W . .5, ... .4... «v "r." : - .g",-.“._‘ "1,,3’;,‘L“~s<-w‘~_‘~.~‘n- .h ‘a a. +5.) r" is :44 r 5%. 7:?“ . q _.,.. 9.. « ~ fingw ... - »-. ..a.._,..._‘. .. -. ..,,_...~... . .... U-.. ....,.., . ...v . . - . 4...- serum were: [‘3‘ one of the necessities of present times, when accuracy and promptness are required in all departments of business life. Buy a Waltham Watch and have a good, dependable time- keeper. ' ‘We carry the best quality ._,:;f;;.;0f goods that can be purchased from the best manufacturers. flour SLATEB .nan- Issuer of Marriage Licenses; W The_Old Reliable Jewelry Store.) Fenelon Flls. b . Protessio nal Cards ' LEGAL ' .W .__.____â€"__.__._â€".â€".__ .1cLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON & s'rmson. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch ofliee at Fenclon Falls, at the L. H. & Power Commissioners' ofï¬ce. Open every Tues- u day. Lindsay oflice over Dominion Bank. . .8. J. Mohavenmn, K. O. A. M. FULTON, B. A, " carry“:Kirstin-.1 ,. ‘T.":li,‘SrI‘Nsou. ~ , HOPKINS, WEEKS dc HOPKINS. ARRIS’I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank .of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Oliices No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Ont. and at Wood- ville, Ontario. ‘ .. H. HOPKINS, K. 0., C. E. Wanas, ' F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A MOORE & JACKSON ARRIS’I‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. 0f, lice, William ereel,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON STEWART (c O’CONNOR, ARRIS'I‘ERS, NOTARIES, £10. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Oflice on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. m . Srswaar. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A, LEIGH n. KNIGHT. ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY 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. ' DENTAL. Dr. S. JiliVSIIMS, DENTIST, Fenolon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ABL BRANCHES 0F DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE:â€"'0ver Burgoyue’s store, 001- orne street MEDICAL. DR. H. H. GRAHAM. -â€"n.'n.,o. u., u. a. 0.3. Eng.,n. c. P. a s., 081%, r. r. u. s.â€" HYSICIAN', SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Oï¬ico. “Francis Street, Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. J OHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE coaoxaa COUNTY or vwronm. SUCCESSOR TO DR. A. WILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- ;,;sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- ,‘-.eo"ncheur. Oflice,Colborne street, Fen- i‘élon Falls. AUCTIONEER. rnonas casuoan. 4UUHONBHR - PENELON FALLS. $111,531 of alfkinds conducti d in a ï¬rst olnseimnunor. Secure dates before ad- vertising. M " . r152" it. . . «71‘? _ ,._. mm mesa-ans. We: stun. an. 1 , ii ,-- wholesome food all the year round, with- ; IT’S so TBUBLE a Tef-have your table supplied with j out a miss or a Slip._ ‘ All the freshness, all the goodness 3 that it is possible to secure may be yours at any time. It simply means the send- ? ing of your orders here. 5 g , v . r a» Let us repeat What we have many times stated before, and what we are proving every business day in the year, that the, cheapestcatables that can be g bought are those which are ,oflthe high- as - E? i est possible“ grade. Always readyrto give you our best services. AWOLâ€"Die;- , l l i .Lines’~ 7 I , J . Boots and Shoes, Groceries, Wall Paper. V WWW’WWW’VWWWjWV’V’W’WV‘V EMWWWW WWW MOO-0W0? A. Stitch in Time . 3 Saves nine, and a suit in time keeps you always well dressed. It pays ,to be a little forehanded in ordering a new outï¬t of clothes, for ,variOus reasons. Call in and let us take your measure for a new suit. Up-to-date goods, style and workmanship. Our motto is " Fashionable Tailoring at Popular Prices.†TOWNLEY. Bares. Fine Tailoring ‘Fenelon Falls ngW WMMMW “MO-OJ Are now so skilfully prepared that they make an excellent substitute for the fresh article. especially at this season. We have a good line of rais- ins, currants, ï¬gs, dates, prunes and peaches. Each has the natural flavor and each has been kept in absolutely good condition. We do not handle -moldy or wormy fruit under any circum- stances. Cowe and try and buy. D. L. MOKENDRY. 3°“ HEAD OFFICE. ESTABLISHED 1817 Tools 0f Industry. “Man is a tool-using animal,†said Benjamin Franklin, and in these few wowds he stated an economic fact of the greatest signiï¬cance, and at the same time guished man from all other animals. Man uses tools ; other animals do not and remain animals forever, while man goes on developing his faculties, chang- ing his environment, and rising stead- ily to a higher and higher plane. If man ceased to use tools he would inev- itably revert to the animal state. The historyof human progress is written all around the tools with which man has worked in his struggle for existence, all the way from the club of the cave man to the modern steel mill. The nature of the tool is closely al- lied with the nature of its user. The degree of a nation’s civilization, or lack of civilization, may be readily de- termined by the kind of tools it uses in producing its wealth and satisfying its material necessities. The cave man owned his own club, and he went out in search of his own food on his own account. He Was an individualist, he was ; and if anyone-had talked Social- ism to him he\vould have objected to it as strenuoiihly as the modern bour- _gc()is, and upon substantially the same ground. ‘The'cave man" would have protested against being stripped of his “ incentive †and being reduced to the “dead level†of inferior cave men. Just ‘here let it be noted that if this gentleman, the cavefunan, had relied entirely upon himself as an individu- alist, he and his descendants would never have been other than cave men, nor progressed an inch beyond their cave dwellings in a. billion years. Even the cave man had his social instinct, and this, and this alone, led him out of his cave habitation and his animal existence, and after countless centuries humanized him to the ex- tent of his present development. The model tool of production was individ- ual in character, and correspondch to his savage state and primitive environ- ment. The modern tool of production is social in character, and corresponds to man’s present civilized state and his highly-developed surroundings. Tools individually used were of ne- cessity individually owned, and it fol- lows with inexorable logic that tools socially used mustbe socially owned. Here we have the genesis of modern Socialism, and the reason why Social- ism, however it may be resisted, is in- evitableâ€"Appeal to Reason. 0.. Capitalists will do anything for la- bor as long as proï¬ts are not hurt. They who pull the purse strings pull the political strings. The workers had better get hold of the purse. '\ , INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAME Paid up Capital $6,000,000.00. NT ASSETS OVER $240,000,000. SAVINGS BANII DEPARTIVIENT Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be withdrawn on R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch W WWWWVWWWWW‘ pointed out what distin- ‘ - BIONTREJXL. : Reserve Fund s1 6,000,000.00. demand- Socialism Not Needed Here. How often we hear it said by smug, self-satisï¬ed parasites, “ Oh, Socialism is all right for England and Germany,- where the people are fearfully oppress: ed, but really it is not necessary in Canada. Our broad spaces, our large unsettled lands, make it possible for all to live in comfort.†‘ This is the cry of our daily papers. They point out the horrors of living in England. They say Canadian workers should be satisï¬ed with their better position. But Canada has quite as much need of Socialism as England has. Mrs. Rose Henderson, Probation Olï¬cer, of. Montreal, took Thee. Rich- ardson, British M. P, through Griffin- town. He was shocked at the sights he saw. ‘He declared, “I never in all my life, Sa-w slums as terrible, as abso-= lutely ï¬lthy as these you have shown me in Montreal. Why, in parts of England we tear down, by order of the Health Board, places that are pal; aces beside these.†‘ Socialism is not needed in Canada ,‘ oh! no. Our workers are such low creatures that slums and filth are good enough for them. That is what the newspapers and labor skinner-s really mean when they say that Canada does not need Socialism. They meanryou ' workers need only the. accommodation which many farmers would be‘ashamcd to give their pigs.â€"Cotton’s Weekly. -0 ‘ All Take Their Toll. With the high cost of living on the one hand and the high cost_.o£ dying on the other, the man with nothing lo sell but his labor power, which at best is but a perishable commodity, is, to use a slang phrase, “up::,against it good and plenty.†Living, he is the legitimate prey.’ of the baker, the gro- cer, the butcher, the ice man and the coal man ,' (lying, he becomes a source of proï¬t to the doctor, the undertaker and the cemetery association. They all take their toll. From the cradle to the grave he is a source of profit to some one every step of the way. Even though dead and buried he is still a possible trade prospectâ€"â€"his wife buys flowers to put on his grave, and per- chance uses some of the insurance money to purchase a marble head- stone. It is really wonderful, when one stops to consider it, that people generally are as dccent- as they are. Without the hope of. Social- ‘ ism, life for the worker and propertyâ€" , less man is scarcely worth livingï¬~ Appeal to Reason. "O The difference between labor and capital may be fought with the strike, but it can be settled only by the ballot. t. S THE BANK F . 1913 a are. v V 4. ‘ You Can Send Money Safely In amounts up to $50 by means of our Bank Money Orders. at a trifling cost. For larger sums, our Drafts payable in any part of the World, are at your service. For immediate payments at a distance use our Telegraphic Transfers, and when travelling, our Letters of Credit and Travellers’ Cheques. Fenelon Falls BranCh M.W. Reive, Manager. v.» rr..w,. .‘N.‘J‘.. ’ ' ,4. .H, :33." u'w :2 1i 4; ‘ué‘fv a, 2?.â€" Add..." vaa . "I. s v 5'1 4’4;va \N ‘.. . l