'1 iiiï¬iitï¬t’ErW-fg‘agq ;' Professional Cards ' LEGAL. ‘ MCLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON & STINSON. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- . ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tio‘ngiven to investments. Branch ofï¬ce at Fen-ion li'alls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay ofï¬ce over Dominion Bank. it. J Melmucumudfl C. A. M. Funron, B. A. JAS. A. PEEL. T. H. S'rmson. HOPKINS, WEEKS & HOPKINS. BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the. borrOWer; Ofï¬ces No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- ville. Ontario. ' s , G. H. HOPKINS, K, 0., C. E. Warns, . F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A MOORE'& JACKSON )ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, &c. Of 3 flee,William street,hindsay. F‘. D. Moons. A. JACKSON . STEWART &, O’CONNOR, ) .-\RRIS'I‘ERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY l) to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent null York streets, Lindsay. ‘ 'i‘. Srnwmn. . L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ) .Xitltls’l‘iï¬lt. SOLICITOR, . _ ) Public. Successor to McDiarnnd & Weeks. Visit-s made to Fenolon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and Sold. Ollice Kent,St., Lindsay, Telephone ll. ‘ --._..... . ..- ._ nurseries-v: .. _...-_ __ DE "EAL. 62‘. §. .3. Slih'li'é, E50131", D‘en’nelon Edalls. Graduale of Toronto University and 4 Royal College of' Denlal Surgeons. ALL BRil‘iCHE‘S (.33? DENTISTRY performed according'to the latestimproved . methods at. moderate prices. OFFICE:â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- ornc street Drs. Irvine. l) E N i‘lb‘TS LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work a speciilry. Splendid fits in artiï¬cial teeth. Painless exlraction. Gas administered to over 9,0.)0 persons with great. sucvess. ‘11â€"..me Manamaâ€"7" moiww- ___._.___.__...â€"_â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" ______.__._â€"â€"- MEDICAL. Dlt. H. H. GRAHAM. - â€"u. n.,o. M., M n. 0.3. Eng.,M.0.P. a s., 0NT., Fu’l‘. M. s.â€" EIYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- 5.) our. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fcnelon Falls. celands DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, successes TO DR. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ollice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTIOEEER. T HO MAS CASHORE, AUCTIONEER - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- class manner. Secure dates before ad- Vertisiug. W ' In Jewelry We carry a large and well selected stock. Our prices are as low as you will ï¬nd any- where. «It . Pays To keep your watch in good order. If it needs cleaning or repairing bring it here. JOHN SLATER, ESUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES m'r DOOR TO POST-OFFICE. FENELQ?! FALLS.~ NOTARY. i .‘D' Highest cash‘ prices for all kinds of live poultry delivered at his poultry house every business day, except Saturdays, com- 1116110ng Monday, Get. 17th, up to and includ- ing Thursday, Dec. 15th. Bring alongjyour poultry. J.L.ARNOLD. We Call Attention Til Gilli SHOES FOR CHILDREN 5 We want every mother, and V v father, too, to know that ’ here is the-place to get ,3 SliilES THATZWEER. ’ They are made to stand any any amount of hard service. Your shoe bill will be cut in half by their aid. ROBSON & SON. Agents for the Steel Shoe. ovnneoars Lightweight for the coming cool fall weather; heavier for winter ' if you need one, or mOIe, call on us. We have the goods-â€"â€"latest styles, best quality, workman- ship unsurpassed. Let us quote you prices and take your measure for a new fall or winter overcoat or suit. No trouble to show' goods. i i l i... warmer BROS. 1 i i s. i vavmvwv BANK or non HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - 314.400.000.00. _â€"__.V_‘â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€"â€" ‘ TREAL, MONTREAL. 'INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT REST " 12.000.000.00 ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. , Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be Ewithdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch "$3: W ' A Shocking Utterance. From the chapter on Panics in N. A. Richardson’s “ Industrial Problems.†On March lst, 1907, Hon. Leslie M. Shaw, while Secretary of the United States Treasury under Prcs’t Roose- velt, delivered a lecture to the stu- dents and faculty of the University of Chicago. It must be kept in mind .while perusing his words that they were uttered during what was univerâ€" sally held by Capitalists to be a period of unparalleled prosperity, and about seven months before the panic broke with such force and disaster upon us ; that they were :spoken by a high govâ€" ernment ofï¬cial and in the presence of one of the most intensely critical audi- ences that it is any man’s privilege to address; and that he knew that his words would be given as wide a circu- lation as anything that he could possi- bly utter. Thoughtless or reckless exâ€" pression is not consistent with such conditions. Among other things, Mr. Shaw told us : “The time is coming when the man- ufactories will outgrow the country, and men by hundreds of thousands will be turned out of the factories. In itself that is not so bad 3 but when we realize that we pay out in wages as much as all the rest of the world put together, we begin, to see the serious: ness of the situation. The factories are multiplying faster than our trade, and we will soonhave a surplus, with no one abroad to buy, and no one at home to absorb it, because the laborer has not been paid enough to buy back what he created. What will then hap- pen? Why, these men will then be turned out of the factories ; thousands of themâ€"hundreds of thousands. They will find themselves without food, and then will come the great danger to the country, for these men will be hard to deal with. The last century was the worst in the world’s history for wars. I look to see this century bring out the greatest conflict ever waged in the world. It will be a war for markets, and all the nations Of the world will be in the ï¬ght, as they are all after the same markets for the surplus of their factories.†, Did ever a more shocking, revolting utterance fall from tongue or pen? As one contemplates the awful signiï¬â€" cance Of those words, it requires very little attuning of the ear to hear the applause they awakened in hell. He is addressing hundreds, possibly thous- ands, of young men, and as he casts their horoscope we read: Train well both mind and body. You may con- template a life of usefulness, of praise- worthy service to humanity. You will Soon he undeceived. Capitalism has destined you for slaughter as certainly as it has the cattle in yonder yards. The strength and endurance of'your manhood is to be tested by the sword; the keenness of your vision by its cer- ' body tainty in landing the deadly" missile. . Think you that you hear the applause†of a grateful people for your splendid; service in ameliorating human condi: tions? Deluded youths, that ,is the sound of gushing blood from the body of a. slain “enemy†whom you have never personally met or heard of, and' against whom you have no cause for grievance. Capitalism must have a market for labor’s products that it is unable otherwise to squander, and you are destined a sacriï¬ce upon that altar. Go like men to meet your doom. Fathers, you and your grandsires withstood the horrors-of war that this land might be free; that it might be land of noble. sons and a splendid manâ€" hood. When your work was done'the - prospect shone with bright hopes. To I what purpose all this'.l That we might ? attain power to sweep the seas of their commerce; to crush with murderous. iron he'el the fruits of centuries of toil. of muscle and brain ; to destroy civili-v zation the world over, hoary with age-- and teeming with progress. And why That exploiters may carry on their“ work of plundering; that a relatively few may revel in the luxuries that. other bands produced ; that they may: ï¬nd markets .for goods that are needed? at homeâ€"needed by those who created; them. The bandits have no claim to- that ‘ market ; it is in other hands and the heritage of another race. It mat- ters not. With the passport of a decâ€" laration of war, countersigned by the- . strong arm of a conquering host, they' will seal their right through might in the blood of its defenders. Universal carnage, universal slaugh- terâ€"this, then, is the prospect, the certainty, that capitalism lays before humanity: this is its logical and necesâ€"v sary outcome. And all for markets of which we would stand in no need were it not for the exploiters of human la- borâ€"the despoilers of earth. This,‘. then, is the ripened fruit that blosâ€" soms in a panic. Here is capitalism’s solution of the problem Of the unem- ployed. The fulness of meaning of the- quotcd words is not upon us until we contemplate the fact that, if capitalâ€"v ism is to continue, these awful utter- ances are true. That hideous system can have no other outcome. Such progeny, such monstrosities, are its- natural and legitimate offspring. Man cannot exist half slave and" half free. What does freedom of the- amount to, when a man has to- sell that freedom because he has not free access to the products of the la- bor of his hands? The class struggle will vanish will: the triumph of the working class. SOâ€" cialism does not lay stress on the Class struggle to accentuate it, but only to ~ analyse it, and to show how it can be abolished by the abolition of the para- site capitalist class. l8?) c 74 Years in Business. The Saving .Habit Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000 sis the foundation of independence Begin saving now by opening an account with the Bank of . British North America and mak- ing regular Weekly or Monthly depOsits. $1.00 starts a Savings Account and interest is Compounded at highest current rates. Fenelon Falls Branch A. Bishop, Manage ï¬ves-5 D... >_ ‘ N