l i l radon Efalls _ diuretic. Professional Cards. . MUSIC. Miss Violet I'll. Wilson, EACHER OF‘ PIANO, THEORY AND . “ The Fletcher Music Method,†a kinder- garten method for children. Pupils may enter any time from Septem- ber Int, 1902. Studio and residence: Corner Colborne and Bond streets. LEGAL. _____.,_‘.. ____._...__._.__._._..._ , F. A. MCDIARMID. ' ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, 85c , LINDSAY and Pension Falls. Lindsay ofï¬ce, Milne’s block, near post-ofï¬ce. Fenelon ‘Fulls ofï¬ce, over J. C. McKeggie 82; Co.’s Bank. The Fenelcn Falls ofï¬ce will be open every Wednesday afternoon from ar- rival of train from Lindsay. 3%“ Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. ,________________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"-â€"‘ McLAUGHLTN &. PEEln ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, 820. Money to loan on real estate at lowest current rates. Ofï¬ce, Kent street, opposite Market, Lindsay. R. J. MCLAUGHLIN. J. A. PEEL _____________________.._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" G. H. HOPKINS, - ARRISTER, 8w. SOLICITOR FOR the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at "owest rates on terms to suit the borrower. Ofï¬ces: No. 6, William Street South, Lind- ay, Ont. ,___________________..__.____â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€" STEWART & O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 8w. MONEY B to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. '1‘. S'rrwan'r. L. V. O’Coxxon, B. A. MOORE & JACKSON, ARRISTERS, SOLIUITORS, ire. 0f- ï¬ce, William street,Lindsay. r F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON m†I MEDICAL. ______________________.___._â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"n.n., c. in, u. n. c. s. Eng.,n. c. P. c 3., ONT., n. 'r. M. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- P our. Oflice. Francis Street, Feuelon Falls. DR. A. WILSON, ‘ ~11. 3., n. c. r. a s., Ontario,â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCH- cur. Oï¬ice, Colborne Street, Fenelon Falls. ______________â€"â€" DENTAL. M“ ' Dr. s. .i. sums, DENTIST, 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. OFFICE zâ€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- crue street __________~_________.___.._._â€"-â€" Dr. llEELAllDS, DENTIST, LINDSAY, Extracts teeth without pain by gas (vital- iaed air) administered by him for 27 years. He studied the gas under Dr. Colton, of New York, the originator of gas for extract- ing teeth. Dr. Colton writes Dr. Neelands but he has given the gas to 186,417 per- ons without an accident from the gas. Other pain obtunders used. A good eat. of teeth inserted for $10. W Dr. Neelauds visits Fenelon Falls (McArthur House) the third Tuesday of every month. Call early and secure an appointment ASunderland lady writes Dr. Neelands that he had made her a successful ï¬t after having eight sets of teeth made in Toronto and elsswhere. ______..._____â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€" W. H. GROSS, DENTIST. The beautiful Crown and Bridge work practised with success. Gas and all other anmsthetics for extracring 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 SECOND DIVISION COURT -or rasâ€" Connty of Victoria. â€"â€"â€"â€"- lhe next sittings of the above Court will be held in Twomey’s hall, Fenelon Falls {IN MONDAY, JANUARY 12lh, 1903, commencing at 1 o’clock in the afternoon Thursday, January lst, will bathe last day of service on defendants residing in this county. Defendants living in other coun- tles must be served on or before Satur- day, December 27th. BRIGHT SKIES AND nAuP SIDEWALKS. WWW†Nice overhead-"disagreeable under - foot is the prevailing weather con- dition for this time of year. It’s best. to prepare for it. Wet feet sometimes mean many ills. It’s best to prepare for it when the preparation is so easy. Wet-proof , footwear means dry feet, no matter what the weather. The surest and safest way for any- body to keep his feet dry is to wear properly ï¬tting Rubb ers. And, by the way, .there is another point where some rubbers cannot touch othersâ€"they haven’t the last that characterizes ours. â€" They are all right in looks, but here you get looks and last both. Different prices for different sizes. Largo stock of high grade Grocerles at fair prices. ' J. L. Arnold. I. HAVE THEM--- . That is, I have What you want in the Boot and Shoe line, and. you will ï¬nd them RIGHT IN MAKE-n RIGHT IN PRICES. ALSO RUBBERS, among which are Lumbermen’s Armor- proof and Corrugated Edge. “- LI ‘ Who’s Your Tailor P It you ask any particularly well-dressed man in Fenelon Falls or surrounding district, “Who makes your clothes?†invariably he will tell ' you ‘ TOWNLEY-’ Be one of the number, and call and see what he is doing for the Fall and Winter. His prices are right, consistent with ï¬rstâ€"class E. C. EDWARDSi if E. D.HA.(1;IID,k . Bill I . er 1 Fenclon Falls, Oct. 15th, 1902. Style and VV01krna’nSh-lp' He makes 110 Other. ~â€"_.. No. All. 000.000 sterlinr, While u-nv t l! 1 mm it is $330,000,000 sterling. 'l‘hosc linens tell convincingly of the success of ml growiug'faith in municipal mmers ip in the United Kingdom. ARE YOU INTERESTED IN RINGS? Engagement Rings! Wedding Rings, -. Diamond Rings. u. ........ Public Ownership or Anarchy, Which ? The Kansas City Journal holds up the fact that the corporations there ll-IVO been using thousands of dollth of serv- ice from the municipal water plant with- out payiue, as a reuse: for the failure of the public ownership principle. It says the public inspector falls to Inspect. Now, if the inspector fails to inspect and permits the manufacturing ï¬rm: (I) steal water, as was done in Chicano it) the extent of millions, and for which no «~ one has been brought to judgment. the fault must lie otherwise than in public ownership. The inspector< must either be bribed or lazy men have been put into place, becausc people follow tllcll‘ political prejudices. To remedy this evil, the incentive must be removed. Not less, but more, public ownership is the remedy. Suppose the public, run» ning the water plant, also operated all the other plants, who then would bribe an ofï¬cial to permit them to steal water? What incentive would be present to pay a public ofï¬cial to permit the use of public water for private use ? And if all the industries were operated by the public; if all industries and the results were the property of the whole people, do you not know that the citizens would then select men to operate them who would do their duty or else take a back scatâ€"so far back that they would cher get in the front row during their lives ? Because capitalists bribe public ofï¬cials to permit them to steal public service, without pay, is proof that private cupi- talism should be abolished, not that public ownership should be. Private capitalism bribes public ofï¬cials. .Then let us do away with the private capital- ism that docs these things. Or shall we do away with all public ofï¬cials and have anarchy ? Which horn of thb di- lemma shall we take, Mr. Republican Journal? In St. Louis the city coun~ oil was bribed by capitalists. Shall the city council then be abolished ? To what does your logic load? If it is well to abolish city water and go back to private ownership because the cupi- talists bribe the ofï¬cers, does not the same logic mean that the city council of St. Louis and other places should be abolished, and the public matters be- given over wholly to' private interests.. because the oflicials have been-likewise bribed? Where are you at, Mr. Jour- nal fâ€"Appeal to Reason. .9~â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Bishop Potter on Labor. WRITE era w. BEALL, THE JEWELLER, Lindsay, For particulars. You will save money. You can rely on what you get. morn. “5., .- up.“ ...-._‘;,: 1;}. .- V-,,,.'.=a.-34'7.r43-.- Glasgow is Doing Well. (From the Toronto Star.) Any set-back that the cause of public ownership gets in the city of Glasgow, or any development of the situation there that can be twisted to make it ap- pear that public ownership iu that city is not fulï¬lling thehopes of its advocates. is eagerly seized upon by opponents of the cause and made the most of. It is natural enough that this should be so, because the experiments made by Glas- gow in the way of municipal ownership bid fair to dispossess private owners of proï¬table privileges in other cities the world over. Last week a local paper warned Toronto to beware of municipal ownership, saying that it was proving to be a disappointment even in Glasgow. Its arguments were based on articles published in certain English newspapers, to which the lord provost of Glasgow has since made a suflicient reply. He admits that the city’s debt has increased since 1888, but it is less per capita than it was then. The debt has been in- creased by the purchase of 600 acres of new park lands and by a system for puri- fying the city’s sewage, which is an en~ tirer new charge. The taxing is done in Glasgow on the rental value of prop- erty, and the lord provost says that, whereas citizens formerly paid 15. 6d. per pound on their rental for their en- tire domestic water supply, they now pay 5d. They formerly paid 55. 5d. for gas, but under municipal owuership they pay 2s. 3d. They paid 3d. for a ride on the tramways and the service was unsatisfactory, while now they pay a penny and get a. good service. Against an increased city debt Glas- now has new assets of £17,388,596, and in addition to that controls franchises for which private companies would pay millions of pounds. In view of the statement given to the Toronto public last week to the effect that the street railway in Glasgow has been run by the municipality ata loss, we may quote the ï¬gures given by the lord provost, who says the total revenue for the year ending May last was £614.413, and the working expenses £293,147. The sum of £111.956 was set apart for deprecia~ tion, leaving a gross balance of £209,- 310, of which £96,815 was paid to ac- count of interest and sinking fund, £12, 500 to the corporation for general pur- poses, and £100,495 added to the re- serve. The amouut provided for de- preciation will keep the service renewed, and the sum put to interest and sinking fund will clear the property of all debt in thirty-one years. It will be difï¬cult for the champions of private ownership to so distort these ï¬gures as to discredit municipal ownership. Before the city â€"â€" I have stood by the open excavation of the new underground railroad in New York city, looking at the men dlgzimr. They have told me that they get $2 a day for fair days when the work could go on. Living is expensive in New York. These are not the submerged ; they are the men of brawn and health. They are the “ labor." and looked on the diners and winers, with liveried waiters obscqulously servâ€" ing the viands of all kinds, These are the " employers." Are the interests of the two classes mutual ? Can easy going: optimism con jure up any relation between the two? Can any bridge span the chasm be- tween them '2 When I go through our factories and sec ï¬ne able-bodied menâ€"dexterous, earnest menâ€"working nine hours a day every day and every year a life time through, fashioning the uncouth raw material of wood and metal and marble into house material, I ask myself, “ Will the laborer have any of these polished and luxurious appliances in the home . -. of his family or will they only go into of Glasgow went into the telephone boat the homes of: the we" mac, the mam uses the company charged £10 to each 8,008 of the rich-the employer class ? " subscriber; the municipality charves r . "- Are the Interests .of the laborer and £5 55., and the company has met this pitaliét mum“, in this work? . . . . ca by coming down to £3 10s for a limited I know fun we" tha‘ many will my service at one penny per call. The gas - - . money payments settle the whole score; and electricity departments met the re but. even if that were so, is there my quirements of their sinking funds and mutual“ h k d , . q. . . y w ere one ma as an he laid attde £58,896 for depreciation. other enjoys ?_Exchanqe. Altogether, perhaps the safest course th ts of ublic ownershi can 0 Opponen p p The number of suicides has doubled adopt is to argue that nowhere but in . _ Glasgow, Scotland, can aldermen be m the last Year. and 18 always on the found competentto administer important increase- I In nearly every instance pov- municipal properties. This argument erby ‘3 “SSH-500d as the cause- will at least hold good until other cities Socialists are breaking into public of.- mnke bold to try similar experiments. ï¬ce everywhere. A few years more. Taking Great Brtain and Ireland as and they will control a majority of the a whole, there was invssted in municipal ofï¬cesâ€"and down will go capitalism. enterprises in 1875 the sum of £93,- and its offspring, the trus‘. I have gone through the corridorslcl the fashionable hotel at midnight hours h. 'z _ 'l g .inA ... r, .a. “3%â€-.. â€" A - ;-¢_«~..-.n_ -... «2... -43â€- -~ -_ -Uvz... I vs. <_;-_.â€".~.« . _ .A a , :..._.§_u-,< v- . A-