- I’I-o t‘casion {:1 Cards. LEGAL. l .-.__.._.._â€"_.____.... IEICDIARMID, \VEEKS dz O’NIEL. i )ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NO’I‘AR- ) ies, etc. Solicitors for County of; Victoria. Money to loan on real estateE at lowest rates of interest. Oliices oppo- ! site Pym‘s Hotel, Kent street, Lindsay! Member of firm will be at Fenelon Falls I every Tuesday. F. A. MCDIAan, ' W. J. O‘NIEL. IIEAD OFFICE ESTABLISH ED. 1817 CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. 'ASSETS OVER Your ‘Mommg Beverage; C. E. WEEKS, . withdrawn MCLAUGHLIN, PEEL &. FULTONI ARRISTERS. SOLICITORS AND NOT- aries. Oiï¬ces over Dominion Bank, l Lindsay. Branch oï¬ice open at Bobcaygeon every Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J. MCLAUGHLIN, K. O. A. M. FULTON, B. A. R. I. ._ 7,, r .. Hamilton, M r. '~ " 771:.“ M's..- 43.; We mean COFFEE, of course. -J...A,p..., Not any coffee, but a pure blend, G_ [L HOPKINS, K, (3. lS appetizing,i stimulating and ' l.\RR[Sl‘ER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY, healthful. ' ‘ ' Public, kc. Solicitor for the Bank of; ‘ We have the identical article. Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit: borrower. Olï¬ces, 6 William street south, Lindsay, Ont. moons &.JAUKSON, We have heard many good things 135335.? 33.35? 53.355?“ 0†sald of our coffees. Said, too, by house- F-O-“om- . - ~ “ms†keepers who have gone the (rounds, and - . STEWART &: O’CONNOR, y BARRIISTERSI, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY g to oau at owest current. rates. ‘erms , . ' , , _ msuit borrowers- Otiice on corner ofKent ‘ I Then Vve a, blt about coffees ourselves.- Have learned ,, from that best Ofall teachers, experience. and York streets, Lindsay. ’l‘. STEWART. L. V. O’Cosxon, B. A . And putting what we have often "been told together With What we have learned we ask lovers of a good cup of coffee to trust us to supply them. Historic Utterances of Great Men. “The public be damned ! I ’m not running this road for the beneï¬t of ' j the public. I’m running it for my own benefit.â€-â€"â€"Cornelius Vanderbilt, of the New York Central Railway. “The damned fools don’t know what is good for them.â€â€"â€"J. Pierpont Morgan, speaking of the striking steel Workers in September, 1901. “ The rights and interests of the la- boring man will be protected and cared for, not by labor agitators, but by the Christian men to whom God in His inï¬nite wisdom has given control of the property interests of the country.†â€"Geo. M. Baer, mine owner, during the coal strike of 1902. “ I see no solution for the problem until hunger compels capitulation.â€-â€" Charles L. Eidlitz, President of New York Building Trades Employers’ Asâ€" sociation, during the look-out in July, 1903. “To hell with the Constitution.â€â€" Major McClelland, commanding the state militia (paid by the Mine Own- ers’ Association) during the Colorado miners’ strike and lock-out of 1904. “ Habeas Corpus be damned 1-â€" W'e ’11 give -. them post mortems in- stead.â€-â€"Adjutantâ€"â€"General Sherman Bell of the Colorado militia, defying the orders of the civil courts. “ What’s the Constitution between friends Cl â€-â€"â€"Timothy Cambcll, of Tam- many Hall. “.I’m working for my own pocket all the time.â€â€"â€"Richard Croker, of Tammany Hall, under whose regime Schmittberger became a power in the police. ’ “Men who object to what they call ‘government by injunction’ are in hearty sympythy with their remote skin-clad ancestors who lived in caves, fought one another with stone-headed axes and ate the mammoth and woolly rhinosceros. * * * They are not in sympathy with men of good minds and good civic morality.â€â€"-Theodore Roosevelt. “God knows; I do n’t.â€â€"'William H. Taft, at Cooper Union, February, 1908, when asked, “What can be done to give men work in hard times i †“ Strike ! They (the American work- ingmen) have no jobs now. We do not want to take up work again now. So what can they do? They will have to submit or they will starve.â€â€"-J. Pierpont Morgan, February, 1908. “The. Club is mightier than the Constitution.â€-â€"â€"Inspector Schmittberâ€" ger, of the New York police, during the riot in Union Square on March 28th, 1908. "chitin. Dr. s. .I. suns, DENTIST, Fennelon F‘alls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of‘ Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE:â€"-Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street Drs.-Neelands & Irvine. DEXTISTS - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work aspecialty. Splendid ï¬ts in artiï¬cial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great success. One Line, Fresh Ground, " Price 40c. ‘ ,' -â€".â€"____ J.L.ARNOLD. MEDICAL. DR. GRAHAM. â€"u. 0., o. 51., M. a. 0:3. Eng, n. c. r. a. 5., ONT., r. 'r. u. s.â€" HYSlGlAN, SURGEON 8: ACCOUCH- cur. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, successor: To us. A. WILSON, RADUATE 0F TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ofï¬ce, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. \_______s:2_. J RDER your Photographs now. It will give us time to do, our EST work on them, and you get “ the pick†of the newest styles. J. H. STANTON. AUCTION EER. THOMAS CASHORE. AUCTIONEER. - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- class manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. TOOTH AND TOILET Â¥ PREPARA TIONS 0-. Under Socialism yOu would not seek employment from another, because you would be able to employ yourself. ‘ fifteen in the family, all good ' COLDER, COLOEsT. Soon he coldest, and a good Overcoat will be necessary for comfort. Let us make you a new one. We have the best of materials and first-class facilities for turning out a good article? Capital ' A Joint Account Prices right. convenient. at highest current rates. any time. Fenelon Falls Branch, INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT SAVINGS BANIi DEP:&RT1\IENT. DepOSIts taken of $1 and upwards, which can be Fenelo handy): 13;; pt; sass cr - DIONTRJCJAL. REST - ‘$183,000,000. 12.000.000.00 on demand. It Falls Branch. >2 ‘ï¬mx -\-V‘l»‘ s 2 5’7 “JW - "H? tum: «1'5» O." . ' 3" "7' Child’s Pla . “Would it not solve the problem of the hard times and the unemployed if all the hungry and idle in the cities would go out in the country and farm, or buy a piece of land on the instalâ€" ment plan? I know a few people who had not a cent of money, who are get- ting rich by going out in Oklahoma and Dakota. The removal of these from the cities would help to increase wages there.â€â€"â€"C. C. This plan has been tried. It was the remedy of the Salvation Army, and, after years of work along this line, England has more unemployed than ever before. The farmers them- selves are just now doing precious little more than making a living, and how is a man without a cent and with a. family needing something for supper, to go a. thousand miles away and sup- port his family in the meansime; and then, when he arrives as a trainp,. keep from being run in as a vagrant?- until he can get cash or credit witlr which to buy a farm? How would you like to try it, neighbor? Suppose, however, he could do this (and not.- one in ten thousand could), then he would help to reduce the price of farm products by just so much more pro- duction, until the farmers became deâ€" pendents ; and, at the same time, more unemployed would have to be created5 or imported in order to keep wages‘ from going too high. You cannot es- cape the proposition that the wages and proï¬t systems are merely ways of‘ stealing from the producer, and that there is no way to get rid of the re- sults of that theft (which are disemâ€" ployment and poverty) until you end the theft in an honest social system that will give to each worker his full social prod notâ€"Appeal to Reason. .. Socialism or Shipwreck. Modern society cannot escape ship- wreck unless it reorganize itself into a co-operative commonwealth. The es- tablishment of the cooperative corn- monwealth implies a social revolution ; it implies the overthrow of the capi- talist system of production that has become a drag on all further develop ment and an incubus upon the corn- mon weal; it means the placing of the machinery of production now held and owned by landlords and capitalists, inâ€" to the hands of the whole people 3 in other words, it implies the downfall of the system of private ownership in the implements of laborâ€"land and capital, i. e., machines, tools etcâ€"and the substitution of public, common, collective ownership, to be Operated for use and not for private proï¬t.»â€" Karl Kautsky. If you had opportunity, it would he. an easy thing to make a living. Sovi- alism means opportunity. .., . ,, '. - ., < I -, ,,_ . p a ,. : i‘ . ,v- . A . .. ’ - 1. 1‘: :- . and Reserve Over $7,000,000 may be opened by two members of a family. Either †may deposit or withdraw money on his or her Own signa- ture alone, so that either may do the banking, as is most $1.00 opens :1 Savings Account. Interest compounded Money may be withdrawn at W. A. Bishop, Manager "ft-V" , . ; \v’v‘J-x-x/‘x-"x.x-V-‘qux/wv’ms‘e’xmw ‘ ’ I i. .‘, " J . v41“?- aiwwwwmmwvrvcwwwu‘wwv’ f‘J3J'sl.--.«w-- xx] . ...,. . 7‘19"" _. 52,-... '5 \. h " f" '5“ v' "W i" e“??? ‘2‘ M319“? r‘écs-V'vhri s’ivi‘r'vf We 3 aâ€??? “:‘Rrh-‘Wv‘évr a? w owwï¬kmk v' a e’iâ€'./v"s ‘v v" V‘k‘ v“« 'v’v'v’râ€"‘WIW?!’ Mar" .--.AAA.--L._