VOL. XXXVII. Professional Cards. LEGAL. MCDIARMID, \VEEKS &, O’NEAIL ARBISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR~ B ies, etc. Solicitors for County of Victoria. Money to loan on real estate at lowest rates of interest. Oflices oppo- site Pym‘s Hotel, Kent street, Lindsay. Member of ï¬rm will he at Fcnelon Falls every Tuesday. F. A. MCDLARMID, W. J. O’NaAIL . C. E. WEEKS, MOLAUGHLIN, PEEL &- FULTON ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS AND NOT- aries. Ofï¬ces over Dominion Bank, Lindsay. Branch ofï¬ce open at Bobcaygeon eVery Monday. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. R. J. MchGutm, K. O. A. M. FULTON, B. A. Lisa. A. PEEL. G. [1. HOPKINS, K. 0. . BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY P bl' ,& . Solicitor for the Bank of . t . ‘- ‘llontre;1.|cllofley$010M“t terms to suit to combine cheapness and quality ,01d,then the pmblem facing the cap borrower. Orï¬ces, 6 William street south, Lindsay, Ont. moons a JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUl'l‘ORS, lie. 0!- ï¬ce,William street,Lindsay. F. I). Hamil. A. honor . ____________________ STEWART 8r. O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, kc. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to nuit borrowers. . and York streets, Lindsay. 1‘. 811me L. V. O’Connor, 3. A mgrâ€"25‘ "H DENTAL. W Dr. 5. J. sums, DENTIST, . Fouclon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. -' ALL BRANCHES 'OF DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. 0FFICE:â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street ___________________..____._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" Drs. Neelands & Irvine. alllNTIS'lS - 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 success. W MEDICAL. '__________,___.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€" DR: [-1. H. GRAHAM. â€"â€"M. 0.,0. M., M. a. c. s. Eng.,M. o. r. a 8., Own, r. 'r. M. s.-â€"â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON A: ACCOUCH- i) eur. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, successon TO on. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- ' sity. Physician, Surgeon and Acâ€" coucheur. Ofï¬ce, Colborue street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTION EEK. THOMAS OASHORE, AUCTIONEER, - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- class manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. In Jewelry We carry a large and well selected stock. Our prices are I as low as you will ï¬nd any- where. It Pays To keep your watch in good / 3 order. If it needs cleaning ‘or repairing bring it here. JOHN SLATER, Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent - GOODS ' I . SAFETY Is in paying the price. There is no use in the world trying in canned goods, nor in any other line for that matter. . High grades cost a trifle more, but for that extra in canned goods you get: I Assurance of purity, Appetizingness, Wholesomeness, ‘ ‘ And these are the things that stand for healthful food. ~ (We conï¬ne our purchase to well known and tried brands. So we offer every customer canned goods safety in every article. J.L.Aen0Lo. *2 Like ours provide whole- é some eating. We continue id to assure you this as we 3 have done in the past, we won’t stand for humbug goods. Reliability is our motto. i ii i a i i gwrcrwwrwmmmmwwrwvwwwwrnmg ilkï¬ mï¬um m we: WEATHER '33st ran ‘ If you need anything "in this line consult us. ' HEAD OFFICE ESTABUSH ED 1817 CAPITAL - $1‘,400,000.00. ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. Deposits take of $1 and 'withdrawn on demand. R. M. H m .‘-".r10‘ir&=tl we; .. .3, amilt on, Mg «Z44». v" in.» comm 22‘: 1‘. . are The Hunt For Markets. If the capitalists could only ï¬nd a market in which the unsold surplus value produced by the workers and which they cannot buy back, could be italists would be solved. The surplus would not pile up in the home mar- kets. The workers would be continu-. ally employed, and the capitalist sys- tem of production would work to per- fection. Markets to absorb the sur- plus values would be the salvation of the capitalists. Hence, in all coun- tries of the world where the capitalist system has developed, the capitalists are frantically searching for those mar~ kets in which goods can be sold with- out the purchasers wanting to sell in return. Great Britain is overstocked with goods, which the capitalists must sell if they are to survive. The tariff reâ€" formers look to the home market for their salvation. They think that, if foreign goods were excluded the Brit- ish market could absorb the home made goods. In America and Germa- ny, where protection is high, the prob- lem of the unsold surplus is as great as it is in Britain. The British free- traders, on the other hand, are turn- ing to imperialism. They think that free trade within the empire will solve the problem. But Canada, Australia. and the other British dependencies are producing unsold surplus values, and the problem cannot be solved by shipping the unsold surplus from one dependency to another. Germany is trying'to solve the pro- blem by a policy of colonial expansion. The United States is trying to solve the problem by forcing goods on China and by developing the industries of Mexico with peon labor. The illusive foreign market for the absorption of the unsold home surplus is being chas- ed by every capitalist politician and diplomat of Europe and America, but that market cannot be found. Hence each nation is trying to steal the mar- kets of every other nation. Algeria has been snarled over by the nations of Europe as a bone by hungry dogs. The ï¬ght for world markets has created a brain storm within the head of every European diplomat. At home the unemployed clamor for work. Hunger, poverty and misery stalk the streets of the great industrial cenâ€" tres. Socialism points to the misery created by the capitalist system for the beneï¬t of the capitalists, and then points the ï¬nger of scorn at the capi- talist. The rulers of every nation sit in insecure places. They are driven to desperation, and the world market will alone save them. Hence, the ru- lers of every nation are bending all their energies to capture that market. War-ship is added to war-ship, and regiment to regiment. The governâ€" [836 73 Years in Business. A Joint Account convenient. INCORPORATED BY ACT 0!’ PARLIAMENT Fenelon Falls Branch w-éfdt‘t'va-‘Qtiy 5mm ~i " REA MONTREAL. REST - 12.000.000.00 upwards, which can be [L\ m. ment of each nation looks with sus- ‘ picion upon the government of every other nation. Europe is an armed camp, and the burden of taxes beâ€" comes unbearable.â€"Cotton’s Weekly. . The Story of the Sick Man. There was once a very sick man†who was so sick, indeed, that the peo- ple of the village in which he lived all. said he was going to die. And the wise men of that village gathered about him, for his “case†was an exceedingly curious one, and" his malady one that seemed strange and incurable. Some tried to explain it one way, and some another. The village priest gravely assured the by-standers that the man was pos- sessed by devils, and that his afflicâ€" tions were thebutpouring of divine, wrath upon him. A moralist said that the man’s illâ€" - ness was due to his own negligence,. and that it was only just that he should suffer the penalty. .A professor of political economy said that there was congestion some- where in the man’s body, and that it was inevitable that such an unhappy condition should occur some time or another. A reformer suggested that. a power- ful drug be injected:- iinto: the man’s blood, to restore his vitality-and prov long his life. A philosopher who was present said" that happiness was a condition of mind, and that nothing should be done externally to relieve his pain: Some of the most recent arrivals in the village asserted that the man had always been in that condition, and alâ€" ways would be. Then a medical doctor came in, one who knew all about physiology and disease, and, from his diagnosis of the case, concluded that the man was starving, and recommended that he should be fed. At this. there was a great uproar, and the man of science, poor fellow†was set upon with great fury The priest denounced him as an atheist, moralist as an enemy of public health, the professor as a revolutionist, the reformer as a fanatic, the philosopher as a meddlesome agitator, the village- rubes as an’i’diot. All of which goes to show that the truth is sometimes very unpopular.â€"â€"~ W. R. Shier. 0‘. The budget ï¬ght is Great Britain will beneï¬t the Socialist party. When the drones fall out, the workers may achieve their economic liberty. Taxation of capital is not Socialism. Taxation of capital simply means that capital, out of its robbings, shall bear part of the burden of the capital pro- tecting state. . WWI" r - Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,001} ' ' may be opened by two members of a family. ' Either may deposit or withdraw ‘ _ money on his 6r her own signa-. ture alone, so that either may do the banking, as is most l My. w. . ' "-“~"v“v"“w~mwwwv . ~. ."~.' é _ I . $1.00 opens a Savings Account. lnterestï¬compmmded .at highest current rates. Money may be withdrawn at, ,_ any time. I “a, Fenclon Falls Branch, W. A. Bishop, manager)“ ' [SSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES TOWNLEY BROS. loner WVV£<WW3W WV nsxr noon TO POST-OFFICE. MEL“ Iâ€. ,i. l 3 i l g i.