Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 12 Jan 1906, p. 1

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melon shille VOLn XXXIII. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12TH, 1906. ' No. 49. His l 905 0 en Letter MR. W. CAGE. TELLS OF THE GROWTH OF THE. CONd SUMPTIVE HOSPITALS IN MUSKOKA OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWOOOOW 000 Accommodation at Free Hospital increased by Twenty-five Bods OPENS A SAVINGS. ACCOUNT IN THE Bank of ritish North Americas , ease The Bank’s view of small accounts is that one more I account means one more . . friend. Professional Cards. LEGAL. F. A. M ODIARMID. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE lon Falls; Oflice, Colborne street opposite Post-office. 3%“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. MoliAUGHLIN & PEEL. - ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, &0. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. Office, Kent street, opposite Market, Lindsuy. RJ. MCLAUGELIN. J. A. PEEL G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, 8w. SOLICITOR FOR ‘he Ontario Bank. Money to loan at owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Oflices : No.6, William Street South, Lind- say, Ont. STEWART 8:: O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &o. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Oflice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T. S'rs‘wsn'r. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. 0f- fice, William street, Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON AUCTIONEER. STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. * Live Stock and general Auctioneer. Write for dates before advertising. MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"â€"M.n.,c. M., or n. c. s. Eng., M. c. P. s 5., Our, r. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUOH- our. Office. Francis Street, Fenelon falls. DE. A. WILSON, -â€"-M. 3.,11. c. P. .t s., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 82: ACCOUCH our. Ofiice, Colborne Street, Fcnelon Falls. DENTAL. Dr. s. .l. suns, DENTIST, B‘enelon 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 :â€"â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, 001- orne street DRS. NEELllIlDS & IRVINE, DENTISTS - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work :1 specialty. Splendid fits in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gns administered to over 9,000 persons with great success. saying a great deal. fitted. Who’s Your Tailor P It Start the New, Year Eight by fleeing to Arnold’s For Your: Shoes. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOO iii in of Time Never get; tired, because they are shod with just such shoes as we sell. The Wear and. Tear Of our shoes means lots of Erika/Q wear and NO TEAR AT ALL. Their quality is equal to their appearance, and that is If you need a pair come in and be w. L. nosson you ask any particularly wellâ€"dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?” will tell you ‘ TQWNLEY-’ Be one of the number, and call and see what he is doing for the Fall and Winter. I-Iis prices are right, consistent with first-closet Wendell Phillips: ‘- I come into a style and workmanship. He makes no other. . for in the Muskoka. Free Hospital for J invariably he URGENT CALL FOR FUNDS TO MEET INCREASED BURDEN FOR MAINTENANCE ' Dear Friend 3â€"â€" Contributions from rich and poor, young and old, received by the Free Hospital for Consumptivcs, tell of the’ love and charity toward the great work carried on in Muskokan Thousands from all parts of Canada. not; only sent; their “God bless the work ” but’their money also to help to answer their prayers. The poor widow out of her hard. heart was made lonely through the dread scourge, as well as the rich insurance companies, have sent their gifts. . 2,000 patients have been cared for since the opening of our Homes in Muskokn. 560 of these were treated in the Free Hospital. 150 patients in these two Homes too-day, show how this life-saving work has grown. Premier \Vhitney, replying to a large deputation in the interests of the National Sanitarium Association, stated that “personally he thought $100,000 would not be too much for the Government to set apart for this work.” ' Seventy-five patients to be cared Consumptives means a. large weekly outlay. The Trustees accept this obligation, believing the needed money will be forthcoming. ' The world is full of good and generous people ready to give. But- they want; to be sure that. their money is wisely spent. In no other place can your money do so much good. The growing knowledge of the com tagious character of the disease has earned savings, telling how her own: made the lot of the consumptive poor :1. hard one. V The Muskoka Free Hospital is to- day the only place where n sufferer ‘ in the early stages of consumption is admitted free. Will you not help to save the life of a. sick one to whom all other doors are ‘ closed? W'hat greater blessing could crcwn your giving, than the knowledge that it helps to snatch :L fellow-being from the very jaws of douth’l $50,000 is wanted for the coming year. ‘Vill you join in this greatest; of all charities? Faithfully yours, W. J. GAGE. Toronto, Can. The industrial Unrest. The revolution in Russia is making other thrones tremble for fear it may become contagious. The slaughter of the working class for aspiring to liberty continues, but the American eagle does not scream for liberty any more. It talks only for capital and the exploita- tion of the workers. Unrest pervades the whole planet. The idle Japanese soldiers are threaten ing a revolution in Japan. Machines have taken their jobs and they are get- ting hungrier than usual, though their masters are feasting. China is under- going n revolution, but not of blood. The machine of modern production is rapidly being introduced ; the old hand workers are being huddled together in great shops, and the habits and customs of centuries are being torn aside. She ‘is mobilizing a great army with modern 'machines of destruction. both to keep her people in subjection and to be pre- pared for the civilized barbarians when they shall again try to coerce her. With modern industrialism and cheap labor she will cause a. oremondous upheaval in the other parts of the world by reason 'of cheap goods. New Zealend and Australia are also in the throes of labor troubles. ’I‘hoir makeshifts of labor legislation have run their course, and still the people are idlo, goods are high, and there are ovi- donoes of political explosions. Unemployed thousands are roaming: the highways of Grout Britain, and the politicians are wondering what to do, but capitol sits in the high places, feed- ing Oil" of food produced by the masses, and rightfully belonging to the masses. and the evolution proceeds with nccelerv aled speed. Germany and France are in like con- dition. Strikes of tens of' thousands have occurred, and have been repressed with the military force at the command of' the chiel' robbers. All the world is ablaze with the new impulse of the twentieth century. Each of these is contributory to the solution â€"qocinlism. All paths centre in the one goalâ€"the ownership of the planet by oil the people living on the planet. It is great to live in these days. To be an actor on the stage for even a few brief' moments is of itself more glory than achieved by any of' the generals of the past. What they changed is no- thing to what this change portends. In the classic language of the immac- ulate Chesterfield, " Git out uu’ hustle.” â€"â€"â€"Appeal to Reason. â€"-__â€"â€"â€"â€".â€". <0. 'civilizntion in which two men out. of cVery three don’t have onouh to eat.’ " V 5&L'HLI ._ AJAJL 'i L.._._.._’ The Real Incentive. For the privilege of skinning the common folk kings have fought and millions of the common folk were killed during the last century. Sixteen mil- lions is the number given as killed in war. And yet every war was simply the result of the desire on the part. of} two sets of rulers to skin the same peo- ple. And the common fools did all the fighting, all the dying and all the pay- ing! And war is simply a matter of business. Business is engaged in sim- ply for the purpose of skinning people. Do you suppose that anybody is in business for the public good ’1’ If there were no rake-off, do you think men would invest their capital ? The skin- ning is slowly being shifted from the battle-field to the counting-houscâ€" but the skinning process goes on just the some. Something for nothing is the game. You can form no ideahow many patches of your epidermis have been nicely slicod 00' you by the modern pro« cess of business skinning. Under Scc~ inlism, what we know as “business” will not exist. Goods will be produced for use, not for sale. No one can profit: by udulteration, and, as all will lose by it, none of it will be done. The cili- zons who handle goods Will have no in- terest in what you buy, where you buy or what you pay. Goods will be dis- pensed as are postage stamps, (and the sellers will be simply public servants whom you have employed for your con- venience. And when business ceases war will cease. and peace and good will will take their place.â€"-Ib. ..6¢ What Competition Requires. Competition requires that you sustain an army of'100,000 men, a navy omting as much, and tui'nish than) with ex- pensive implements of‘ destruction ; it requires you to support 250,000 lawyers, 100,000 policemen, 200,000 agents and real estate men, a million servants and waiters, 200,000 commercial travellers, 200,000 saloon keepers and assistants, 500 000 extra clerks and proprietors of stores, 50.000 unnecessary public oliic- iuls, 200,000 paupcrs and criminals, made such by the system, 100.000 un- necessary men and women in the vari- ous advertising avenues, and a host of where that never help to produce the things that enable society to live. These consume or hold twice the natural prod- ucts that the producers consume, nnd this alone would treble the income of the Workch it' they Wore kicked all their backs and made to produce their own living. The labor of the working: class supports the whole pyrnmi‘l. And they are so stupid they don’t know it.â€"â€"Ib.

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