Professional Cards. LEGAL. W. NICLAUGHLIN. MGDIARNIID 8:. PEEL, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Office: Kent-St., opposite Market. Feuel‘on Falls Ofï¬ce: Over Burgoyneh Co’s store. The Een‘elcn Falls ofï¬ce will be open every Wednesday afternoon from arrival of tram from Lindsay. 5&3?†Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MCLAUGHLXN. F. A. McDIAuMID J. A. PEEL. ____.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- Cr. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &'c. SQLICITOR. FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at c'v‘vcst rates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofï¬ces: No. 6-, William Street South], Lind- ay, Out. ____________________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"-.'â€"-'_-‘ STEWART & O’CONNOR, BARRISTERS, NOT-ARIES, &c. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and Y6rk streets, Lindsay. STEWART. L. V. O’Coxuon, B. A. __________.____.__..â€"â€"â€"â€" MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, 850. Of- ï¬ce, William street,Lindsay. F. D. Mocha A. Joncou .______._.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"vâ€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€": ' MEDICAL. , SEWâ€"f! DR. H. H. GRAHAM. 0., 0. 1a., M. n. as. Eng., no.9. a. 3., Can, u. 'r. u. s.â€"- HYSICIAN, SURGEON 8: ACCOUCH- eur. Oï¬ice. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. ________________._____â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"- on. A. WILSON, â€"-nt. 3., u. c. P. a s., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- our. Oï¬ice, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. ___________._.__â€"a DENTAL. W" Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed aCcordiug to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, 001- orne street ___'_____’_______._..__._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- wâ€" . Dr. NEELIINDS, 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. 5%†Dr. Neolands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur 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 ï¬t after having eight sets of teeth made in Toronto and elsewhere. w W. H.'GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all.other anaesthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. .4 set of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. SECOND DIVISION COURT ~0F THE-â€" County of Victoria. .â€".â€"â€"-â€"- ext sittings of the above Court will 1lcllceli‘eld in Dicksoms hall, Fenelon Falls, ON MONDAY, JULY 7th, 1902, at 1 o’clock in the afternoon. -sdav June 27th will be the last day Eiluslervicb on defendants resrdmg in this coutnv. Defendants living in other coun~ ties must be served on or before Saturday, June 213t- E. C. EDWARDS, Bailiï¬. chlon Falls, April 15th, 1902. / KAWARTHA LAKES. The TRENT VALLEY NAVIGATION 00., LIMITED. commencing E. D.HAND, Clerk. BOBGNYGEON, STURGEON Pl‘., LINDSAY. Slr. Esturion or Mani a. May 1 to 31 and Oct. 1 to close of navig’n, Arr 5 30 p. m. bca eon lv 8 00 a. m. Eindsgyg arrlO 30 “ Lv 300 H Calling at Sturgeon Point on signal. Fenelon Falls agt., D. Gould, telephone ' ' ’ exchange. Who ’3 Your Tailor P i 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. J. L. Arnold. SQLE LOCALAG‘ENTS son “a My Spring Stock of BOOTS AND SHOES has arrived, and contains a number of new styles, and the prices will be found lower than I ever had the pleasure of of- ferng you before. W. L. ROBSON. It you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes ‘1†invariably he will tell you ‘ TOWNLEY-’ 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¬rst-class style and workmanship. He makes no other. . . . ' “ILâ€: ' FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 9TH, 1902. est injustice for the wealthy, whose lives are surrounded and embellished by la-v bor’s work, to have a superabundancc‘ of the money which represents the ag» gregate of labor in any country, while the laborer himself is kept so steadily at work that he has no time to acquire the education and reï¬nements of liter which would make him and his family agreeable companions to the rich and cultured. The reason why I am a Christian Socialist comes in just here. “ I would takeâ€"not by force, butvby the slow process of lawful acquisition through better legislation, as the out- 3;, come of a wiser ballot in the hands of 2, ~ men and womenâ€"the entire. plant that ‘ we call civilization, all that has been achieved on this continent in the four hundred years since Columbus wended his way hither, and make it the coma mon property of all the people, requir-s- ing all to work enough with their hands to give them the ï¬nest physical devel~ opment, but not to become burdensome in any case, and permitting all to share alike the advantages of education and reï¬nement. lectly practicable; indeed, that'any oth- . er method is simply a relic of barbarism. “I believe competition is doomed. The trusts, whose single object is to abolish competition, have proved that we are far better without than we are with it, and the moment corporations control the supply of any product, they combine. that the corporation of humanity should control all rades, this is the frictionless way; it is the higher way; it eliminates the mo- tives for a selï¬sh life; it enacts into our every-day living the ethics of Christ’s gospel; nothing else can bring the glad day of universal brotherhood.†ARE YOU INTERESTED IN WRITE _______â€"___â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€" manhood from useful toll on the speci- ous plea of patriotism. off to the other side of the world to ï¬ght against men with whom we have no quarrel, whom we do not even know, the merits of whose case we do not un- derstand. When our boys pillage and burn and slay, we applaud their gal- lantry. When the tables are turned, when the messenger of death lets out a brave Canadian soul, and the body lies neglected with the numberless dead in an African trench, we name it heroism, and Canada weeps at the loss of her sons. desperate stand, where the boys met death calmly, the martial spirit swells, and we congratulate ourselves that Can- ada has furnished the only real ï¬ghting men in Britain’s legions. tetlch of the flag. farmers of South Africa? What have they done to us that we should send our men to burn their homes? No- thing; positively nothing. gleam? Who owns the gold mines for NGS? Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings, Diamond Rings. GED. W. BEALL, THE JEWELLER, .7, Lindsay, For particulars. You will save a money. You can rely on what you get. The Martial'Spirit Thrives. We take the flower of our Canadian We ship them When the wires tell us of a last Such is the But what quarrel have we with the Then for whom does the bayonet which these nations ï¬ght? Do we, the people, own them ? No: capitalists in London own them. Will the people own them when the war is over? Not at all. The rights of the capitalists must be protected, al- though the cost may stagger humanity. Then this is a capitalist war. All these thousands of men who clothe themselves in khaki and march to the grave to the strains of martial music, all these are ï¬ghting for the capitalists who own the gold mines. What do the capitalists do for them? They give them 24 cents a day. They deck them in the livery of death, and furnish them with tools with which to slay their fel~ low men. The dead lie where they fell, forgotten on the bloody ï¬elds of Paardeberg or Magcrsfontein. The maimed can care for themselves or be- come mendicantsâ€"a charge on charity. The survivors go home when the was is over. and help pay off the debt created by the war.- Some they mark as heroes, and place them on a pedestal, to be an idolized example for the imitation of rising generations. Priests are paid to pray for their souls. ‘,Kings condesccnd to use some of the power the people have given them to ecufer on these sol- diers an empty title. Newspapers flat- ter them and praise their gallantry. Tales are told and poems written of how some warrior bold climbed over dead men to a throne. So the martial spirit thrives. But the man behind the gun ? The man from Canadaâ€"what about him? Well, if he is not killed or does not lose any of the larger sections of his anato- my, he may come home and look for a job on a farm. ' What fools these mortals belâ€"San- don, B. 0., Paystreak. Why Miss Willard Was a Socialist. At the National W. C. T. U. Conven- ti0n at Buffalo, in 1897, Miss Frances E. Willard said : “Look about you; the products of labor are on every hand; you could not maintain for a moment a well-ordered life without; every object in your room has on it, for discerning eyes, the mark of ingenious tools, and the pressure 0 labor’s hands. well-supplied whose toil furnishes the food? Why should the man who warms himself by the ï¬re forget the man whose labor in the forest or in the mines brings forth the fuel ? Why should the man clothed in the best product of the loom forget the man whose calloused hands make ï¬ne clothes possible? Both the con- sumer and the producer are necessary, but of the two the producer comes ï¬rst in point of time and in portance. in beauty and shedding its fragrance in the air, despise the roots of the bush because they come in actual contact with the soil? Destroy leave the roots, and a second bud will appear, as beautiful and as fragrant: as the ï¬rst; but destroy the roots, and the bud and bush will both perish.â€" John Mullwlland. f a thing unknown before But is it not the cruel. I believe this to be, per- What the Socialist desires is production. Beloved com- "0+0 All Men Will be Brothers. ._..-â€"- Under Socialism all men will be as brothers, because there will be no un- brothcrly environments. have conflicting personal interests; will not have to compete with each other for employment, for selling articles, for the possession of wealth. Employment will be accessible to each and all on equal conditions and pay. the whole product of labor, and that will be all each can consume; and more ‘ ' would be not only superfluous but actu- ally a burden. skimping and saving against a possible day of want, or to give the children a start in life. enter life as rich as the parents left it. No chicanery could disinherit them. If they would perform their part of social; labor, they would have all the good; things of life. There would be no spec- ulation, no 'chance, no unproductive ef~ fort, no disappointment and despair. Life would be pleasure from the cradle to the grave. that kings and Capitalists oppose, be- cause, like the workingxpeople, they do not understand it. down the -â€"Appeal to Reason. Men will not The pay will be There would be no The children would each: This is the condition . But it is coming path of time, just the same. - Why F rget ? Why should a man who cats at a table forget the man- point of im- Shall the rosebud, blooming the bud and 0-0 The czar has more than a million ot‘ his subjects in prison for thinking. The real battle is not between the helpless workers, black, white or yellow. The real battle is between all who are, laborers, on the one hand, and all who are exploitcrs of labor, on the other. Five years ago, says a correspondent, locks and bars were unknown in Hawaii. Since the Americans appeared there thefts have become very commonâ€"â€" 4 Cir: lIMIW. -â€"-well, just a few. wt" J4"4>v‘ or «gnaw.mwmus “Lawn. .mz'uu'. - .- A 75C: 2mg ; '5‘) ‘ 1“ , I ,,‘ l git . , .. l: it .4.