.-: mfg“, w. «me 'u g!. ., .g. Anemia, 'H‘l', _ «)3 4‘, r. "i - DEX’I‘ISTS - WW â€"__._. _. .__._ _._.~ _.___....â€"â€"‘~ â€"â€"~L â€" To do repair workvthat, will give satisfaction and stand the test of time has always been our endeavour, in Watches, Clocks, ’ Jewelry, Etc, V We carry the best lines. luau SLATER Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. r I flFenelon Falls. , - w.- Protessional .- Cards. WWW‘T'-'â€â€™ , LEGA . .._... "McLAUGLl-IIN, PEEL, FULTON & STINSON. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, 'NOTARâ€" l ics. Money to loan. Special attenâ€" tion given to investments. Branch ofhce at Wenelon Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay ofï¬ce over Dominion Bank. R. J Mclmuonms, K. O. A. M. FULTON,B. A. JAS. A. PEEL. T. H. Srmson. _____,________.._â€"_____.~ HOPKINS, \VEEKS dz HOPKINS. I TE‘ltS SOLICITORS, AND 'BAidiitEries. S’olicitors 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- ‘villc, Ontario. 1 ' G. H. HOPKINS, K. 0., C. E. Warns, F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A _______._._.._._ moons a JAOKson-g ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, 810. Of ï¬ce, William streel,Lmdsuy. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON ___â€"â€"â€"" STEWART 86 O'CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY B to loan at lowest current. rates. Terms to suit borrowms. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 'I‘. Srswsm. L. V. O’Couxon, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, l‘lOTaRY B Public. Successor to McDiarmid & Weeks. V'sits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp heal Estate bought and sold. Oflice Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. DENTAL. % Dr. 5. .1. sums, DENTIST, Feuelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimprovcd methods at moderate prices. OFFICE zâ€"Over Burgoyno’s store, Col- orue street ________________________.____.___ Drs. Neelands & Irvine. LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. ‘Crown and ridge work 9. specialty. Splendid ï¬ts in rliliciul teeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great success. ‘ W MEDICAL. _.______._._c-._.,_._.,- DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"â€"u.o.,o. M., M n. c s. Eng.,n.o.r. a 5., 05:12, 1?. 'r. n. s.â€" )llYSlClAN, SURGEON k ACCOUCH- Falls. - ,,.-________ ill . i NOTHENG woum lSAPPOINT us so uucH 3 ‘3 . , As to have you disappointed. Nothing would please us so much as to have you mention to us the slightâ€" est cause for dissatisfaction. Our aim is to have what we sell as nearly as possible faultless. fair-«not a cent higher than it ought to be, not so low that quality must be thing that will tend to form a “ Iâ€"will- comeâ€"again†resolve in the mind of every buyer. - {-J.L.Asnoro. Our lines ----- Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Crockery and Glassware, Wall Paper, All classes of Fireglnsurance at lowest rates. *5 E i 'l 3 customers courteous, and to do ever â€" i l i E a» i i To make the price we charge E i g i i i i i .i FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1912. “5 BANK or MONTREAL, sacriï¬cedâ€"â€"-t0 have our treatment of ______.________. .. ___....._.~..â€" ,1 Fine Tailoring i l l i Call andsee our stock of new goods. i We will be pleased to have your order Style, ï¬t for a Suit or light Overcoat. . and workmanship guaranteed. wees. ,TOWNLEV Iâ€"IEAD OFFICE »ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - $15.400,000.00. .ASSETS OVER $230,000,000. SAVINGS BANK‘ DEPARTMENT Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be = wihdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT . BIONTRJCAL. REST - $15.000,000.00 W... ' “ Liberty †in Britain. Because a workman’s paper appealâ€" ed to soldiers, three weeks ago, not to do the dirty work of the capitalists by shooting down or bludgeoning the working people who are forced by star- vation wages and slavish conditions into “ striking†from time to time for better terms, the Government have ar- rested the editor and printer of that paper, for a. week refused them bail, ransacked their premises, and are pros- ecuting them for treason felony. What does this mean? _ It means that the salaried persons who form “ the Government,†and who are there to do the bidding and serve the brutally selï¬sh interests of the ï¬- nanciers and big employers who run this country for their own proï¬t, at the loss of the rest of the community (including, policemen and soldiers)â€" it means that these gentry-in-otï¬ce are afraid that some instalment of com- mon justice may be won by their pro- testing slaves unless soldiers and "po- lice can be counted on, at any mo- ment, to baton and butcher the slaves into silence and submission in their wretched poverty. It means that this‘country, which we were taught at school to believe was “ the land 0’ freedom,†is now be- ing worse than Russianised and Ger- ' manised by the parasites and place- ruen who ride upon the backs of the working folks, and get rich by their pcnury.‘ It means that the govern- ing classes are so afraid of the people being told the plain truth about these things that they are trying to sup- press the liberty of utterance in Eng- land ;‘ to make an end of freedom of speech and of pen, except when that freedom is used against the workers. Now, freedom to criticise the laws and the law-makers, and to express opinions upon all the public questions of the dayâ€"such freedom of utterance is the very keystone of all freedom of any kind. Without that freedom there can be no freedom. Every liberty depends upon that one. No self-res- pecting Briton can stand by and see that fundamental liberty trampled upâ€" on or interfered 'with. Every one of us possessed of the least remains of our national honor must resist such a blow to our traditions and to our ele- mentary rights, at all costs and by ev- ery means in our power. Moreover, those of the misgoverning clique who would suppress the free expression Of opinion, or the liberty of appeal to any section Of the nation not to deliberate- ly commit brutality and murder, are themselves the most dangerous enemies of decent society. For the suppression of frank and Open utterance upon ev- ery question of public polity means éwWWWMMW WM driving earnest men and women to se- ~.,.-...n.4~....~. . ... - SHOES? cret and underground methods of or- ganisation and action. There is, in other words, no mor 1836‘ -~ < e 3 THE BANK OF . ,6 .. 2‘: l; I . _.‘ .v 72. '.' l mischievous and suicidal policy of mis- governing than that of “sitting on the"- safety valve.†If, for the sake of the mean and grasping £. 8. d. interests of the rich, We are not to be allowed to appeal to our fellow-citizensâ€"and our soldiers and our police we, of course,- claim as our fellow-citizensâ€"not -to butcher and bash their own kin and;" their own class, when these dare to insist that the laborer is worthy of his hire and must have a. voice in ï¬xing the terms of that hireâ€"if we are not to be allowed to issue such an appeal as that, what right of any sort under heaven remains to us? It will not do. There are still too many people in this island profoundly concerned to defend what slender rights and liberties yet remain to the common people, for this. new bulldozing experiment of the pres-- ent reactionary jacks-in-Ofï¬ce to sue- ceed even temporarily. Meanwhile, I, for one, endorse and emphasize every word of the appeals which have been made to the common humanity and selfâ€"respect of our sol- diers. I urge the police to refuse to be diverted from their proper function of guardians of the peace into strike" breakers and ipso faeto blacklegs of " the trade unionists. In any case, it should be clear to policemen that bet- ter pay and, conditions for the strikers : mean better pay and conditions for' the police as well. .The stabbing or sheeting of unarmed men and women is not work for soldiers. The proper function of the army is the defence of the country against aggression, not the backing of avaricious capitalists in their disputes with sweated labor. Moreover, you, soldiers and police- men, are the sons of the working class, and you know only too well how hard is that unjust suflering Of your class, which drives it into the organized pas- sive resistance of strikes against its dwindling rations, or for a less squalid and grinding existence than that to which the wage-workers are at present doomedâ€"Leonard Hall, in “J usticc.†..._._.__. -‘ Ripe For Socialism. At the annual convention of the Saskatoon Grain Growers’ ASS()ciation,. held at Regina, the secretary, F. “’1. Green, made the statement that; many" of the delegates had been unable to , attend. “Many,†he said, “have not enough money to buy the necessaries of life, let alone spending it to attend the convention. They have thousands of bushels of wheat which they are not able to sell or to raise money on.†How is that for bloated prosperity for" the farmers? They are in the position of workers peddling labor, and unable to ï¬nd a buyer. They have congealed their labor power in wheat, and them is no market for their labor product. The farmer is (lead ripe for Socialism. e l â€"â€"Cotton’s \Vcekly. 1912 n our. ~Oliice. Francis Street, Fcnelon' . FIT F08 A KING ‘You'll find us ready at any time to do you, a lot of good for your shoe money. 4 This is the placcvwhere the money you spend represents more good results to you than any other. They're as good as they look and better than they cost. 76 Yearsin Busines Capital and ReerveOr $7,500,00 KEEP YOUR MONEY WORKING FOR YOU" VVheu you carry a roll of money around in your pocket, or keep it in your home, you are not only risking loss but wasting the interest which it should be earning for you. This may not amount to mucl. in a day or a week, but it . counts up in a year. Start-a savings account now â€"-deposit all yOur spare cash regularly, and beneï¬t from the interest which we add twice a year. DR. II. B. JOHNSTONE, i SUCCESSOB TO DR. A. \VILSO‘S, RADUA‘TE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac‘ coucheur. Oilire,Colhorne street,-Fen- elon Falls. i l l _______~___ 2 switchers- l nele ROBSON & SON WW mg Fenelon Branch .‘~;" I 24’ fr) .“w‘ AUCTIONBRR . - FENEIDN FALLS. Sales of all kinds eonduotui in a ï¬rst: ï¬lm manner. Secure dates before ad-. W. MW. Reive, Manager. i .% ~.v d'lw‘u.“kl"}‘w"r" 3 ‘