mg. -, «A â€" am» 3.. 4,: Ti " Reliabii To do repair work that will give, satisfaction and stand .the test of time has always been our endeavour, :1. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Eta, ' We carry the best lines, JOHN SLATER Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. Fcnelon Falls. 1’ vol 0.55 tonal O ards LEsAL 10LAUGLHIN,PEElLi, FULTON a s'rnvson. P ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, _NOTAR- ) ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch ofï¬ce at [Pens-Ion Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay ollice over Dominion Bank. RJ. .llcllwonl.m,K. 0. A. M. FULToN,B. A. ' .JAs. A. PEEh. T. H. S-rmson. HOPKINS, WEEKS tic HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND B Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Oflices No. 6 William, .St. south, Lindsay, Out. and at Wood- ville Ontario. ' . H’. HOPKINS, K. C., C. E. WEEKS, E. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A _________.____.____â€"_â€"â€"________ MOORE & JACKSON . AltRlSTERS, SOLIUITORS, Size. or ï¬ce, William street,Liudsay. F. D. Moons. A. Jacuson STEWART & 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. Sruwam. L. V. O’Connor, B. A LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTrtRY Public. Successor to McDiarmid & .Weeks. 'Visits‘made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Oflice Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. . W ' m DENTAL. W" Dr. s. J. SIMS, 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. OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- o‘rne street ____________________________ Drs. Neeiands 0L Irvine. DENTISTS - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and ridge work a specialty. Splendid ï¬ts in rtiï¬cisllteeth. Painless extraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great success. w} MEDICAL. WM DR. H. H. GRAHAM. --M. n., o. in, 15.3.0.5. Eng.,u. o. r. s 5., Os'r., r. 'r. n. s.â€" )ilYSlOIAN, SURGEON a: ACCOUOH- l our. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenclon Falls. _____________________________._.._ DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE CORONER COUNTYOF VICTORIA. SUCCESSOR TO DR. A. “'ILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- I sitv. Physician. Surgeon and Ac- conchéur. Ollice, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. ___..-â€"â€"--â€"â€"-â€"â€"--â€"'â€"'â€"‘,â€"“ AU CTIONEER. THOMAS GASHORE. AUUHONBER - FRNRLON FALLS. ‘ Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst- olm manner. Secure dates before ad- vertis‘mz. 1 N FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY FENELO ‘h an Up ," _ This is the season of the year when everybody should give the home a chance and brightcnthings up a bit. The walls- and ceilings stare you in the face every hour of the day andare entitled to more consideration than most people give. Try the effect of NEW WALL PAPERS and let us submit designs and estimates for your consideration. It is difï¬cult to convey without actual seeing, any notion of the attractive patterns we’re showing in paper hangings. Our lines-«- a.L.AsnoLn. 1.26.11! Groceries, Boots and Shoes,’ . Crockery and Glassware, Wall Paper, All classes of F ire Insurance at lowest rates. l i 3 Fine Tailoring » Call and see our stock of new goods. We will be pleased to have your order for 9. Suit or light Overcoat. Style, ï¬t and workmanship guaranteed. TOWNLEY Bees. 1 l l WWWMMWWMWï¬ l i t i 9 R013 SHOES ,FIT FOR A Milli You‘ll ï¬nd us ready at any time to ‘ do you a lot of good for your shoe money. This is the place where 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. ON & SON W WWWWWWMN? i l ' Lam grant sands * - ~ 26, 1912. BANK. OF M0 NTHEA 1., HEAD .' OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 CAPITAL - 315.975.220.00. ASSETS OVER $240,000,006. DIONTREAL. INCORPORATED BY AC? 0F PARLIAMENT REST - $16.000.'OO0.00 3 SA VINGS BANK DEPAï¬ï¬EMENT Deposits taken of $1 and u wardsf‘ivhich can be withdrawn on emandf. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon‘i Falls Branch Wm The C. P. R. Graft. The question often arises amongst Socialists as to what the rake-oh“ was upon the Canadian Paciï¬c Railway. We hear much about the energy and initiative of the men who put this road through. We are told that cap- ital ought to be rewarded and that brains must have their pay. From statistics it would seem that the only energy exhibited by the Canadian Pa- ciï¬c capitalists was the energy needed to plunder a nation. William Larabee, former governor of the State of Iowa, published in 1898 a book called “The Railroad Question. The book is somewhat out of date new, but it is interesting, as it gives the ï¬gures of government assist-; ance to theCanadian Paciï¬c Railwayfl The following is a statement of the assistance : ‘ 5* Subsidy granted by Act of Parliament, Feb’y 13th, 1881 »- - - - - - $25,000,000 Cost and interest of 714 miles built by Canada and given the C. P. R. 36,760,785 Capital stock guaranteed - 65,000,000 Loan to Company authorâ€" ' ized by Parliament, 1884, in part - - - 4 - - 29,880,912 Balance of above loan - 15,000,000 Bonds, interest guaranteed -‘by government for ï¬fty years at 3}? per cent - 15,000,000 1' "15,000,000 Subsidy of $186,000 for 20 years - - - - - - 3,720,000 Total - - - - - $205,361,697 The total cost of the rdad, accordâ€" ing to the Company’s balance sheet of December 3131:, ‘ 1888, was $131,361,- 697. So the government guarantees and grants amounted to $74,000,000 more than the total grist of the road. When we take into consideration that large areas of land Were granted to the builders of the road, and that when they built the line they formed construction companies and bled the road by charging high for building the line, we can begin to see how the mllionaires were made, and how the “ ability†of the capitalists lay in rob- bing the people. \Vhenthe day of rev- olution comes, and the Canadian Pa- cific Railway System is conï¬scated for the beneï¬t of the working class, the claims of the descendants of the C. P. R. thieves to be compensated for the workers taking what their fathers stole will receive scant consideration. â€"Cotton’s Weekly. Political parties are the manifesta- tion of class distinction and class in- terests, and classes are the result of economic disparity. Under capitalism labor power is bought like hides and bones and phos phates and coal. SocialiSm will stop this state of affairs. 1 Every 030:1 Thing Has Been' ‘ Condemned. Every good thing has been con- demned in its day and generation. Every innovation has to ï¬ght for its life., Error once set in motion con- tinues indeï¬nitely, unless blocked by: a stronger force; and old methods of thinking and doing will always re- main, unless some onc_invents a new and better way and then lives and dies for it. And the reason men op- poSe progress is not that they hate progress, but that they love inertia. Even so great a man as John Rus- fih foresaw that railroads would ruin ___ England by driving the stages out o}? . business and killing the demand for horses, thus bankruptng the farmers. ' Thomas Jefferson tells us, in his auto-‘1' biography, of a neighbor of his who “was agin†the public schools, be- cause when everyone could read and write no one would work. Sir William Berkeley thanked God there was not a printing press in Virginia, because printing presses printed mostly lies, and their business was to deceive the people. In the time of Mozart, mu: sicians Were classed with stablemen, scullions, clown and cooks. They ate below stairs, and their business was to amuse the great man who hired them and his‘asscmbled guests. The word business was ï¬rst used in the time of ' Chaucer to express contempt for peo- ple Who were useful.*'l‘he word was then spelled busyness. ~To light cities- by gas would set them aï¬re. Elccr tricity was dangerous, and to put up wires was to invite the lightning to come into our houses and strike us all dead. Only a few decades ago, only man who advertised in the newspa~ pet's was looked upon with suspicion; and even yet we have associations of professional men who stamp with their disapproval _ any individual amongst them who pays for his advertising. Such a. one was called an “irregular.†If we look back through history, we~ shall ï¬nd that every good and beauti- ful thing has at one time or another been under the ban, and assailed as an evil, And the argument seems to. be this : If you think a thing is right, stand by it; never mind what the many may say.â€"-Ex. . In view of the above, don’t condemn’ Socialism; because, no matter if the majority are against it now, it does not prove that Socialism is not right. Socialism is based upon justice and will win.â€"-â€"Ibid. mu-.. ..-.._. The employment of women as street. car conductors is becoming general in- the United States. \Vomen as motor- drivers have also proved successful in California. ‘ Love cannot rule under capitalism- The class war results in enmitics. Socialism will make love among men possible by abolishing the cause of antagonism. 1836 I I 76 Years in Business. Farmers’ THE BANK OF‘ Capital and Reserve Over‘ $7,500,000 1912 ii A 1L, ,1' Banking as well as that of Ranchers, Cattle Dealers, Miners, Lntnbermen and Merchants, receives our special attention. Sale notes discounted or Collected. Cheques on any Bank cashed. Money Orders issued for amounts up to $50, and Drafts for larger sums. vanced to reliable men Money ad~ to discount their bills, purchase stock or extend their business. We invite your account. in. i W W 9.3 Fenelon F3118 Branch MW. Reive, Manager .l‘ï¬ï¬‚f.)‘.r, :" . .u. ¢|-_ ..‘ '1. .txf Ar: r". r.