Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 1 Jun 1900, p. 1

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., I: i ii .‘i a v'xrsz‘Iâ€"ma .x . u... an... ~ umâ€"wm.JMfiâ€"‘"a? :x-xn .23: E'C‘A‘A‘ .-.r are -.-." ~.. . M... A mrcmuugmp :rnwxv -v «x V OL. XXVIII. melon jails diuretic. - The llld Reliable Drug Shir. FIELD SEEDS. Clover, Alsike. . .. I. Timothy. Mongol, ' Turnip and Carrot. Headquarters for GARDEN SEEDS. Opposite the post-office. D. GDULD. , Lytle’s old stand. Professional Cards. _--_â€"__________________._._â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"--- LEGAL. .___________'_-â€"â€"- .Mfâ€" MOLAUGHLIN & MCDIARMID, ARRISTERS Solicitors .Etc., Lindsay B and Fcneloii Falls. Lindsay Ofiicczv Kent-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Office: Over'Burgoyne 8t Co’s store. The Fenelou Falls oflicc will be. open every Monday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. W Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J.'McLaucaLm. ' F. A. McDiaanin.“ ______..._â€"â€"â€"-- W I LLIA Al STEERS, ARRlS’l‘ER. Solicitor Dominian Bank. W.lliam Street, Lindsay. A. P. DEVLIN, ARRISTER, Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chancery,KentStrcet.Lindsay G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, 8w. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at I lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofiices: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. , W MOORE & JACKSON, BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of- fice, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. Jacxsos .__._.â€"_ F...â€" MEDICAL. . WM DR. H. H. GRAHAM. _-. â€"-M.D., c. ii., iii a. c 5. Eng, M. c. P. a. 8., , ONT., n. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN,'SURGEON & ACCOUCH- P cur. Office. Francis Street, Fenclon Falls. M DE. A. WILSON, â€"-M. a, M. c. P. a 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN’ SURGEON & ACCOUCH- ~‘eiir.{;0ll_ice’, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. 1 _ __â€"_____â€"___â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€""â€"‘â€"- DR. D. GOUPD, Graduate Teronto University, .Member College Physicians and S_urgeons,‘70nt. Office at Drug Store. Residence, Francis street west. _â€"_____’_______________..___â€"-â€" P. SMITH, . ' TERINARY SURGEONiand Dentist I(ga‘rraduate ofOntario Veterinary College- . . _. by e Stock Inspector for North Victona L” ointment of Dominica Government. Oligce and address â€"â€" CAMERAY, ONT. M9!â€" - ~ DENTAL. . - ##- Di‘. NEELlllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, . . .m,_ Extracts teeth without pain by gas (in ized air) administered by him for}? years. He studied the gas under Dr. Lolton, of ' ‘ ~ tract- Ncw York the originatOi of gas for ex . ing teeth.’ Dr. Coltou writes Dr. Ncelands that he has given the gas to 186,417 per- sons without an accident from the gas. ,, Otherlpainvobtunders used. A good set of . .. . d8 te th inserted for $10. W Dr. Neelan v’iiiits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment _______________.___.._.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"- W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. e beautiful Crown and Bridge work prii‘gtised with success. . Gas and all-other anaesthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. A set of Artificial Teelh, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. ________________â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"- NEW MEN IN THE OLD STAND. 'The undersigned, having bought Mr. William Golden’s Livery buSiness on Fran- cis street east, have put in . New Horses and New Rigs, ‘ ° ' to retain and Will do all in their power Mr. Golden’s patrons and gain many others, W CHARGESYERY BEASONABLE.‘ Calls attended to day or night. MUNCEY & THOMPSON. Fenelon Falls, Jan. lfith, 19.00. 49-1y_ __._â€". BATTER nooas. ‘ Winn DOORS J. T. THOMPSON. J12, CARPENTER. ' attended to. “bungling-y Chairs made to order. Workshop on Lindsay Street, Near the d, 1.8. Station, Echelon Falls. . ~\-- *~-; "as: 3:11;,‘4'1'2’, ‘i ..,v.~i‘i;‘ni}2:.udamr&t‘ ‘ Wall Brackets and .FENELON 'FALLs, ‘_ ONTARIOfFRIDAY,’ JUNE IST, 1900. for Spring and Summer wear is arriving daily. You Will find that we HAVE stimulus that is required in footwear, with cor- rect styles, newest designs, best quality and lowest prices. GROCERY STOCK COMPLETE. J. L. ARNOLD. Fire Insurance Agent, representing the Northern and Imperial of England. Who’s Your Tailor, p I If. you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” invariably he will tell you ‘ TO W NLEY-’ Be one of the number, and call and see What he is doing for the Spring and Summer. His prices are right, consistent with first-class style and workmanship. He makes no other. W J ust- received a stock of that enjoyable tea, “ Salads,” of the following kinds : Salado Ceylon Green, Salada Ceylon Black, and Salada- Oeylt'm lined. Also a splendid line of Japan Teas. JAPAN SlFTIIGS, 4 PDUIDS FOR 25 CENTS. The best value ever ofi‘ered. w 1.. season. VIE suinsavon to man: All lines of our jewellery and N watchmaking business RELIABLE. We are'particularly careful in the Selection of the gold of which we make our ENGAGEMENT and WEDDING fillGS. We appreciate the confidence _. placed in us, as shown by the very “.3 large share of trade we have com- manded for so many years, and. WE DON‘T INTEND to lose it . now. ‘ You can always rely on what you buy from GEO. W. BEALL, THE JEWELLER, I Lindsay. - A Big Salary. But---- The N. Y. World estimates that Rockgafcllerlgdiyidends this year will be twenty millions of dollars, and from other sources fifty-five millionsâ€"a total of seventy-five millions that the people will pay him to keephim supplied with the necessities of life so he can work for them! You may think this a rather , heavy salary to pay one manâ€"a salary greater than all the crowned heads of Europe draw. But it is not too great a salary. Rockefeller is doing more for civilization than he or you realize. He is doing more to concentrate wealth in the hands of a few, to show that private property must centralize in the hands ofthe cunning, to prove that doing business on a~small scale is so wasteful that it cannot compete with business done on a gigantic scale, to force peo- plc to question the safety of letting busi. ness be done for private profit, than all the social agitators of the nation. The worst luck I wish him is that he will suceed in getting all the property of the nation and all the other people have none. Then all the others will have no interest in maintaining the present in- sane system. Ninety per cent. of the individual business men of the nation will be out of a job within the next ten years. Industry of all kinds will be monopolized and harmonized ready for the people to take it over and have no jar in the process. Rockefeller is all right. One of these monopolists hold- ing a hundred million of property said to a friend of mine recently, in response to the question, “ Where is all this monopoly going to end ? ” “ Well,” said he, “ there is only one end possible. The people will havo to take all these properties in self-defense, but we will have a h -- of a good time playing the game before they wake up to the fact." And Rockefeller is doing more to hasten that day than any other living man.â€" Appeal to Reason. -â€"â€"â€"o.â€" What the War Money Would Do. Up to the end of March Great Britain expended on the war the sum of $570,- 000,000. A writer in the home Maga- zinc has been making a calculation of what could be done with that amount in philanthropic, educational and reli- gious edort. He says : “ It would maintain every aged poor person in the United Kingdom, educate all our mil- lions of children, support all our pau- pers, replace every pound spent through- out the Kingdom on every form of missionary and charitable work, endow all our hospitals, support every church and chapel with their tens of thousands of ministers, maintain thousands of convalescent homes, libraries and mus- eums, equip and support thousands of technical schools. pay for an army of 50,000 missionaries, supply eoals, blan- kets and medical comforts in-‘millions, and still leave milliOus more to spend on similar works of usefulness.” Are you thinking? Oriental Immigration. Whatever may be the result of the elections in the Provinceâ€"whichever party may be successfulâ€"there is no a immigration. The disastrous result»! _, .. . which will inevitably flow from a '-*-" largo influx oi'tlicsc people are becinu hing to he parocived even by the least observant. and the outcry raised against, it is being joined in by the most indifâ€" ferent of the citizens of British Coluin~ ha. The very few residents of the- coast who areianxious for a labor market in which this class is to be found are coal miners and cannery men, and they are willing to sacrifice the interests of the country to serve their own private ends. That their wishes will be allow.- ed to weigh against the general good is hardly to be expected, nor is it likelv that the complacency of Sir Wilfrid Laurier and his desire to meet imperial. views in a matter so vitally opposed to our cXistence and prosperity will long successfully stand in the way ofthe de< termincd efforts of a practically nuitcd province.â€"â€"Rossland Miner. 0-. A War Parable. A Wealthy Citizen, passing a certain . house, heard sounds of tumult from within and entered. He saw the House- holder barricadcd behind a pile of fur~ niture and defending himself from the onset of three burly bravos, who Were. tenants of the Wealthy Citizen. “ How now i ” said the Wealthy ill.“ izcn. “what have we here ? ” “ These men,” replied the House-- holder, ” have come in oil the street and. purpose to eject me from my house and take possession of it and all that there-- in is.” “ Can this be true?" inquired the Wealthy Citizen of him who seemed to be the leader of the bravos and who was curiously decorated with a single eye» glass. _ “ Mere sophistry." answered he of the mouocle. ” We are civilization. This Householder is barbarism. He has managed his heusehold badly and is unworthy to have charge of anything. We are going to take his property away from him and administer it with wis~ dom, of which we possess a. large store.” 0-. A Lesson in Economics. â€"â€"_. A typical operation of the Standard. Oil Company on the discovery of a de- posit of natural gas adjacent to an American city was the purchase of a tract of land over the gas vein. The company then bored :1 number of holes into the vein and set fire to the nos as it escaped, thus wasting this vdluable supply and depriving the city of cheap fuel, light and power. The company was actuated by the natural desire of all sellers to produce scarcity and create necessities that people might be forced to buy. While the interest of buyers is in the direction of abundance, the in~ terest ofsellcrs is in the direction of scarcity. The one is benefited by pro-v- duction and the other by destructiOu. In Britain this diflerence has been rec~ ognized andcommcrcial freedom has been established, that being in the in- terest of the buyers. In almost all other countries the interest of the sellers has been paramount, and taxation has been devised so as to create scarcity and prevent production.â€"â€"Globe. ' What Armies Are For. . Armies are maintained to do the bid" ding of capitalists. This is so alike in. the case of wars and strikes. The rc~ cent strike of Italian workmen on the Croton dam in New York was the en; forcement of the State law covering emâ€" ployment on public work. The State law provides that eight hours shall eon-- stitute a day’s work and that $1.50 per day shall be paid for same on all public work. Contractors violated the law. made the laborers work ten hours, paid them, $1.25, and the men struck. The State militia was immediately Ofelch ed out to quell the strike and the leaders among the Italians were thrown into jail. Some day the loyal toilers of. Canada may get a dose of the some kind of medicine.â€"-â€"Exchmbge. The biggest nugget yet found in tin. Klondike was picked up on Gold Hill recently. It weighed 77 ounces, and was mined at $13,000. ' By aclose vote, and after a debate which exceeded in bitterness anything: yet heard during the session, the npié. copal Methodist Quadrennial Cooler. ence practically decided to make no change in. the attitude of the church in ‘ doubt that to insure a continuance of regard to card-playing, (lowing. them the confidence of the people the Gov- ernment will have to deal promptly and forcibly with the question of Oriental tre-going and other forms of amuse-i ment which Since 1872 have been under the ban of the church.

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