VOL. XX XVII. l’i-ot‘essional Cards. ‘ LEGAL. F. A. MCDIARMID. ARRIS'I‘ER, SOLICITOR,Etc., FENE, P) Ion Falls. Ofï¬ce, Colborne street! i opposite Post-office. ï¬g†Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. M McLAUGlllllN, PEEL Sr FULTON ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT-l [ aries. Ofiices over Dominion Bank,l Lindsay. Branclioffice open at Bobcaygeon i ev~-ry Monday Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J McLauenmn, K. C. A. M. FULTON, B. A. _ ' Jas. A. Penn. W G. H. l-lOPKlNS, K. O. ) I.) ARRIS’I‘ER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY: Public, 550. Solicitor for the Bank of; Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit borrower. Ofï¬ces, 6 William street south, Lindsay, Ont. nooun a JACKSON, BARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. Of- F. D. Moons. lice, William street, Lindsay. i A. JACKSON -S'1‘EWART a. O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &c. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit. borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 'I‘. Srewnm. L. V. O’Couuon, B. A WM Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST 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€"-0ver Burgoyne’s. store, 001- orne street » M on. reruns & min, DENTISTS LINDSAY. d Natural teeth preserved. Crown an bridge work a specialty. Splendid ï¬ts in artificial teeth. Painless extraction. Gfas administered to over 9,000 persons With, great sucress. _ , MEDICAL. “riffâ€"1"; DR. H. H. GRAHAM. -â€"-n. 0., c. M., M. n. c. s. Eng.,1u. c. r. a s., ONT., r. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSIOIAN, SURGEON & AOGOUCH- eur. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. .____________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"‘_‘-â€"_-_â€"-_‘n DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, succnsson T0 DR. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- ooucheur- Ofï¬ce, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. g AUCTIONEER. _I______,_.__________â€"â€"â€"â€" STEPHEN OLIVER, LINDSAY ONT. Live Stock and general _ Auctioneer Write for dates before advertismg. __________________________._â€"â€"â€"--â€" T HO MAS OAS HORE, AUCTIONEER FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- elass manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. Wâ€" EYES irsrro, FEEii‘i’lESlESi’ED. When your eyes trouble you, cause you pain or head- ache or if your glasses re- quire changing or you need new glasses, go to on. re. Bananas, Eyesight Speciaiisi. (over Neill‘s shoe store), Lindsay - Ont. - Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges mod- erate. ____________.__â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- WOOD FOR SALE. The undersigned is prepared to deliver wood to any part of the village at any time. Hard or soft wood 4 feet long or cut to order. All kinds of green and dry wood bought at highest price.’ M. W321 ALEY. W DRESSDIAICIN G. The undersigned is prepared to under- take all kinds of dressmaking, in the latest styles, at Mr. Webster‘s, next to Ba tist church. ah£13448"p Mas. M. Low'rusn. _..__« :AKES. “tr-One cupful on 7.9. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1909. ___2.'S Buy Your Footwear Now and Save Money. Right now is your chance to get really good shoes at a considerable saving. We’re selling the balance of summer styles at a reduction to sell quickly. Anyone looking for good shoes and fair treatment Will ï¬nd both here, with never anything inferior for the sake of a cheap price. ' Your. complete satisfaction comes before any consideration of profit. We want your trade next year, as'l'-'Well as now. " V ' ' < J. L. ARNOLD. â€"Sâ€"2._______J gain: althzafihullbmimc Mudbuim MunflumanML mm WWWJW 5E ’nflhu. For Spring and summer Our Stock is now complete. We have the newest and best in WEEK'S-S, PANTING‘S, AND FATE"? VESTINGS. We will be pleased to have you call and see these goods. «I S E: :3 Es s it @5909: u"it"‘-'"‘“llll“"~"‘liill‘"‘“giilit “Winmmhilmhï¬w “WWJIJW'WWWWW llwiflmlrln‘lwrnmu armpit:mirruwrrwr‘31:];in am": anyppironmrnufgï¬ 3 rflhudlinr. Jrlflirrniiflhudfliuwillinr.:ullirudhrjlhrnl’hcnfliun ‘ “*7 ~' rim: in .1 '. '. - .. '3’, i. . . ‘ ' ii: A} 'r._. . .ihl . i, . . r‘irgruir vi ‘ flog ignite ï¬tt-lf'fltlhlfltfltt aghast-3:5? CEREALS For the warm wea- ther breakfast we have V W0 0391‘ W. Jnmnnnjair Jams. all the good and tried is kinds. There are so ‘1? lg; many varieties that we “2:? E. can hardly enumerate 55‘ them. But whatever kind you like best is B," here for you. 0‘... ‘ as $3 GROCERIES AND " BOOTS AND SHOES. RObSOn 8‘ $10“. r.“ . *5? 55% ~.flavor; cook in hotter the irons will get and re»- tain the heat longer. I To Remove Mildewâ€"To remove ,, mildew, rub commongyellow soap the damaged a ti camel thep s ' MW e» sift W :. i E .a. v"? ' fl r u .79" ~‘ BANK o I‘IEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817. CAPITAL 314.400.000.00. ASSETS OVER SAVINGS BANK T. Deposits taken of $1 and withdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. u~~._.-~ Exposures. The Socialists have little need of pointing out the defects, the inconsist- encies and the contradictions existing in thepresent state of society. The evils which afflict humanity are patent to every beholder. The single taxer lays bare the injustices and the incon- sistences. The reform politician ex- plains them to his audience. The Christian minister sees them around him. The dails press could not exist in its present shape were it not that the contradictions and the inconsist- encies produce murderers, thieves, em- bezzlers, failures, suicides, divorces, monkey dinners, evictions, corrupt pol- iticians and the whole panorama of an anarchical and senseless social system. It is in applying the remedy that Socialism comes to the front. Social- ists do not need to Criticize the present order. There is a self-criticism inher- ent in the present order which does away with all necessity for subjective criticism. A whole literature of ex- posure has risen and has formed one of the chief literary commodities of the American magazines. There are persons, however, who are so blind, or rather whose environment has been so limited, that they cannot see the contradictions and inconsistâ€" encies of the present businessand in- dustrial methods. These persons genâ€" erally dwell in peaceful village commuâ€" nities, where the methods of producâ€" tion are still in the peasant or artisan form. These persons sometimes exist in the capitalist atmosphere. They get their revenues regularly from the work of others. Personally they have noth- ing to do with the industrial system save to live off it calmly and contentâ€" edly, and to follow their own sweet will. By persons in the above limited environments the capitalist system is not understood. To them murders and suicides, divorces and corrupt pol- itics, vice and slum miseries are utter- ly inexplicable, save on the assump- tion of a wicked devil who goes about to corrupt the hearts of men and we- men. These persons form the back- bone of the Christian churches. cannot explain the world on a rational basis, and therefore explain it on a su- pernatural basis. These persons em- ploy a minister at a stated salary to explain the world, its origin and its mode of action to them. As the min- ister is not forced into the capitalistic arena, he little understands the busi- ness world. He, too, is forced to ex- plain the world on a supernatural ba- sis. Thus a false philosophy is taught from most of the pul pits, and the great capitalist world gives but slight atten- tion to the moralizing homilies eman- ating from the pulpits. Exposures are unnecessary. Corrup- tion and vice are known to be ram- pant. The only thing is to solve the problem of present misery. This canâ€" 73 Years in Business. Every Banking Accommodation. most favorable terms. Money advanced to reliable men at reasonable rates. Teleg‘ap'a Transfer. enelon Falls Branch, INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. NTH EAL,- ‘ MONTREAL. j { i- ‘ 4 REST $183,000,000. 12.000.000.00 sin .2, cré‘tgl. 9; b “‘1 L-Q‘if‘v'i‘i’nï¬â€˜ 5“!“ 'Upwards, which ‘can be ..~4. ’Fenelon Falls Branch. not be done by the churches. The- remedy must come from scientiï¬c Sow cialism consciously applied to the eco- nomic structure of society.â€"-Cotton’s Weekly. ~' -,‘~,.,4'l+"1-.r ;.= ~ 0.0-- The Little Business , Man. It is pathetic to watch the express- . ions of the small business men when :- they are struggling over the acceptâ€" ance of Socialist doctrines. They are afraid that Socialism will interfere with their petty trade. They wonder whether they should accept or reject the doctrine. The small business man , does not realize that he is doomed. ‘ He has been ï¬nding it harder and harder to make a. living. He has to ' i work hard and the proï¬ts are small. ‘ Any slump in the local market will send him into bankruptcy. He hangs on and hopes conditions will get betâ€"» ter. He does not realize that he is‘ doomed. He does not realize that it is only a question of time when the“. gigantic trusts will reach out and take. his business away from him as easily . as he could steal milk from a baby And he wonders whether he had bet- ter accept Socialism or not. The Rockefeller group of capitalists have. i already cornered oil and many other“ ' products. They are now reaching out for the retail trade of the big cities. l The cigar and tobacco store are most- ly controlled by the tobacco trust. The; beef trust has the butchers in its grasp and is squeezing them. And the little» trader wonders whether Socialism will interfere with his business. We could point many morals to small merchants, but they will not 4;; listen. There will be a few of the keener ones who will join and ï¬ght for Socialism. But many of the tradâ€" ers will go on wondering till they learn - «it. by sad experience that their business " ( ,1“ has been taken away from them, and that they have nothing to lose. \Vhen .. 1;; they have been put on a meagre salary “:1, as clerk for some trust, or when they ‘5 are refused work and sink into the 2’? rank of the day laborer or the unemâ€" . ployed, when in fact they have become 3} They proletariatized, they will become ii'ipe for the Socialist message and remedy 3 by revolution. But even when they 4;“ are thus reduced, some of them will *9 not have brains for the message, and will remain unenlightened to their (lyâ€" 4'; ing day.â€"â€"Ibid. a; It is the working class which pro- duces all the world’s food, yet it is. the working class that goes hungry. I. It is the working class which pro~ duces all the world’s wealth, yet it is. not the working class which enjoys most of it. It is the working class which niain- it, tains all the world’s colleges, yet it is not the children of the working class 4;: who are taught in them. ,5 ‘i 3. , pl ".0 if 4"?» d? u; Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000. " '1 .r . a, offered to Farmers, Cattle- 3" men, Miners and :. Lumbermen. / 1‘ ". Sales Notes handled on I; ' Checks on any Bank cashed. .1» 2 “.3 Money sent to any pornt by Money Order, Draft or hi ' a (I! '. W. A. Bishop, Manager .> i “y r‘ 3 .5 , n.4, ms,- t nmnmnywmw . » __v - . “was;