lUuV I'Vul\§ I... . In the sixth innings the Wideawakes batted Duck all over the lot. They scored six runs in this innings and insides two reaching ï¬rst hasehon errors. When the C..L.S. came up they began to hit and suc- ceeded in getting three runs. The ï¬elding of the two teams was a little loose at times, both having their share of errors credited to them. One of the features of the game was a fly which “Nanny†Nesbitt sent singing out to Killen, who nabbed it with his left hand. The hearts of the fans were also delighted and great noise was made when “Bill†Cinna- mon. the‘ old reliable, singled out a two-bagger with :5 much ease as he would light his cigarette. Carew and Hopkins were the only ones to re- ceive bases for being hit with the ball, and neither of them seemed to be injured to any great extent. In the ï¬rst three innings the C.L.S newer touched at ï¬rst. The men either being struck out at put out 'at ï¬rst In the ï¬fth and sixth innings every Wideawake man batted and some even stepped up to the pan twice. made six hits, Park Nine .......... Tecumseh ........... Huron>~ ............. Clippers ............. Orientals ........ Bankers ......... Wideawakes . 'ictors ........ Express Nine Highlanders Giants ........ WIDEAWAKES vs. c.L.s. ‘ The Wideuwakes won from the C. LS. at Diamond Park by the score of 11 to 3. A good crowd witnessed the game which. despite the large score, was fairly fast. The contribu- tions were not up to the ordinary last night. Dick Gray was in the box for the winners and “Bill" Cinnamon looked after things behind the bat in a very satisfactory manner. "Tonyi‘ Duck. who did the twirling for the C. DUCK. \VHU Ulu lll‘ yu......‘7 _, LS. was not up 30 his old form and pitched poor ball in several innings. (‘otey, who has Iween off duty for a. couple of games. played fast ball last night. stopping everything as fast as "Tony“ would put them in. -u..<. , VA1_A- George Little won the game for the? Bankers. In the sixth Koyl and Cot-i ton were on bases and Little at bat.1 Dusty sent a nice one into Little, whoi singled it out to right garden. This; brought Cotton in, and Roy] then stole, home on Donaldson’s error. Things: now became wild, and Dusty, who had; gone up in the air, was pounded allj over the lot. Little and Stalked both; made home on a single from Conway; One of the best, if not the most interesting games of baseball, which have ever been played in Kinm. unt, occurred in that burg on Monday, when the maried men played the single men. The game was exert- ing throughout the whole course 3f it. Mr. A. Donelly, the brilliant young G. T. R. despatcher there, did the twirling for the singles, while Mr. Jas. Graham, of the Kinmount Cooperage C0,, did the trick for the married men. .- Dobson’s stealing was one of the features of the game that delighted the hearts of the fans and made even the gentler sex hold their‘breath as this daring thief of the bags made off with PAGE TWO. Mr. George Train, short-stop for the married men, got in some very good work; George is an old-timer, and has not lost any of his youth- iul skill yet. On a foul fly Billy Grey, a printer, formerly employed in Lindsay, and backstop for the bachelors, “skinned the cat†on the top rail of the fenCe, but got the them one after another. Victor Sug- gitt did some pretty work in centre ï¬eld, although it would have been far better for his team if he had stayed in the pitcher’s box. .’Donaldson 5 hitâ€" ting was of a high type, but he was OLD TIMERS PUT UP A GC DEFEATED BY THEIR BANKERS vs. OR I ENTALS. STANDING OF THE TOWN LEAGUE. Seniors. Won. Lost. Tie. Lt Juevile League. Juniors. ‘i’on . 1‘05 UP A GOOD GAME â€" THE BENEDICTS WERE ( THEIR YOUTHFUL OPPONENTSâ€"SCORE WAS 9 TO 6. C Won. L05 750 Junior IV. to Senior IV.--Honorsâ€" Annie Duck. Passedâ€"Mary Gilogly, Mary chlihan, Helena Downey, Mary Breen, Katie Dwyer, Irene Powers, Ethel Jerue. The following is the standing of the pupils at St. Joseph’s Convent at the promotion examiï¬natjon,» June, 1908: An old angler told The Free Press this morning that in his opinion the ï¬shing this season would be better than it had been for some years past. St, Joseph’s Convent Promotion Examinations “Some good catches have been made so far," he said, “and I do not see why the good ï¬shing should not con- tinue all through the season.†He said that while the majority of the ï¬shermen were having excellent luck, no record breaking catches have yet been made. The lunge are bit- ing splendidly though and are in large quantities in the local waters. NAMES OF SUCCESSFUL PUPILS, IN ORDER OF STANDING. Junior III. to Senior Ill.â€"Hon0rs â€"Monica Breen, Theresa Murt-ha. Passed â€" Genevieve O’Neil], Ruth Shannon, Mary Hennessy, Lorine Mc- Intyre, Mary Stamelen, Amelia Brooks, Kathleen Murray, Monica Primeau, Annie Houlihan, Marie Mc- Phee. An American paper, regarding Longboat, has the following to say regarding his standing: Tom Long- boat, the Indian runner, has sailed for England with the Canadian con- tingent to participate in the Olym- pic games and the long-threatened in- ternational athletic war between the United States and the Dominion comes to an issue. Americans claim that Longboat is a professional and positively will not compete against him nor against athletes with whom the Indian competes. James E. Sul- livan. president of the A. A. U., and secretary of the American Olympic committee, who sailed for England last week. will stand against Long- boat in the championships. and if the English committee turns down Sulli- van’s case. the American team will be withdrawn, at least from the events in which Longboat competes. unable to make connections with ï¬rst» fast enough. Senior II. to Junior ll|.â€"Passedâ€" Libori Moher, Agnes Brady. Mary Kingsley, Lizzie Flynn, Annie Banks, Dorothy Nicol], Helen Breen, Alta Switzer, Mabel Tetrault. Christina Berry, Mildred Meehan, Helen Duck. Junior II. to Senior II.â€"Passedâ€" Mary O’Loughlin, Genevieve Murphy, Mary Murphy, Marguerite Mulvihil], Gertrude Fluery, Mary Hogan, Pearl O’Neil], Rosie Gossein, Harriet Tobin. given the names 01 we Uluc‘trut Pm,- ers: Singlesâ€"N. Butts, W. Craig, W. Graham, G. Henderson, N. DeFinney, W. Grey, T. McGrath, J. McIntyre. A. Donelly. Marriedâ€"C. Hall‘, W .Craig, R. Hop- kins, J. Train, Jas. Graham, W. Louis, A. Moore. Umpireâ€"M. J. O’Hara Part II. to Junior ll.â€"Passedâ€" Mary Primeau, Marguerite Tangney, J ulia Shipworth, Philomena Dwyer, Kathleen Walters, Mary Caddahee, Gertrude Dovey, Grace Teevins, Viola Blatchford, Aileen Murphy. - Senior l. to Part ll.â€"Passedâ€"Eï¬e McPhee, Grace Meehan, Irene Kearns, Annie O’Neil, Annie Blatchford, Irene Walsh, Eva Simons, Josie Mullein, Genevieve Gossie, Annie Tretault. In the ï¬rst innings the score was one all, but in the second the sin- gles got two and the married mar- ried men one, which made the score 3-2. In the third the singles piled up ï¬ve scores, which made the tally 8-2. The score was 9-6 at the end of the game in favor of the singles. Mr. M. O’Hara, 0f the Kinmount Cooperage 00., umpired the game to the satisfaction of all. Below is Junior I. to Senior l.â€"Passedâ€" Alexandrina Blanchard, Mary Lehané, Kathleen Sheehan, Irene Martin, Anastaia White, Lena Trainer, Lillian Hand, Dorothy Wilford. Leona Mc- Ginity. NEW HOME PLATE. Mr. Robt. Chambers has pro- se-nted the town league with a solid white marble home plate. The league wish_ to thank Mr. Chambers for this splendid gift to the teams, ball all the same. LONGBOAT’S STANDING. ihe names of the different play- ANGLING. ....--- v__ _. , .-â€"-to-day he stands up and can harness the forces of nature and overcome all other animals of the world. Man, at ;the beginning. was a savage. but it {did not take him long to find out that by concerting with his fellows he would protect himself against sur- lrounding animals. As time went on; "he learned how to build; how to doâ€"‘ ‘mesticate animals. and therefore had a stable food supply. During all this ‘time he never knew what it was to ‘have the shackles of slth-ry upon his :limbs. Those savages laid the foun- dation of our large industrial corpora- tions Of to-day. Then came tribal wars in which great slaughter marked the conclusion; of every battle. Later on they dis-r covered that to kill was not profitable,‘ 1and they decided to keep their cap- tives and make them work as slaves. â€Out of this simple process chattel; slaves became the predominant force} of this earth. These slaves were. guarded by large armies of soldiers,: and during this period remarkable. progress was made. Crime, vice and' graft followed this, until Rome be- came so corrupted that the countries: to the north swept down npon the. city and brought it to ruins. 3 FEUDALISM. After these tribes conquered Rome and its inhabitants, serfdom is garbed in another garment called the Feudal! system. Under this system great? headway was made and the tools of' production were greatly improved. The serfs gathered together in discontenti and decided to rebel against their feu-E dal‘lords. They gained their liberty; and were allowed to go free under the. name of Free Burghers. Then camei the starting of the capitalist. One of ; these Free Burghers brought several: other men to work with him. The‘ master worked with them every day; and paid them as much as they could? make any place else. He organized; them in such a manner that he could: I l I i l WITNESSES SAY THAT STRIKERS DID NOT CREATE DISTURBAN CE The court room at Oakwood was crowded last Friday afternoon, when George Saranac, Mark Hicks, Frank Bolt-on, Joseph Channon and William and Simon Ferguson appeared before County Magistrate Moore on a charge of using obscene and insulting lan- guage. The men all pleaded not guilty, and after the evidence was taken the case was adjourned. vv All great students know that man has lived on this earth for a long time and has always been a tool-mak- ing animal. This enabled him to lift himself above all other created things Mrs. Robert Nicholls, the ï¬rst wit- ness, entered the box in a nervous con- dition and sobbed throughout the ex- amination. Her husband was one of the employees on the steam roller who stayed with the job. About 9.30 o’clock on the night in question she heard considerable cursing and swearing in the vicinity of the roller and went to the window to look out. She recogniz- ed a. man named Boulton approaching the house and she watched him. He rapped loudly on her Vmother’s win- CASE HEARD BEFORE COUNTY MAGISTRATE MOORE IN A CROWD- ED COURT ROOM AT OAKWOOD -â€" CASE WAS DISMISSED Mr. G. A. Jordan, appeared for the prosecution, and Mr. Hopkins, K.C., for the defence. About the same number that greet- ed Miss May Wood Simons attended the meeting held in the Academy of Music last Friday in the interests of Socialism. Mr. C. T. Kingsley, editor of the Vancouver Clarion, and pioneer of the movement in Canada, was the Mr. Beal, who was in the chair, opened the meeting with a short ad- dress in which he reviewed the great question of Socialism. He read an extract from a Toronto paper, giving a report of the Pan-Anglican Congress meeting at which the members attack- ed “The Idle Rich.†He showed that all the speakers had a Socialistic ten- dency, and this he claimed was an important step in the great move- ment. The speaker also read an edi- torial from the Toronto Globe which highly commended the stand taken by the clergy at the congress. After reading the editorial, Mr. Ben] remarked he had always thought that Socialism would have ï¬rst been taken up by the Methodist clergy, and was surprised but glad to know that the Anglican clergy had been the prime mOVers of Socialism in the -- »- , :¢l_ua..,m,i u. Mr. Kingsley. on rising, expressed his regret that the house was not tull of citizens of the town, because he had something to say that would in- terest them all. He intended to deal with the different claSSes of society, and would begin with the early his- tory of Christ. Ticâ€"Story of Socialism Well Told by 3. Vancouver Editor éhurches. Kingsley. speaker of the evening, and his re- marks were listened to with interest by all preeent. 3.. A]..- nhoSv- â€"-Mr. W. H. Powles, of Powles’ Corners, Fenelon, has already harvest- ed a ï¬rst crop of alfalfa, and reports the second to be well advanced. IN THE ACADEMY- THREE SYST THE SPEAKER. ‘e;swof Sgéialism in the He then introduced Mr. DEMYâ€"SMALL NUMBER PRESENTâ€"SPEAKER TRACED SYSTEMS 0F SLAVERYâ€"SOCIALISM WILL ,FOL- LOW CAPITALISM, HE SAYS. i The discovery of America installed 'in this country the same system as {was in vogue in the old country. The ‘inventions of steam also worked a great revolution on the world. Mach- ines gradually took the place of the {workers and the factories grew. The ;manager of one factory joined with a ifellow manufacturer, and they joined gwith other factories, called themselves 2a combine, and ï¬nally the trust was iiormed. The speaker told of his early iexperiences on the farm and showed #the evolution of the cradle to the {sell-binder. To produce enough wheat gto feed an ordinary man for a year, :he stated, costs so little that it is not {worth mentioning, and still the man 'who is earning wages pays the same gprice for his flour. Just as Capitalism has succeeded Feudalism, so shall Socialism follow capitalism. Collectively, the working class must come into control of the means of production. Production is social and individuality in production is lost. Socialism is a movement that is going to break the fetters of capi- talism, and the efforts should com- mand the attention of everyone in the community. In this struggle culmin- ates what our forefathers dared and died for in their battle for human rights. If every workingman was able to come into possession of money and buy what he needed, the machines of production would start full tilt to. morrow. The speaker claimed that the ten American capitalists who owned the States owned Canada. These men have representatives in Congress and Parliament who have been sent to the legislature by the people. , 7 _ _ _ :1 vote of thanks was heartily dered to the e10quent speaker. Just as sure as the three systems of society have taken their places, he said, so shall another system fol- low this. In American papers it was learned that an international steel combine is already being formed, and it will break down all national com- bines. During the last few years there was an increase in the expan- sion of capital which, followed by the consummation of wealth, has helped to bring on this ï¬nancial depression. Next winter will be as much worse as this winter over last. dow and came to the back door and asked for her husband. He went back to the gang again and the swearing continued. Some time later, a stone was thrown at the house, which she believed was done by one of the men. Mr. Robert Nicholls, husband of the last witness, also seemed to be rather agitated over something and his evi- dence was very brief Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Woodbridge were also called, but they both claim- ed that there was no disturbance 'rais- ed. They were both sitting on the verandah, but did not pay any atteno tion to the men on the roller. George Saranac, one of the accused, made a flat-footed denial of Mrs. Nicholls’ testimony, and claimed that no disturbance was made. He could not swear whether Boulton was in- toxicated or not, but there was not a row of any kind. The speaker showed how the farmer was the logical successor of the feu- dal serfs and was no better off than the wage-earner. He showed clearly the difference between the wage-slave and the feudal slave. The feudal master chased after a slave and the wage-slave set out after the wage master. The speaker used the United Steeli Corporation of the United States as; an illustrationâ€"it had a capital off $1,300,000.000. Last year the dividends ; were $134,000,000, over 10 per Cent. of f l the capital, which is the nominal divi- 3 dend paid. The company had last‘ year 160,000 employees, and if none of these men appeared in the morn-' ing and no men came to take their. places the United Steel Corporation would not be worth a penny. The‘ capital lies in the hide and carcass of ‘ the men who manipulate the industry. é These men made enough to pay their: wages and 10 per cent. dividends This is what the working class will do » as long as capital rules. ; The evidence of a few more witnesses was taken, at the conclusion of which the magistrate dismimd ~the case. make more using them callectively than each man working separately and he reaped the proï¬t. This was the foundation of the present state of humane society. creasing daily. Have you subscribed yet? r-_-7 _,, To-day humane society is armed with the greatest tools of production that have ever been known. If these implements were used to their full capacity for a month the markets of the world would be gorged. The means of production are used for the production of capital. -- .. u n. I 1:45 WEEKLY FREE Do Job Printing. Killed a Woman Sued for Damages One afternoon last fall Mr. A. O. Hogs, the well-known Manposa grain buyer and elevator man, while driv- ing his automobile between Beaver- ton and Oakwood, had the misfor- tune to collide with a buggy driven by Mrs._ W. G. Shannon, the wife of penses connected with the e‘mbalm- ing of the body and its transmission to the -home of deceased. The husband, we understand, has now entered an action for $10 000 damages, on the ground that the fa- tality was caused by Mr. Hogg s neg- ligence in managing the auto. Mrs. Shannon left several children of ten- In some way the details of the sad affair were kept out of the Toronto and local papers. The Free Press learns that Mr. Hogs did everything .mu0<5<o >><mI m0“. .EDw < 2.. Pz<ozmumo 000â€"... .O .< .mE a' Georgina. township farmer. The lady was thrown from the vehicle with great force, and died almost in- possible at the der Local Brakesman Fell Underneath Moving Train (Special to Free Press.) Midland, June 29.â€"While attempt- ing to board his train here Saturday morning, Frank King, brakeman on the, G.T.R., missed his footing and fell underneath the ca“ and the wheels passed over both legs. The train had just been made up in the G.T.R. yards and was moving out when the accident happened. King was standing on the platform of the station, and as the caboose The celebrated soprano was in the middle of her 3010 when little Fred- die said to his mother, referring to the conductor oi the orchestra â€" came along he attempted to board it by the front. leaving the back for the rear-end brakeman and conductor. WHEELS PASSED OVER BOTH LEGSâ€"ONE WAS AMPUTATED. BUT THE OTHER MAY BE SAVED. How It Looked to Freddie. rV‘ The train was going fairly {mt King missed his footing. Hf’ legs went underneath the car and 1!? wheels passed over them. The trait was topped and the injured railroadi? was found lying on the track mice: scious and both legs horribly crushex1 He was taken to the hOSpital. when one of the legs was amputated by 1†Wallbridge and assistant. Hope.i 3’3 entertained of saving the other leg} King is still very weak, and V“ be removed to his home in Lindsay 8: soon as possible. His wife was “'1?" When the accident occurred and 5h‘ arrived on the next train. she holler-in “Why does that man hit at the W“ man with his stick ?†“He is 110'“ hitting her," replied his moth“ Keep quiet." “Well, then, what i‘ THURSDAY. JULY 2,“, I for ?" attttttttmt # ’tttimltttt THURSDAY. J A woman You mu: The bu But 1h kin Will u And ! By :1 W MATTERS AN ERS wuu. WHICH O! Tht Hill Thm c: \th- That llll Thum: (-11! Thuug! \Vill Aw And \‘a r14 ’11 ooulist AH hn‘ll lik n nu! HI stn The mothq hardly eXpï¬ till the troll! up, for thd she may I darlings wi make an in who ï¬ngers \w â€â€˜1 keeper cm and to rela! mother 0: 111K 11111 )ll [WI ‘M {I nhy Hl‘ ful sun A WOM ill 1V h he