Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 12 Sep 1902, p. 1

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Protessionul‘ Cards. MUSIC. MissVioiet M. Wiison, EAUHER or PIANO, THEORY AND “The Fletcher Music Method,” a kinder- ' gar-ten method for children. Pupils may enter any time from Septem- ber lst, 1902. . Studio and residence: Corner Colbornc and Bond streets. _ _ L23} 1L. ELAUGTILIN. McDIARMID & rnnn ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etci, Lindsiiy ' p and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Offico: I X Kent-EL, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Office: Over Burgoyne & Co’s store. The Fenelon Falls office will be ppcn every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 5%“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R.IJ. MCLAUGHLIN. F. A. MCDIARMID J. A. PEEL. G. H. HOPKINS. ARRISTER, 8w. SOLICITOR FOR. the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices : No. 6, William Street South, Lind- ny, Ont. STEWART 85 O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Otiice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. STEWART. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A. MOORE 8:. JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIOITORS, &c. 0f- 8 fice,William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. -â€":u. 1)., c. 31., M. n. c. s. Eng, M. c. P. a- s., ON’l‘., r. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSIGIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- cur. Office. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. DR. A. WILSON, -â€"ir. n., M. c. r. a 3., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Office, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. DENTAL. Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE zâ€"Over Burgoync’s store, 001- orne street Dr. llEELllllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands hat he has given the gas to 186,417 per- ons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. 3%” Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neelands that he hadmade her a successful fit after having eight sets of teeth made in Toronto and elsewhere. W. H. GROSfi, DEHTEST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all-other auaasthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. A set of Artificial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot,Lindsay. .I. G. McKeggie & 00., (ESTABLISHED 1879.) BANKERS, FEHELoN FALLS, - our. Agents: The Bank of British North America. A general up-to-date banking business transacted, Current accounts with merchants and business men opened on the usual terms, and careful attention given to the busmess of our customers. Deposits Received. De osit Receipts and Savings Bank bpoks issued on account of the Bank of British North America, Toronto, and usual rate 0; interest allowed- W. A. Bishom‘ Acting Manager School time again pretty soon. We have gathered for the boys and girls a lot of suitable shoesâ€"big shoesâ€"little shoesâ€" all sortsâ€"all prices. When We bought them we had in mind the busy feet of the romping boy, and his mother’s care for neatness. We looked well to the features that must stand the strain of many a kick; and, after we had made sure of looks and strength, we found that the price could be kept within easy reach. ror Irsrncr-.- Dressy, strong shoes for $1.00. Better ones for more money. J. L. Arnold. " My Spring $tock of GOT if; A D has arrived, and contains a. number of. new styles, and the prices will be found lower than I ever had the pleasure of ofâ€" fering you before. “ If you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes ?_” invariably he will tell you ‘ TOWNLEYJ .. “Beoone of the number, and call and see what he is doing for the Spring and Summer. His prices are right, consistent with first-class tyle and workmanship.- He makes no other. = ARE YOU lNTERESTED IN lliS?‘ Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings, Diamond Rings. WRITE THE JEWELLER, _ Lindsay, For particulars. You will save money. You can rely on what you get. ~ “Piaâ€"rentagie Discouraged. Dr. Andrews, one of Rockefeller?) chattel professors in Rockefeller Col- lege, Chicago, in a recent lecture said that “Peirentage among: the poor and improvident ought to be discouraged,” and insists that the duty of populating the earth should devolve upon the rich and cultivatedl The next thing, the rich will organize a trust under the laws of New Jersey for producing and dis- tributing babies! They will then drive all the little produccrs out of the mar- kct, because they can produce so much cheaperl The Only difficulty in the way is, that the rich are so debilitated by excesses that, so For, in all nations, they have not been able to keep up the stock, and their lines have been filled by the energy and mental power that alone can be produced by men and wo- men living normal lives, and working more or less in the open air with their hands. Look at the families of the rich, and imagine a nation of such! What would a nation of rich, and no workers, be ?. A nation of workers, with no millionaire, would make a great and strong government. But reverse it i The immaculate gall of' drones say- ing that those who support every na- tionâ€"without whom there would be no nation, no-civilization, no anythingâ€" ‘should not reproduce their kind l Dr. Andrews is greater than God. God or- dered the people to multiply and replen- ish the earth. Andrews denies the right or good of it! But then anything may be expected from the freaks who serve the millionaires as teachers in colleges endowed with the fleecings of the people on the oil they useâ€"oil that nature lur- uishcd free to the human family, but ‘ which has been appropriated by a set of enemies to the human race. But such breaks do good in opening the eyes of the millionsâ€"Ammal to Reason. -â€"â€"0* 0-â€" The Purpori: of War.» What (speaking in quite unofficial language) is the not purport and upshot of war? To my.own knowledge, for example, there dwell an’d toil in the British village of' Dumdrudge, usually, some five hundrel souls. From theseâ€"- by certain “natural enemiesz’ oi the Frenchâ€"there are successively elected, during the French war, say thirty able- bodied men. Dnmdrudge has. at her own expense, sucklcd and nursed them. She has, not without difiiculty and sor- row, t'ed them up to manhood, and even trained them to crafts, so that one can weave, another build, another hammer, and the weakest can stand under thirty stone avoirdupois. Nevertheless, amid much weeping and swearing, they are selected, all dressed in red, and shipped away, at the public charges, two thou sand miles, or say only, to the south of‘ Spain, and there l'ed till wanted. And now to that same spot in the south of Spain are thirty similar French arti- sans, i'rom- a French Dumdrudge, in like manner wcnding; till at length af- ter infinite effort the two parties come into actual juxtaposition, and thirty stand fronting thirty, each with a gun in his hand. Straightway the word “ fire " is given, and they blow the souls out of one another; and in place of six- ty brisk, useful craftsmen, the world has sixty dead carcasses which it must bury, and anon shed tears for. Bad these men any quarrel? Busy as the devil is, not the smallest. They lived for enough apartâ€"were the most entire strangers. Nay, even in so wide a uni- verse, there was eveu unconscious'y, by commerce, some mutual helpfulness br- tween them. How then? Simpleton,,. their governors had fallen out, and. i".- stead of‘shooting each other, they had the cunning to make these poor block- hcads shoot.-- Carlyle’s Sartor Resartus, ‘ Compare These Two Statements. It is said “ comparisons are odious,” and perhaps they are, but they may be: instructive. Note the following: Adam entered upon earthly existence" about 6,000 years ago; we will call it even 6,000 for the purpose of compari. son. .We will suppose him still living, and as having been engaged in produc- tive labor for 300 days in each year, and that he saved $100 for each day of work. Three hundred days of’ lab n' for each year of the 6,000 years gives one million, eight hundred thousand days, which, multiplied by 100, the number of dollars saved each day, gives one hundred and eighty million dollars as total savings at $100 per day for 6,000 years. John D. Rockefeller, the Standard Oil magnate, is credited with having “saved” two hundred million dollars in the last forty years. Workingmcn, re- member the universally accepted truth, that labor is the only means by which wealth can be created; also the truism that, “to the toiler belongs the product of his toil,” and you may find in the f'oregoing food for profitable thought. F. L Wns'r. 0“. Fifty Thousand Die of Famine. After a special investigation among the agricultural laborers in Eastern Gaâ€" licia, the None Freie Presse draws a gloomy picture of the miscrable condi- tions which led to the existing strike. The average mortality from famine for several years past, according to the Neve Freie Presse, aggregated 50.000. Laborers' wach range From eight to sixteen cents a day, and women earn, from four to eight cents a day. The peasants rarely taste bread, and exist chiefly on a soup, the principal ingredi- ents of which are water and herbs. When you read such items in the daily press, they make about an much impression on you as water on a duck‘s back. What do you care for what is occurring in Galicia or any other part of' the earth? Such items teach the thoughtless nothing. But the thinker knows why. There has been plenty raised in that country during the past nch for all the people, even with their crude implements of industry. The famine is not caused by drouth, but it exists because the land is owned by a Few, and they-take From the workers and squander it in riotous living, while those who produce it are lei't to starve. That is the cause of' all alleged famines. The rich class in Gnlicia are just like the rich in this country; they get their wealth in the same way; treat. the workers the same way; are upheld by the working men in the some way; live in no grziater splendor, and commit no greater crimes. The workingr mules ol' Galicia are funny bipedsâ€"sc different from the American species.â€"â€"â€"£'Z'cc.’tngc. 0-. It is Queer. Aconarezation of half-starved miners will sit for hours listeningr to the ha- ranguc ol'n well-Fed priest on absti- nence, frugality and contentment. It will never occur to them to draw com- parisons between their own condition and that oi‘the man who talks to them. They will never observe that it is easy for the priest to reflect on the exm‘llence of fasting with his belly full of good food. The wonder is that the miners, with their bowels pinched by hunger, will rather think of eternal bliss than of satisfying their most pressing mate? rial wants. It is indeed queer that the thought never comes to then) that there is a deep and vital cannection between their fasting and the wealth oi' the cor- porationsâ€"Ernest Unternwn. ______....____. At Globe, Arizona, the “too” all parties have combined against the Soci~ alists, which shows, when there is a live issue at stake, there is no difference be- tween republicans and democrats. The world calls Carnegie a philan- thropist- beonuse he expands his annual income of $12,000,000 in furnishing libraries for the people. Every book in a. public library donated by the Homestead murderer represents the stolen profits of labor, and every build~ ing is a. colossal monument to'ourunjust s ooail system. "Wifir' .: "“Wmmwimwaan 'v , . .,.,.,:.,

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