS- IN BUSINESS . . capitaliand Reserve Over $7,500,000, '- _ . Fenelon Ealls Branch D i MW. Reive, Manager ~ . "“u'r . A 7"?) 4-‘5"£h-’1’-Â¥~:i,â€"(,.,_. _, 3 ;.:~’.,'., 5,, r?” 5249,)“.7‘ ’ 4,. . . I. . . .. - v . > . -_, .v. .. 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