Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 28 Mar 1913, p. 1

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rattan jails a .m XLI VOL. ‘ Is one of the necessities of present times, when accuracy and promptness are required in all departments of business life. Buy a Waltham Watch and have a good, dependable time- keeper. We carry the best quality of goods that can‘be purchased from the best manufhcturers. Issuer of, Marriage Licenses. The Oldfilteliable Jewdry Store. Facelen Fall 5. w Prol 13.55 ionul Cards MCLAUGLI‘IIN, PEEL, FULTON & STINSON. ARRIST‘ERS. SOLICITORS, INOTAR- . ies. Money to loan. Special atten- ,. tion‘givcn to investments. Branch ofhce at Fenelan Falls, at the L. 1-1. & Power - .Comluissiouel‘s' ollice. Open every Tues- day. Lindsay ofllce over Dominion Bunk. .. 'R. J. MOLAUGHLIN, K. O. A. M. FULTON, B. A. > ' JAB. A. PEEL. ' T. H. Srmson. M .HOPKINS, WEEKS a HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND B Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms. to v suit the borrower. Ollices No. 6 William ‘-St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- ville Ontario. u Hi HOPKINS. K. 0., C. E. WEEKS, F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A MOORE & JACKSON ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. 01“ B fice,William streel,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. STEWART & O’CONNOR: ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms ‘ to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. . S'rswnn. L. V. O’Conson, B. A _________________.____,__â€" LEIGH R. KNIGHT.‘ ARRISTER, SOLICl’l‘OR, NOTARY B Public. Successor to McDiarmid & Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Olhce Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. . ENTAL. Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, ' Feuelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental’Surgeons. I ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne's store, Col- orne street MM MEDICAL». ‘ DR. r1. GRAHAM. --u. 9., o. n, u s. e. s. Eng, u. c. r. A 3., Orrin, r. r. M. s.â€" iiH-IYSIOIAN, SURGEON a AOCOUCHâ€" our. Ollice. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. _ ,___________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" ' DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE CORONI‘IR COUNTY OF VICTORIA. '. ,1 BUCCESSOR T0 DR. A. WILSON, OF TORONTO UNIVER- H'sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- couchenr. Office, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. AUGTIONEER. THOMAS OASHORE. . economic - .mmon mus. Sales of all kinds conducted in a first class manner. Secure dates before ad- rewr- A. Jonson gm i” could possibly make you. "We make it. Why are superior eatables the best to use? Because they give better resultsâ€"more satisfactionâ€"are more healthfulâ€"â€" and go much further. Let your money buy all the value that it can. Do this by spending it here. I d Is the best busmess proposition that a? merchant E F E E‘ as as as E Large stock of wall paper at reduced prices. :i If you intend to buy wall paper this season would advise you to call early. life have a lot of bargains for you.[ $652435 Everythihg in our boot and shoe stock :will be sold at less than cost prices in order to make room for our'spring stock. stock of shoes. _ We can save you considerable money on each pair you buy. 59:! " i E: New s th e time to buy your spring E g i E 5’ E’ E Saves nine, and a suit in time keeps you always well dressed. It pays to be alittle forehanded in ordering a new outfit of clothes, for various reasons. Call in and let us take your measure for a new suit. Up-to-date goods, style and workmanship. Our motto is " Fashionable Tailoring at Popular Prices.” TOWNLEV sacs. Fine Tailoring Fenelnn Falls WWWMMMW W 009% __â€"â€"- NOW The Cereal Story Goes fine at breakfast time. and is still to .be continued. Of the mak- ing cereals there is no end, just like books. We have all the good and tried kinds in plenty, and the new kinds in sufficient quantity to try. There are so many varieties that we can hardly enumerate them. But whatever kind you like best is here and at a ~price that will supply you many break- fasts at a rate that even the econ- omical must admit is cheap. °°°§ FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, EdibAY. MAR. 28, 1913. HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 Paid up Capital $6,000,000.00. No. 5 BANK 0F MthhEAl, - 1‘1 ONTR ICAL. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT Reserve Fund $1 6,000,000.00. ASSETS OVER $240,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTDIENT Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be. withdrawn on demand. . R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch M The Dirty Work. ‘I‘ Who will do the dirty work ’i” How often has that question been flung atthe Socialist by some smooth- handed gent with a. triumphant look in his eyes, as though he had utterly floored the Socialist. ~ That argument holds good only among the parasites. You see, the owning non-producers are accustomed to have the non-owning producers feed, clothe and shelter them. They the world do not only the dirty work are accustomed to have the workers of of the world, but also the far dirtier work of the parasites. Of course if you are among a bunch of labor skinners, and ask, “Who will do the dirty work under Socialism? ” , ' the bunch will agree that this is a poser and proves Socialism unworkable. For every man jack of the bunch would refuse to do the dirty work, and they feel that the workers would refuse also, and there you are ; no one would would do the dirty work and we would have to go right back to capitalism, where the parasite bunch would be frecd‘froin such tasks, and the workers would be compelled to do them because of their poverty. But such an argument does not go down with a group of workingmen. They know what they have to endure, They haveshadr to waslrth‘e clothes of the parasites. They have had to build the sewers and wash the windows, and their daughters have had to stand the dirty, arrogant impudence of the females pertaining to the male para- sites. VVhen the working class get the' political power, the members of the master class will no longer talk conâ€" descendingly of the necessity of the lower order that the dirty work may. be done. They ’ll be whining, “ Have we got to help do the dirty work '1” Let the capitalist class realize this as a. bit of comfort. Under Socialism a lot of dirty work will be abolished. Labor will he applied for the produc- tion of things for use and not for profit. Hence the dirty work of em- balming beef, or putting shoddy in clothes, or bad material in houseswfor human habitation will no longer be done. The rotten floors and filthy quarters of the buildings rented by the capitalist class to the workers, and which necessitate the wives of the workers living in unhealthy surround- ings, will be abolished. Co-operative efiort and inventive ingenuity, which are stifled under capitalism, will abol- ish most of the dirty. The remain- der of it will be so light and easy that, even while doing it, the workers will consider it light work. We might say that under Socialism the capitalist and the lawyer and the politician and the judge, being full of dirty tricks to enslave the workers, would be given the dirty work as a' penalty. But there is no idea. of re- f; 4;. ‘of the means of life. 77 Years in Business. Capital and Surplus venge or penalty in the working class' movement of emancipation. Socialism will free the working class and, free- ing that class, will free all humanity. aCotton’s Weekly. 9-. A Farmer’s Furrows. They tell you Socialism means “ di- viding up.” I received a letter from Milo, Iowa, saying that there they had to pay 75 cents a bushel for pota- toes. I am offered 20 cents here. If I ship there I will have to deliver them to the railway twenty miles a-- way. How much would I have to diâ€" vide up in exchange new? They say Socialism would destroy in- centive, is against religion and would break up the home. When do you like to work best’l \Vhen you are prosper- ing from it or when you can only keep even with the world, and have a hard time to do that? Is it possible that when we get all we produce we willi drive our children from home, forsake- our wives, turn our. faces from the churches and go wrong morally”.l One of my neighbors tells me he is afraid Socialism. will take away his farm. Did the government take the trade away from the little shoemaker, cabinet-maker and from a thousand other workers? Now that we have .seen the small trades drift into the- handsof the few capitalists with their" great machines, and the beginning of' their efforts to gather tracts of our best lands into great farms, installing the best and latest improved machine- ry, can we, as farmers, have any more hope of competing with them than had the small manufacturer of the past? We farmers with small means and our 14-inch plows turning over two acres aday; the capitalist with his big trac- ‘ tion engine turning fifty acres a day. We with the small binder cutting from ten to fifteen acres a day ; then having to stack and wait for some man to come along‘ with his threshcr, before we ean bin our grain 3 the cap- italist with his great machine whereby he can cut 120 acres a day. \Vhat chance have we with the capitalist? F. [0. A'rwoon. Crosslake, Minn. ._.* You don’t hear anything about the increased cost of postage stamps. Why? Socialism does not mean “dividing up.” People now are dividing up with the trusts and the idle owners Socialism is, briefly, collective ownership of the things people use to live. This kind of ownership would give every pro: ducer the full value of his product. Nothing would be left for the idler, and he would have to work. Socialism would end the dividing up system. 1913 Over $7,600,000. the name implies, the Bank of i As 31» British North America was establish- before the Provinces united . :gdkbxdgame the Dominion of Canada. Dominhn of _Ganada which Fenelon Falls Branch: The sound, progressive management has made it a power in Cana- dian ‘finance makes it Me bank for your account. MW. Reive, Manager. ~aâ€"u .M q, . . ..~.v~N

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