Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 19 Nov 1897, p. 1

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we . 'Otl' :0 B a C ’ . Tl Perlh‘chielcn Dialsubggenewill libs Osllgllle eves; FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19TH, 1897. nounces that the principle of a fair day’s wage for a fair day‘s work would be enforced by all the departments of the Government, and the hope and ex- pectation are that the example thus set will have far-reaching effects, which will redound to the advantage of a much- abused class 0f workers. Fortunately. as far as Canada is con- cerned, sweating has not reached any serious proportionsâ€"such as it has in the United States. The workers in this country who are the worst paid and de- void of the sunshine that all God's creatures have the right to expect. live in a paradise compared to thousands of the miserable beings who struggle daily for existence in the great cities of the United States. Canadian workingmcn of any class do not know what real hu- mon degradation and misery are, and it is to be hoped they never will. This country will grow, and under ordinary- oiroumstances with enlargement of pop- ulation will come the keen business competition and the many other condi- tions that breed the sweating evil. Now is the time to take steps to, as far as possible, by legislation and by a vigorous educational campaign, make it so that Canada, even when she attains a. larger growth, may not have the sweating incubus on her back. It is pleasing to note that the Government realize the necessity of protecting the workingmen, and will take steps, as far as they are concerned, to discourage a. system that not Only deprives men. women and children of enjoyment of life, but morally and physically reduces the calibre of the countryâ€"Ottawa Journal. Professional Cards. ;” MUSIC. CH P onwm A. MORSE, Organist Cambridge Street Methodist iChurch, Lindsay, Music Teacher. At ‘ Brooks‘ Hotel, Fenelon Falls, every Tues- R E A D i N G , day. Terms moderate. 32. ' ~ WALL PAPER TEL WALL PAPER ' ' . MCLAUGIILIN & DICDIARMID 1 . ' ’ i ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay per month, AT THE LOWEST PRICES. WATDHES. RINGS. JEWELLERY, BY MAIL. Unless you are a practical wateh- ,: maker you must place some confi- ' dcnce in the dealer you buy from. The principle upon which we do our mail business is that it a custom- er. after seeing his purchase, would prefer his money back. he simply has to say so, and we cheerfully return all 5, he paid. , You thus have the privilege of .; examining your goods at home,and .- it makes selling by mail mutually 3;. satisfactory. When wanting an Eng-a ment Ring or Wedding Ring 0r esent write us for particulars. Gen. II. Beall, Watchmaker, Kent Street, , and Fenelbn Falls. Lindsay Office: lKent-St., opposite Market. Fenelon Falls XXXX ‘yliouduy afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 38" Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. r. A. McDIAnMID. Window Paper. â€"- AT -~ R. J. MoLwnnmn. .- _ _ Fancy Goods. l [ ARRISTER, ftt£E:-:t{§;tv, Solicitor Materials for Fancy Work, in Chancery, Kent Street, Lindsay. FENELON FALLS. " To s 'n a - , G. H. HOPKINS, y 1 Gre tval‘lety ARRISTER, &c. somorron FOR Stampmg Done. the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices: No.6, William Street South, Lind- 51"" 935:, x X x X MOORE SITTATCKSON," MRS. HEELEY. Established 35 Years. LINDSAY. Eggs Taken in Exchange. ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. or. Chinese in America. lice, William street, Lindsay. GOOD F I ‘ J g ' FURNITURE insureds. The Montreal Witness published re- cently an interview with the Rev. J. K. McLean of Oakland, Cal.. in the course of which he showed with unusual cour- age and clearncss the real nature of the Chinese problem, which has caused so much trouble in the United States. What Mr. McLean has so impressively enunciated is exactly what thoughtful men have for twenty-five years been pondering, and what Congress has been assuming as the motive for its anti-Chi- nese legislation. In the last resort, suc- cess in the competition for work becomes to a considerable extent a struggle be- swcen the standards of living, with the chances in favor of the one that is low- est. The Chinamau can live in San on. A. WILSON, -â€".u. n., u. c. r. s s., Ontario,â€" Is always cheap furniture in the long run. Looks better. ‘ wees. immer- Gives better errataSaturatgzzatsg satisfaction. I have the best Fans, . and largest stock of furniture Of all kinds, from the best manufacturers in the province, consisting of ' ' w t Solicitors for “Canada, an e I an Encyclopedia of the Country,” in five Royal Quarto Volumes. No delivering. Commission paid weekly. A canvasser reports his first. week making over seventy dollars profit. THE LINSCOTT COMPANY, Toronto. .. Ontario Gold Mines. DR. H. H. GRAHAM, RADUATE of the University oi Trinity College, Fellow of Trinity Medical School, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons oi England,Member of the Col- lege of Physicians ti: Surgeons of Ontario. Office and residence on Francis-St. West‘ Fenelon Falls, opposite the Gazette otfice. Ontario can boast of being the fruit field and the grain and dairyiug premier Province of the Dominion, and there soon will be no place to dispute her claim to being the mining Province par excellence. The Rainy River District, the Michipicoten gold vaults are being pressed in the matter of precedence by â€"Dt.\'l.\'G ROOM FURNITURE, â€".Rnonoon sn'rs, â€"-E.\SY CHAIRS, DTS, _ttO(.I\:l:Itf, 12.. D‘ . DIASON, Francisco on 0,2,1], cents a day, and 0,, the Hastings gold deposits, and now we “LOUD QED: ETERINART SURGEON ; Honor Grad- what fare he was pmcures he can work have rocky IIaltburton coming to the _§1DlaBUARDS. uate Ontario Veterinary College, To- for wanes that would not keep a whim fore as a gold dust depository. I? ronto,1884 ; R. M. O. V. M. A. Residenceâ€"Francis Street East, Fenelon Falls. ‘ ' » â€"SI’RI.\'GS AND MATTRASSES, â€"KI’I‘CIIE.\' FURNITURE (all kinds), Mr. S. D. Carver, of North Monog- han, returned on Monday from a part- ridge hunting expedition to IIaliburton, where he spent a week. Deer he report- ed abundant, though partridgcs are not plentiful; but Mr. Carver came across something of more value than many partridges, that is to say a gold mine, as well as other mines. A Mr. W. Austin with whom Mr. Carver name in contact, is a mighty hunter, who has not confined his attention to animal game, but is also a prospecting miner of some experience. Mr. Austin in- formed Mr. Carver that he (Mr. Aus- tin) had diseovcrcd in Cardifi'township, near Clear Lake, a very promising gold mine, and be loaded down Mr. Carver with a basket of specimens which, to the uninitiated, seem to be very valu- able. Mr. Austin has located the mine and taken out a lease in the regular way. The vein is on the side ofa bill, and Mr. Austin has had surface speci~ mcns assayed in Toronto, and the yield was 816.80 of gold and $24 of copper, which is considered a very rich assay for superficial quartz. The vein is not far from the Irondale, Bancroft & Otta- wa Railway, and can be very advantag- eou-ly worked. Close to the gold and copper [ind Is an extensive deposit of very fine magâ€" netic iron ore, which Mr. Austin values at from $70 to 889 per ton, and in the same vicinity is an extensive deposit of mica which, from the surface specimens shown by D] r. Carver, premises at a proper depth to be productive of on ex- cellent quality and large quantity of mica of commercial importance. .\Ir. Austin is represented as a man of reli~ ability and sufficiently expert in minâ€" ing to understand the value of the (le- l posits he has found. and if they are err-n ' approximately as rich as he thinks they are, his discovery is of great import- man from starving. Exposed to this kind of competition, with the advance guard cfa host of invaders, numbering millions, it is not surprising that the working people of the United States have been clamoring for effective meas- ures to exclude the Chinese. The hardship to which white labor is sub- jected has been intensified by the fact. that the importation of Chinese work- men and the management of their labor in America have been carried on by or- ganized Chinese companies. The white employer does not deal with the Chinese laborer directly and individually; he contracts for so much labor with a soci- ety, under whose control the individual toilet is virtually a serf. In this way he avoids trouble with his employees, who are kept in order by their own coun- trymen, and by means entirely unknowu .to the law of the land. It is easy for a secret society to get rid of a trouble- some slave. The aim of the average European in America is to 'become a citizen of the country of his adoption, and the head of a household therein ; the aim of the average Chinaman is to make as much money as he can during his iew years of exile, and return to spend the rest of his life in China. and to secure burial there for his mortal remains at death. The one ideal should by every legit- imate means he encouraged here in Am- erica. while the other should be as per- sistently discouraged. One obvious way is to prevent the Chinese from immi- grating to this cootinent, and it is quite likely that in the future the measures resorted to for this purpose will become even more stringent than they have been in the past. As the anti-Chinese legislation of the United States is from this standpoint far more advanced than our own, it is worth while considering whether the time has not arrived for SHOES, RUBBERS. YOU WANT THEM. WE HAVE THEMâ€"- GOOD-â€" CHEAP}. CALL.AND SEE. GEORGE MARTIN. THE WEST SIDE STORE. and prices are away down. Repairing and all ordered work promptly attended to. 563‘ Undertaking in all its branches. L. DEYMAN. 1*]. P. SDIITIâ€"I, ETERINARY SURGEON and Dentist. Graduate ofOntario Veterinary College. Live Stock Inspector for North Victoria by appointment of Dominion Government. Ofiice and address â€"â€" CAMBRAY, ONT. SURVEYORS. JAMES DteKSON, .Ecoflu D|v|s|ofl coun'r P L.Surveyor,CommissionerintheQ.B., Conveyancer,&c Residence,and ad- â€"or ranâ€"â€" dress, Fenelon Falls. County of Victoria. :/ DENTAL. The next sittings Of the above Court will be held in Dickson's hall, Fenelon Falls, ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 28th, 1898, commonelngat 10 o’elockin the torenoon Monday, January 17th, will be the last day of service on defendants residing in this oountv. Defendants living in other coun- ites must be served on or before Jan. 12th. S. Nsvlsox, E. D . HAND, Bailiff. Clerk Fenelon Falls, Nov. 9th,1897. ENSURANOE. Dr. IIEELAIIDS, 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. Cotton writes Dr. Neelands that he has given the gas to 186,417 per- sons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtundcrs used. A good set 0! teeth inserted for $10. E8“ Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday ofevery month. Call early and secure an appointment _________._____.__.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other anaesthetics 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. H.HART,L.D.S. SET OF GOOD TEETH FORSIO. GnSI and local anaasthctics for painless ex-l tractiug. Satisfaction guaranteed in all, branches of dentistry. 1 1 Ottice over Fair-weather & Co’s store nearly opposite the pest-odioe, Lindsay PATENT S PROMPTLY SECURED Send a stamp forour benntltu 00k ”How to get: Patent' ,“ What profitable to invent."nnd Prizes on Patenta‘.Advice tree. Feesmoderm MARION & MARI ON. EXPERTS Temple Building. ms St James St., Montreat The only firm of Graduate Engineer! in tleomi~ nlon transacttng patent business exclusively Mr. Wm. B. Ellis having transferred hi0 Insurance Business to me, I am prepared to take risks on all classes of property At Very Lowvest Rates Companies represented. fl. FARDI PJJOPERTY at very low rates. James Arnold. ...â€"â€"-._â€"â€"~ The “ Fenelon Falls Gazette” None buttirst-class British and Canadian I \"3 ‘I - ‘ c u . . h 1' "him "9'." PM“? "‘ "1°. 9mm °“ INSURANCE ail! R- TS" taking a step forward in the same dtrec- “cc, 1“ “ouuc‘i‘uonl‘m: “llzdlsfov‘ the corner of May and Fraocls streets. A . â€"â€"- a prepared ,0 furnish ,be people of Lind ,ion._7vor0,,,o Sun ry, ; icfiulcccss tint ins . een eye opt-t [UHCRIPTION ‘1 A YEAR 13' ADVANCE, (1‘0 the Pllbllc. say and surrounding country with _,__, ___ M.-. __~,__m_ "3 “‘3‘ 0.0m 80ld_ mine 10 Hastings by t t r week «in be added as noxonssrsaxn nnaosrosss, The sweat," 8 Stem tho. Iwalla“ syndicate would seem “to 0' '“ m l‘ as ROYAL CANADIAN issuance, but, Mum“, 6mm. 9 Y Indicate that the Hallbut'ton find Will, as itremniul unpaid. l . “I: i ' under improved methods of treatment. Sir \VilIrid Laurier spoke at some be of a, we“ impommce as the “3% I U ‘ 'V . I I I leng‘h I" “‘3 *Pcmh 3" [Momo 0" “‘0 tugs gold deposrts of which the Formula beginmng made by “00' M"- Mul°°k World has lately spoken so favorably. to abolish the sweating system in Cana- _pe,c,.b,,muqh Examiner. do, the initial step being the command .__- . -. A.-- that supplies for the Post-office Depart- A Hindoo closed a conversation with ment should be manufactured in facto- the following remarkable words ; ~ '1‘... ries subjch to inspection. that the com day, if the British wanted to Iowa our tracts should not be farmed out, and , lind, on our knees must we Implant that fair wages should be paid to the them to remain ; for India without Lita “Orkmcn employcd~ The Premier am British means disorder and chme. Co. has amalgamated with the Alliance lot England, giving insurers the security or 5,006,000 and the same good policy. cemetery work" perl'tue pennanm. Cnsualadrertisements,; JOHN AUSTIN,Agcnt Marble Tuhle Top9,\\'astops, Manth 8 out: per line fo!’ the first insertion, Ind; Also a cut for the Queen of Eng P38693103.» SDCCIRHF- '1 “a” P" m“ I“ ET"! subsequem inset- land and Calcdgonian ofEdinburgh. Cnpi-l )VORksâ€"I" “3M 9 ll“ :“n'ke: 0“ 05”“ non. Contracts by the year. half year or. uhombintd’sw'ooofioo‘ ,bndgc strcm’oppusuc Madge,” Pukmg leu, upon reasonable terms. , house_ JOB PRINTING, â€"â€" ' ' " ""“ “E E: “"l Being a practical workman All should I“ i l . . . ANTED. I can pay ten dollars ‘ ate his designsand compare prices before ’I ‘u "an"! kinds nee-uled nun" tori wexy to a. lady of mature age, refinement purchasingelsewhcre. rectly and at nodenti prices.x ‘m and metro spend her time in .\ good cause. “031-. CHA'BERS_ L D’ litrepr’idor 1" "' “Moon: T°’°"“” W“ North of the Town Hall Advertising Rnten. Estimates rem tit-wivenonuminds 0, Professional or business cards, 50 cents I $2 P p , ,, ‘u-h‘aUâ€"gn. - .a..." "snagâ€"‘mq' vm‘ ‘ W . .1 saw-‘2‘ ' W‘ 'Mfi-«r-w‘ «(adv -..w “0%, a;

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