Ontario Community Newspapers

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 21 Aug 1890, p. 1

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At 85 por otnt. on good Mortéages. {gr Agent Allan ships. ! X Port Perry, Oct. 17, 1889. - MONEY TO LOAN Line of Steam- Ee The MOUNT on AT 8 PER OENT. Property. Office next to Ontario Beiik,: Port Perey, May 10, 1885. » | Fine, Live AND ACCIDENT. 7 NorrHERN Assurance Co'Y. Paanix Assurance Co'y. Crrmzens' Insvmaxce Co'v. Grasgow & Loxpox Insurance Co'y Port Perry, April 26, 1889. WILLCOX & HOLT Licensed Auotioneers FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHIP OF CARTWRIGHT, Valuators, &oc. &ec. REAL ESTATE -A SPECIALTY, Sale Bills made out snd Blank Notes furnished free of charge. Satisfaction guar- antee or no pay. Terms liberal, Sal ogi will be kept at HENRY Port Perry, and at the | DENTIST, $4 T0876 EACH ving just: purchased ever brought into North n d I can suit you both as to quality Come and see. Rooms ov I. A. MURRAY, SET. DENTIST. OLDRST ESTABLISHED PRACTITIONER IN _ THIS PART OF CANADA. it ~ Our a physician, a skilful Seencx, Township Clerk, | I] 8 family for years always foand it the bast remedy for croup, to which aint dren have been object Capi. O. Carley, Brooklyn, N. ¥. "From an ence of over th years in the sale of Proptietary med! cines, T Leal justified in ding 's, best mi the enduring more salabl twenty-five years ago, when its great success was considered marvelous." -- R. 8. Drake, M. D., Beliot, Kans. 1 little sister, four years of bot 'was go ill from bronchitis that we h almost given up hope of her recovery. of large experi oh it aud experience, pronoun use- ve her ids more medicine ; 'worst, last resort, we determined to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I can truly say, with the most happy results, After King 4 few doses she seemed to. danger. We bE Vi th out of: r. We continue ng the until satisfied she was entirel, well, This has given me unbounded fait! in the preparation, ; and I recommend it ners."'--C. O. Ayers Chony Pectoral, PREPARED BY "Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price + six bottles, 9%, Worth #5 a botle, was shortly after oyhé the cliff. -The body was taken i charge by the 'coroner. * The cloth-/ ng was taken off aud placed ind bogs The remains were' burried in the Drummond Hill "cemetery. ~~ Before doing so they were viewed by Mrs, Quigly, and she indentified them from the clothing to be those of Mra. Deser: iah Day. a At 2 o'clock this afternoon Detective Furtherer arrived in town with Arthut Hoyte Day, who had been arrested in Rochester for bigamy and did hat ; know that the charge of murder hanging over him. The officers keep ing this from bin, told him that tt body of a woman was fouud at Ningara falls, supposed to be that of his" w Deserinh, and they wanted him toe and identify her. ' He willingly assent S10 ed and eame here as stated. 2 g preliminary examination hefo diary magistrate Hill. His was remarkably cool and throug he outwardly seemed perfectly 5 erent. ; Mrs: Quigly was brought ini court room amid a breathless Bi He was expected to show at least | surprise, but he remained perfectl, moved; though his face became ali flashed. When the prisoner,being ne ye sented by counsel, was asked he ask her any questions b pin © be heard drop. He said : Do you know how fi were away from me when you pushed her dyer 1 1 could not say exactly. Was it five paces | : It was more than that, T guess. Did yon go up the hill with us, "8 I.went up to it. If 1 had Je your intentions I. would never gone to the Falls with you How long were we gone t About 25 minates or half an. Are you: sare I waved for come up ¥ i Yes, you did, You. know: Arthur Day ; you needn't try crimmate me, "Your brothers. wife | hithe sinews and tendons is compelled to yield to 8 they have provided, on unquestionable auth- ithe testimony of the patients 8--that rheamatism, however od, may be cured ' by the | persistent application of ® Ointment. This we feel ill be welcome intelligence nds of sufferets; bed-ridden pase; Or liwping with stffened ig the pathway to the tomb. ate where the quicksilver 8 inakes a lop of thirty de: stock all around. The inevitable old- est inhabitant had told him how when he came hére twenty years ago, *" 'ere place where they wor a drinkin' had been covered with brush an' there worn't but one cabin for five miles around." _ Life was becoming very wearisome when a man with a long {ape streamer flying from his hat ru in to take a drink. Here was p or down, the complaint is of |d prevalent one; and in our ements at the West, along the borders of our great rivers, in ook swamps of the South snd low and damp locations, few reach the age of forty years rheumatic visitations. It is therefore, that a. preparation | afford immediate relirf, and tually a thorough, cure of plaint, must be of especial people of all countries. We reasonably doubt, in view. of attested statements which laid before us, sustained as by circumstances within our ad, this is certainly r t. Many an industrious tiller 'the soil, whose services are needed ji the field, is at thi spoment languish- | on a bed of sickness, the hand that Bould guide the plow or grasp the pade rendered powerless by Rheumat- jm, Many a toiler in every branch f productive labor is similarly situat- ; and 'we can imagine with what by these sufferers would hail the jeans of immediate cure. To all such fe feel justified in recommending this amic remedy, the application of hich. with the aid of a few doses of olloway's Pills to regulate the in- grnal organs, would, we feel assured, estore them to health and usefulness. E- Daily Argus. 'BroxEs-WixpED.-- Fare (to cabby, bho has dashed his handsom, down Renfield street, Glasgow, and run 0 0 shop window in St. Vincent t).:-- How did you manage this, abby ¥ Cabby :--'Axing yer pard* ng, sir, but it's a broken: winded horse, Fm ii ut English tourist lately traveling 2 fries, ratlway carriage, near Dumfries unas arked tos fellow passenger, a re- d minister, 'that the most interest: he had seen in the course of all the:mourners eying him with a puzzled look. Then they began whis- pering to One another s her, I su; 3 Ne donit look like him," "One of them heirs come to see if the old man left any property, maybe." "No, he don't seem to be interferin' with the coffin." ; "I wonder who he is." it went on till .one old woman atidibly settled the question. "I know who he is." "Whot"" "He's the nan as owns the hearse." i 1 20-1" San Francisco Chron- cle. e Heroism at Home, : How useless of life's g wish to be héroes. We think of the good we might do if our lot had been cast in other scenes. 'We forget that the world bestows no such titles as noble as father, mother, sister or bro- ther. In the sacred precincts of home we have many chances of heroism. The daily acts of self denial for the good of a loved oné, the gentle word of soothing for another's trouble, the care for the sick, may Seem as nothing, yet who can tell the good they may have accomplished? Our slightest word may have an influence over another for or evil. We are daily sowing the seed which will bring forth some sort of harvest. Well will it be for us if the harvest will be one we will be proud to garner, If some one in that dear home can look back in after years, and, as he tender ly utters our name, say: 'Her words and example prepared me for a life Of usefulness, to her I owe my present happiness, we may well say: "I have not lived in vain,"---National Presby- terian, Men like to be looked up at, depend- ed on, quoted and referred to. An ugly temper is a trial that few women are able to endure. The only cure is silence. You can't kiss a it only makes him worse. The thing to dois to keep still, let him cool, an let the matter drop. He will respect your sense and some to terms of his ews in Scotland was 'the caves |! the ious man; | o idual of responsibility for the good of the unity is weakened the constant shifting and alteration of its members. A man naturally takes less interest in the affairs that concern the welfare of comparative strangers than in those which affect his friends, and naturally cares less for the welfare of a com- munity of which he is a mere tran- sient'member than of one to which he is bound for life and with whose past and futuge he is united by indissolu- ble ties. New York is a city of stran- gers to each other, without common traditions or controlling common in- terests. Bo vast an ag; tion of men with so few of the elements of a true community has never before been seen. In such a city the social sentiment is feeble, and its part is largely taken by the mere sense of the necessity of maintaining the institutions requisite for the defense of material interests. Ciyio pride, one of the most powerful motives in the history of the progress of civilization, has lost its force among us, --Professor Charles Eliot Norton in Scribner's. Changing the Spots. A short fime a negro underwent 3 gal oper ron at Laipsic after Ww. 1%. 6 nec eral small ions on wound." skin was taken fro white Remsous, and as the wound be- gan io eal the color of these ieces of began to change, and wi the cure was completed assumed the ebony color of the negro's order to find out whether skin could in the same manner ening ehanged into fair, a small portion of of a negro was sown over a wound in a white man's arm. Pres get tho right kind of ) 6 back with one last T stop] in Hartford to buy him new es, the price of wh as 8 be deducted from his wages, The new « retty good ; old farmer sarliest earnings. Friday morning b sot him to work in the garden in the rear of his barn, In about an hour the old Sirmes wet out to 5 hoy a tting along, He found him on Bay prs the barn floors "iV int i the matter?" said the farmer. 2 "I'm feeling bad--don't know what ails me" : "Dg you ever drink?" asked the farmer. v "Yes, an' I s'pose that's what's the . matter, I've been drinking purty hard' 'of Inte." "Why didn't you let me know it?" said the other, *and I would have fixed' yon sunthin'. I'm a "temp'ranc mau, though I always bave & drop i the house for medicine. The old farm- er went in and made a rum' punch and' gave it to the fellow. "This had an in- spiring effect, and the hired man "said he felt better and stuttéd for the house. « In a few minutes he came out dressed * up in the new suit and started down the road toward Middletown, much to be old man's surpris #"* sang out the farmer. 2 "To New Yorrak," wus the prompt" answer, as the pedestriag struck a five mile gait. The old farmer's feolinigs may be bets: ter imagined. than described as lie saw $20 worth of his clothes on. the road to New York, but at this moment his son =~ came along, and, with a tw le "in hig starboard eye, quictly said; "Whorc's the hired man, father?" % The old man, with eye still on'the re. treating figure, pointed to kim and ans swered: 'There Le is! Don't yo see him?" Then. after a short pause; hi ad ded: "But, a iu ve b +Whure you go- oN adiar orth T The Paris correspondent. of a Bostow paper, referring to his recovery from & gerous illness, ee 1 mention this illness that I may tel} you how easily I wus cured. Iwas bent double. I could not breathe. My phy= sician ordered me to take a flat-iron and heat it as hot as I could bear; put a double fold of flannel on the painful part, and move the iron to and fro om the flannel, I was cured as by enchant- ment. My doctor told me some time since a professor in one of our colleges, after suffering some days with neural: gia in the head, which he himself had < tried to cure, sent for the former, who prescribed a hot flat-iron. The next. time the doctor saw the professor, the "J really shall not pay you What! I had no sooner applied th My physician. was summoned recent- ly to the bedside of woman who had neuralgia in both sides, and so violently that she alarmed the whole neighbors hood by the screams which her iptolera- ble anguish wrung from her. CR taken from her bed and borne near the fire. In such severe cases a heated iron is not energetic enough. He has an fron rod fastened in an ivory handle, He heats this rod to white heas (whick causes less painthan red heat) and ape ples it very slightly to the seat of paid, rst in longitudinal, then in latitudinal - lines. The applivation is so light that no-trace is le but red lines on the sph : dermis, which. are soon effaced. twenty minutes the woman walked back - to bed, and the third day afterward Fitted it, entirely freed from neuralgia. instrument is not to be entrusted to awkward hands. Three weeks ago one of our brilliant artists was invited to shoot by the owner of & chateau im whose grounds there are wild fowl Abundance. Ha a woke, the 'mo A o£ E& wih solution §

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