'15:: .A ‘4 ti . "\v ' merry Christmas And a’llnppy New Year To You All. Now is your opportunity to buy . .1, A .lllt'i PRESENT FOR CHRISTMAS Or a. New Year’s Gift. \Ve have a good line of Bracelets, Ncclclcts, Lock- ets. Chains, “hitches, Brooches, and plenty of other goods suitable for the holiday time. Will StAIEh Issuer of Marriage Licenses. Fenelon Falls. MCLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON & , ' STINSON. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch oliice at Fenelon Falls, at the L. H. 83 Power ’ Couunissioncrs' olilce. Open every Tues- day. Lindsay oliice over Dominion Bank. RJ Mcimoonmsï¬. O. A. M. Fomon, B. A. . Jns. A, Piss]... T. H. Srmson. , norms WEEKS .0 HOPKINS. ARRIS’I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan-at terms. to suit the borrower. Ollices No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Ont. and at Wood- ville, Ontario. . H. HOPKINS, K. C., C. E. WEEKS, F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A MOORE & JACKSON ARRlS’l‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, are. Of lice, William street, Lindsay. .F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON STEWART 8c O’CONNOR, ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, 6w. MONEY to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. . Srswsnr. L. V. O’Couxon, B. A. LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRIS'I‘ER. SOLICITOR, NOTARY Public. Successor to M cDiarmid & Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real _ Estate bought and sold. Olllce Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. DENTAL. Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fenelon Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY performed according to the lntestimproved methods at moderate prices. Oli‘FIOEkâ€"Ovei' Burgoyne's store, Col- orne street . '_.___â€"_â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"_-â€"â€"_- MEDICAL. DES. GRAHAM é; GRAHAM. Dr. H. H. Graham. M. D. C. M., M.R. C. 8., Eng. ; M. C. P.& 8., Ont. ; F. T. M. S. Dr. G. C. Graham, Gaadunte Toronto Uni- versity ; M. C. P. & 8., Ontario. Phys- icians, Surgeons and Accoucheurs. LL’Oflice Francis St., Fenelon Falls. DR. H. B. ‘JOHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE conoxsn COUNTY or vrcronu. successor: TO UK. A. wILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ofï¬ce, Colborne street, Fen- elon Falls. AUCTIONEEB. THOMAS CASHORE. (romance ‘ - rsmox FALLS. Sales of all kinds conduct« (1 in s. ï¬rst class manner. Secure dates before adâ€" Milking. FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12 Christmas ' groceries of the choicest, daintiest things for Christmas that we have ever asked you to select from. Our display was never as complete or tempt- ing. We don’t believe there is a single thing . missing. We would like you to notice the prices of what we are offering, always remem- E bering that they are the very'highest grades ‘ of goods that it is possible to buy. Our Boot and Shoe Department is Well stocked with all the- leading styles of Shoes lor men, women and children for the Christmas trade. We have slippers, moccasins, hockey boots, in fact nearly anything you could ask for in the line of boots, at prices that are sure to please I you. We have tried harder this . year, we. believe, than we ever did to make the biggest showing itésmrssssmwssmssié ‘A Stitch in Time well dressed. It pays to be a little forehandcd in ordering a. new outï¬t of clothes, for various reasons. . Call in and let us take your measure for a new suit. Up-toâ€"date goods, style and workmanship. Our motto is " Fashionable Tailoring at Popular Prices.†- TOWNLEY BROS. Fem-Jon Falls g Saves nine, and a suit in time keeps you always 3 FWWMMWWWM? Christmas Weighs. So heavily on some people that they forget the everyday aï¬airs of life. Now we have things for Christmas, lots of them â€" Raisins, Currants, . -. Canned Oranges and Lemon Peel, Nuts, Fancy Crackers and a. hundred other things.~ But, whiie these things are good and very good. we don't want you to forget the other things. Good Groceries are our specialty, and we‘ devote our best energies to getting them {or you. That‘s why , everything you get from here is ‘ always good and never dear. ' ' :o. L.McKENDRY. run ornomrn. ' Iâ€"IEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 Paid up Capital $6,000,000.00. DIONTI§IC¢XL. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT Reserve Fund $16,000,000.00. l ASSETS OVER $240,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be ' withdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. Fenelon Falls Branch WWWE Bishop Attacks Capitalism. A sensation was caused by Bishop Franklin Spencer Spalding, of Utah, at the recent convention of Episcopal clergymen and laymen in New York city. The following is part of an ad- dress delivered by Bishop Spalding at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, which startled many of his fashiona- ble audience and the New York press : This convention now on is a. capiâ€" talistic convention. The men who at- tend it made their money from proï¬t, interest and rent. They care not how they get it as long as they do. Not a. particle of feeling have they for the workmen beneath them. The wealth in this country is created by the labor- ing classes. Alone the workers are responsible for every great develop- ment'thnt'is made. Yet they are sufâ€" fering untold tortures from poverty. They do not get the wealth. Where does it 'go? I ’ll tell you where it goes. It goes to the Owners of the machines. In this country 7-l per cent of the population Owns but 4 per cent of the wealth. That tells you where it goes. In this country 'there ars 2,000,000 children working at various industries. These little ones are slaving because of the poor wages of their parents. .What do you know of that? I The poor ought to be thrifty. How. often bone I heard that ! And yet ev- ery lay delegate to this convention re- ceives ten times the wages of one Workman. How does that sound to you? I am not pleading for a. little more; than: a tenth for the worker. The laboring classes don’t want chari- ty; they want justice. Capitalists own the tools, and the proï¬ts are the ï¬rst consideration. The workers come a. poor second. They are a mere side isâ€" sue. If the church is supported by proï¬ts, the worker knows that it is supported by that which is taken from him‘- He is forming his own religion away from the capitalist religion, even as he is formihg his own political pur- ty away from the capitalistic parties. We ought to accept the truth which the industrial democracy movement is trying to teach the world. We ’ve got to put out of existence the competi- tive system. The worker must be re- warded on the basis of whut he rend- ers. Every child must have a chance of life. I hate this system, my friends. I hate this system which gives to the greedy and takes from the meek. 'It is unchristian and ungodlike. I hate this system and it must be ended. The church must awoke-and must ally her-’ self with the movement for industrial democracyâ€"New. York paper. I No Moses can lend the working class out of the wilderness of capital- ism. They must do it themselves. Only Soldiers Face Fire. In Crensy’s “Fifteen Decisive But-' tles †there is a footnote quotation from' Sibornc’s "History of the Cnmpuigxr of \Vuterloo†which illustrates 'tho’ class consciousness of military masters and the ruthless contempt with which they regard the lives of common sol- diers from the working class. This footnote relates that during the butth of \Vaterloo “ an olï¬cer of the artillery came up to the Duke of Wellington and stated that he had a. distinct View of Napoleon attended by his stall' ; that he had the guns of his buttery well pointed in thntdirection and was pre- pared to ï¬re.†His Grace instantly and emphatically replied †No 2 I’ll not allow it. It’s not the business of Com- manders to be ï¬ring upon each other.†There you have it. 'Hcd the “ Iron Duke†permit-ted his urtillerymcn to ï¬re on Napoleon and kill him the but- tlo would have been brought to n. .specdy end, and the lives of thousands of English, Irish, French and German workingmen would have been spared thereby, The Duke of chllington was class conscious. For four of harming. a. hair of Butcher Napoleon he com~~ ‘manded the urtillerymen not to fire at him, but to train their cannon on the French'connnon soldiers, members of the working class.g.r\Vhen.it came to shedding the blood of useful men the duke did not hesitate. It was he who shouted, “Up, guards, and at them!†and cheered and exultcd in. their slaughter. When the workers of the world unite, and declare that it is not their business to be ï¬ring upon each other for the beneï¬t of a close which holds them in supreme contempt, they will refuse to furnish that close with “ cnn- ' non- fodder.â€~'â€"John F. Monough. A Day’s Journey. In a. day’s journey on acrowded street, you will not meet one man in ten thousand who will not admit that there is something wrong with 'our present day methods of doing things which gives the few too much and tho manyptoo little. In a. day’s journey on a crowded street, you will not meet one man in ten thousand who would not glndly see poverty abolished. ’ _In a, day’s journey on a. crowded street, you will not meet one man in ten thousand who does nut want exâ€" actly what Socialists wantâ€"providing you call it something besides Socialism. Funny, isn’t it lâ€"Ex. ' 0-. The world’s greatest menace is cop- itnlism. It makes millionaires and poverty, mansions and slums. 1836 * 1|“ THE BANK OF 1913 rlh America TI Years in Busmess. Capital and Surplus Over $7,600,000. You Can Send Money Safely '. In amounts up to $50 by means of our Bonk Money Orders. at a trifling cost. For larger sums, our Drafts payable in any part of the World, are at your service. For innnedmtc ' payments at a distance use our Telegraphic Transfers, and when travelling, our Letters of Credit and Travellers’ Cheques. &.WWWMMMWWW§ Fenelon Falls Branch M.W. Reive, Manager. If. '3; 35?:- ‘1 ; cum) 1 v9 sac-4m AM ’ ‘ w ...- v, r r. .r ‘ h ,3 5N. fv‘ximsm" .‘ ,_ ' -