"xxâ€"rev: .- a; .4.»- .-.<..-_. 2.. A. vast“: uLva'xâ€"‘nzcacu‘ >awm“ :::-rm; Lenny)“ r . Jails VOL. XXXVIII. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY. JUNE 3, 1910. Professional Cards LEGAL. MOLAUGALIN, PEEL, FULTON dz. STINSON. ARRIS’I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch ofï¬ce at Fenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay ofï¬ce over Dominion Bank. R. J Mchmitm, K. C. A. M. FULTON, B. A. JAB. A. Penn. ’1‘. H. Sï¬xsos. HOPKINS, WEEKS dz HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICiTORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Otï¬ces No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- ville, Ontario. G. H. HOPKINS, K. C., C. E. WEEKS, F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A. MOO an a JACKSON, )ARRISTERS, SOLIUI’I‘ORS, &'c. Of- ) lice, William street,Lindsay. F’. 19. Moons. A. JACKSON STEWART 8; O’CONNOR, BARIHSTERS, NO’l‘ARIES, 8w. MONEY to loan at. lowest current. rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. ‘i‘. Sruwuu. L. V. O’Couxou, B. A nEN'rAL. ' BIT; J. Sims, DENTIST, Fenelon li‘zllls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Deutai Surgeons. dLL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street ___,.,_____._______._._.__â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€".- Drs. Neelands & lrvme. IDENTISTS - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge workaspeciilty. Splendid tits in artiï¬cial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great SllC\'€SS. W MEDICAL. WM DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"-n.n.,c. AL, u in. ca. Eng.,u.c.r. 1-3., Oun, r. 'r. n. s.â€" )iiYSlClAN, SURGEON 3r ACCOUGH. cur. Oflice. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. n. JOHNSTONE, successor: T0 DR. A. WLLSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVERâ€" sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ollice, Golbornc street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTIONEER. T HO M AS CASHORE, nucrrounun - renames macs. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- elass manner. Secure dates before ad- vertising. In Jewelry We carry a large and well selected stock. Our prices are as low as you will ï¬nd any- where. It Pays V To keep your watch in good or repairing bring it here. JOHN SLATER, ~ [SSUER or MARRIAGE LICENSES NEXT DOOR 'ro POST-OFFICE. FENELON FALLS. 3’06 -_ :1. 5'1 .. 0 w 90. 0 f , ’ A __-' (3%.. I, s x 1,. -.0 ..r7. -: Inn' 0 - £13259?- ='}’-\i'=. " "‘e ""' - ._ - _ - _;. ._ .‘ _ __ .. I... 1 _, as ,\, v V: .' r .. .eg , THE WISEST ' j 9 ~ s HOUSEWIFE : .m Is she who devotes the most care to thglselection of the supplies for- her ::: ta 9. ‘ ' 1.: She recognizes that in this particular she is the custodian of the health of g. the family. ' - ' ' She sees to it that all: doubt of quality is removed. ~ \i :J In short, she enforces a pure food la. of her own framing. 4 1:3,- have got into the habit of depending upon thisstore. They have learned that our claim for high grades is more than talk. We invite a test from every overseer of a family’s eatables. 4 We promise to give everyone all that there is to be had in the way of eatable surety. I» This explains why so many housewives I J. L. ARNOLD. HIGH IN QUALITY but always correct in price, is what you always ï¬nd prevails at our grocery store. . . PICKLES. CATSUP and other things that we handle. are always the best. The best is always cheapest because it’s wholesome. Get our “High in Quality†goods and be safe. ROBSON 8: SON. rt jSpring and If it needs cleaning . Summer Suits. invite your inspection. Fit and workmanShip i g a date goods for Spring and Summer Suits. We 4 the best. ' No trouble to show goods. 4 4 MMï¬xï¬ï¬ï¬Mï¬ï¬‚ufluflnflgï¬Mï¬ and; We carry a. ï¬ne line of the most up-to- i , i TOWNLEY BROS. i BANK OF ' Iâ€"IEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - $14,400.000.00. ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. Deposits taken of- $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. The Social Unrest.‘ The topic of most of your conversa- tions with your neighbors is about _the way things are running in this coun- try. You cannot discuss any subject but what this is a part of it. If you discuss the price of products, you are trying to think how to get the most for what you have and where to get goods for the least, and how to avoid the tribute or miss the pitfalls that schemers are continually laying to skin you. In other words, you are forced to play the game, whether you will or no. And so long as you are forced to play it, the system that you see has many wrongs in it will continue. The things that can only be cured by legal actionâ€"politicsâ€"are the uppermost in your minds all the time, touch you closer and oftener than any other, and yet you‘ fail to see that politics have anything to do with it. Your idea of politics is that you are to vote for some friend or honest man to hold a position and draw a salary and do things; and you have probably not once thought as to what ought to be done to give you relief. Neither has the man whom you elect, unless he has made a study of the sub-. ject. An honest man who does not have the knowledge cannot help him- self. Now here is where you lose out, A man who has studied the subject must necessarily have discovered how to make the change ; but, to do so, he must advocate a programme so totally different from the programmes that have been used and complained of, that you either do not understand him or you lose faith in his sense. Something totally different must be adopted to make the change; for, if the same rules that have been used are centin- ued, the same evil effects must be pro- l duced. And every such man is quick- ly denounced by the papers and poli- ticians controlled by those who are beneï¬tng by the present conditions. If you have hope of relief by any- thing the Liberal or Conservative par- ties will give you, you certainly are credulous. If many years of rule by these parties has not demonstrated that they cannot or will not make the changes that will produce justice, how much more proof do you wish? Even honest men elected, and the ma- jority have been such, if they try to remedy things by applying the same, principles as in the. past, cannot give any relief. The illegal stealings have been inconsiderable compared to the legal thefts. One big trust legally robs the people of more "each year than all the petty thefts and defalca- tions combined. And if the honest men you elect believe in the private ownership of the trust combine, how can it be prevented from taking l836 MONTREAL, INCORPORATED BV ACT OF PARLIAMENT its . it, and see whether this be not true.â€" toll from the people and crushing alllCOtbon’S \Veekly. THE BANK OF - DIONTREAL. REST - 12.000.000.00 Fenelon Falls Branch M smaller concerns in the same business? Your theory of governmental function- ing is narrow. You do not want it to go into productign and distribution, and yet it is the private ownership of these things that produces the evils of which you complain. You would like- ly oppose the collective ownership of the postal system, if it were privately owned now, as you now believe the government should not take over the express companies or establish other conveniences. You believe in the col« lective ownership of the postal plant, not on principle, but because you have grown up under it and never saw it any other way. If it were pri- vately owned to-day, you would de- nounce men who advocated the gov- ernment taking it Over; just as you are honest in your opposition to the" government doing other things for‘ you, so that each is equal before it. The Socialists cannot do anything for you. If there is anything done for' you, you must help to do it. It takes a majority, and you Liberals and Con- servatives are the majority; so, after all, nothing can be done for you unless you help to do it. A minority cannot pass a. law. We do not ask you to trust us Socialists, but to trust your- selves. If we can get you to under- stand . the principles of society, you will then be most potent in bringing: about the things you want; It is the- things that you want that we are try- ing to induce you to help get. But that is what you can ’t get into your mind. You have an idea that Social- ists want a lot of things that you do not want. If this were true, Cotton’s would quit the work of agitation. \Ve want just what you want, and are try- ing to get it ; but you are not clear-in the matter. If we could speak to you face to face, we could convince you that what you want is the very thing we are trying to get for you as well as for ourselves. We want to put this stronger, if we can. You will not make any change in your nature, your desires or wishes, if you should become a'Socialist. No- body does that. It is not a change of any conviction. It is but a change of method to get what you now long for. When a farmer throws away an old machine, good in its day, and gets a better one, does that change his de- sires in life? Is n’t it that he has got the new machine to more easily secure the very things that he was trying to get with the old machine? Now, that is something like the Socialist moveâ€" ment. It is a process to get what you' have been trying to get by using the old parties for many years, and have not gotten. Socialism will give yOu what you want today. No change in you is desired or sought. Get a book on Socialism and read [-910 Bri lSll North America 74 Years in Business. Every Banking Accommodation. most favorable terms. Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000 . offered to Farmers, Cattle- m en, Miners and Lumbermen. Sales Notes handled on Checks on any Bank cashed. Money advanced to reliable men at reasonable rates. Money sent to any point by Money Order, Draft or Telegraph Transfer. Eenelon Falls Branch, W. A. Bishop, Manage; x.~» ,