5 Hand Bills, Posters, Programs Blank Receipt style and eolor olor promptly 4 i at lower rates tha «an Se tal : County, Parties from a distance gettin band &o. Printed can 'have them done ioe with tho. % .l ; H. | Suen and r se. and Residence é" Tot ome Port Perry, fice, y Solsitor, oy u Conyeyancer, Solicitor Ontario. Bank, £4 Ofee over the us the be yy, Tocthextracted or producing Tocal anesthesia. ag - new Shocks purchased the largest stock of brought into North Ontario Lam |. can nit you both as to quality - Come and see. Rooms over | Store. Dec. 30, 1885. J.D. JOTI, f ESTABLISHED PRACTITIONER IN THIS PART OF CANADA. 5 want & set of Teeth that are| yy : peatifal, Pink ble, comfortable and in ap ce, give mea call.-- | or pra EEE without 50 cents per ver Mr. Rol he Haruess Shop. oh Oo 1 Good Notes « Dicousoa| 2 Has any amount of Money to Joan | At BF per cont. n 0 Mortgages. TI SURA NCE effected at the Lowest Rates W Good English Companies. EF Agent Allan Line of Steam- ships. Port Perry, Oct. 17, 1880. MONEY TO LOAN HE Subscriber is prepared to LEND ANY AMOUNT on Fara Security AT 6 PER CENT, &3rAlso on Village Property. #27 MORTGAGES BOUGHT. $HUBERT L. Tobi, Barrist Office next to Ontario Bank. Port Perry, May 10, 1885. Représeuting -the following First Class Companies : Fink, Lire AND ACCIDENT. Nowrruery Assyranck Co'y, PaaNix. Assoraxce Co'y. Crrgzexs' INsuraNce Co'v. Grascow & Lonpon Ixsurance Co'y Port Perry, April 26, 188 WILLGOX & HOLT Licensed Auotioneers FOR THE TOWNSHIE Valuators, ; REAL ESTATE A SPE@IALTY. Sale' Bills made out end Blank Notes furnished free a charge. Satisfaction guar- antee or no pay. 'Terms liberal. COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND oF CARTWRIGHT: A Sale He ster will be kept at HENRY | Gorpoxn's Office, Port Perry, and at the 'office: of Wn. Spence, Township Clerk, Manchester, where parties can make ar- rangements for sales. Acall is solicited: Vv. M. WiLroox, Perer Hour, Port Pergy, Manchester. Ang. 22,1887, Licensed nine, vit &. OR the Townships of of Brock, Usxbri Scott, Thorah, hava, Rom, Cabri and Eldon of it SH en me 8 6 t thank uced bi lla, After using bs well a mit a iii 'wor a su ! nceniand, Auger = - Delsbane: harbot Lake, Ryer's Sursaparly x PREPARED BY OF. +.-G. Ayer & Go, LowelljiMass. Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth §5 a bottle. Ayor's Hair Vigor I the "ideal" Halr-dressing. It re. I siore hslor to gray hae vigorous prevents » fresh and ~ the formation of but they did no good. t ng of Ayer's Fale Vigel, 0 ohly & part of the con- toate. ond was covered with a heavy growin a hair. I recommend our pre as the best in the Jn ed , Sharon Grove, Ky: "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a number of years, and it has always heer me satisfaction. Xt isa5 excellent , prevents tho "hair turning ve insures its hi; ous , BN eeps the scalp 'wi Pr ALJ n, Nelo Hi "T have used Ayer's Hair y r for moting the growth of , BN nk it unequiiad. For Yestoring the unequal 'or res hair to its has color, and storing the ing, it cannot be surpassed." --Mrs. Geo. ver, Eaton Rapids; Mich. oy bad Hair Vigor 1s & moat excels lent pre paration for the hair. I speak my own experience. Its use promotes the growth of*new hair and Ee gloss; Sand soft. The Vigor is a Jord ip "J. W. Bowen, ," McArthur, Ohio. Tg Hp ER vars Hair Vigor for the past two years, and found it all it is Jopresented to be. a Jomtoree the hain. color to find to Siow Le {reel a i ik Ti ton ll the hair from th @ top of as he me month's trial of Ayer's Tivor he hair began three months, he had aot h the patel olor. ""--P. J. Cullen, Ayer's | flair Vigor, PREPARED BY Mariposa | 5 1. G. Ayer & Oo. Lowell, Mass. - Bold by Druggists dnd Perfumers. hel » bred thirotigh' 'their ilar and tro and further, the chances 0 .|atavism or reversion--that rock on which many novices shattér' success--nare provided against, matter how much' cars is taken" to keep fowl pure, they are apt to reyett back to some original ancestor, aid show this in a feather on' the k if of clean-legged descent, or a few Linck feathers if descended from parents pure white in colour. In the case of buying the fowl, the breederhas not taken that risk. On the whole, we are sure it will be cheaper and more desirable to purchase the fowl rather than the egus.-- Canadian Live Stock and Farm Journal for Qctober, - CR leg A Rapid Transit. Cuicaco, October '4.--The Times this morning publishes' the following |i under display headlines : For a week a dozen gentlemen have been pas: 'gathered at the Grand Pacific in earnest |" discussion of a plan which sounds like a tale from the "Arabian Nights." If carried out, and $20,000,000 of solid cash have been paid in to say that it will be, their schemes will result in waking railroad trains appear like mere stage conches ; will make the transpor tation of the mails almost equal Yo the telegraph ; allow a business man; to baverhis office in New York and yet live. in Ohicare; with no a incon. 'Tlie project was co afternoon - ims at Be ye Mount Carmel Aeronaatic Manufactur. ing Company will be chartered with a capital of $20,000,000. Within sixty days the first air "ship is to arrive ing Chicago. The company is backed 'by a powerful English syndicate and by eastern capitalists, both these juterests having representatives at the Grand Pacific meetings. The incorporators, however, are the inventors, B, Ji Pennington and Righard Butler, of th Mount Curmel Fiuchine §¢ Pulley Works, at Mount Carmel, 11. ; W. C. Dewey, of the Grand Rapids Furniture Compuny, of Grand Rapids, Mich. E. L. Chamberlain and James Pogh The proposed air ship, models of which have been successfully tested, will carry cars the size of the Pullmans and will contain fifty persons each, special cars being manufactured-for quick wal and passenger service. Work will} commence immedictely at Mount Carmel upon the manufactory, plant being a mammoth one, covering | 4 The first building to bo of Wl erected will be 800 feet square and the' many acres, contracts for it have already been let. The company will 'manufuctare all its needs from the raw materigl, even to the aluminum, of which the airships will be-slmost entirely. com. Hogs as Money. Makers. Even allowifig. two dollars. as purchase money for each pig. Li oa make pork with whey and 'shorts fo | three tents per pound," said an exten! sive dairyman to us just recently, B raises Be keshil #'s Wild Cherry has been peas readily and w nd take n vast quanity more if we had | them toship There must be a smallér rl pking of lean oot, : great {heuy Pigs , | thoy havi the 0 Fhe Af In oh to stated that thrinkage in: the bred\hogs than those d; there feing in the case in bred hog a per cent, to I per cent. mentigg in fdeding resultant character of that if fed on coarse ¥ much larget ' and that the intestines and are 'diseased. The greater the Canadian hog is worth n market about } ceat mes as high as 2 cents per. than the American.' In that difference does not lr. Davis in Canadian |. and From Jotrtial for ¥ Bair shows signs of failing. ge' to use Ayers Vigor. tioh strengthens the scalp, c growth of new hair, g natural dolor to gray and renders it soft, phan, produst of barley. Why may not our rmers substitute peas for the defici- ency t Farmers will do well to think this over. We can produce too much | Wheat, too much tarley, but so far Ontario has not produced more peas than the English market would readily take at very fair prices. ---- eat A TELEPHONE war is now raging in Ontario. The Bell Company, which is the orjginal occupant of the field, Be a reduction of $10 a year, bat adds, * This reduction on our part is intended to be made only to those who are not stockholders in or subscribers to an opposition company, and of course any assistance given by you to the present attempt to ruin the business established by this company in Peterboro' will be taken as indicat- ing that you do not intend to take ad- vantage (or to contintde taking advan- tage) of this offer, and as a cancellation of the reduction as far 4s this company is concerved." The Ontario Telephone Company of Peterbord' replies that its fees ure $15 per annum for a single, instrument, and $I2 50 for each instrument where ® subscriber take two or more, and its 'prices " are permanent and apply to everyboby." The charter of the néw company applies to Toronto, so that we may except an interesting contest here: akin Ax Actress' MISADVENTURE.--A Peterboro" despatch &afs : . The the- atrical season was opuned in Poterboro' on: Friday by Mjss: Margaret Mather ef | and more, please; madaw. you to keep still long enough red fdale - Wilson &" Co. , Wholesale of Hamilton, for nearly tweuty the cure of Coughs, Colds, Croup, s no equal. 'rag 'Far Norra.--Highland (to Storekeeper)--* If to please id you gif me a pun of ta tea orekeeper-- Oh yis ; and wall itta Llack or ta green, or Highland Woman (after fion)--* Black. Oh; ay, black. a funeral !' ests eit t a: ood Bitters oan effectual cure of constipation, does not war- neglecting to use it at the right e it now, linker asked Matilda, a nig- pant. a few nights ago--* What | scratching is that out in the never heard anything like it her oompany i in SRonito and Juliet.' Take-no substitute | , ithe genuine with white wrappers. followed shrouded in clouds of mist; | hind seonts I only know that I fainted when I saw "twas my sister th. I bad kissed! THE TERRIBLE TELEGRAM A Jockey's heart ought to behard and cal- lous--if he has feeling like uther men he will always be getting into trouble, My wife had been dead about eight years at the time Iam going to write about, and I onlyhad one child. Iheld a very good position as Jockey to Lord Kinder's stable, with as much rid- Lo er get through, so' I don't | know what ever possessed me that I should make such a fool of myself over that boy. Goodness knows I had enough to think about without troubling my head with such a young Whipper-snapper as that. But there it was-- I was as fond of bin 'as I knew how to be, and I was never so happy as when sitting in my little drawing room with his eurly head resting on my shoulder, He would sit there by the hour together, as pleased as Punch, telling me all sorts of yarns and explaining | all about the boyish scrapes he was forever getting into. Let's see he would be about 9 years old then--a tiny little chap he was- | but as 'harp as a needle; and he hadalready more than one ride on the Kinder Lodge horses, We bad not been having a very grand §ear, Bomehow or other our handicap borses never seemed to wing and the two-year-olds were a very poor lot, We had one good horse in the stable, though, and Lord Kinder and all his friends were backing him tre- mendously heavily for the Derby. He would have won the Guineas as sure as eggs is eggs. but--bad luck to him-- he started coughing on the Monday; and never ate so much as au oat for two days. Even then I could have got third on him if I had ridden him out, and he had been coming on wonderfully 'ever since. To sure there was no mistake; we gall hit on the Friday before Epsom, 'and he did even better than I It was' trial--they, werent rip 'best miler in England he woulkin'c have hundred to one chanes, 1 don't kine w shat but I was a long way Jas >--fin- bx en away on the opposite side of the course to the others, pus Lom yo my colt covered a matter of a huudied yards than they did. My head was swimming, that followed is very indistinct in my ming, unsaddling paddock, and I remember the black and angry facesof tho swells as they' stood round the colt; but I don't think any-", body spoke to me tll Lord Kinder came up. I have never seen such a look in anybody" face as I saw in his as he walked up to me. It was absolutely iivid with anger, and thers was a cold, set gleam in his eyes that Ihopé never to see again as long as I live. Broken as I was, it seemed to freeze the very marrow in me, and I suppose I cowered before hind He spoke very shortly, ina bard, clear tone: "What does this meant" was all he said. "I am vi sorry, my lord," I ans huskily; "I wasn't fit to ride. Will you res: that?" and I put the telegram into his hand: - He took it and stood there the best part of a minute looking at it. Hedid not apes but the hard look in his face died out, without a word he handed it to a geutieman standing next to him, and told hin to pass it round. 'Then he put his hand on my shoul- der ani drew me into the staud, and we went into one of the private rooms est apart ' for the stewards. The first words he said were, very kind ones: 4 "You must forgive me, Richard, for speaks ing to you like that. I didn't know. Poor little e boy! I can't tell you how sorry I am for you." "Thank you; my Lord," 1 ssid, or rather tried to say~--I had & mocking sort of feeling in my throat, and say the words weren't very intelligl i WA is not many owners who would "heir jockeys: like