e l 3‘ 2 ii I. ,, I W a VOL. XXX. ‘ Professional ' Cards. s sin ohm Mustc. » ._..._ _. V.,__.___.___._.___~._.__.__.â€".n has Violet M. Wilson, EACHER 0F PIANO, THEORY IAND '“ The Fletcher Music Method,†a kmder~ gal-ten method for children. Pupils may enter any time from Septem- her lst, 1902. Studio and residence: Corner Colborne and Bond streets. .mwwï¬â€"fl F. A. MCDIAKMID. ARRIS'I‘ER, SOLICITOR, &c , LINDSAY and Fcnelon Falls. Lindsay ofï¬ce, Milne’s block, near post-office. Ft-nelon Falls ofï¬ce, over J. C. lIcchgie & Co.’s Bank. The Fenelon Falls ofï¬ce will be "open every Wednesday afternoon from ur- rival of train from Lindsay. 3%“ Money to loan on real- estate at ’lcwcst current rates. » » M OLAUGH LIN ‘I & PEEL. ' ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS: the. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. Ofï¬ce, Kent street, opposite Market, ,Lindsay. ' R. J .- MoLscoan. o. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, 8w. SOLICITOR ‘FOR the Ontario Bank. illoncyto loan at owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofï¬ces: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- . ay, Out. J. A._ PEEL STEWART s O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. A T. STEWART. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A. . . mooaanaoKsorx, ' . " ARRTSTERS, SOLICITORS, Sic. Of- ' ï¬ce, William" street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON MEDICAL. .])R. up. GRAHAM. -u. 1)., c. 51., s: n. c s. Eng.,>n. c. P. s s.,‘ ONT., F. T. M. s.â€" ‘ . ' HYSTCIAN, sunoson e ACCOUCH- cur. ,Oflice. Francis Street, Feuelon , Falls. ‘ DR. A. WILSON, --n. 3., M. c. r. s s., Ontario,â€" “HYSICIAN, SURGEON «it ACCOUCH- eur. Ollice, Oolborne Street, heuelon Falls. DENTAL. Dns. .I. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenolon 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. . OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, 001- orne street W -â€"â€"-â€"-â€" ' n. Trains, DENTIST, man, 1 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- ingdeeth. .Dr. Cotton writes Dr. Neelands hat he has given the gas to 186,417 per- mns without an accident from the gas. TOther pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. 33%†Dr. rNeclands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday ofevery month. Call early . nod. secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neolands that he had made her a successful ï¬t after having eight sets of teeth made 1n Toronto and elsewhere. in. II. GROSS, DENTIST. 'The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all_other masthetics for extracting teeth Without pain. Acct of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. V‘Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot, Lindsay. W SECOND DIVISION COURT -â€"'OF THEâ€"- County of Victoria. T next sittings of the above Court will zibhceheld in Twomcy’s hall, Fenelcn Falls ON MONDAY, JANUARY lZih, 1903, commencing at 1 o’clock in the afternoon Thursday, January lst, wtll belthe last day of service on defendants residing in this county. Defendants living in other coun< ties must be served on or before Satur- day, December 27th. D HAVE) . WARDS . . . r , 3' 0 ED Bailiff. _ Clerk Fenclon Falls, Oct. 15th, 1902. Keep them warm, too. Any care that you give your feet at this time of the year will well repay you. ‘ †A maxim’says that “If your feet". are "right you are all right.†_ ' A good deal of truth in it, too. There are Rubbers here for any unuâ€" shape of shoe, almost. They are this year’s I goods---strong and durable. Put a. pair on, and your feet will never guess that the ground is wet and slushy. WWW . our Grocery stock is always com- plete. ~ I .Yl HAVE THEM"- . That is, I have what you want in the Boot and Shoe line,- and you will ï¬nd them RIGHT IN MAKE-n . RIGHT IN PRICES. ALSO" RUBBERS, among which are Lumbermen’s Armor-= proof and'Corrugated Edge. ' w. L.V..RO}BSON. Who’s Your Tailor :3 It you ask any particularly Well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?†invariably he ‘ will tell you F TOW W NLEYJ Be one of the number, and call and see. what he is doing for-the Fall landtWin’ter. ‘His pricesare right, consistent with-ï¬rstâ€"clasS, style and Workmanship. ‘He' makes no other. run ‘2 ' ARE YOU . INTERESTED IN Engagement Rings; . Wedding Rings, Diamond Rings. WRITE, ' , gEfl' w- BE‘ALL, THE JEWELLER, ' . . \leilldsayy‘ For particulnrsv'Y‘ou willsave . money. You can rely.on what you get. ' I " Labor Pays All Taxes. Do the rich pay the taxes? No. All taxes, all burdens, are paid by the pro- ducers of wealth. Without Wealth, mo- ney Would have no value, for it would buy nothingéther'e would be nothing to buy. Wealth is produced by Labor. For instance, I am a. landlord. My ten- ants pay me the money I pay in taxes. The tenants, being merchants, add the price to the goods they sell, and the consumers pay the taxes in the price of the goods they buy. ‘Thus the taxes fall on the consumers, through the chan- nel of rent in this instance. Where the customers themselves derive their living from proï¬t, they get it, ï¬nally, from those who live by producing. Thus the taxes-and proï¬ts are wholly paid by the producers. Not only are taxes paid by. the producers, but. they also pay all proï¬ts, all interest, all rentsâ€"three , names for the same foundationprinci- ple. - If a producer owns his home, he not Only, pays the taxes on it, but, through the channels of interest and proï¬t, pays the taxes on the property of the rich; for, it that were not true, no one would want to own property. If I could not collect rent (proï¬t) including: of course the taxes, I would laugh at the idea of owning property. I would not have it as a gift. The working people keep me supplied with money by reason of that OWnership. They are very foolish to support such a system, but: so long as they do I shall try to ride them, because, under the private ownership system, one must ride or be ridden. I prefer the place in the saddle on their backs. But I would more pre- fer a system that did not admit of such private ownership, and will vote for it every time I have an opportunity. Those who suffer most from the present system vote the hardest to support it. They do not know any better, because they have been mentally trained to be- _ lieve that private outnership is right. I prefer a system in which private owner- ship is not possible. 1 know I would get a great deal more out of life, and so would all'my felloWs.â€"- Wayland. 'Bloody Work of a Trust. The Hamburg and Bremen commer- cial chambers decided to join the Liv- erpool chamber of commerce in demand- ing international interference in the af- fairs of the Congo state, as the Belgian trust which bought the state from King Leopold made trade in the Congo a gi- gantic monopoly, excluding all outsrdc traders, particularly British, German and French subjects. The Belgian trust at the same time forestalls all le- gitimate competition by its system of securing the natural resources of the country by the utmost cruelty and op- pression. The natives of each district are forced to deliver up certain exorbi- tant quantities of ivory, gum, kopal, kortschuk, otc., every month; and if the required quantities are not furnish- ed, the village lose a certain number of women and children, who are sold into slavery, while the left hands of the male natives are out ofl’, the ï¬elds devastated and the huts burned. This, according to the} testimorxy of Bishop Shepherd andothcr missionaries, who witnessed the fact that. the Belgian authorities demand a certain number of human: hands, smoked to keep them from pu- ddle diuretic. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO-g FRIDAY, “NOVEMBER 14TH, 1902. cruelty and power traders cannot com- pete with it, either in quantity of pro ducts or prices, for the trust pays its enslaved laborers in powd-r and load only.â€"N. Y. Globe-Democrat. The Only Remedy. Come with me through the slums of Chicago. Never mind the rocking ï¬lth of the so-called streets that would shame a village in darkest Russia. You will presently get used to the stench of the gutters, garbage, dead rats and excrements. Peep into this hole below the ground. Human beings live there, Within a stone’s throw of the magniï¬- cent palaces tboy have built. A home- made bedstead, a little straw and dirty cotton, a few ragged and threadbare blankets, a three-legged table propped ‘ 35' against the wall, a few rickety chairs and sundry kitchen utensils form the whole wealth of the family. Offcr the “ head of the house †a Socialist‘lcaflct printed in his own language? - What? Socialism? Not for him! He is an henest man and is going [to make an honest living. He does n’t believe in if dividing up. What would become of ' the home 'I No. he will never become a Socialist, never! Poor fellow, his case is almost hopeless. Like the sick man, be will struggle with all his strength against the only remedy that will save him.-â€"-â€"Emest Unterman. 0-. Such is War. The sultan sent 1.000 troops to col- lect $200,000 tribute from the-Arabs. They paid,but_waylaid the looters. kill- ed mnny of them and retook the booty. They then took a small Turkishtown and massacred the whole population. The Turks, in another efl’ort tocollect booty. were deï¬ed by the Macedonians. The Turks put the wives and children in front of them-in their attack on the rebels; butthc Macedonians, loving lib- erty more than family, shot down every- thing before their guns, but were over- pOwered and annihilated. Such is the result of tribute getting. ' Such is war, and war is only caused, by reason of one set of men desiring to get the results of other people's labor without giving an equivalent. In" other words, all was is for proï¬t to some “one. The sultan is a fool. He should send for 3. Morgan or a Rockefeller. They can show him how to get many times as much loot as he dees, and not have an army either. That is, they do not have one, and vet gather in more than the sultan. But perhaps the sultan's subjects have a. higher estimate of liberty'than the peo- ple of Americasâ€"Appeal to Reason. Capitalists Need Paupers. Modern industry demands a reserve force of labor, which may be called into requisition on short noticeâ€. Lot up pre- mise, for the sake of illustration, that the shoe market is glutted, and the fac- tories are closed and one millionof men are deprived of employment. The stau- nation of this industry continues for two years, and in the .mcantime the ur- my of supernumcraries emigrate to a , a foreign country. The market is ï¬nally cleared, and there ,is a demand for la- borers. The capitalists cannot wait for a new generatiOn to supply the vacuum . created by the emigration of their quon- dam employees, for the shoe manufac- turer must “ make hay while the sun shines.†Therefore it is necessary to have a reserve army in readiness for the call of capitalistic generals. In Eug- land there is a constant army of 700.- 000 unemployed and 800,000 paupers, and in'times of industrial depression these ï¬gures are multiplied. In Amer- ica we have our reserve force at all times in Waiting for capitalistic exploit- ation, and this mighty array will be augmented with the centraliZution of our industries, and with the limitation of foreign trade. which essentially fol- lows the dcvelopment of foreign capital and the intensiï¬cation of competition in. the markets of the worldâ€"Rev. Father McG'rady. ' - 0‘.- The anthracite coal combine gener- ously returns to the miner one dollar for three dollars’ worth of product, and then takes the dollar back again for rent and geods. , f ' The people whoare so afraid of havâ€" ing to “ divide up,’,’,., have probably not .heardhof the dividendsby which the corporations have been “dividing up" 'treiact‘i’on‘,‘ for every shortage-in conceal the products of the workingman’s [ahac products. On account of the trust’s _ for these many years. l l I l 3’ 9, ’7’ if .V.