: , l 9 ,7 i l , '. :34. ,, . 2;. T Clocks," McLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON dz HOPKINS, \VEEKS dz HOPKINS. ’- suit the-borrower. omees, No. 6 William F. D. Moons. 1T0 do repair work that will give satisfaction and stand the test of time has always been our endeavour, In Watches, Jewelry, Eta, We carry the best lines. Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. lFenelon Falls! | Protossioual Cards " LEGAL \ STIN SON. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, _NOTAR- flies. Money to loan... Special atten- , tion given to investments. *Braneh office at h‘cnelon :Falls, open every Tuesday. Lindsay oilice over Dominion Bank. R. J. liclmuonms, K. O. A. M. Funros, B. A. ' Jas. A. Best. T. H. S-rmsos. __________.__._.â€"-â€"â€" AItRlSTERS, ' SOLICITORS, AND B Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to St. south, Lindsay, Ont. and at. Wood- ville, Ontario. H; HOPKINS, K. 0., C. E. WEEKS, F. Homes HOPKINS, B. A _’___________..._-â€"â€"- I MOORE 8!. JACKSON BARRJSTERS, SOLIUITORS, kc. Of- ï¬ce, William streel,Lindsay. _ A. JAOKSON srswsar a O’CONNOR, mm'srsus, uorssrss, as. n’ossr B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Oflice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsey. I 1‘. Sir-wear. L. V. O’ï¬osxo‘s, B. A, LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Successor to McDiarmid & Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Meney to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Otlice Kent St, Lindsay, Telephone 41. v M neural. _ Dr. 5.1. sins, banner, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of ,Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICEzâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, 001- orue street Drs. Neelands & Irvine. DENTISTS - LINDSAY. Natural teeth preserved. Crown and ridge work a specialty. Splendid ï¬ts in rliï¬cial teeth. Painlessextraction. Gas administered to over 9,000 persons with great “success. MEDICAL. us. a. n. GRAHAM. -â€"u. n.,o. u., x s. c. s. Eng.,'x.o. r. A 22., Out, I. r. I. s.â€"- . )HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUOH- l eur. (idiom-Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. 0 _ ________________‘_______.__â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"- DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE coaossa oouurr’oir VICTORIA. SL‘CCi-isson m on. A. wusox. RADUATE 0F TORONTO IINlYER- I sity. Physician. Surgeon and Ac- cnuchcur. Ollice,Colhorne street,.Fen- elon Falls. ’. r ’ WM AUCTIONEER- 'rnouAs ossnoan. AUCTIOXKRR - FENKLON FALLS. - Sales of all kinds conducted in a first- elass manner. Secure dates before ad- pertain". and ceilings stare you Try the_effect of NEW for your consideration. in paper hangings. Our linesâ€"«1 , liroceries, Boots and Shoes, Crockery and ‘ Glassware, Wall This is the season of the year-When everybody should give the home a chance and brighten things up a bit. The walls convey Without actual seeing, any notion E E i‘ E h All classes of Fire Insurance at lowest rates. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAYSâ€"AEOBST 30,1912. BANK OF MONTREAL, f in- the faCeevery E E g i E consideration than most, people} give.- WALL PAPERS It is difï¬cult to of "the attractive patterns we’re showing __ .. «11-... . . Paper, . Call and see our stock of - new goods; Wc‘will be, pleased to" have for a Suit or light Overcoat. your order a Style, ï¬t and workmanship «guaranteed. ‘ TOWNLEY BROS. - SHOES FIT FOR A KING You'll ï¬nd us ready at any time to do you a lot of good for your shoe 1 . mom-y. 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. you." They {servethe owning class, he- 'us Socialists once believed just as they HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1917 CAPITAL - 315.975.220.00. ASSETS oven $240,000,000, M ONTREA‘LI 1. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT ' REST - $6,000,000.00 s’nVINGs BANK DEPARTMENT Deposns taken of $1 and, upwards, which'can be ; Withdrawn on demand.. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch W ’1“ 018 and Fools. Your ancestors, with the crudest tools of production, produced enough of the necessaries of life to keep them in food, clothing and shelter. To-day you are producing, with modern ma.- chinery and methods, an average of twenty times as much as your ancest ors produced, and the mass of workers do not have as good and respectable a living as your ancestors had. Why? If you produce more, why don’t you receive more? Can you not see that there is a screw loose somewhere? This surplus that you are producing and not getting is being piled-up into great buildings, great factories and shops, great mines and works and pal- aces by the tems of thousands for those who do not produce anything, but merely manipulate what you workers are producing. The wealth increases, but you do not get it, though you pro- duce it. Others, who do not produce it, have it. Each of you workers, man or woman, could and should haveean income of $8 a day for your workâ€"for that is what the average products of a day sell for. The reason that you do not get it is because others take it un- der the theory that they are entitled to it for the use of the capital invest- ed. But you workers make that capi- tal, and it is morally yours ;‘ but not legally, because those who make the "laws have seen to .i’tythatrconditionsfl r favor them and those they» serve." You have the votes that elect every ofï¬cial ‘in the nation, directly or indirectlyâ€"â€" yet these people you'elect‘ do not serve' lieve' in the owning class, and as a rule are honest in their belief. All of do; just as you do. We are not more honest now than then, but we have studied and know more about the sub-. - -'ject, just as men know more about , electricity when they study it. Your A poverty is the direct result of the sys- tem .of owning capital individually?â€" of the dividing up system. You are making enough getting it. No matter how much more you. might make; it would not enrich you an iota. It would make the own ing class richer. What you should do is to study, not how to make more wealth, ' but how the owning class get wise, Debs would get twothird's of all tion‘ this fall. But you are not wise, and you will elect the same kind of minds that you and your ancestors have ever put over you to rule. Funâ€" ny, but tragic, this density of your mindsâ€"J as. A. Wayland. 9-. of a man getting robbed a pocket and his money in world. Fenelon Falls Branch wealth, but are not . that which you do make. If you were: the votes cast in the Presidential elec-~ This discussion as to whether there .is a hell or not is entirely out of place, considering the condition of the ~ average toiler. ‘ A Case in Point. Capitalist papers call attention to the fact that 50,000 farmers in Colt.â€" rado and adjacent states faced great loss during the harvest period because they could n’t get enough men to care for the growing crops. At the same time this paper stated that there were 20,000 idle men in Denver who could not pay the fare to, the harvest ï¬elds. This is only part of the situation. The capitalist papers advertised the need of help, and more. than ï¬ve times as many workers as could get employâ€" ment went to the harvest ï¬elds, cut- ting each other’s throats in biddirg for jobs, and impoverishing themselvz s a great deal worse than they were be fore.“ This illustrates» the way of the capitalist system. If the government had control of the great wheat ï¬elds, and employed, men in making roads“ in redeeming landand in other public work, it could immediately transfer to the harvest ï¬elds sufï¬cient help to meet the need, without waste and without impover- isbing the toiler to get, him there. If the government‘vcpnducted these , things they wouldbased-supporting, and the money. deposited in govern- ment banks would be available for use by the whole people, instead of being available for use by the banks; 80 it. will become practicable to do this: work without waste and with justice to all.â€"'Appeal to Beaten. ‘ Protecting the Criminal. A most amazing situation hus'dou veloped in New York: ‘Rosen‘thal,va. gambler who refused tobuy protection from the poliCe, was murdered bya gang who had been hired by police agencies for $2,000 to do the work, in order to prevent an exposure of the graft collected annually by the police of that city 01? of crime. - ' ‘hie graft is. said to amount to nearly two and oneâ€" half "million dollars annually. It payment; made to the police, who‘are to secure protection for the criminal element. New York is all torn' upover the situation, and there are threats and counter threats of further assassi- nation. Politicsï¬â€˜under the‘old parties has become not only mgr-aft but also a promoter of crime. The very organiâ€" zations which are behind this almoat unbelievable situation are also behind ~Woodrow- Wilson in .his .aspirations for the presidencyâ€"fl-Ex. Poverty is not only, under capitalâ€" ism, a crime; it is also a punishment at hard labor for life. ' I'" The capitalist has but one poliatica principleâ€"protection. of, proï¬ts, nothat his tribute may be safe. men, in the'interest of the fellows who proï¬t from their toil. who had a cheque book in his the bank ? Or did you ever know of anybody who lost money" because a ï¬re happened to eat up a cheque book? Any man who keeps his money in the bank and pays by cheque eliminates two of the It costs nothing to be safe, and then besides, it greatest risks in thy ' is so much more convenient. ' The Ban]: of ' British North America, will be glad to have your account. . ‘ r ' . '76 YEARS IN BUSINESS CAPITAL AND RESERVE OVER $7,500,000. M.W. Reive, supposed to enforce the law, in onion, ' War is a contest between working' .--x.,-faév./Je " ,3 plr