VOL.XXXVL _Pro fessio ual Cards. vâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- A .__V .. LEGAL. ‘ r. A. MCDIAKMID. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE . lon Falls. Ofï¬ce, Colborne street opposite Post-ofï¬ce. 15%†Money to loan on real, estate at lowest current rates. r__________’_._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- MohAUGi-l LIN, PEEL &- FULTON ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- nries. Ofï¬ces over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch oilice open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest. rates of interest. 8. J. MCLAUGULIN, K. C. A. M. FULTON, B. A. Jas. A. PEEL. G. H. HOPKlNS, K. O. )ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public, &c. Solicitor for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit borrower. Olï¬ccs, 6 William street south, Lindsay, Ont. STEWART & O’CONNOR, the line of . SWOT H 0000†000‘ 000» V cc>oi 000g er siren, FENELDN FALLS. Q Q Q g HEAD OFFICE - MONTREAL ETAB LISHE 1817. E Q Q % INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. NEST ~ $1I.OO0,000.00. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $922.418.31 ASSETS OVER $165,000,000. DEPARTMENT. INTEREST ADDED FOUR TIMES A YEAR Deposits taken of $1 and upward. ‘ .l...a.-..x~~..v.' _ ble, and that the “ biggest navy †idea is not only absurd (so long a: there is a dollar left in any nation’s tre. sury) ; but it is also very burdensome to tax-‘ payers. \Ve are going to see the in- consistency of our talk about “over; production â€'of the necessaries of life when anyone is in need, and that a big wheat crop and a long bread line' are not compatible with civilization. \Vhen this big truth c0mcs home at last to human society, it will come; home to all classes of human society. Doctor, lawyer, merchant and laborer will grasp it together. We are all brothers in the last analysis, and we all have our hearts in the right place.- The only thing is that up to the pr< s: ent time we have all been just a lit- too busy making a living to stop long enough to think about it. In other words, we are not yet living in a- “ thinking †age, though we have some: how fallen victims to the comical hal- lucination that we are. Funny, isn’t it 'i‘ â€"Thc Vehicle Dealer, Pennsylvania. ARRISTERS, NOTARIES 8w. uoNEY ’ De osits can be +‘ to loan at lowest current rates. Terms d d to suit borrowers. Uï¬ice on corner of Kent ‘ wl rawn on eman I You Are Poor. and York streets, Lindsay. T. S'rrzwaur. L V. O’Conxon, B. A MOORE 8L JACKSON, )Aamsruas, sommroas, &c. or- b lice,William streelfliindsay. A.JACKSON F. l). Moons. AUCTIONEER. FELlX A. NOR’I‘HEY, 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€" STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY - ONT. Live Stock and general Auctioneer. Write for dates before advertising. THOMAS OASHORE, AUCTIONEER - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- class manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. _______,_,_____._. MEDICAL. M? DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"â€"n. o.,c. n, n n. c 8. Eng, 11. c. P. a; s., ONT., r. 'r; n. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCHâ€" P cur. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Feuelon Fat 115 . _____________________._.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- on. A. WILSON, â€"-M. 11., M. c. r. a 8., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & AOQOUGH cur. Ofï¬ce. Colborne Street, henelon Falls. _______________________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" EYES TESTED, . FRAMES TESTED. \Vhen your eyes trouble you, cause you pain or head- . ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glasses, go v to on. m. B.ANNIS, Eyesight Specialist. (over Neill's shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges mod- . crate. F____â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"‘â€""â€"‘_â€"_â€"-â€"â€"__â€"_â€" DENTAL. W! now and save money. for samples. standard. at greatly reduc- ecliprices during July. Buy your footwear We have the ï¬nest line of Suit-V ings ever shown in this district. Come and see them or write Quality, ï¬t, style and werkman-i ship always up to the highest being sold _ O R. M. HAMILTON, MANAGER. fl°O°0<=>00c>ooc>ooc>ooc>os Q i Q Q i % sumes BANK l i l l i l i i i i i The Humor of It. ‘ We are such delightfully stupid lit- tle folk. \Ve have n’t the sense of hu- mor of an owl. The bestâ€"selling joke- book of some future age will be the historical record of the serious doings of this age. Imagine the people of a few centuries hence reading how we overworked our publicity department tellng folks how highly civilized we were, meanwhile spending one penny for public education against 25 for perfecting machinery to kill each othâ€" er with. Or, fancy the loud “ ha-ha †that will some day greet the account of the southern planters of 1908, who were forced to cheat nature and turn under a portion of her bountiful crop of cotton in order to keep up the price of cotton , or the fruit jobbers of Cali- fornia, for instance, who dumped a shipload of bananas into the sea to maintain market prices, while ragged men sneaked along the gutters picking up banana peelings and eating. them with relish. Verily, our vaunted civ- ilization needs a brisk curry-combing, for it “ shoz is †shaggy in spots. ' \Ve live in a thinking age, and yet we talk earnestly and with much god- liness about “humane-bullets†and civilized warfare, as if there could be such things. A humane bullet is one that kills you without inflicting any unnecessary injury upon itself. It just hates to see you die, but can ’t resist the temptation. And so we call the wise men of our civilized nations to- gether to decide for just how “dead†we may kill one another, and what kind of bullets to use without disre- garding the international courtesies of the benevolent game of warfare. We fully believe we are living in a thinking age. \Ve are so sure of it, in fact, that if anybody doubts it, we make it pretty hot for him. But some ï¬ne day, when we really do begin to think, we are all~everyone of us, from the millionaire to the pauperâ€" No matter what you may think a: bout where you'came from, why you‘- are here or whither you are going, yorr are here and under the necessity of providing for your comfort and those dear to you or dependent upon you. Here you are, in a world full of natu- ral resources that possess the property of feeding, clothing and sheltering you when you fashion them to that pur-- pose by means of your labor. But certain artiï¬cial as well as unsatisfacâ€" tory relations have arisen between you and other fellow travellers through this weary world. One fellow worm in human form has fenced off a part of the earth from you, and insists that you divide up what you produce in tilling that land and give him part of' it as rent. Another has by certain' processes obtained ownership and conâ€" sequent control of the machinery you must use in order to make shoes, coats,. hats and other apparel. At every turn there is a man between the property- less worker and the things he would and must use; and this man in every instance exacts a tribute from such as he gives opportunity to use what he calls his. As a result of the so-called'. civilization that has developed under- such conditions, there are OCCasional periods of industrial depression or pan- ics, when the man who claims the-e- natural resources is unwilling to let you use them, because unable to do so with any proï¬t to himself. If monâ€" eyless, you are as eï¬'ectively shut oli from the earth as though adrift in space, with a wire fence between. It is a condition, not a theory, that confronts the workingman. If he is to cultivate the earth and make the most of himself he is under the neces- sity of removing the man between, who, instead of being necessary to his happiness and welfare, is in fact the author of his disemployment and want and misery. There must be a re-ar- rangeinent of human relations, so that all may have access to the means of production, and that each may do his share in shaping natural resources for the use of mankind. To achieve this is the purpose of Socialism and the so- cialist movement. A calm and disâ€" passionatc view of the problems that confront the race makes it plain that the only solution is to be found in 4.? cl 4.9:“: ‘n- a a i '- . ' t J J T V 1 Fenelon Falls going to gce‘tlle absurdity of our po- this great workingclass movement?“ Dr..S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, SUCCESSOI'S O . . own By . sition. “e are gomg to see, for in- Appwl ,0 Reason Fenelon Falls. stance, that instead of urging parents ' r.“ 5': G “Guam of Toronto University and to have more children, we should take “‘ _ 2;.- Royiil College of Dental Surgeons. ‘ m egg, czp'evpf cllllcllfrr filial: they The-b.3031, friend of religionjn the 1 ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY a W m L!" 4 '"' ' " :3: Elle; g7 ‘f‘ _' I e “"19 coma: World is Soc-18.113111, because 1tw1]lg1vo v; n 1. performed according to the latest improved in I m“ 0 niclease aimies an names I men tune, If they choose, to cultwato a} 1‘ methOds at mom}th prices. T H E G E g E A L S means to Increase the PPOSPGCt 0f tl'ou‘ the spiritual and develop the ideal. ,9 OFFICE :â€"â€"Ovcr Burgoync’s store, 001- v_-. ornc street . 8 s. > , .' ‘~ goes ï¬ne at breakfast time, egg 3 . & ‘i‘ and is still to be continued. a , ‘ DENTISTS - LINDSAY. a: or the making of cereals there ._ ,». ‘a w - l tleth preserved. Crown and Is no end' .“ e have an the _ j" bi-iiiighmw‘orkta specillxy. Splendid ï¬ts in gramd. and. trled lfmils -‘.- - l- artiï¬cial teeth. Painlessogf):trpgfpgrrl.s “Gilt: % ï¬lls-31¢:flcea:(irl:lgi?en\l$1: . ' ‘ tercd to over " ' . ‘ H . ' " s Eligibnguucss' , them, but whatever kind you CANADA'S OLDEST AND STRONGEST BANKS. we "‘““ like best is here and at a price is? ï¬r “WW mam Lanna PlllND. LILLIAN G. WILSON, A. T. c. M. Honor Graduate (piano and vocal) of that will supply you many breakfasts at a rate that even the most economical must ad- mit cheap. ' A Joint Account may be opened by two persons. Either may deposit or withdraw money on his or her Signature alone. 31 6m ' ~ l 1,. . No. 20. . ., _. Iii-{r Toronto conservatory. Of Musâ€. Ggld k ' Interest at highest cum-cut rate is paid on savings deposits 4 tlmes a year. I madam“ 0f Whinily Lndxcei‘sl;tggnegilllxgl?‘ ad . Money may be withdrawn at any time. t and piano pupi 5 ac . I x ‘1 . S l 1 studio, Dr, “\‘ilsours rcsxdcucc, or telephone a“ a V V. . H I Fenelon Fans Brancfl, W. A. Bishop, I’flana'ger.