(mmmsm. . . 5‘ I. .rwvmam u.- :' n».- F ï¬rst-Glass ________..._____â€"â€" | FARM FENCING I ___________â€"â€"â€"â€"-" only ‘ . 30 cts. per ROD. I M FOR EALE BY The;0NT. WIRE FENCiNG 00., Limited, PISTON, ONT. LEGAL. .“M/ MCLAUGHLIN. MCDIARMID & PEEL, ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay B and Fenelou Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Kent-St, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls @ftice: Over Burgoyne & Co’s store. The Fenelon Falls ofï¬ce will be open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. 36“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLA‘UGHLIN. F. A. McDIARMID J. A. PEEL. _________________.__._â€"â€"-â€"-__________._. G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, 8:0. SOLICITOR FOR B the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Oflices : No. 6, William Street South, Lind- ay, Ont. ____________,_.___..___â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" STEWART o O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &c. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and Y6rk streets, Lindsay. T. S'rswanr. L. V. O’Cosxon, B. A. _________________._â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"- MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. Of- ï¬ce, William street, Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON _______________.______._..______â€":_______._ MEDICAL. WM DR. H. H. GRAHAM. ~31. 9., c. M., M. n. e. 8. Eng., M. c. P. a s., Crux, r. 'r. M. s.â€" ’ HYSIGIAN, SURGEON a ACCOUCH- P enr. 0dice. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. _______________._.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" DR. A. WILSON, --x. 3., n. c. P. a s., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 8: ACCOUCHâ€" our. Ofï¬ce, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. P__________________.._â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"-â€"-â€""“’ DENTAL. Dr. 5. a. suns, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES or DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE:â€"â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne‘ street MM 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. nan Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthnr House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early .- nd secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neelands that he had made her a successful [it after having eight sets of teeth made lll Toronto and elsewhere. _______-__’______â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€" w. H. Gnoss, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all-other anaesthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. A set of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. M SECOND DIVISION COURT -â€"or ran-â€" County of “Victoria. . . ,1 - xt Sittings of the above Court wl libelileeld in Dickson’s hall, Fenelon Falls, on MONDAY, APRIL 14th, 1902, cimmencing at 1 o’clock in the afternoon "hursdav, April 3rd, will be the last day ‘r‘ service on defendants residing II] this Defendants living in other conn- 1 ntv. . . ‘ ‘ Q 1 ' ed on or oetore Saturday, ties must be scrv March 29th. ‘ ‘ " DS E.D.HAND, it. 0. ED“ ARuaiiim Clerk. Fcuelon Falls, January 14th, 1902. Our first consignment of Slater Shoes for Spring and Summer trade has arrived. All the latest styles and best qualities of leather. Prices $3.50 and $5. SQLE AGENTS F OR V- . ’i Shoe: Fresh Frozen Sea. Herrings. FIRST OF THE SEASBN. W. L. ROBSON. Who’s Your Tailor P It you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?†invariably he Will tell you 'I'O W N LEY-’ Be one of the number, and call and see 'what he is doing for the Spring and Summer. His prices are right, consistent with ï¬rstâ€"class style and workmanship. He makes no other. ARE YOU '1‘ TERESTED IN RINGS? Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings, '5‘" Diamond Rings. WRITE 0E0. W. BEALL,“ THE JEWELLER, Lindsay, For particulars. You will save money. You can rely .on what you get. Where Money ishurned. _.____ ..â€"â€"â€" A lady, and a. very pretty lady she was, good to look at from the crown of her head tothe soles of her feet, enter- ed a New York shop. A demure sales- woman, faultlessly gotten up in black, met the lady at the threshold. They greeted each other pleasantly and then conversed together for a few minutes in a low tone. What they said did not reach my ears. There was a clock on the other side of' the street, and, being prohibited from paying too close atten- tion to the pretty lady and the demure saleswoman, I watched the clock. It had ticked of? seven and a half minutes when the conversation that had been beyond my ears increased in volume. The lady and the saleswoman were ap- proaching the front of the shop where I was standing. What followed could not escape me. “ We are very much obliged to you, Mrs. Blank.†“ I’m sure the obligation is on my part,†was the gracious response, “ for a prettier gown l have rarely seen in my life. You don’t know how pleased I am at seeing it.†“ Thank you, indeed, for your good opinion. Good morninO." “ Good morning." The pretty lady had reached the door, which was held open by a page in buttons, when she suddenly seemed to remember something. “ By the way,†she said, “ I forgot to ask the price of the gowu. How much is it ?" “ Seventeen hundred dollars,†was the calm answer. “ Isn’t that rather high ?†suggested the lady, as the ordinary woman might have suggested that peaches at sixty cents a basket were high. “ No, I think not, replied the sales- woman, as demure as ever, and appar- ently also looking at the transaction as the most commonplace thing in the world. “You know it’s an exclusive design and the very latest importation. Then the for trimmingâ€"†“Yes, Isuppose that’s true; I had forgotten it. All right, be sure and get it round early.†' And the thing was over. A dress costing seventeen hundred dollars had been bought by' this woman as freely as the average maid would have bought a kerchiet‘. It hadn't even occurred to her to ask the price, except as an after- thought. ~_ And that is the whole tone in New York to-day. It is the Era of Burning Money. There are bonï¬res at every corner of Fifth Avenue, from Twenty- third street to Forty-second street, and they are being fed with greenbacks at a rate that would have made the ancients, fabled for their luxury, store and write themselves down novices. This dress transaction that I have attempted to describe is simply an incident, and a very small and unimportant one; an in- cident that is repeating itself in scores of shops every day, almost every hour of every. day, In the jeweller's, the florist’s,_the furnisher’s. everywhere it is the sameâ€"New York Post. The Religion of Labor. Herbert S. Bigelow, in the pulpit of the Vine street Congregational church, on the evening of Sunday, February 25th, spoke on “ The Religion of La- bor,†quoting: as a text from Z lla's nov- cl on Labor: "I wish that some one would preach to the world the religion of labor, and sing hosannahs to labor, as to a saviour, the only true source of health, peace and happiness.’ “ A nameless Jew, in a little volume of poems which the Christian has incor- porated in his Bible and calls the Book of Psalms, long ago voiced a sentiment which deserves emphasis in the pnlpits of to-day: ‘ I had fainted, unless I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.’ " Religious faith cannot be nourished forever on speculations as to the future. It is not enough that the priest should assure us that righteousness is to tri- umph in the land of the dead. We want to see a progressive revelation of the goodness of God in the land of the living. “ Last Sunday morning the patrol waggou was summoned to one of the hovcls on the river-front to get an old woman and take her to the hospital. This is the reporter’s description of all that these wretcheshad to call a home : ‘ The floor, which was so sunken that it was hard to walk over it, was devoid of carpet or other covering. On the thin walls newspapers had been tacked up to keep out a little of the wintry air, but the cracks about the floor were wide enough to admit the winds from the river in full force. Poverty, distress, destitulion were on every hand. The woman was so emaciated that it seemed little short of a marvel that the poor old body could have sustained life in such surroundings.’ ' “ Tell me, you very reverend doctors of divinity, did your God ordain that? Is such poverty necessary in the world which he has made? Dare you apolo- gize for such decay of human life as something inevitable, and still ask us to believe in the impartial love of the hen- venly Father? By such a gospel you are driving the deepest religious natures out of your churches, and ï¬lling your pews with men who are Christians in nothing but name.â€â€"-â€"C’incinnat£ paper. Standard Oil Co. Dividends. In the last six Oil Company has paid $243,000,000 in dividends. In other words, the Amer- ican people have been extorted on the little item of oil in six years enough to build and equip a four track railroad from New York to San Francisco, and ï¬t it with the ï¬nest depots. Would it be better for the people of the United States to have such a railroad and own it, or to have that sum go into the pock- sis of the oil trust? That is a question for you, as an American citizen, to ans- wer to yourself, for yourself, and for your countryâ€"if you have any country. Some people can’t. see how the Govern- ment could get money enough to build railroads. The capitalists know how to get enough money. Thcyget it from, the people by overcharging them for" service. If the Government did the same, the people would still own the overcharge. Now the capitalists own it. Is your prejudice too strong to think without your party heeler telling you what to think ?-â€"Appeal to Reason: 0*. Direct Legislation. Senator Clark, of Montana, has a mine for which he is said to have re- fused 3500,000,000. It is capable, it is said, of producing 3180000000 per year. That makes him easily the rich- est. man in the world. But how did he become the owuer of “ The Great Verde†mine? The people once owned it; how much did they get for it? Never mind answering these ques-- tions; answer this one: Why do the- people so often give valuable franchises and gifts of land for a song? Will they ever learn that it is because their rep- resentatives do not represent them, but act as traitors and betray them into the hands of the enemy ? When we secure Direct Legislation we will soon have Public anership and everything else we think worth having. o- The Diamond Match 00:, an inter- national trust headed by the Goulds, is about to establish a factory in Manila. Cheap labor is the inducement. Twenty-ï¬ve thousand men are idle in Vienna, and great suffering is reported among the laboring people. The troops recently ï¬red upon a lot of hungry men and women. Strikers and troops at Barcelona, in Spain, engaged in street ï¬ghts last week.- ’l‘hc men are asking a living wage. An- 0 her instance of the identity of' the in4 {crests of capital and labor. years the Standard- 'â€".‘ «EHâ€"I. i I}, j,\â€".-.--«._â€"_v, m a , [an r ‘3?) , tn; ‘3?" ~ .. . .r 7388-“ ‘2‘ x. . dingo-pg.