41.»... Ma‘s-m. tv%:t.:.2 ,VVednesday afternoon from arrival of train . r. a: .1 . amsswzmwmxcsarw , - t»... VOL. XXX. .2").- 1~::» '.’-..r ‘ Professional Cards. LEGAL. h'l'cLAU'GHLIN. MCDIARMID & PEEL, ARRISTERS, Solicitors, Etc, Lindsay and Fenelon Falls. Lindsay Ofï¬ce: Kent-SL, opposite Market. Fenelon Falls Ofï¬ce: Over Burgoyne & Co’s store. The Fenelon Falls ofï¬ce will be open every from Lindsay. 5%“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. R. J. MchGn'Lis. ‘F. A. MCDIARMID - (J. A. Psn'L. " G. H. HOPKINS, ARRISTER, 8w. somcrroa FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at ‘owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Offices : No.6, William Street South, Llud- ay, Ont. .-_______._________.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"‘â€"â€""â€"_’ STEWART 8; O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &c. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and YG'rk streets, Lindsay. T. STEWART. L. V. O’Connor, B. A ‘__________________â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" MOORE & JACKSON, BARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, 860. Of-, ï¬ce,Willi-am street,{ain‘dsay. . A.JA‘GK~SON F. D. Moore. MEDICAL. ' DR. n. H. GRAHAM. â€"â€"M.n., o. '11., M. n. c. 3. Eng, M. c. r. a 5., Our, 1?. T. n. s.â€" EYSICIAN, SURGEON (I6 ACCOUCH~ eur. Ofï¬ce. Francis Street, Fenelou: Falls. DR. A. WILSON, --M. 3., m. o. r. a 8., Ontario,â€" PHYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- eur. Ofï¬ce, Golborne Street, Fenelon Falls. __________.â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"" DENTAL. MM Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fénelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES or DENTISTRY performed according to the latest improved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE :â€"â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne' street Dr. NEELAllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- ized air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Oolton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Gclton writes Dr. Neelands hat he has given the gas to 186,417 per- ons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good set of teeth inserted for $10. 132$†Dr. Neelands visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early 1 nd secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neelauds that he had made her a successful ï¬t after having eight sets of teeth made in Toronto and elsewhere. ___________.....,.-â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"- W. H. @3353, DENTEST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work ractised with success. Gas and all other anaesthetics for extracting teeth without pain. A set of Artiï¬cial Teeth, better than the average, for $8 00. Rooms directly opposite Wood’s stove depot,Lindsay. W SEGOND DIVISEGE BENEFIT â€"OF THE- County of Victoria. _â€"â€"â€" lhe next sittings of the above Court will . '1 be held in Dickson’s hall, Fenelon Falls, ON MONDAY, JULY 7th, 1902, commencing at 1 o’clock in the afternoon. Thursday, June 27th, will be the last day of service on defendants residing in this coutny. Defendants living in other coun~ ties must be served on or before Saturday, June 21st. n. o. EDWARDS, n. D.HAND, Bailiff. . Clerk. Fanelou Falls, April 15th, 1902. , if The TRENT VALLEY NAVIGATION (30., LIMITED. Bore-inter, ».srurnor PT., LINDSAY. '.:-Str. Esturion 3 manna. , ‘ May 1_ to 31 and Oct, 1 to close of navig’n. ’Bobcaygecn lv 38.00 a..m_." . Lindsay arrlO'BO, “ ‘ 1.rL-V 3.00:,“ V ‘ Galling- ‘tï¬Sturgeon'Pomt on s1gnal.- -* FenelonFalls agt.§»‘D. 'Goiildfjtclephcne'nr exchange. " What, he'iiis- doing for the Spring and Summerl 1 Arab 30 p. In. ’ : -~¢~.‘ r‘ .'.":. ~v- .- 'aâ€",.« ~.n. .- 1 - an. .~~f.'â€"'.l Our first consignment of Sister Shoes for Spring and Summer trade has arrived. All the latest styles and best qualities of leather. Prices $3.50 and $5. 3. i.- amen y S ‘é‘. (.- has arrived, and contains a number of new styles, and the prices Will be found lower than I ever had the pleasure of of- fering you before. it. a... season. ailor A It. you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, .‘fWho makes your clothes?†invariably he' will tell you 1 '1:",_-‘.Be one or. the number, and call and see} w pymésggro,gright, consistent- Withï¬rst-classl Style Work‘manship. He? makes no ' Other. i'JI'LL: .- r' .2 .' ‘-.""-‘-.- <"v'r," ,r'a .gn ' meE are a. stat, , lmoney. You can rely on what shall pay for it.’ It this your idea of ~freedom? If so, what is your idea of slavery? No master could dictate more than that to his chattel slaves. Why should you be proud of great buildings or machinery, if you have no owner- ship, no voice? In olden times men but in these times you ï¬ght each other for the privilege of working for some _._...._..... _. I. ‘ I can be done? Are you willing to surâ€" -> render your manhood, surrender the fu- ture of your children to the tender merâ€" “ I cies of the trusts that will own all the , wealth of the nation ? Are patriots » F make of such stuff? Are MEN made of such stuï¬â€™? Wake up to what the 7,. future portends. Greta move on your 1'! sluggish brains, that they may help you to better conditions. Capitalists use s. their brains to control you; they em- ' ploy slick politicians; they employ such a of the clergy as they can ; they employ all the wiles of kings to keep you doing :3 the things and thinking the things that " _ make you their slavesâ€"human ma- , chinesâ€"for their pleasure and proï¬t.â€"â€" v 2 Appeal to Reason. ‘ -â€"â€"O+o-â€" Home, Sweet Home. Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings, iamcnd Rings. _â€" How often do we hear it said that" ', Socialism would break up that sweet 3 and happy home life which is so clear '5, to the heart of the British workingman. “ Touching pictures, drawn from the im- agination, are printed to depict the SHE JEWELLER, 2,. Lindsay, ;i.' For particulars. You will save ._ a. . m... I‘iï¬liinï¬bfwu!’ beauty and holiness surrounding the domestic hearth. But only, those who zu‘c acquainted with the conditions um i; der which the masses of England’s poor "3) I THINK! are herded together, who experience the . , reality of the cry “ No room to live,†It IS beyond my undelsmnqu What know how far removed the reality is Interest In the present System you can from these fanciful pictures. From ev- ; ‘ have. If it gives you Peace, Plenty - . _ . er uarter of the . ' and pleasure; if It affords you absolute y q compass come Stones security against want; if it makes you self-reliant citizens; if it gives you a voice in your employmentâ€"then it is something worth defending. But does it? Are you not under the authority of others? Are you not dictated to as to year wages, your hours, and the price of what you spend your wages for? What: system could be worse for you? Why, in many employments you have of slum dwellings indescribany ï¬lthy, in which men, women and children are crowded together worse than pigs in a. l sty. One day it is Birmingham which 3 has its tale of slum dwellings to tell; I 34 i I ) another day it is Chatham. Now we learn that here in St. Pancras there is such a dearth of dwellings and so much ' ( overcrowding that the people are herded ~ together in underground cellars, a man, i I ‘ , his wife and ï¬ve or six children fre~ ' our dress prescribed, and whom you quemly occupying a single underground « tenement. In some forty tenements a. 1 thousand personsâ€"men, women and: 2:: childrenâ€"have to live. Oh, the happy ~ " (‘3 homes of England, how beautiful they -- stand l What a terrible thing must be -' this Socialism» which would break up the happy home life of St. Pancras’s nndergrOund cellars.'â€"-Londcn Justice. .-..â€"._ - trove to run away from their masters; ever being anything more than wage slaves. You have no hope that your children will be better off than you are under this system. You have no secu- rity against sickness or old age. You and are employed only to make proï¬t ‘for him; and if you can ï¬nd no man 1who thinks he can make something out you never tire of such a condition ? Is it the only system of employment you can think of ? Do you never aspire to higher conditions? Do you never wish for a voice in the conditions and pay of your employment? Does the system give you what you want, what you feel ,you are entitled to? Do you feel that you were born to Serve others? Do you are bossed about by every employer, of you, you have no employment. Do feel that your highest abilities can be developed under present conditions? Do you never long for a good home, geod clothing, and time for pleasure and self-improvement of mind ? Do you get it? What argument, what voice, will instil into you action for realizing something out of life? Do you think the men who would give opportunities for a better life are your enemies ? Do your employers want you to have more than they give you? Is it to their in- terest to give you more and take less ? You must be your own employers. To do this, you must have the public own all the places of employment, and then you, as part of the public, will have an equal voice in the management of the same. Would that help or injure you ? Would you be more or less a slave when given a voice with your fellows in directing the industry in which you ; worked? Wake up to the promise of the Twentieth century for the laboring j people of the world. You alone can bring a change. You are in the mrjor- ity. So long as you hold your slavish ideas, so long as you vote to uphold the present system of private capitalism you must remain as you are, and your chil- dren must remain even lower, for day by day the trusts are tightening their heads and making their power greater, which means that your power is lessen- ing. Are you, going topsit down. in. hopeless submission, and say nothing master. Again, what interest have you Toronto sweat Shops- -. in voting for and supporting the present , . _ industrial system ? You are the under SW?“ Shop? eX‘St “1 cYcl'y large City, dog in the ï¬ght, when you have the and 10"°?t°1513° exceptlon- 000 Case power to be on top if you will quit sup- came to “CW 5‘ few days ago. A. woman ,3 porting the rulers that place You undc,._ had been making fancy blouses for \vom- '1, heath. You have little or no hope of e“, at 65 cents each: for ‘1 Youge StI‘O-Ot ,3 ï¬rm, and by hard work she could make (3 a blouse in a day and a half. That equals only $2.60 per week; but last week she was informed that the rate would be only 35 cents in future. “ The departmental stores have out the prices? cut the prices on this class of goods, and the only way we can compete is by reducing the cost of production,†said the storekeeper. It matters not to the bargain-hunters at the departmental store whether the “ bargain †is secured at the cost of the seamstress’s life or virtue, and it matters little to the de- partmental store magnate, so long as he makes a few more millions in proï¬ts to donate to some church fund, or spend in riotous living. This is only a simple case of daily life under the competitive system, and there is only one cureâ€"the abolition of competition and the substi- tution therefor of co~opcration. Bar- gains and sweat shops go hand in hand, and neither would exist under Social- ism. ’I‘hen vote for Socialismâ€"Citizen and Country. â€"â€"o°â€"¢ Whose Was The Crime ? A woman in Kansas City, Mm. whose husband was out of work, owing to the consolidation of two daily papers, tried to prevent the birth of a child to share her poverty, and died as a result of her crime (?). But whose was the crime; was it hers, whose heart was too tender to see another child born into poverty and degradation, or was it society, that tolerates the present miserable system of industry ? In every honest heart there should rise to heaven a prayer, supplemented by ceaseless endeavor. to make such things impossible beneath the flag we love.-â€"Amcrican paper. on The bishop of Monte Carlo receives $45,000 a year from the gambling dot: to support his church ! ' New Zealand reduced the railroad poor to own ours. tariff seven per cent.', and the result was ' that, the revenue was $8,000,000 more than‘fthe higher, tarifIAproducod. She Lo'wns her, railroads:..t_his nation is the [I ,5