3v. .... F. A. MCDIARMID. '- )ARRISTER, SOLlClTOR, Etc., FENE i) lon Falls. Office, Colborne street opposite Post-ofï¬ce. Wliouey to loan on real, estate at lowest current rates. _________.____â€"â€"â€"â€"~ ill-CLAUGHLIN, PEEL & FULTON arics. Ofï¬ces over ,Dominion Bank, Lindsay. ‘ Branch ofï¬ce open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. , p R. J MCLAUGHLIN,K. C. A. M. FULTON,B. A. ‘ Jas. A. PEEL. ' PARRISTERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- ‘) G. u. nor-isms. K. o. 3ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY l) Public, Ste. Solicitor for the Bank of Montreal. ’ Money to loan at terms to suit birrowcr. Ollie-es, 6 William street. south, Lindsay,» Out. , S'l‘El‘WAR'l‘ (is O’CONNOR, )ARRISTE 1S, NU t'.\.!:ll§:‘, Sac. MONEY l) to’loan at lUWCS current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ullicc on corner ol'Keut and York streets, Linilsay.‘ . . 'i‘. S'rrwnnr. L._V. O’Conaoa, B. A ‘ MOORE & JACKSON, Binnisrnas, SOLICITORS, Ste. or. lice, William street, Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON ,__._.._ AUCTIO EER. FELIX a. scarcity, PUBLIC AUCTIONEER. Farm and other sales conducted in ï¬rst- class order. Secure dates before adver- tising. Address, Fenelon Falls. ___________________.___â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€" srarnnu omvnn, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer. Write for dates before advertising. ____________â€" T HOMAS CASHORE, AU CTIONEER - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rstâ€" class manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. ’MIâ€"gï¬â€" - MEDICAL. . I; DR. H. H. GRAHAM. -â€"n. n., c. M., M. a. c. 5. Eng, M. c. r‘.‘& s., ONT., r. 'r. M. s.â€" _ - HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- P cur. Oï¬ice. Francis Street, Fenclon Falls. . DR. A. WILSON, -â€"M. 3., M. c. P. a» 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH eur. Ofï¬ce, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. “ M EYES I TESTED, FRAMES TESTED. When your eyes trouble you, cause you pain or headâ€" ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glasses, go to on. as. . seams, Eyesight Specialist. (over Neill’s shoe store), Lindsay -- Ont. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges mod- crate. '_-________.._.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"‘â€"â€"'â€"‘ DENTAL. ______._________.___.â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"' Dr. 5. J. sums, natives-r, Fenelon 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. OFFICE :â€"-Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street DRS. NEELliliDS & IR‘llNE, DENTISTS, - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Splendid ï¬ts in artiï¬cial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 0,000 persons with great success. vmcé'tunusr um ante. LILLlAN G. WlLSON, A. T. C. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of Toronto Conservatory of Music. Gold Medalist of Whitby Ladies’ College. Voice and piano pupils accepted. Apply at studio. Dr. Wilson’s residence, or telephone No. 20. 31â€"6111 i NEAL,“ FEN‘ELDN 1 FALLS. HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL_ Q, g Q Q asuausnao .1817. g g Q Q i u“ IS NOT WHAT YOU PAY our THE VALUE YOU GET‘ INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL - $14,400,000.00. REST - , $11.ooo,ooo.oo. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $922,419.31} ASSETS OVER $165,000,000. SAVINGS BANK. DEPARTMENT. INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR Deposits taken of $1. and upward. ,. g I'Deposits can be†Withdraw-n on demand. % i 0 § R. M. HAMILTON, MANAGER. 0<>00<:>0 000000 000000 ..,_. The Empress Shoe is built over es‘peci ally designed Oxford Lasts, and Will not chafe the heel or gape at the sides, and they are made with a listing piece inserted, which pre- vents slipping at the heel. Helping Soclallsm. Every move of the capitalists helps Socialism. They «are helping to do the ‘vcry thing that they don’t want done. In this struggle it. is just as 'it was in the anti-slavery contest. Abolitionism grew in proportion as the slave power distorted and maligned it. Every effort to wipe out the antiâ€"slavery movement generated just that much more senti- ment in favor of it. In 1838 the governor of Ohio honored a requisition from the slaveâ€"holding governor of Kentucky for the arrest and deportation of a Metho- dist minister named Malian, who had been active in aiding negrocs to escape to Canada. Malian had never been in Kentucky, and while the jury convicted Let Us Sell You a, Pair. him of the crime the judge discharged him, because, he said, he would not take cognizance of a crime that had not been committed in the state of Kentucky. But the damage was done. This act re- sulted in defeating the Ohio governor for rc-clcction in 1840, and the whole state went against the democrats ; and, not only that, but the incident was used by the anti-slavery agitators and helped them to carry hundreds of thousands of votes all over the north. This case was similar to the Haywood case, which is likewise bringing about results. When congress refused to receive petitions for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, the agitators piled them in thicker and faster; and the slavery , forces were always saying and doing things, just as the captains of industry are to-day, that helped the abolition cause. In reading of this struggle I-am struck with the similar conditions beâ€" tween that struggle and this for the freedom of the masses from wage slave- ry. The pro-slavery men thought they had done with Lovejoy when they do- stroycd his paper and killed him; but in that they did the best thing for the abolitionists that could be done. They played right into their hands ; and Love- joy, had he lived ï¬fty years, could not have been as advantageous to the aboliâ€" tionists’ cause as he was when dead at their hands. And that is why the Appeal is fearless in the present struggle. 1f the capitalists destroy it and kill its edâ€" itors, they will have done just what the killing of Lovejoy and the pcrpetration of other outrages did for that other struggle. And that is just what the Ap- peal is published for ; and if it can help the cause more by being the victim of those who propose to rule, rightly or wrongly, then it is performing its highâ€" est mission. It will probably take some act-ion of this kind on the part of the capitalists to awaken the spirit in the American people that will abolish capi- talist control of the nation. Capitalists to-day are just as blind to the signs of the times, just as ignorant of the forces that face them, just as unconscious of want it in a hurry ‘ when Spring opens up. So will a. hundred other people. Get ;. your order in NOW before the big rush. . . Our stock of goods is the b1g- . gest everâ€"and has alwayshbeen ; big. Make your choice w 11e 1t is at its bestâ€"that’s now. You will "lint. infirm :10fliun_avll'lilr,_ni‘lhr. stiflizr, wlk' anagram: gamut ‘JHMHL’ Jumps ' - ~I’ ~ “r ll iL...lf.'..r..'~"'"lli'. haltâ€"iffy it" if†'i Dmvï¬ï¬ï¬ Wmmï¬mg 1'. Amuflkflfï¬cm‘f’m q up, will? mafia: 1 form of account. ' ' best Come and try and buy. W. L. ROBSON. ‘ seesseeassaaassaii Fenelon Fans Branch some... the social factors that have appeared on the scenes of human activity, as wcr‘ the slave masters of long ago. It is not their dishonestyâ€"41; is simply their luck of knowing what all this ferment means, and their believing it to be only a pass-- A ing fad that might be brushed aside by‘ the drastic action of their adherents. \Ve smile.â€"-Fred 1). Warren. ,Why Do Women Do the Work ? “Why is it that women, in increasing? numbers, avoid housework and do other work, so that men can hardly get a job on account of them ? They make it hard on the men who, I think, are the. ones to hire out.â€â€" iiâ€. If. G., Enterprise, Ala. ’Women have the same need for the' material means of life that men have, and, when thrown upon their own re-; sources, are under the same necessity of: earningtheir living. Unless possessed. of property, they are compelled to seek’ an employer or seek marriage as a means of providing themselves with a home. But there are two parties to a mar- riage, and there are two parties to a job. If she would marry she must ï¬rst ï¬nd a husband; and if she would work . forvwages she must ï¬rst ï¬nd an em- ployer. With the developmant of the capitalist system it has become increas- ineg tlillicult for those who are married» to comfortably provide for their famiâ€" lies; and this is discouraging to the young man who might take a wife, were he reasonably sure that he would be able to decently care for her. Young men are not assuming the responsibilia tics of marriage as readily now as they‘ did in the past ; and this makes it neces-' sary for the young women, who would under more favorable conditions become wives and house-keepers, to go out into the stores, ofï¬ces and other places where! labor is bought and ï¬nd work. The average woman lives more cheap- ly than the average man ; and this enaâ€"~ bles her to work for less wages than the average man would accept. Cheap labor‘ is what the average employer wants, so: he hires the woman in preference to the ina.1rf01' any work that she can do as well or nearly as well as he, and thereby saves the difference in wages. It is not the women who are making employment; scarcq for men. They are doing only‘ what they must do to live under the conditions that exist. It is the capitalist system, with its iron law of wages that always and eve erywhere tend to fall to what is required for more subsistence, that puts women to work and men to tramping. More than that, the same thing is putting children to work in place of the women wherever the children can clothe work. You are mistaken in the idea that the men are the ones to hire out. Neither men, women nor children should work for hire.‘ It is this miserable wage sys~ tem of industry that Socialists are try~ ing to abolish, and which must be abol- ished before those who labor can have any assurance of work or just renmnera-I tion for what they (loâ€"Appeal to Reason, -â€".â€"-&. Double Accounts and Double Dealing. Suppose some trade union officials had kept double accounts, one set to Show to auditors and another and different one for their own information, and had de~ stroyed checks and vouchers to conceal payments, as the New York traction companies and allied corporations have been doing. How long would they re~ main out of jail ? Would the district at- torney let years go by without prosecut-L ing them ? Would not the public author- itics ï¬nd it quite practicable to get at the facts without a law assuring immu- nity from punishment to the criminals ? And could these men for a single week, to say nothing of a series of years, pose as eminent citizens, public spirited gen- tlemen and. benefactors of humanity, without being exposed by both the reâ€" publican and democratic pressâ€"exposed and hounded to destruction ? Working- men who have brains in working order can answer all these questions for them- selvcsand draw their own conclusions. ~â€"lee Worker. .04 Juvenal spoke truly when he said: - “Integrity is praised and starves.†In the future there will be a day when i11- tegrity will not starve and villany thrive. There will be no unemployed under Socialism, for there will be a place for every citizen in the public industricS, and those who will not work will not be able to get anything to eatâ€"~that is, if 1 they are able to work. Deposits so that either may deposit or withdraw funds, making “a very convenient I“ " Are now so skilfully 4 DIEDFRUI prepared that they ' make an excellent sub- {32% stitute for the fresh ar- “* ticle, especially atrthis 7- season. We have a complete line of every OVER known kind. Each has l the natural flavor and SAVINGS ACCOUNTSâ€" given special attention. A deposit each has been kept in of $1 or_upward startsa Savings Account, on whichi'the highest current; a . g? rate of inteiest 153 paid or addedto the principal GVGI) 3 months. 5‘ absolutely good COllCll- 35% maybe Withdrawn at any time Without notice. g tion. We handle the Ti; JOINT ACCOUNTS may be opened in the name of two perSong i W. A. Bishop, Manager.