'rfl'>.-r'< , 1 1.. .44........,;,...... ,1 . .A , - . 121151.11»): .. \‘f-‘Q'f: smmwisw ' m. " ‘ 149...:r.!‘.»1‘.o'~‘.n: 1; ’1 ., "a; ...» .1943“ 1.:1. . _MCLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON 151 ' suit the bor".1ower Oliices No. 6 William is the man who owns a Walthamâ€"but only the man who has car- ried a Waltham Watch for thirty or forty years knows . what a ï¬ne investment a good Waltham is. d, » “13’: Time You Owned 1: Waitham." We carry the best quality of goods that can be purchased from the best manufacturers 3' char. Slater Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. Feneion Faiis. run-.m- nal Cards UCKY 'L’rotc, ssio LEGAL _____._._._____. I STIN SON. BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- 1es Money to loan. Special atten- tion' given to investments. Branch ofï¬ce at li‘enelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsw oflice over Dominion Bank. R. J. bicL.1ue1n.m,K. O. A. M. Funron,B A. JAS. A. PEEL. T H. S'rrnson. HOPKINS, WEEKS 1k HOPKINS. BARR. ASTER/S, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- ville, O11t111.) G.U.Hor111>1s, K. 0., C. E. WEEKS, F. Hermes HOPKINS, B. A MOO RE 81 JACKSON l iRRlSTERS, SOLiUl'l‘ORS, &c. lice, William street ,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. STEWART Sr O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. T.Srswsar. L V. 0100111113. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Estate bought and sold. Oflice Kent 812., Lindsay, Telephone 41. A. JACKSON DENTAL. Dr.-S. .1. suns, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. 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, 00]- orne street , Drs. Neelands 81 lrvme. DENTISTS .- - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and bridge work aspccialty. Splendid ï¬ts in artiï¬cial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great suceess. MEDICAL. DR. H. II. GRAHAM. ._n..,.no.u., na.......osEng,noras., Onr.,r....'rnsâ€" 9 )HYSIOIAN, SURGEON & ACI‘ JOUCH' - our. Oliicc. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. ' DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, successor. 'ro nu. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- slty. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- 'couehenr. Ollice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTIONEER. THOMAS OAS HORE. sucrionnua - FENELON FALLS. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- class manner, Secure dates before ad- . remains» Jflxiï¬tï¬kflrï¬k ..n. m. 3a.. 1a.. ..a. .11. Wyï¬znï¬ruflu the“ 1111-3111. .11. .m- itinnlï¬mdhr. 1a.. ï¬duwflrnifiuaflu an... 2 i Successor to McDiarmid & Money to loan 11111) Real If; .a . n. i i i i i i» 1; i 1» INT 0111' poultry house at ~fienelon Falls will open on Monday, Oct. 16th, vhen we will be p1epa1ed to pu1chase any i; i quantity of Chickens, Fowl and kaeys, gfor which the highest ma1ket piices will ébe paid, up to and including Friday, §Dec. 15th. Bring along your poultry. of; 1 “i s.1.aawe13 Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Wall Paper, Crockery. femur WHEUWWWWWW‘W‘WWWWW WVWW aura.» About the repair of your watch, or anything in the repair of Jewelry We are prepared to give you our best efforts, no matter how small your order ENERMING FREE On "goods bought from us. We are showing a complete line of Jewelry in Watches, Silverware, etc,, everything that you would ï¬nd 111 an up- -to- date jewelry store. NORTHEY FENELON FALLS. Jeweler Watchmaker 21:1: mmww nannies-ravage my seesaw warmer Winterize =1?an were: Eisner WWWM" manner: assert “RW‘W wsmrvwrrr rename? VWWWMWOWWME WHEN BAD WEATHER COMES You'll want good shoes. If they’re not made right better not have them. The shoes we sell are the best that money and skill can produce. Another strong point about our shoes is that they aceom- modate the feet comfortably and their outward appearance presents graceful and harmon- ious lines. Robson 81 Son, Fenelon Falls. WWW 1 l ' unï¬t are in anothe1 class" Shhi‘i 0% it IIEAJ) OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1317 CAPITAL - 514.400.000.00. midi... DIONTRXC 3A1 L INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT REST - $12,000.0co.c0 ASSETS OVER $220,000,000. . SrXVINGS BANIE DlEI’AIR'TlTD’IEIVT. Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on demand. R. M. I-Iailton, Mgr. i Objections. VVhon you are out stump speaking, you run against the stock questions Here are a Ofew of them: “What w ill you do with the lazy people unde1 Socialism?†There are thlee classes of lazy peo- ple, the capitalists, the unï¬t, and the healthy tlamps who won’t wo1k. Un- (lei Socialism, the capitalists will lose thei1 unea1ned revenues. They will have to w 01k, if they are able to. So- cialism, by dep11ving them of theii un- earned revenues, will force them into the ranks of the useful workers. fibe These un- fit persons a1e usually the result of bad economic conditions surrounding them, 01 which suuounded thei1 par- ents bef01e they W816 b01n. A child may be born tired because its parents were overworked and underfed and illâ€" fed before its birth Or it may haxe acquired a tired feeling by being underfed in its infancy. Good food, fresh air, healthful surroundings and short hours of labor for all will elimi- nate this class of the unfit. The third class is the healthy tramp who won’t wo111. Personally, I admire the tramp. He has more spunk and manhood in him in refusing to w01k and be 10b bed than has the conscientious slave who diligently attends to the business of the capitalists and gets robbed of th1ee- qu.11 te1s of the wealth he pro- duces. Unde1 Socialism, when each will get the full social value of what he produces, the t1 amp will find it far easier to get a living by doing useful work than he can by tramping it. Then he will turn to work and give 11p his tramp ways. There may be a few old tramps who will not change; but they will die out and then class will become extinct. If there should be any peisons who will not \101k af- ter we have attended to the above, we will set the doctors at wo1k examin- ing them fo1 the hook wo1m. “Who will provide the capital un- der Socialism?†The workers will provide the capiâ€" tal. They do it now. .Capital is that. pad: of wealth which is used to p10- duce more wealth Nature supplies - the 1aw material. The wor'ke1s change that raw material into things,3 0‘ood for the use of man. They produce the capital, for they build the factories and lay the raihoads, and make the maeh1ne1 y and dig the gold and man- ufactu1e the bank notes. The work- ing class collectively produce the capi- tal. Unde1 Socialism they will collect- ively own what they have collectively produced “Lab01 cannot get along without capital, can in?†No. Unde1 modern conditious it cannot. But the workms could get along very nicely without the private capitalists. Socialism does not aim at Falls Branch .,â€" abolishing capital. It simply aimsat abolishing the p1ivate capitalist 1y making capital the collective property r In Montrealr of then working class. found two definitions of capital cur- rent, and as a result, when the above question was asked, some speakers dc» clared that capital would be socialized,. and others declared that it would be abolished. The former speakers de- clared that capital was wealth which was used for the production of more wealth. This, of course, will he so- cialized. The latter speakers declared that capital was that part of wealth which will be used to exploit labor" As, under Socialism, there will be no part of Wealth which will be used to exploit labor, it follows that there will be no capital, and capital will be abol- ished. I think it best to use the ï¬rst deï¬nition, although both are incom- plete and inaccurate. “ If a man works and makes a for- tune, should he notcnjoy it?†Certainly he should. But most men who get a fortune do not make it.. They steal it from the useful workers... It istrue that many capitalists work hard. So do burglars and slave raid- ers and highwaymen. But if a highâ€" wayman holds up a coach and gets. away with a few thousar‘id’flollars, no one thinks of s.1yrin0"tlia't the highâ€"- wayman has “made†a fortune. The capitalists do not “make†fortunes. They steal them. We socialists will prevent the capitalist steals, and so will allow the man who “nial1esâ€or produces wealth to enjoy the social: value of what he has made. “Socialism will destroy ambition.†No, it will not. It will make men' ambitious. You can ’t make men am- bitious by just giving them a bare livâ€" ing, and taking away. from them all the rest of the wealth they have pro- duced. It is not robbery that makes men ambitious. They are ambitions in spite of it. A good many workers start out with the idea that they can become prosperous by hard work. So they work hard, stay poor and lose their ambition. It is the height of folly to say that it will make men 11n-' ambitions to give them the result of what their toil has produced. There are many other foolish objec- tions inged to Socialism. But the dibove seem to be the chief questioas and objections used. The Montieal public, at least, have get beyond the stage of thinking that Socialism means dividing up, and that it will break up the home or destroy religion.â€"â€"â€"Cot-- ton’s \Veekly. Surely a system that keeps men from getting employment, and forces women and children into factories, is wrong. When the cooperative comâ€" monwealth is established, your child will have an equal opportunity with any child on earth. 75 Years in Business. A Jain- Account “Capital and Reserve Over $7,500,000 may be opened by two mem- bers of a family, E1ther may- deposit or with- draw money On his or her own signature alone so that either may do the banking, as is most convenient. $1. 00 opens .1 Savings pounded at highest current rates. withdrawn at any time. WW3 Fenclon Falls Branch Interest com- Money may be Account. M.W. Reive, Manager -' v"‘~.r†. ..,! - J _« 5,1,7.- , :1. s _. - '~_r,~_\.._a\.-.. ou~u ...â€"1W" "‘4‘... - -4‘\-\.n. .. 1_'/v"