“ ‘ ‘ v Lugfsrrsg... u v .1 - . . ..-. .ns _V___...~._.. «:A. . . ~1\. .... '.I s,va U‘A‘a 5.5,. - .._...,_ ‘_ , the average, for $8 00, Professional Cards. LEGAL. MCLAUGHLIN, MCDIARMID , ’ & PEEL, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fcnelon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Kent-Sh, opposite Market. . Fenelon Falls Office : Over Burgoyne 8r. Co’s Store. The Pension Falls office will be open every ,Wednesday afternoon from arrival of train from Lindsay. Whl‘oncytovloau on real estate. at lowest current rates. R. J. Mchantm. F. A. MGDIARMID J. A. Post. ‘G. H. HOPKINS, BARRISTER', as. ‘S'QLIC'IT'OR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at jewcst rates on‘terms to suit the borrower. Emcee ": No. 6, William Street South, Lind; ay, Ont. as “You INTERESTED IN NS? Engagement Rings. ..: Wedding Rings, Dian‘lhml Rings. WRITE use. w. BEALL,‘ STEWART a O’CONNOR, _ ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &'c. MONEY . toloan at lowest current rates. Terms. ‘to suit bor‘roivers. Ofï¬ce‘on "COruer of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. . p ' 'T. S‘Tswan-r. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A For particulars. You will save money. You can rely on what you get. Our first consignment oi Slater {Shoes ior Spring and summer ‘trade has (arrived. MOORE &.'JAUKSON~, r _ ARRISTER-S, SOLIUITORS,&c. OF B lice, William s tree’s, Lindsay. ' AJscxâ€"sos The Future Farmer. F. D. Moon‘s. When the ï¬rst shoe factory or wagon factory was built, the shoemakers and wagonmakers did not go out of business. V MEDICAL. V â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€".._â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" . ,_.____.â€"__.__.__.._ , _ __ , DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-M.D., 0. 3L, n n. ’c s. Eng, M.C. P. a s., Om, s. 'r. M. s.;- : HYS-ICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- . cu'r. Oflice. Francis Street, Feuelcn Falls. Q- All the latest styles and best qualities of leather. It required some time’for the new and better methods to supply the demands. But they ï¬nally disappeared. The ï¬rst few scientiï¬cally managed farms, em- bracing machinists, chemists, managers, and every technical knowledge that can be used, are here. The small farmer is here too, and will remain a few years longer, but he is doomed to extinction. The present methods of farming, im- proved as they are over the methods of days gone by, are very crude and waste- ful. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, in a recent article for the press, stated that he saw in the near future a system of giganting farming that would create a. greater change in that industry than in any of the industries that have been revolutionized by modern methods. The waste of raising crops on small farms is beyond computation. The machinery and technical knowledge for scientiï¬c farming is not possible of application to a farm of less than thousands of acres, and the greater the farm the more ad- vantages can he used. Even to-day the successful farmer has to how much ma- chinery, must be a good business man, and requires much technical knowledge; The machinery that will produce the great results will be such as will cost more than the average large farm, but it will handle thousands of acres as eas- ily as a few hundreds. The government reports have shown that wheat can be raised at a labor cost of less than four cents a bushel, that core can be raised for eleven cents, and so on. With all these facts staring them in the face, is it not time that farmers were ï¬nding out “ where they are at? †What of the future? Do they think that they can compete with such meth- ods? And when there are sufï¬cient of these rapidly increasing farms to supply the annual product, do they not see that - they will no more be permitted to do business than the old time shoemaker or wagonmaker? They may think it will not come in their time, but that is what the other fellows thought. And their tools are worthless and their occupation gone, just as will be the obsolete tools and occupation of the average farmer of to-day. That we are in an age of prog- ress, that machinery and methods will go on perfecting, will be admitted by all. The forward march is not going to stop for any person or any interests. If the farmers saw all these things, they would be helpless to stop it or change it. It is inevitable. The only thing that can save them and their children from serfdom to the I, you askany particularly wellâ€"dressed great corporaï¬omowm “9.0mm, man In F-enelon Falls 01‘ SulToundlng district, farms oftlle next few years, lsachangc . in the industrial system. Individually _ “Who makes your ClObheS ? †Invariably he they cannot own these gigantic farms; willjtell you nor can all of them hope to have an in- TO W NLE SE. .. terest in the corporations that will 'own them under the coming system. The Be one of the number, and call and see What he is doing for the Spring and Summer. only thing that can be done, and the thing that must be done, is for the whole S S His prices are right, consistent with ï¬rst-class - - -,stylc and workmanship. He makes no 0mg}, Prices $3.50 and $5.. DR. A. WILSON, “-‘â€"M. 13., u. c. P. e 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 8r. ACCOUCH- ee'fr. Gill-cc, Colborne Street, Femalesi Falls. , I DENTAL. or. s. .l. Sims, DENTIST, _ Fenelon Falls. Graduate of. Toronto University and Royal College of DentalSurgeons. ' ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY J.- AIIIOid. . mil-rifciimcd according to the latest improved .. * sow consonants» re? . QFFlCEzâ€"Ovcr Burgdync’s'store, 001. a V . \K V ‘ lit. REELllllDS, DEllTIS’l‘, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital-r izod air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract.- iag teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands hat he has given the gas to 186,417 per: one without an accident from the gas. ather pain obtnnders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. 33ԠDr. Neclands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neelauds that he had made her a. successful fit after . having eight sets of teeth made in Toronto and elsewhere. W My Spring Stock of BOOTS ANDISHOE‘s has arrived, and contains a number of new styles, and the prices will be found lower than I ever had the pleasure of of» fering you before. " w. H. enoss, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other antesthetics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artificial Teeth, better than Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. W. L. ROBSON. I HAVE Q PURCHASED W.MCKEOWN’S FURNITURE BUSINESS, A and will carry a large and up-to-date stock of furniture. Am also prepared to do all kinds of Carriage Making, Repairing and Repainting, and to. make DOORS AND SASH. W Planing done on short notice. Who’s Your Tailor P people to own and. operate the agricul- tural as well as all other industries of the nation, so that thc beneï¬ts coming from the improved methods shall inure to the beneï¬t of the workers in the na- tional vineyard. This is the future of farming, as Well as of other industries. There is no escaping it; 'but there will be the escaping from much suffering and misery if the people wake up soon ߣ255.;w'rv',4!«ï¬ï¬mmkunéozwlum.»dub‘ .7-‘r--..,_,,_v.33“ .‘ - _. ,._ , A ,_ J WU" . require the election of Socialist candi- xii. ;' - ate the" agricultural department, instead enough, and apply the remedy before . the ills shall have fastened themselves" is too ï¬rmly on the nation. ‘ k' The remedy is the establishment of a Socialist government. To do that will dates, for no others would or could es- tablish such a system. Under Social- ism the whole people will own and opera '*' of corporations doing it. The whole people will use the highest ideality of machinery and methods, and the whole people will get the equal beneï¬t-of such " results. Otherwise, a few people will get the beneï¬ts, while the millions who J." work in the departments will become a the mere slaves of the corporations. iii Between these conditions the farmers 1 must choose for themselves and their ‘ ; ‘i' , children. Where are you at?â€"â€"Appeal v to Reason. w.-.“ ,’~ 3 The Class Struggle. ' " 7," 'At the Denver Labor Conference, it ; Father Hagerty, of the Catholic church made an address, in which he said : a -“ The reason the average man does. not understand Socialism is because he. ' has not fully invesiigated its principles._ iii The grumblings of underpaid men, the- sad ey,es,of overworked women and the, '7'“; half’st-a‘rved condition of children call“ for a remedy, and that'l-emedy is in. Ti.) Socialism. To understand tlle'groan? - 1’5 ings of the down trodden we must labor ' 31"" and live with those who groan. As his 233 economic education goes on, his eyes .“n' are opened, and he begins to grasp the fact that in all periods of history intel- ligent discontent has been the torch- ill" bearer of progress and civilization. )‘i‘ There is no more terrible doctrine than ’5- that which teaches the poor working- 3“: man to be content. The doctrine of 'l contentment is mockery. Thé aged me. chanic who has outlived: his iieefulness and is sent to the poor-house, becomes "I" to the. public contractor an algebraic‘R ii quantity. He is taught on Sunday to: be content, and is left severely alone the Pl rest of the week. In the meantime the millionaires live in palaceshand their A sons continue to rob the people of three- fourths of what they produce, and fur. f pish them with barely enough lllbricsta ing oil to keep the machinery of life in :11"? motion. Theright to earn meat. and ' iii bread for- the body is prior to law, and A“ whenever law operates against the rights of a family it ceases to be a just law. ) The jingle of gold drowns the voice of justice, and, to straighten out the crook- ‘I’ cdness of law, courts of ~equity 'must be 1 established. ‘ “ The absolute and unbiased testimce 9‘ n'y of an editor of a New York medical ii journal shows that 30 per cunt. of those - who die are less than ï¬vevyellrs of age. ‘ Socialism would do away with this, be-. ‘ ii cause it does away with the coaditions '1‘ that bring about this mortality rate in )‘ young life. Socialism will place the man who digs in the ditch on an equal . 33’. basis with the man who guides the in- [’1‘ tricate machinery of a large manufac- turing concern. Labor is the only source of wealth, and the sole measure pf value. The only legitimate exchange is between labor and labor, and not be- tween idleness and toil. A certiï¬cate of toll is the only thing that entitles a man to be called a gentleman in any part of the world." . ‘ ‘0â€" The Testimony of Clergymen; . I): ) “ The ideal of Socialism is right. So- .- cialism is found in the New Testament." ; T â€"Rev. R. H. Macpllerson, Presbyteri- ‘5’ an, Albert, N. B. ' ' » ' “ I do not believe that if Christ were -: now on earth, he would be a member of any particular sect. But he would, in “t ‘ all probability, be a Socialist."-â€"Rev, I?! George M. Campbell, Methodist, Frede~ ' ricton, N. B. _ i " Socialism is inevitable. It is the .r . industrial movement of the world. The .. 1 '9: corporations of to-day, like ancient cone -' 77‘- querors, set their boundaries wherever ":13 they will, and disdain to regulate the ‘ 13 output to suit the needs of the common- ‘ I f wealth.â€-â€"â€"Rev. Dr. Joseph Pullman, - - President N. Y. Methodist. Conference, , l' “-9 Qo-operatiou is in the air. Winnipeg Unlonlsts are startlng a co-operative bakery, and Unionists and Socialists in l Toronto and St. Thomas have new ca- ' operative schemes at their own. ‘. The landlord who owns the land has , v . a country, and ought to be ï¬lled with 1 joy at the words “ My Country â€; but the worker who has no, home, no land, no place that he can call his oWnâ€"that 5 ’ 7‘ i one has no country. The landlord hag } ‘z ’ a country; the worker lth a grave, . . .....-..-.-... . r. ,. .,,._ . . , . ,. “‘ “'v'“'~â€" ‘ ‘ '- -vâ€"-~-\..-..l,.wy. . l ’ ....