,g “1.. r -.. 'R. J McLauanm, K. G. A. M. FALTON, B. A. ' owest rates on terms 'BARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY i / Binmsrnas, SOLIUITORS, Ste. or- ‘F. D. Moons. . I W ‘ class order. V OL. XXXV. l’roiessional Cards. ,___._....5 LEGAL. F. A. MCDIAKMID. PARRISTER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE ) 1011 Falls. Oliice, Colborne street opposite Postâ€"oflice. pa? Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. W McLAUth LIN, PEEL &.‘FALTON, Panmsrnns, SOLICITORS AND NOT- . Ofï¬ces over Dominion Bank, ) aries. Lindsay. Branch ofï¬ce open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. ' JAs. A. PEEL. W G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &o. SOLICITOR FOR theOntario Bank. Money to loan at to suit the borrower. Ofï¬ces: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- say, Out. STEWART 8: O’CONNOR, to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner or Kent and York streets, Lindsay. ‘ T. STEWART. L. V. O’Coxxon, B. A MOORE. a JACKSON, (ice, William street,bindsay. A. JACKSON ,__._--o AUCTIONEER. . ,_ FELIX A. roan-my, PUBLIC AUCTIONEER. Farm and other sales conducted in ï¬rst- ' Secure dates before adver- tising. Address, Fenelon Falls. / STE 9 HEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer W rite for dates before advertising. ///# MEDICAL. ‘ :_â€"’_-,/ DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"--M.D., c. u, it. a. c 3. Eng, :1. o. r. .e 3., Our, F. T. M. s.â€"- HYSICIAN, SURGEON tit ACCOUCH- our. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenelon 1‘ 8.115. ___________’___._’â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" DR. A. WlLSON, -â€"-M. 3., M. c. P. c 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON 85 ACCOUCII eur. Ollice, Colborne Street, h‘enelon Falls. ____’____’___________._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" an. as. B. ANHIS, ,Eyesight Specialist. Successor to R. R. Milne, D. 0. Olï¬ce and Parlors, 92 Kent street (over ' Neill’s shoe store), L nasay - On , Special attention. given to examining and treating the eye with proper lenses if required. > Lenses, Eyeglasses and Spectacles ï¬tted and adjusted. V Hours, 0 to 5, Saturday evenings, and by appointment. W'__.____â€"-â€"-â€"’â€"â€"_â€"_â€"-.â€"â€"_. l“â€" . ‘- â€" DENTAL . #Mrâ€"f’f Dr. S. J. SIMS, DEHTEST, Fonelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OF-FIOE zâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street . ______________.._â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€" DRS. NEELllliDS & IRVINE, nrxrlsrs, - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid ï¬ts in artiï¬cial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great sue.ess. VOICE CULTURE AND PIANO. LILLIAN c. wusou, A. T. c. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of Toronto Conservatory of Music. Gold Medalist of Whitby Lndies’ College. Voice and piano pupils accepted. Apply at studio. Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone N0. 20. 31 8111 Ems?"- on is. an We want you to see it. Itexplains its ood than we could do? ‘ You will notice ï¬rst of all that it is particularly large. We wanted it that way so that every demand of our customers could be met. - _ We dislike very much be- ing unable to meet a person’s -‘ idea of what is proper. It is not very we cannot cisely what is wanted. You are invited to call. We want our _ often that plck from our stock something that is pre- EOOO GOO 000 000 000 000 errant, FENELON FALLS. MONTREAL. ESTABLISHED 1817. INCORPORATED EIY Ac-r or PARLIAMENT. $14,400.000.00. $11,000,000.00. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $922,418.31. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR Deposits taken of $1 points far better ] friends and custOmers to know that from this date we make up only our own goods, and that we will in no cars price goods b pedlars. has been built 8 manufacture at any. ought from shoddy Our reputation and business up on the best of ma.- terials and workmanship, and we still wish- to Imaintain it. Hence'this notice. 3. J. 'TOWNLEY. '\. .icrrflw‘i/ . ' fort and durability. You cannot fail to be interested if you call. W. to wear are the shoes to be had here. They are right in quality and style. I SHOE MAKING in its highest development is apparent'in every department of this store. -The shoes rep- resent the acme of style, com- L.aossen. Q Q Q i Q Q i i Q Q Q Q Q i and offal. gathering nuts. -' individuals. that the machines would obey the laws of nature and turn out their products’under the hands of Ship- . ,labor, just the same under collective ownership, as they do under individual ._ownership. But the peeplc “he think. HEAD OFFICE - CAPITAL - REST .. and upward. ‘ Deposits can MANAGER. Question and Answer. “What would become of the poor if it was not for the rich? come of the world if all were poor, and it there were no wealthy people to give us work and lend us money ? â€â€"â€"J. G. lila- rme City, Michigan. . 1 They would all starve to death of course i The sun would no longer shine the rain would no longer fall, birds would no longer blossom, and the earth would no longer yield its fruits and grains and metals and minerals, because the ab- sa‘jnoce off ricth men would upset the Oper- 1 use na'ureandl “iv-r7†' ' a stand-still ! Jim 8 m 01) thng to , 1t 1s horrible to think of a condition that would furnish no rich parasites to revel in champagne and roast duck so that the poor might exist on garlic sbup it is a glorious provision of nature that makes a few squirrels rich so that the poor squirrels can get a job _ _ it is fortunate that there are rich birds to lend the poor birds money with which to build their I It would be a thing to .have no rich monkeys in the African Junglcs to rent the cocoanut groves to.the poor monkeys. How could the American bison have existed had it- uot been for bull’alo landlords to provide the poor of the band a feeding ground. There are people who think that the earth would be just as fertile if owned . by the people as a whole, or if not own- ed at all, as it new is when owned bv These same people think in every factory itl‘vle nests. withdrawn on demand. R.‘M. HAMILTON, 000000300000000000 W What would beâ€" dreadful man, although they began their career" as decidedly poor-,peopie. They were' under the necessity of digging and spin: o ning for themselves, but were. not under" ~> the necessity of giving part- of their 0 [crops to a landlord, or part of the cloth ' that live \‘vove to a factory owner. Some‘ think that since the world did not then come to an end for want of landlords and capitalists, it might possibly re- volve regularly around the sun it" the rich exploiters who, like the Eden scrâ€"~ pent, crept into the world, were all ~ab0l-' ished. Those undesirable citizens who" think that Adam really got. along withâ€" out. capitalist-s or a capitalist system of industry, think also that the working“. men and women of to-day can do as; well. and better if they can get access to the- land and the looms without beingheld up for tribute by some capitalist who owns these necessities but does not use them. ' Reverse your question, and ask your« self how the rich could get along with-- out the poor. What would become‘o'f the world and the people in it without the» men and women whose labor produces everything that is produced? The men and women who make things are neces- sary ; the men and women who make no- thlng, but consume champagne and silk, are unnecessary, and the world will be better when such are made to dotheir share of the world's work. When the idlers are compelled to go to work or quit consuming what the in- dustrious have made, all will be rich; for there would be plenty for all-if that plenty were not hogged by a. few. .Soci- alism would make all rich by removing the burden that keeps the majority poor. This thoughtis not popular with the rich of to-day, who get theirexcessive wealth not by labor, but by absorbing the wealth that labor has created. it Should be popular with the many prop». .. ortyless workers, Since it willrcnder to them what they never yet enjoyedâ€"ex- act justice. it will restore to the work- ers the land and the tools made and de- veloped by many generations of their la- her, and will enable the rich man to re- main rich if he will do his part in proâ€" ducing wealth. ' The poor would become rich if it were not for the rich and their capitalist sys- tem of exploiting laborers. The world would do well to establish, as it can, an industrial system without. either private omployers or money lendcrs.--Appe€ll ‘0 Reason. ._....-_.â€"._â€"â€"'. .- oâ€"â€"~ Criminal Foolishness. The government has just paid $6,000,â€" 000 for the battleship “Kansas.†This ship has been built for the purpose of killing people and destroying wealth, and it costs $2,000 a day to pay the ex- penses of keeping this destructive ma- chine in commission. For a. government to expend six million dollars to furnish men with employment to produce wealth or to save lives would be wicked, be- cause it would be socialistic. What a. brilliant thing it is for people, all of whom want life and want wealth, to exâ€" pend millions on machinery to destroy - wealth and kill each other ! Can people be sane who vote to approve such crimâ€" inal foolishness ‘2 But it suits the purâ€" pose of the rich, who use these machines to force their shoddy wares into'foreigu markets, and it suited the contractor, who probably got four millions in proï¬t out of the wage-slaves who built the. Millions for war aiidiwoï¬t, but note. cent for peace and industry! Inâ€" dustry is not respectableewar is the only royal and noble occupation.’ A So- thesc revolutionary thoughts are brandâ€" ed fools, anarchists and undesirable ettizcns. These undesirable citizens "‘0 so far in their folly as to assert that the poor can get along without the rich betâ€" ter than the rich can get along without the poor. They even assert ‘that the man who works is the onlv necessary man. They imagine that the world could get along without the rich parasite fully as well as a hive of bees gets alonn' withâ€" out its ostraciscd drones. c There is a story about a man named Adam. who was turned into this world to hustle for himself, with no other pos- sessrons but his labor power and a ï¬gâ€" leavf breech-clout. There is no record of a landlord to supply him with a gar- den spot, of a money shark to lend him the price of his ï¬rst shanty, or of-a capâ€" tain of industry to give him a job. A troublesome poet, who had the bad habit of mtxrng economics with his rhymes, was moved by the story of Adam to ask the following question : i ‘ “ When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman 2’ †cialist government would use that six millions in building decent homes for the'working people. But Socialism is a thing to be hated and feared: so your masters tell you. -â€"-Ibid. - “ ,.. ‘. .____‘._â€"-.__â€" ‘A Prosperous Country. There's proof of the country's prosperâ€" ity on every side. i. read the other day how Mrs. Henderson, of Se‘dalia, walked ninety miles, and carried her little blind boy to Kansas City in search of work. She weighed ninety pounds, and the ba» by weighed seventeen‘pouuds. She had only one meal a. day, and the last two days had nothing to out. A negro family gave her shelter one. night. White folks were too nice to take her in without money. Yes, there is no doubt about the country being prosperous and being govâ€" crned by honest Christian people. 311‘ any one asks you, tell them that we have the best government on earth ; that our peoâ€" ple are the richest and wisest and most humane. That the government sees that no one is oppressed. Socialists who .It would seem that Adam and his good would change all such things are public wrfe got along fairly well Without a rich enemies, of c0urse.â€"~-F-red. J). Warren. W M†rinse nears sweeten. snvmcs DEPARTMENT. Interest ailowed on deposits from date of ï¬rst deposit to date of withdrawal at the current rate compounded FGUR_ times a year. Toronto and Lindsay cheques negotiated at par. PENELON FALLS BRANCH. a. BESHBP, maria. BANK 0F OPEN FROM 9 TO 6. SATURDAYS 9 TO 9. ,.. ~<;:“::;:Â¥~?_‘,. " ‘i ’1‘. v x. ' r flaky-pa. .. v: n.‘ :. I