Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 3 May 1912, p. 1

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.._ v‘-...... .......-~_._- in Watches, Clocks, . To do repair work that lvill gi'Ve satisfaction “and stand the test of time has always been our endeavour. - Jewelry, Eta, " We 'c'ar‘ry the best lines. Milli iISlATEIl ’ Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. "" Fenclon Falls. P rotessional Cards ticLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON a STINSON. ‘ '5 ARRIST-ERS, SOLICITORS, .NOTAR- l res. Money to loan. Special Malon- ‘tion given to investments. Branch ed of) at h‘enolou Falls, open ‘evpry Tags a). Lindsay ollice orer Dominion Ban r. A .l. UGIILIN, K. O. A. M. Fotros,B. . R. J Hill; A. Part. '1‘. ll Srmsou. I P_____..._â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" _ MOPKINS, WEEKS a, HOPKINS. ; BARRISTERS, somoi'rons, - AND ‘ ' ‘ .. Solicitors for the Bank of bemuclllonoy to loan at terms. to Oliices’ N0. 6 William Out. and at Wood- Montreal. Ell-it the borrower. St. south, Illndsay, v'lle Ontario. ' 3 Gt. H’. HOPKINS, K. 0., C. E. Warns, F. HOLMES HorKIss,.B. A M MOORE a JAtKSONg mmsrnas, SOLIUITORS, 8:0. or ‘ 'am street Lindsay. _ lis cldbviiil.‘ ’ A . J mason ‘ STEWART & O’CONNOR, ARRIS'l‘ERS, NOTARIES, 8m. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Tpirms: to suit borrowers. Ollice on corner of on d York streets Lindsay. :l‘n Srnwsm. , L. V. O’Connor, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. _ , NOThfit‘i blie. Successor to M cDiapm1 ' Weed: Visits made to Fenelou Bali: appointment. Money to loan unp t gt Estate bought and sold. Ollico Ken ., , Telephone 41. Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenelon E‘alls. . ‘ Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. 0FF]CE:-â€"-Over Burgoyno’s store, orne street . Drs. Neelands 62. lrvme. DENTISTS - LINDSAY. DR. .11. H. GRAHAM. 3., n a. o s. Eng.,n.n.r. s 5., 02m, 1. 'r. x. 3.â€" AN SURGEON & ACCOUCH- HYSIClOffihe. Francis Street, Fenelon â€"-H. D.,0- ‘ on. H. B. JOHNSTONE, SUCCESSOR T0 DR. A. WILSON, ' RADUATE 0F TORONTO UNIVER- G sity. Physician. Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ofllce, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. W AUCTIO‘IE‘ - THOMAS OASHORE, mmonm - FRNRLON nus. Sales of all kinds conduct“! in a first- nrlnn 0 5; lb cam p , FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY. MAY 3, 1912.: _ d Secure dates before ads z We will be NOTHING WOULD rumour us . _j so MUCH As to have you "disappointed. Nothing would please us so much as to have you mention to. us the slightâ€" est cause for dissatisfaction.- Our aim is to have what we Sell as nearlyas possible faultless. To make the price we charge it ’fair-â€"--nota cent higher than it ought to be, not so low that quality must be sacrific,ed~-~to have our treatment of customers courteous, and to do over â€" thing that will tend to form a “ Iâ€"wilLâ€" come-again” resolve in the mind 0f every buyer. Our lines ----- Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Crockery and Glassware, Wall Paper, All classes of Fire:Insurance at lowest rates. ‘. .â€" l l ‘ Fine Tailoring Call and see our stock of new goods. pleased to have your order for a Suit or light Overcoat. _Style,-fit and workmanship guaranteed. money. they cost. ‘ ’ n- ...T..__-._...._. ...-T.;',T-h.__..-n‘._.-;.~.-f,....._._..._..., ........ ROBsON & so J.L.ARNOLD. ,. l l i 2: r l l g E SHOES. FIT FOR A KING You'll find us ready at any time to do you a lot of good for your shoe This is the place whore the money you spend represents more good results to you than any other. They're so good as they look and better than N ,3 Fenelon Falls Branch HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - 815.400.000.00. Thinking. Some men do their own thinking; others allow others to think for them. One should think about what is most important to oneself. You know that two plus two equals four. You thought that out. of course you know who Canada of ours, who built the fine houses, factories, elevators, who have cultivated the vast prairies, gone into the great forests and brought out the logs, who have gone down into the bowels of the earth and brought out minerals of all kinds, who made the fine clothes, the fine automobilesâ€"in Now, Mr. 'Workingman, you know ’ you have helped to producoxall these good things. Have you a nice home of your Own? Have you everything to make your life com- fortable and happy? If you have n’t any of these things, WHY HAVEN’T YOU'l If you have n’t, start thinking; be- cause, it you think right, you’ll know how to get these things. ' You say the prospects of the future are very unsettled. It is very often you are hunting a job, and sometimes you say if you had a job you would soon be on your feet again. Prosperi- ' ty strikes you and you get a. job, and happen to be working steady. You get your pay envelope about every two weeks, but still you are unsettled. The ,c'ostf- of (living goes up, and ynt your wages remain the same. So you start thinking a little. You talk mat- ters over with the boys. You join the union. Then you feel that you are somebody. You tell your boss that if he doesn’t raise your wages you will go on strike. So you go on strike, and find that there are lots of other men ready to take your place. You go to them and tell them not to scab, and they say, " We have n’t any jobs, and we have wives and children to keep.” So you call them a lot of nasty names. Along comes the policeman with his club, and you finish upin the Pen. When you come before the judge, he issues injunctions 'forbidding you talking to the scabs, and from walkâ€" .ing near 'the place you were working. Then you begin to think and say some silly things about the mayor and the police and the boss, which do not amount to anything. Then you can- not think any further ; you are at the end of your reasoning power. The trouble is that you do not finish the sum ; the other half you have to work out, the capitalist half. So let ’8 start figuring on the other half. Of course you know that there is a class of peo- ple who work, and a class of people who do n’t work, and the class who don’t work Own the factories, mills, elevators, railways, lands, etc, and . I x . . i 1836 Biri lSll 76 Years in Business. counts up in a year. twice a year. _L._â€"_...-_._q_.....-.....___....__...___..._...___. .. . BANK 0|: .Mpmnm’ INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT ASSETS oven $230,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Deposits taken of $1 and upWards, which can «be wlh rawn on demand. ' 5 R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch . this class allows you to work, but only have built up this great Dominion of fact, everything that man requiresp you an automo- ; bilel' The best of: furniture? Have also the machinery and the tools with be discontented. THE BANK OF 0H1 America ; Capital and Reserve Over $7,500,000 . ," KEEP YOUR MONEY WORKING FOR You When you carry a roll of money around in your pocket, or keep it in your home, you are not only risking loss but wasting the interest which it should be earning for you. This may not amount to much in a day or a week, but it Start a savings account nowâ€"depoSit all your spare cash regularly, and benefit from the interest which we add No. 112.. MONTREAL. REST - . $5,000,000.00 which things are made. Sometimes~ on one condition, and that is that they can make profit out of your labor power. In- order to protect itself, it. also owns the government, police, mi-- - litia and politicians. That ’s the sum. - One, two, is the working class. Three, . four, is thecgapitalist class. The work- ing class produces everything, and only gets two dollars out of every ten: it produces. The capitalist class gets x the other eight dollars out of what - you have produced, called profit. That " 18 why yourv'boss can live in luxury of? the profit of your labor. Now, can you think? Can you solve your prob~ lema‘l Now do you know how to strike? first, you have to get control of the - government by striking at the ballot box. Vote for yourself by voting your own class into power. Then you will 2’ be able to control the wealth you have produced, and control the land, mills, factories, railways, etc., and operate them collectively for the benfit of all") mankind. Until you do this, your " struggle for independence and liberty . will be in vain. Until you start thinkâ€" ing right, by reasoning from cause to ; effect, you will always be clubbed, . " boycotted and starved into submission l to the will of your-masters. Economic 1 conditions are beginning to change all over the world, because workers are. beginning to think. Those who have- not been able to think for themselves have honored their masters, believed in the world’s.;groatest .liars,,_, revered superstitious priests, and buried the rogues with pomp and erected costly marble monuments to their memory. Toâ€"day the men who are thinking are not honoring some hired assassin called a soldier, some lying politician called a statesman, some puppet of an- idler called a king, some malicious bah ing who happens to be a bishop. The science of sociology is gradually break- ing the chains of capitalism, getting ., the brain out of the rut of ignorance, . giving courage and freedom to the- man who wants to start thinking. Get: into the line of thinkers. Join the So- cialist Local. Read the Socialist pa- pers. Help to broaden the rights of mankind. Study conditions around you. Do this, and we will grow great- er, nobler, and the cooperative 0001-» monwealth will be here before \st know where we are. Every man and woman will then have equal rights, and everyone will be judged according to their works and their intelligence. -â€"W. J. Carter, Port Arthur, Ont. ~§~ Each year makes it harder for the capitalist class to fool the workers. “ You Socialists are teaching work- ers to be discontented,” is an objee-- tion raised against us. Let us put it; another way. We are teaching the workers, at present, why they should ' l',’ . 1912 MW. Reive, Manager ‘1' - .‘A:q_,a A -‘.- ‘ .,‘â€"- - ‘_.:."5i.-v_

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