LEGAL. F. ’A. MCDIALH'IID.:_ ‘ Pinnrsrnn, somerrommci, rm ) ion Falls. 1 Ofï¬ce, Colborne «street opposite Post-'ollice. 3&3" Money to loot. on real estate at lowestmcui-rcn‘t‘rates? _ " notauhtihru, chm. &. .EALTON. . - ARRIS'NSltS‘,_â€SQlJClTORS'AND NOT 8‘ cries. {Ollicfes ov'er Dominion Bank Lindsay. L liran’ch oilice open at Bobcuygcon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J MCLAUGHLINJC. C. AN. FALTON,B. A JAs. A. PEEL. _________________._._â€"â€"â€"-vâ€"â€"- G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, &o. SOLICITOR FOl. the Ontario Bank. Money to loan a! owest rates on terms to suit the borrower Olï¬ces: No. 6, _William Street South, Linda“ soy, Out. ' - ’ ' STEWART a O‘CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NO'l‘ARlES, lire. MONEY to loan at-lowesi current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. - T. STEWART. ‘ L.‘V. O’Connor, B. A MOORE &"JAUK'SON, - ' . ARRlS-TERS, SOLICITORS, 3m. Of: (ice, William street,hindsay.. I . F. D Moons. n. JACKSON ‘ 'AUGTIONEER. 'FIQLIXA‘. nonrunr, rUBLIC AUCTIONEER. Farm‘ and other sales conducted in ï¬rst- cla'ss order.â€Secure' dates before adver- tising. Address, Fenelon Falls. ', S'rnrnnn‘ L OLIVER, ' " LINDSAY" r our." _. rim "jï¬tock and general Auctioneer. W "fori dz'a fore 'adyertising; ' MEDICAL, I If " ‘, DR. H. _I‘I.I'G,RAH AM. ~n.n., c. in, n, n. c 5. Eng, M. or. e 3., ' Ono, F. 'r. M. s.â€",â€" , HYSICIAN,’ SURGEON '& ACCOUCHâ€" 'eu-r‘.‘ Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenelon Fall’s. - 1 DR. A. WILSON, Lâ€"M. B.,.M. 0.12.3. 8., Ontario,_â€"â€" 4 , HYSICIAN, SURGEON & AOCOUGH 'e‘urf. 'Qilice, Colberne Street, Fenelon- Fails.;" M as. .re. shoals, ,- Eyesight Sgecinlist. Successor to R. R. Milne, B. 0. Ofï¬ce and Parlors, 92 Kent street (over ’ Neill’s shoe store), ,Lin (lsay â€" Ont. Special attention given to examining and treating the eye with proper lenses if required. . ‘ Lenses, Eyeglasses and Spectacles ï¬tted and adjusted. Hours, 9 to 5, Saturday evenings, and by appointment; ' . a. ':. MM ' DENTAL. MM or. s. J. suns, oEnnsr, Fenclon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latcstimprovcd » methods atmoderate prices. OFFICE :â€"â€"0ver Burgoyne’s store, 001- - i one street ____‘__,__________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"‘ : DRS. NEELllllDS & IRllilE, nerrlsrs, _ - ’ 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 suciess. gr voter cuuunr m PIANO. . LILLIAN G. WILSON, A. T. C. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of ' f Toronto Conservatory of Muiio. Goldi 01‘ lodnlist ol' Whitby Lndiu’ College. V clue and piano pupils accepted. Apply at studio, Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone No. 20. Sl-am - 4 _. ~l ., t ’11 .Vte‘i; A r.- t and duraili Ins..- ',_"u0NE 31mm iHAN tory in every iiil Way, When tile-y; lay-e I aside for-thalast time. _ p ‘ “Worn out,pbut-they have earned __ their cost. V‘No longer of any use, but'they’ve -been neliable+trustworthy -~ ~dependable, -‘every‘ minute ‘ ' since I bought them.†' This is v something that, we try to. have true of every†Shoe that we sell. _ must earn its cost by :pproper service. Take “a look atour spring -. '1 “stock. - - - - ~~ . - , i T†g i. ARNOL V Echelon v ‘ Vie want our friends andcustomers to know that from this date we make up only our own goods, and that we will :in' no case ,manufacture at any price, goods bought from- _. shoddy Our reputation and business. pedlars. has been built please :us must usage you. " To please‘you it . giving . galls. up on the best of ma.- terials and workmanship, and we still wish to maintain it. Hence this notice. _ J. .3. Townnnv. - inner on] ' .- . ty. ion cannot fail to be interested if you call. W. FIT FOR _ A KING to wear are the shoes to be had here. They are right in . quality and style. SHOE MAKING in its highest development is apparent in every department of this store. The shoes rep- resent the acme of style, com- L. ROBSON ‘ - with [startlingnjmoidity ; upon the other, _drastic measures are evcrinore adopted ruling class. The capitalist class is in lessness and misery are logical conse- ' tiou, the resources of the earth and the ' working class as though they had a ball , century. Between slaves and masters moo oooooOooobooooooa :ssilii 20; Farrier; FALLS. 7 . . ,‘nmnï¬prmé‘sg. MQNTREAL. ' ESTABLISHED. 1817.-. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL " $14,400,000.00. REST .- - ~$11,000.000.00. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $922,418.3Lv , l sivnosrirr 96 i 'i l l; 9 DEPhBTMENT. lNTEREST Aunts-roan TIMES A Van! Deposits taken of $1 . andupwardaj ‘ Deposits can? be, ' withdrawn on demand. a. M.HAMILTON, Q Q I'MANAGER.’ 0 § oooo<>oo<>ooc>ooc>ooc>o l i o o O i 9. l l 9, i 9,, i g Q i l l The Class Struggle. The present system of property in the resources of the oarthand the tools of, production divides human society into gtwo warring factions, the capitalist - class and thogworkingclass. Between themtherc exists a conflict of,interest tliatpis irrepressible. It will not down. The result is that human affairs are-kept in a continual turmoil. Peace-and harâ€" mony are impossible. Upon the oile hand rebellious outbreaks follow each other to‘quell the outbreaks 'and preserve the property rights and privileges of the every sense .a. ruling class. vIts power arises solely from that fact. The work: '1ng class 15 an enslaved class: Its help- quenccs. The capitalist class holds ab- solute control of the means of precinc- tools of industry. As a result of this, they hold as complete mastery over the and chain on each worker‘s leg. From this point of vantage the capitalists can as elfectnally dictate terms to the workâ€" ers as could the chattel slave masters of 'old to those they held in bondage. No master ever hold such unlimited mastery over his slaves as the capitalâ€" ists. No master class was ever saddled with so little responsibility towards those over whqu it exercised its rule as .the commercial and industrial high- binders and despots of this twentieth there can be no peace so long as the de- .sire for freedom is not dead in the breast of the slave. So long as the spark of manhood still flickers in the slave, he will concoct schemes of rebellion and revenge when the lush of the master beâ€" comes no longer tolerable. Eventually, his schemes of rebellion will give way to revolutionary action for the purpose of striking the letters from his limbs and attaining his freedom. " ' The‘capitalist class maintains its con- trol of industry, and‘the consequent on- slavemen’t of the workers, *by means of the state." This is essentially a ruling class institution. It decides whore title to property in the means of production shall rest, and protects the ownch of it against such assaults as may be made upon them. Without the organized pow- ers of the state at their command, the capitalists could not for a moment mainâ€" tain their mastery over the workers and continue their scheme of robbery upon them. The state exists. It safeguards the interests of capital at every point. whatever direction it may threaten. Its tentacles reach out into every quarter of human activity, ready, at a moment's notice, to throttle any treason to the rule of capital that may spring up. So long as control of the state by the capitalist class remains unchallenged by OPEN 'lOII 9 TO 6. SATURDAVS 9 TO 9. " the working class, the latter can redress o 110 grievances 1101' SGGlll't‘ any [)t‘l‘lllllllulll} betterment of the conditions surroundâ€" ing them. This is such a. selfâ€"evident proposition that evidence in support of it would be" superfluous. The workers of every country on earth are beginning to challenge the capitalist state. They" purposoto strip the capitalists of their control of its powers and use these pow- ers in their own behalf, by (‘lestroying capitalist ownership'and control offliua dustry, and substituting "in place ownership and control thereof by‘ tho Iworking class-itself. With control oi the state goes the control of industry. 80 long as this control remains in the hands of the capitalists they are masâ€" ters, and the workers are'slaves. Once this control is assumed by‘the workers, the masters are put out of business and the workch are free. Free, becaus‘e'no longer plundered oftho products of their labor by a gang of useless, parasitical and rullianly rulers. The struggle be- tween the capitalist class and theiworkw ing class for control of the state is the class struggle. The former struggle to retain it ; the latter to seize it. A Spa‘smodic and intermittent nets of rebellion .on thohpart‘of slaves is no part 'of a class struggle. They are buttho premonitory symptoms 'of n struggle to come. When an enslaved class grapples with a master class for the purpose of breaking'its fettcrs, a class struggle-is on. With the breaking of the letters, human society moves forward one stop in the evolutionary process towards a higher and better civilization. The pre- liminary skirmishes which pros-age the rapid approach of the classstruggle be- tween -the, capitalists: and the workers are now on in _nearly every country of the earth. It needs no prophet to foresee , , the culmination of that struggle within the-next two decades. Let it come:â€" , ll'm'zcouver, B. 0., ll’estern Clarion. 44'» "Yes, Why Do n’tVThey ? “Farmers say they-cannot get help enough. If so, why do n‘t thosein the cities, who are ‘out of work, take this farm work ? "4â€"H; T. C'I'ossu‘ell, _;l[crcci‘,_rlle. . There are only a few weeks in thoyear when the farmers need more hands than they can get. For these few weeks‘ labor men in the cities cannot aliord to pay rail roadifarc, even they knew just at Eivlfat'ï¬ioint they we're “needed, and it‘ they knew that- othcr‘ 'fellows like them had not already started for the same place. Butthe men in the cities do NOT know on what farm, they are wanted, do NOT knowwhat day the y‘aro wanted, do ‘NOT know for how long they are wanted, :do NOT know how many fellows are makâ€" ing for that particular form, do NOT know where to go next, have no money to pay their fares, or board. or bed; and they would be arrested as tramps it' they were, to fact it over the country without money. And if they HAD money they would stay in the cities, where the chance of employment is 'reallybetter for them, for they know nothing of farm work. Besides, the pay on the farm would not more than keep them while they are at work, and they would be' just as badly off when they quit as they were when they went there. All they could save would not pay their fare. to the next place, and they would n’t know where the next place was, anyway. It is easy to THINK idle men to where there is work, but the actual doing of it is a bigâ€" ger problem. industry under ihe presâ€" ent system is in a state of anarchy. It is confusion everywhere. Socialism will organize the workers and the work, and is the only solution. Then the workers will be carried to the places where they are needed, and taken to the limb place, and there need be no idle people willing to workâ€"Appeal to Reason. 0*. -Pull Together. Two big rubber companies have merg- ed and six big silk factories have mar- ried. , Rich men know better than to waste their energy competing with each otherâ€"â€"they co-operate. It is only the small capitalists of the middle class and the work people who perpetuate compe- tition and fight. each other. Fvery workâ€" er should coâ€"operate with other workers in trades unions and in politics ; work- ers should pull together both at the ma- chine and at the ballot box. They can own the earth and all that it contains, if It scents danger to those interests from they only will. So long as they remain divided, and each ï¬ghts for himself, the devil will get the hindmostâ€"â€"â€"and many of the foremostâ€"Get wise to the game, and play according to the modern rules. ~â€"Ibid. -0 Three thievesâ€"rent, interest, '1) reï¬t. “WMâ€"fifâ€" BANK or BRITISH, rum AMEBIGA. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. lntorostallnwod on deposils'from date of ï¬rst deposiirto dan- of withdrawals! the current role compounded FOUR times a your. ‘ Toronto and Lindsay cheques nogotlatod at par. FENELON FALL-3' BRANCH. u l. BISHOP, MANAGER. ' . £319" when r ' : - V no!“ .3 ... . T:-'?«‘;>{Ié<f2?}-’ir*?io shrugs 1., l..<:,' ,. .. Nab/(y! v} Ni.» a gym: :1. '-.s'r.n-IIIF%‘ . . . "N :‘m; . 6. ,g:. v .t, ‘. :~.~:~:¢rwâ€v=¢.«.::s 2d . ,-' m .21 2 ab»- 2’ ., x“ Hi:z(_wv'~.0 V;y)¢g>1 ‘. “.4 4‘ .2†W‘svs y» ‘-;-.;'.'-‘.4.v24\i..-u.~ ’ y ....l ~..;-. «4’ 42-» " . , 51- 7-31- ‘ J .5 1-," :." 4.: “ . - e. tr". gag.