o o -. "v , a, .r ‘5 .v‘..<. '9‘4,’w 1, is... '< afï¬x r 4r. A r.»,_ - Clocks, I g i . M HOPKINS, \VEEKS & HOPKINS. 1' n p .. an» . . < _. - m~._w...-...- Rehib†" i NOTHING woum . To do? repair work that i will give satisfaction 3 DISAPPOINT US time has always been 4 our endeavour. i In Watches,“ 30 Nucn As to have you disappointed. Nothing Would please us so much as Jewelry, Etc, iv. any the best lines. g to have you mention to us the slightâ€" : . r est- cause for dissatisfaction. ,5th sum 3 Our aim is to have what we Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The 01a Reliable Jewelry Store. ' 3 ï¬Feneloh "Fails. ' j to be, not so 10w that quality must be sell as nearly as possible faultless. i i r E9 i' it To make theprice we charge E g E h b it e E i fair---not a cent higher than it ought Pi-otossional Caxde f.-. .. . ‘ LEGAL ::______.________..__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-"“"â€" _ MOLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON dz ~STIN SON. RRISTERS, SOLIGITORS, INQTAR- BA ics. Money to loan. Special :1th- tion given to investments. Brapch othce at Fenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay Oflice over Dominion'Bank. A R. J. Moll/menus. K. C. A. M. Funron,B. . Jas. A. Paul... '1‘. H. Srmsou. 4" sacriï¬ced+~to have our treatment Of ' customers courteous, and to do ever - 3 thing that will tend to form a “ Iâ€"Willâ€" come-again†resolve in the mind of every buyer. l ARRISTERS SOLICITORS, "AND Notaries. Sblicitors for til": Bank p: t cal. \loney to loan a erms :dhiltlie boriower. Ollices NO. 6 William St. sou‘t’h, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- villc, Ontario. G. [-I. HOPKINS, K. (3., C. E. WEEKS, F. HOLMES Horxrivs, VB. A MOORE dz JAUKSON‘l same/runs, SOLIUL’I‘ORS, &c. or lice, William ‘slreet, Lindsay. j JPL.ARN0LD. ‘“ Our lines ----- Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Crockery and Glassware, Wall Paper, All classes of Fire_Insurance at lowest rates. F. D. Moons. A. Jsossos ' may: 3'? WV ~ I WWW .-________________~____ I _ . srswaar. a O’CONNOR, WVâ€??? W W W WW _ ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, aw. MQNEY _ WW“.â€" ‘ï¬mflm 4†an“ Huh“ “haw†B to loan at lowesl current rates. 'lerms " ‘ ""‘ “‘W â€"â€"- _. _ to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of K9“ rwowmommoommo WWMMW and York streets, Lindsay. ’1‘. Snwsm. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. RR‘IS’I‘ER, SOLICITOR, SOTeRY A Public. Successor to McDiarund & Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real 3 Fine Tailoring ~ + -' Call and see our stock of new goods. 3 i We’will be pleased to have your order Style, fit § Estate bought and sold. Ollice Kent 80., Lindsay, Telephone 41. W DENTAL. _ W Dr. s. J. suns, DENTIST, § FenelonFalls. g for a 01. Overcoat. . Graduate of Toronto University and . Royal College of Dental Surgeons. workmanshlp guaranteed. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY _ performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. ‘ OFFICE:â€"-â€"Ovor Burgoyne’s store, Gol- orne street M “TOWNLEY BROS. H Drs. Neelands & Irvine. ' "é “ENTISTS - LINDSAY. MM m Natural teeth preserved. Crown and WWW WOOOUMNNH,“ ridge work aspecialty. Splendid ï¬ts in rtiï¬cial teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great success. . MEDICAL} :____._____.______â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€" DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"u. n.,c. 3., u. a. o. s. Eng.,'ir. c.r. L 3., 05m, 1-. 'r. x. s.â€" HYBICIAN, SURGEON A: ACOOUCH- our. Oï¬ice. Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, scccssson T0 on. A. wnsox, RAbUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- - sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coueheur. Oliice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. SHOES m For A KING , g You'll ï¬nd us ready at any time to do you a lot of good for your shoe you spend represents more good results to you than any other. They're money. This is the place where the money é. as good as they look and better than AUCTIgFâ€"EERo _ 9.â€?er they cost. THOMAS†OASHORE, - ' I sameness - mums rm. g S N ‘ . Sale: 01.0.11 kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- - ,, t A ‘ class manner. Secure dams before ad- - vow-ins. ' - . WWW W4 .1’ ,. .ho"~v*3~°‘-V‘5)"K" - iris-w ~â€" -~"-«' 3. a.» .L‘Jr-wr: .32‘ w .. '- . aux-z,†.1 ‘ 3v... ' r» hwy“ ‘ ........-;’..:...-».. .. _... .. . ‘..'.‘,.. . _..... . . HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1617 CAPITAL 4 315.400.000.00. Pity, For The Rich. ’ I pity the poor cuss, because there is something personal in that pity. I know how it is to be poor, but some- times my pity goes out to the man of millions. Personally, I do n’t knew what it would be like to be rich, but I can imagine a good many things. It means this, at least. On the rich is devolving the maintenance of employ- ment for all the people. This is a big job, and it is growing bigger every day. The foolish rich, that is, the sons and daughters who never attempted to solve the problem of capitalism, can- not spend this money fast enough to dissipate it, and it becomesnecessary to reinvest it. Under the agitation that exists there is practically nothing that is considered asafe investment. Fully ,half a dozen of the biggest ofï¬ce buildings in New York are vacant and not paying expenses. The Goulds have within the last two years lost ï¬nancial prestige and a good deal of their for- tune. There isno opening that is safe any more, yet the capitalist is compel- led to seek a place for his money. It is the only thing he can do under this system. f He is absolutely forced into the control of the courts and into the terrible oppression that he is inflicting on the workers 3 and at the same time this travesty on justice and this op- pression is threatening the very base of capitalism. So, I pity the capital- ist. ~He, too, is a victim. Don’t you remember that passage from St. James which says “ Go to, new, yerich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you. Your riches are corrupted and your garments are moth eaten. Your gold and silver is can- kered (that is, unused and uninvested) and the rust of them shall be a wit- ness against you and eat your flesh, as if it were ï¬re.†, That is it. The rust of themâ€"the inability to keep this system going, to keep the money investedâ€"the thing that is making the trouble. Listen further: “Ye have heaped treasures together for the last days.†The un- used treasure, money which they are unable to keep in service, is a danger- ous thing. Already there is a cry for the taking of that treasure. A preach- ment is being widely circulated from Chicago favoring this among many. other things : “A man’s opportunities are never exhausted so long as other men, not his friends, possess millions of acres of land and thousands of tons of gold. The guarded treasure alone of modern kings and presidents, high priests and millionaires, are positively the richest the world has ever known. Here is opportunity on a large scale, Here are the goals of the Caesars, Neb- uchadnezzers and Napoleons in the days that are coming. The proï¬t sys- tem is simply a large gathering ma- chine. It was bound sooner or later 1836 ‘ THE BANK OF Bfri u: 76 Years in Business. BANK or MONTREAL, INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT , ASSETS OVER $230,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT .‘ Deposits taken 0f $1 and upwards, which can be wihdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch - MONTREAL. REST - 315.000.000.00 to gather that vast treasure into the hands of a few. When it gets into the hands of a few, it will become a temptation for those who are dispos~ sessed. It is for this reason that I say I pity the. rich at this time ; and it is for the rich that I declare that the so» cialization of this wealth is the only» thing that will save them from rapinc and robbery in the days to come.â€" James A. Wayland. Criminal Waste. The criminal wastes of capitalism- constitute the most stupendous crime against humanity. The utterly wan- ton destruction of the natural resour- ces, the ravaging of forests and mines. to rush out. proï¬ts without the least delay, and by this reckless method destroying what ought to be the patrimony of future generations can- not be excused upon any ground com- patible with reason and sanity. The» criminal wastes thus involved in the capitalistic method of production for proï¬t are made strikingly manifest in the following extract from the address of J. A. Holmes, director of mines, to the miners’ convention : “In ten years 30,000 men were ~ killed and 60,000 injured. We have destroyed three millions of tons of bit- uminous coal and two millions of tons of anthracite coal, since mining was - begun in this country, by our wasteful methods which leave so much coal u'nâ€" niined. In the last twelve months we a have allowed to escape into the air 480 billions of cubic feet of natural gas. That is the price of competition.†Life is as ruthlessly sacrificed as are the young trees of a forest when the i heart of it is cut out and rushed to market, to realize proï¬ts by the light- ning express methods of capitalism. Fortunately, the end of capitalism is near, and its criminal ravages are soon to be a thing of the past. Socialism will conserve the life of man and the resources of the earth for his susten- ance until the latest generations.â€"-â€"Ex,. *0 The capitalists have had the power of: selecting and recalling judges long enough. Now the people mean to run the men they pay. New Zealand gives a pension to every widow, according to the number of her children. This country prefers to let them work for a miserable pit« tance or sell their bodies to the plutcs for their pleasure. President Walker of the Illinois miners, in his annual report, declares that “every great industrial battle which has been fought and lost by the workers in the last twenty years was lost because the employers had control of the powers of government,†and he urges the 75,000 coal diggers of Illinois to unite 'upon the political as well as upon the industrial ï¬eld. 1912 in America Capital and Reserve Over $7,500,000 Two Members of a Family particularly if they live far from town, frequently ï¬nd it very convenient to take ad vantage of our Joint Account plan. Either may make deposits or withdraw cash on his or her ownsignature alone. Thus either can do the banking when in town, as suits their convenience. $1.00 opens a Savings Account, Joint or Ordinary; Interest added half yearly. drawn at any time. Fenelon Falls Branch Money may be with- M.W. Reive, Manager