Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 23 Jan 1914, p. 1

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res I914: Buy you; Watches, Clocks and Jewelry From its starts Issuerfof Marriage Licenses. , Fenelon Falls. (chum w..- .- A. ....-... ,.â€".......m.â€"-..~» "-_... <~. "twat-mm E’i-otessio uul Cards A???” LEGAL MoLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON .t I s'rmson. PARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ') ‘ ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch office at Fenclon Falls, at the L. H. & Power Commissioners' office. Open every Tues- day. Lindsay office over Dominion Bank. R. J. McLauean, K. O. A. M. Fumes, B. A. - Jas.l.A. PEEL. T. H. S'rmson. ,HOPKINS, WEEKS r. ‘HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, 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. H. HOPKINS, K. C., F. HOLMES HOPKINS, .B. A MOORE &. J AUKSON ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. or lice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON 'STEWART & O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &0. MONEY to loan at lowest current. rates. Terms ' to suit borrowers. Ofiice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. . Srswsm. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. ‘A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Successor to McDiarmid & Weeks. Visits made to Fcnelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Oflice Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. DENTAL. or. 5. J'. sums, DENTIST, Fenelon 1321115. Graduate of Toronto 'University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALLBRANCHES or DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE zâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, 00]- orne street MEDICAL. DBLS. GRAHAM (l; GRAHAM. Dr. H. H. Graham. M. D. C. M., M.R. C. 8., Eng. ; M. C. P. & 8., Ont. ; F. 'l‘. M. S. Dr. G. C. Graham, Graduate Toronto University ; M. C. P. & 8., Ontario. Physicians, Surgeons and Accoucheurs. Office Francis St., Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE OORONER COUNTY OF VICTORIA. SUCCESSOR T0 DR. A. IVESON, . RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac. .coucheur. Office, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. Anorlonssa. THOMAS CASHORE. summonses - FENELON FALLS. . Sales of all kinds conductul in a first class manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. ' High Grades At Fair Prices Is the best business proposition that. a. merchant could possibly make you. J We make it. Superior Groceries. Superior Footwear. Your money will buy all the value it'can buy if you spend it here. 1 A R N o L_ D ‘ C. E. WEEKS, . “i well dressed. It pays to be a little 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.” TOWNLEY' BROS. Fenelon Falls é Saves nine, and a suit in time keeps you always E Your Good Man’s Breakfast As well as your own, should include a good cereal? We have breakfast foods in 'a most infinite variety. No . matter what particular r rain or com- 3 A bination you prefer we have it here. GM" You can have the cooked, the half I , cooked or the uncooked ; the prof“. ' 5 . gested, the half digested, or just the - 2 plain cereal. It is for yen to select, . us to supply. ' “‘3 HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1311 ‘ - "MONTH EA L. I INCORPORATED BY ACT or PARLIAMENT Paid up. Capital $6,000,000.00. Reserve Fund $16,000,000.00.t ASSETS OVER $240,000,000. . SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Deposits'itaken of $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on demand. RIM. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls 'Branc 'l M“ . I W i Hell in Calumet, Michigan. The capitalist class are showing their true temper at Calumet, Mich. Sixteen thousand miners of that place have been on strike for some months. Calumet is the centre of a rich copper country, where the copper barons have taken over a. hundred million dollars profits on an investment of one mil- lion dollars. These enormous profits hztve come out of overworked and un- derpaid copper miners. The minors struck for better conditions. The Cit- izens’ Alliance has fought the strikers. The citizensbanded together to sup- port the mine barons. Economic de- terminism has made the small business men hostile to the strikers. \Vhen the miners worked, they tra- ded at the local stores. Many a dollar found its way to the pockets of the lit- tle middlemen who dealt’in the neces- saries of life. When, however, the men struck, the Western Federation of Miners poured money in to support the“ men while out» of work. Instead of dealing with the Calumet business men, the W. F. M. bought wholesale. One trainload of necessaries purchased by the Union in Chicago was com- posed of sixty-five cars. Buying in such quantities, the .Union could buy lower than the merchants of Calumet, and the cost of supporting the strikers was considerably lowered, much to the anger of the men whose economic interests were disregarded. Therefore the business _, men fought the strike. Thugs were imported, strikers shot up, evicted, maltreated, and forced to suf- fer the usual brutalities‘which revolt- ing slaves suffer at the hands of their masters and their agents. 011 Christmas eve the foreign strik-. ers hold a Christmas tree and festival in a. hall. The hall was packed. In the midst of the festivities the cry of “ Fire” was raised by a man said to be wearing the insignia. of the Citi- zens’ Alliance. The cry came from two or three places. A panic ensued, and seventy-five persons, “fifty-six of them children, were crushed to death. At once the capitalist papers reported that this was the end of the strike. It was heralded that all class feeling . was sunk in the presence of death, that business men and masters and miners would get together. The Citi- zens’ Blliance raised $25,000 for qhe relatives of the victims of the panic. Chas. Moyer, on behalf of the striking miners and the \V. F.'M., announced that outside aid wOuId be refused. The Unidn would look after the vic- tims, and no money would be accepted from foes of the Union. On the day after Christmas Charles Moyer was at Hancock endeavoring to get the mine Owners to arbitrate. He was set upon in his room at the Scott hotel, Hancock, Michigan, by armed thugs, shot two or three times and brutally assaulted. He was then drag- ged a mile andw a. half through the streets, thmwn on board a train, and told that if he ever came back he would be killed. Charles H.-Tanner, travelling auditor of the \V. F. M., was also beaten up and deported. At the same time the owners, editors and employees of Tyomies, the Finnish So- cialist daily at Hancock, Micln, were arrested and the plant of the paper . seized. The staff of twenty men arrest- ed are charged} with conspiring to print false statements calculated 'to cause “felonious assaults on residents of the country.” ,- Meyer was one of the three held in ‘- Boise, Idaho, in 1906, along with Pet- tibone and Haywood, over the Colora- do st_ril(_e.; They would all have been railroaded to the gallows, had not the Socialists roused the nation. A conti‘" nent wide protest is now on, and the" Socialists of the states are raising a mighty protest over the present hellish conditions produced by the profit mon- gers who batten on the Michigan cop-~ per slaves.â€"â€"Cotton’s Weekly. a-.- Not For Money, They tell you a. man will not do anything unless there is money in it. It was not for money that Columbus . discovered America. i _ They tell you a man'will do nothing; except as he may make money from it- Yet Shakespeare did not write for money, nor Emerson, nor Whitman, nor many others. _ They tell you men will do nothing except for monetary reward. Yet Liv- ingston did not go to Africa for money, and. Florence Nightingale did not do her work for money. - They tell you that unless one may pile up stores of showy wealth he will not do his best work. YetJesus had not where to lay His head, and Sec- rates Was not rich, and Bruno was not a millionairc. ' _ . I They tell you that will not work for anything but money. But the agitation of the present day gives the lie to the word. The best work of this age, and of all ages, has been done for the joy of accomplishment, and not for money. v It is all right to have remuneration for one’s work. Every man should have it. But to permit hogs to give a hog’s reason for everything, and .to keep the workers from their due be- cause .of their own hoggishness is not reasonable or right.â€"â€"App’l to Reason. .-. ‘Twenty thousand persons are starv- ing in the eastern provinces of Russia, and thousands are feeding on weeds and the bark of trees. The Lancushire cotton mills have been closed down and 160,000 men, women and children thrown out of work, and an equal number reduced. to half time. 1836 British THE..-§ANK OF ' 3.}: ‘ j-, . . * 3. ' . v 5" f: 1 Ti .,'»" *- T 5‘ ,tL'C '~ . , r . f . . l ‘ l v. .. ? ‘é' ,_ .u - . .1 . g,“ . 1914 m 78 Years in Business. Capital and Surplus $7,786,663. .. Bank Money Orders AreSafeAnd . Convenient If you want to send any sum up to Fifty Dollars, to any pointin Canada, Yukon excepted, or to any of the principal cities of the United States, buy a Money Order at any Branch of the Bank of BritishNorth America. The costis trifling. M.W. Reive, Manager, -r“~..‘u .w'; .- v! . , . , h ; .u f n, â€", < . sf._\,- ' ~ .vew messes»; sisters-‘1 we“; .' . ,uv. .J'xffnf . :‘ . . . _ .. .1“-." v“. . . ,a_i"‘q)fi.~'\‘;r \i‘x‘.‘ 1) ‘ .. .2- ._I’\J“ V r ._ «J. m S c-JV-"a' .- .. \â€"\AM if} n). . a 1, ---_-‘_‘AA."'

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