Ontario Community Newspapers

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 14 Jul 1904, p. 4

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he Ae doa TE RC EN RARE. Lee od a a actin - x or Kew Premises! u 5 hi LawkeraSon ISH TO ANNOUNCE that flat rey are now comfort- ably ensconsed in their new pre mises in the Purdy Block where the Public willjalways find an ample supply of GH2ICE, FRESH MEATS at P ices that cannot fail to plea A full supply of Meats of the very Tat grades, and cut in dimensions #0 pliase the most fa tidious ®il orders wil atiention. SLE 5 receive profipt CAWKER & SON March N returning thanks to the pubiic for patron x to for r 3( years, | w y intimate that ain, as usual, now ready for business, and ba ° Large & Assort ried Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS which I an tery to se vyCHEAP As ar tt asers (EAN { un ApE -A Bsmt Hy bh) t Wii™ will be allowed on a « now Jan. Ist vext 1 k being £2 MADE BY HANI 5 and nc factory work key ns k, ¢ super ority of my goods wi tc appa' ent ; Tutending purchasers will find that by giving nea ca f ing elsewhert the ycan be suited in qua a e, my long experience in the trade being . putasle guarantee that perfe tisfactior will be given by y sed Everthing is ss ken constantly on hand repairs neatly an promptly attended t JOHN ROLPH Port Perry, D Agricuitural Machimes IMPLEMENTS SUNDERLAN D TJYHE undersigned keeps on hand ar sales the following Agrienltura h ines and Iicplements manufactured by the NTR EMITS MTG 0 OF PETERBORO Binders, Reapers, Crown Mower, Dais Seeder, Tiger Hay Rake, Two Farrow Plow, Three F w g, ( na tion Plows, Chamy ws, S. T S. 1 rrow, Land S Fran pring T h vator, Binder Trucks, & also the following, the manufacture of JOHN ABEL, Toronto High class Threshing outfits, Traction Engines and Machines, Victor Clover Haller, To:table Trivmph- 1,am prepared to supply cver farmer requires in way of Machines, Imple ments, Repairs, & 22 A call solicited One door West ¢ McDonald's I R. K. BRYANT SP ie 1S THE TIME FOR HOUSE CLEARING. 1 am prepared to do all kinds o Papering,, Painting, &c. Paper and Paint furoished i reqaired W, F. NOTT, J € Jf s stor Farm for Sale. OUTH-HALF lot g and South west quarter of lot 10, con 3, Township of Brock, consisting of about Bo acres good Farm Land with house and barn; also 20 acres Hardwood, and 55 acres Pine Cedar, Hemlock and Tamarac, Apply to owner. H. ©. CLEMES, Dec. 8, Port Perry 1902. BURNIIAM, Clerk of the Thiré vision Court. Ofiice iv Psot Office i FAVE "\JEATHER SENSE." Australian Bushmen Have Gift of Pro phecy as to Seasons. Oné of the most :~markable in- stances of science learning from sav- agery and instinct is that which is of ~veryday occurrence in Australia, The Australian natives are expert weather prophets. It is a gift that €an hardly be called instinct, inas much as they form their judgment from a thousand and one sighs | about the i, such as the average | white would nbt notice. The appear- ance of the trees, the length of the | stalk of certain' reeds, the actions and doings of mative animals, insects reptiles and fish; in short, a thou- sand and onc signs, the purpc t of which they have learned by long cen- turies of observation, constitute their stock in trade as weather pro- phets Years ago, in the days of the old Botany Bay settlement, the English learned to ap reciate the "weather sense" of the patives and later when the colony became civilized and weather stations were established here and there over the country, the best native weather prophets were employed as members of the staff Many stories. are related of their wonderful powers of foresight In Australia the conditions are such that it would be desirable if the meteorologists could foretell the wea- ther six to eight months in advance, something which no weather forecast- er is able to accomplish, twenty-four hours being the longest period at which he can or' venture a fore cast. But the native weather doctors do not hesitate to predict what will oceur six months to a year ahead, and, what is most remarkable, they hit it correctly more often than ono would expect There is a story current that sev- eral years ago the sheep farmers and winemakers certain quarter of Australia we much wrought up thinking the would followed by a severe ight. I'he We Bureau men held the same opinion, but would not, of irse, ventur ny prognostications so far ahead. Y while all ..cre con fident that next year would t he herds and flocks ather prophet at tation shook his that he had serious thing happening I to set his wits to v I f ~d gether provi- 5 s f h into the desert p r b . going to consult the sig a w eturn in about a Wh he went or what he did knew at the end of the mont he r »d, declaring that th wk were all fools and that irought, the next 5 w nusuall rainy Nc one | but, sure enough wi xt arrived more rain fell than I en experienced in years In dry, a intries like Austra ha it i t 8 easier to fore ast w k in others Plant life has ad tself to the cond t 5 d dying their growth fr car t r one might poss Y the s ficance of the s r growth of plants Doubt les leaving the station d weatl prophet went direct to some ou the way localit grew » particular plant occurring ther nd in no other part of the reg ch during feasSons preceding a v dry spell cast r eve s some peculiarity of growth or structure not r but plain | | Puns and Promotions. | Canon Melville, who died the other | day in his ninety-second year, owed his earliest promotion to a pun, af firms a London paper When the te Ear Dudley, who knew Mr Me le sufficiently t aber that his Christian name wa d, had a g at his disp he received a r ntaining only tk words I i ember David I'he Earl's reply was no less terse and Scriptur- | I' Thou art the man! Perhaps | the earliest instance of ecclesiastical promotion won by a pun is that of a | cu named Joseph, who was pr by Swift to take this text for a sermon preached in St ate rick's Cathedral, Dublin the Viceroy Butler," the Th f Or mond: "Yet did not the chief butler r Joseph, but he Rev. Dr. Mountain, wk son of a beggar, ow nea ' step of his success I ir great part to his nd the last step a by a single When he was n as shop of Durham, 1 as | the fittest pers te va cant archiespiscopal = of York he| lied Sir, hads faith as a n of mustard i thou wouldst | to this Mount dramatically | king his breast 'Be thou re-| 20% and cast to this seca see That Georg IT. should sc understand and a ate the joke as to accept its suggestion is per haps the stra part of the story | He Did Not Bite. { There is a new London story about Charles Darwin, I'wo English boys said Miss Leiter, "being fricnds of Darwin thought one day that they would play a joke on him. They caught a butterfly, a grasshopper, a beetle and a centipede, and out of these creatures they made a strange, com- posite insect. They took the centi- pede's body, the butterfly's wings, the grasshopper's legs and the beetle's head, and they glued them together carefully. Then, with their pew bug in a box, they knocked at Darwin's door. "" "We've caught this field," they said. "Can you tell what kind of a bug it is, sir?' ps 5 then 1 at < smiled slightly. "* "Did it hum when you caught it?' bug in a us he asked. "" "Yes," they answered, nudging one another "" "Then," sald Darwin, 'It ia a humbug." STANLEY'S GARDEN MODEL. Keminder of the Tollsome African Journey in Search of Livingstone--Speut Much of His Time on the Toy. The countryside is radiant with furze bloom all about the little vil- lage of Pirbright, and pear here, on a slope of pleasant country, is Furze Hill, the country. seat of the late Sir H. M. Stanley. The great explorer chose well his retreat during the last year of his active and adventurous life. The house is a fine mansion of brick, stone faced, of a fashion something Elizabethan, and about it are spac ious green lands. By contrast with the aching sunlight and the blight- ing heat of Africa, it is paradise in a ringfence. But the man who dis- covered Victoria Nyanza and spoor- ed the Congo to its source, could not forget the wilds that gave him fame. $80, in the garden-roaches below the house he had the ground laid out to keep Africa in mind. Mr. Muir- head, the steward of the estate, car- ried out the work, following the wap to which Sir Henry added such basis erties resembling those of the white of SE a of wheat --=and certain mineral sub- the breath and burn it fn their houses 1 . supstantial areas, and now a mine ature Congo drowses in a bed of cement through English underwoods and a winding path between haw- thorn and dog-rose leads onc to a summer-house on the topmost crest of the Mountain of the Moon What this dwarf Congo lacks in breadth it makes up in depth. In the middle of its widest part--where the mighty river is a dozen yards from shore to shore--it is 12 feet deep. There has been no slavish ad- herence to geographical detail in the design; that was impossible from the first, through the nature of the ground and the size of the original; and the Congo of Pirbright runs around half an acre of island, which the spring has turned into a thicket of young green. At one place, 'the Congo turns into the Zambesi, and its waters thunder over a five-foot concrete fall in imitation of the Victoria Falls When Sir Henry was in residence, there were canoes and a punt on this water, and the youngest members of the family took their turn at solv- ing the riddle of the Congo and cut- ting their way to the roof of the world on the Mountains of the Moon Higher up in the grounds in Vie toria Nyanza, a fine sheet of water, from whence issues, as is due and proper, the River Nile. A bridge spans the lake, and there are boals on it, and in this model the Congo itself draws its water from Vigtoria Nyanza. The whole scheme cost a very large sum, and was an idea in which Stanley himseltl took the greatest interest. | the orient, He spgnt many fternoon, alone or in cbmpany with his wife, in the summer-house on the Mountains of the Moon I'rom there the whole of the elaborate and costly toy can be seen, and it is curious and not a little pathetic to think that the man who bored a road through the bleak s and imminent dangers of ar unknown country should derive pleasure by means of channels and islands in an English garden, Congo N and Zambesi! There were nam- es that had the force of technicali ties for him--they were a part of his trade--and when he had used them he made them in miniature to keep 1 him, as an old sea captain keeps ag cased model of his ship It was esser his alone If ( f the matter you - Congo? I don't kr no Congc 18 ye ost a heap of mone s the first comment of the men on the state, and it is only tho wi } i in making it whe ow wt ngo and which is Nil It has taught no geography and aroused no local interest It was Stanley toy, his momento of days wher carried lives in his } ds i pushed the rders of c rther and further apart A Highland Chieftain The ct hip of a Highland lan is still a great position, even n tt le ng days; and where there is a doubt as to who is en t th adherents of the | r uphold their r eclive 18 with a quite mediaeval ardor It would be a bold Southron who would venture to adjudicate on the competing clair »f the Mackintosh and Cluny Macpherson to the chief tainship of the an Chattan; and even Lord Lovat, who was the rc C nt last week, at the hands of his fellow-Frasers, of a splendid sil i rec of his pat universally igh v generally) held to be { of his famous clan Lord head of the Aberdeenshire I is understood to assert his righ to the chieftainship; and when, in the great hall of Beaufort Castle, the clansmen mustered, some years ago, round the youthful Lord Lovat, end congratulated him on his ma- jority. Lord Saltoun (though one of the hou party at the castle) stern- | ly declined to take any part in a | ceremonial which seemed to imply | recognition of the claim of his | br er-Peer to be the chief of their | n clan London Chronicle The Very Man. English dull speaker told this story: '"He dull onc remarked statesman | Lord Of an eminent who was a very Ashbourne was making a very speech to a mem the dreariness when 1 abinet on of the performance He is was the reply What would you do with him? course He evening ber of the ( an ad mirable man I wish we had him." him?' 'Do Send him to Ircland of dispe unlawful five would se any assembly in minutes.' ' Leal Estate Value of a Name. County Cavar part of I Travels," has land judge's court, to the Owing to the association and land of a rental of ary rental -- London Mail. FOOD VALUE OF MILK. House, Swift Quilca ere Dean wrote ver's been sold Irish with Gull in the demesnc with Dean were sold on £111 being estimated at Swilt the the the ordi £57 house Its Nutritive Substances, All of Which Are Digestible, In certain sicknesses, says a scientist, such as typhoid, life may milk, which may not only postpone the final issue in certain kinds of senile de- cay, but may contribute {0 the stability of vigor in maturity. While the food value of milk is gen- erally recognized, there is a popular ig- norance of the exact nature of its nu- tritive properties. If a gallon of water is boiled long enough it is lost in steam, Milk similarly boiled leaves a solid res- idue weighing from twenty to twenty- three ounces. This substance chiefly consists of sugar, fat, the fat of butter, casein--a material with feeding prop- depend on stances which are essential {n the man- ufactre of the bones and teeth. Un- like almost all other foods, these milk substances are all digestible, and, what is more, they exist in almost precisely correct proportion to each other. The once famous analyst Letheby demonstrated that whereas 100 pounds of quite lean beef without bone con- tained seventy-two pounds of water and twenty-eight pounds of feeding matter--not all of which is digestive-- 100 pounds of good milk contained fourteen pounds of feeding matter--all digestible. THE INCENSE TREE. It Is Bquatty and Thorny, Like the Myrrh and Acacia. Incense is the resinous gum that ex- udes from a tree found in British Bo- maliland from pear Berbera to Cape Guardaful. Some incense comes from a region adjoining Maskat, near the Arabian coast. Inferior incense is found in India, but the best and great- est quantity comes from British Bo- maliland. The incense tree is squatty, thorny and unsightly, like the myrrh and aca- cia, and seldom reaches a height of fif- teen feet. Incense i8 not only used in worship, but many orientals use it to sweeten { | Is the title of an int let which explains our which deposits may be. withdrawn by mail 3 ently as if your own | were our office. Send for it. You find it interesting, Canada 3 Permanent / Mortgage (Formerly The Canada Per Western Canada Mortgage Ca TORONTO STREET, TQ ro p va- pounds ana dur- price to KIII AIsagreeanie oqaors. ries from 2,240,000 to 3,3604 and is gathered in the aut] brought to market by the Sof ing the winter months, ranges from 2 to 6 annas (4 § per pound, according to qu. Incense is extensively us pounds is a great distributing point, 880 pounds to Europe, the ald tion going to Marseilles and Tri THE FIRST SKY MAP. Probably the Chart Hipparchus. were probably the cultivate astronomy, Which, science, astrology, ap- pears to been evolved independ- ently by Egyptians, Chinese and Chal- deans, who had all distinguished the planets from the fixed stars and group- ed these into constellations, Drawings of the heavens were prob- ably common to the observersiof all three nations, but owing to the Whole- sale destruction of records it is impos- whether any charts upon plane surfaces, which alone can strict- ly be called maps, were made by them. recent times the first to chart of the heavens was Hipparchus, who upon the appearance of a new star decided to record the state of the sky in bis time and to com- pile a catalogue of all the stars wisi- ble above his horizon. He enumerated 1,080 stars and in order to fix accurate- ly their positions invénted the plani- sphere, a projection of a sphere upon a plane surface, which is for most pur- poses more useful than a globe, Very Made by The Chaldeans first to with It Was its sister have gible to say In more project a GAS AS AN ILLUMINANT. Chinn, It Has Been Annerted, Used It Centuries Ago. It has been asserted, but never prov- ed conslusively, that China used gas for lighting purposes centuries before its use in the western world. If this was 80 it was doubtless natural gas. Clayton, at the end of the seven- teenth century, stored gas in bladders and played with it at times, and Lord Dundonald in 1787, in working a patent for coal tar, stored up the gas and oc- casionally used it for lighting up ipe hall of Culross abbey. It is to the genius of a Si Ww. Murdoch, that we owe our ght {1- luminant. In 1702 he was ing at Redruth, Cornwall, and affer exper] ments in gasmaking he lit up his own house, much to the astonishment of his neighbors. illed to Birmingham, he erected a large plant for lighting up the Soho works, This drew attention to the whole matter, and in 1803 London be- street lighting. The Royal so- ciety in 1808 gave Murdoch its Rum- ford gold medal for his invention.-- London Standard. gan A Unique Collection, Among the curious ways by which some persons in England make a living is the sale of castoff garments belong- ing to disting personages, for which the curiosity loving fashionable sure and profitable ulished world affords a market. One English lady has a col lection of corsets, including articles from the wardrobes of reigning im perial and royal personages as well as | )bjects of historical interest. Among the latter are a leather corset belong- ng to Charlotte Corday, the heroine of the French revolution, anda con struction of whalebone and steel worn by Marie Antoinette, with an eighteen inch waist.--Toilettes. Needed in Every Home # Always 1 Up to Date WEBSTER'S INTERNATION DICTIONAR A Dictionary of ENGI Biography,Geography, New Gazetteer of the with more than 25000 titles, ba latest census returns. New Biographical Di fontatiing names of SYoriouey te Persons, w. nationality, of reigns, date of Pt death b ete, Edited by W. T. HARRIS, PLD. United States Commissioner of Ed New Pla 2380 Quarto I Rich Bindings 5000 Illusts We also publish Webster's Collegiate Dictio with Gloss rf Soos ish Wordsavd ii 00 Pages. 1400 111 Bizo . 5 by oly in quality, second-class ig LET US SEND YOU F "A Test in Pronunciation" which nf pleasant and instructive evening G.G6C.MERRIAM COMPA Publishers, Springfield, Cossack (Kosak) 1s a word of & origin meaning a bighwayn ALWAYS CURES Aud is Pleasant and TS N i 3 emoy The unders gned won d take this opportunity of thanking his nu- customers for the opening business in Port Perry, that he hus moved his business from the Market building to the merous Store Willard Block Queen Street where he will be pleased to fill all crders for Meats in a manner that cannot fail to please customers, freilities for the transaction of business he feels confident that he can give better satisfaction than heretofore, to aerify this state premises, ww. GAME AND FISH IN SEASON, I. J. WHEELER. XI; LNIINIINS sIN71 RAK i NIN ' ZN ~ Nis EN No SIN IN FULL [ lake great pleasure 5 PA Dad PA [111 Tw i 1 SARIN ZIN/IN/IN7 \1 SH Ie SRK 7 SKI 4, SEK Pot Pye 3 Roller Mills © NZ New Mills are now completed and in full oper- SI 42 ation and that I am better than ever prepared 12 AN to meet the requivements of my friemds and tiie 4 . No . 1 < general public in cvery line pertaining to my IE M2 already extensive and rapidly ncreasing busi- p14 IN ) AEN No HESS Correct business principle 5, prom bilude Ny" 2 and courteous trealment may be relied on. $e EN PZ EN Me JAMES CARNEGIE SE 32 Port Perry, Dec., 1902. A IN 7 1 1NI2N es 1/31] RY al ¥ libera. patronage receivid since and would inform the public Having new and inereused and in order he solicits ull to give him a call in his new - i oe BLAST in announcing that ny rl { NIN SAAR B+ wat NA A GR IN T DURING THE HO Che undersigned will sell a large qu sist Parlor, Dining Room. Give me a call. Cash or Approve £5" A Fine lot of Picture Frames rade EZ Agent for N EF Wood Wanted. 63 FAMILY Doctor human body and You might as w Every case is No Care--No BLOOD POI is positively cured the gystem 80 no cure, such as emissions, ment under a po Consultation Free. EAT SACRIFICE Sale of I ug THE OLD FOGY DOCTOR | but they are not specialists, [rise the most intr ye every facility known to medical sci taken Pay. cured by us 25 years ago and no return; best evidence of a NERVOUS DBEBILITY -and other complications, weakness, etc., are cared by our New Method Treat. WE CURE ALL DISEASES OF MEN AND WOMEN. Books Frees. Write for question blanx for private Home Treatment. HE urniture ! LIDAY Si first JASON antity of lass Furniture of con- Bed Room Sets, &e d Cre and Gilt Mouldings suitable to the Tonuments." 8 are all right as general practitioners, "he sexual organs con fA and important system in they fequice the most skillful treatment. 11 e f dollars and have nce to cure them, with a positive guarantee of K AON--Whether inherited or acquired, §'3 forever. The virus is eliminated from danger of return. Hundreds of cases drains in the urine, varicocele, sexnal Bj sitive guarantee--NO Everything confidential. DETROIT, MICH. alia Pry my Silt For Sale a orm, being composed of | he East-hulf of lot 20 and North half ef lot | i, in the Ist con. of Curvwright, coutain ng 200 Acrer, more or less, on the property here is ereeted a first class Barn, Driving Jarn and Stables, and Dwelling House, The ad ina good state of cultivation, well enced, there isa grand spring of good vater thereon. There arc about 40 acres of sand pastare lagd. farther particulars, 1:38. Barrister, Port P Apply to W.-H. or to the | LANG, : Prin Albert. June 24, 1903. on Grand Trunk Railway. | TIME TABLE, Port © Pe RRY, GOING BOUTIL GOING NORTH. 7-25 a.m, g.51 an. 11.35 a.m. 5.40 p.m. 1.33 p.m. 7-33 p.m. H. GRAHAM Has just taken possession of the! FOY SHOE SHOP one door South of the St. Charles | Hotel, where he intends to make all kinds of Boots and Shoes, and do all kinds of repairing All comers strictly attended to. He wants to to please all who come his way, 1f ssible. -- SEVERAL INDUSTRIOUR PERSONS 'wtate to travel for house established eleven 'and with a large capital, to call upon merch. s Rid agents for successful and profitable line. nent en; ment. Weekly cnxh salary of $18 ai tr traveling expenses and hotel bills rdvanced in ask Experience not essentinl. Mention d enclose self-nddressed envelope. THE RATONAT, 831 Dearborn St , Chicaga, Corn Sittings of the Division Cours COUNTY OF ONTARIO. 1904. Clerk, D. 0. Manone) Whithy ~Janw ry 4, March 2, April 5, Muy 3, June Ju'y 5, " wiper $, "Getobor b NET Dee ember 6. Jan. 3, 1% 1 WHITBY ary 6, Febr OSHAWA Clerk, D, 0. Macdonell, Whitby-- Janu ary 7, February 5, Maroh 3. April 6, May 4, June 7, July 6, Nepioniber 7 October 5, November 8, Doc ember 7, Jan. 10, 2. BROUGHAN Clerk, M. Gleesan, Greenweod--Jant - ans. Jaren Bars , July 7, Baptember 8, Nov, REET oy Muy 7 Eerie ber 13. November 0 dora we, OY res 4 UXBRIDGE Clerk, Jos. FE. Gould, Uxbridge January 14, March 18, Huy 5, July 15, Bepteube. 16, Novewber 18, Jan. 12, 1 5. CANNINGTON Clerk, Geo. Smith, Cannington -- January 13, March 17, May 19, July 14, September 15, November 17, Jan. 11, 1005. 6. BEAVERTON --Clerk, Geo. F. Bruce, Beaverton- dJunnary Ya, Murch jo May 18, September 14, Nov- ember 16, Jan. 10, 7. UPTFRGROVE Clork, Thos. P. Hart, arch 15, My 17, § rove prember 13, fh bog By order, J. E. FAREWELL, Clerk of the Peace. Dated at Whitby, Nov. 14th, 1903, Our fee returned Any one sendin, ee find Scectiption: iy any invention wi ve our opinion' free concerning y re Frome: SRA of same. Patent' sent upon request. Fatents secur through us advertised for sale at our expense. Patents taken out tnjough us receive special | nolice, without charge, in THE PATENT RECORD, | an illustrated and widely circulated jowrnal, cansuited by Manufacturers and Investors. Bend for sample copy FREE. Address, VICTOR J. EVANS & CO. (Pateat Attorncys,) Evans Building, WASHINGTON, D. C. 'How to Obtain T Chamberlaly ) Cough Remedy ALWAYS CURES Acd is Pieasant and Safe. Sealed Tenders | ment in Port Perry, ks EALED TENDERS will be received by the undersigned for the purchase of all or any of the Parcels-- Farm Properties --belong ing to Mr. John Adams, advertised to be sold by -auction on the 23r¢ Novastbers and withdrawn at the sale, . A. McGILLIVRAY, Temple Building, Torouto. Nov. 30, 1899. 50 YEARS® EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending n sketch and description may quickly ascer our pnts: Commu ce fvantion {8 probably patents able. Com Baits rin gi ie fllustrated weekly. 5 argest * A Linde of any selentific journal. Terms, $3 a year: four onthe, $L 801d by all newsdealers. HN & Corse No Tor Bt Waatnaton, Is our LS books ** ig 1" fel f sketch or mide! vention pls rovemnent and we w our opinion as to whetb=r ft patentable. Rejected applic- Fras ri Trossel ed By we. {Cor cict fully eq piped cen In Mon and Wasningion' tl hy Jualides wi to 1; spatch work and qu ne Briel the inventio si thromgh Barfon & Ma- i i cs a Roti: without Sharte in over 100 1 P the D' minion. ~ --Paten: Tiel} is pro Pave + busimess of Manufac turers and Engineers MARION & MARION Patent Experts and Soliciters. Offices 1 New York Life B1d'g, Mont Atlantic Bldg, Wash ngten D. ~ MONEY TO LOAN, We have funds from private pariies for rhe wl mortgage al 4) PER CENT. and those whe remew old mortgnges, buy more Iand or build, Obtain money. Trom tin without. any ny, {and very quietly). e have customers whi w to buy im hie oes Who wld sxghien < . If you have farms or other pro- pertics for sale, commercial, mechanical, or business of any kind, ploase send us price and of same Fire and Life Insurance « Rested, and Weonerai fuageial aug brokerage business Loans LUND & C 28 Victoria Street, Lig The mails are despatched from the Post Office Port Perry as follo ys : Going North-- 9.30 a. m. Going South--11.20 a. m. Going North-- 515 p. m. 5 : Going South--10 p.m. Chamberlain's Remedies. Chamberlain's Con s Cough Remedy. For Coughs, Colds, Croup and Whoop- ing Cough. Price 25 cents; large size soc. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For Bowel Complains Price 35 cents, Chamberlain' s Pain Balm. An antiseptic liniment especially valua- ble for Cuts, Bruises, Sprains and Rheuma- tism. Price 25 cents large size 50 cents. Chamberlain" s Stomach and Liver Tablets. For Disorders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Price 25 cents. Every one of these preparations is guaranteed and if not felly sat- isfactory to the purchaser the money will be refunded. TICKETS TO ALL FARTS OF THE WorLp.--Mr. W. H. McCaw, Pont Perry, is now in a position lo issu ickets to all parts of the world anc o supply all necessary informatie: o partics as to the cheapest anc best routes, &c. In addition to hi merous Ticket Agencies for Rail oad and Steamship lines, he ba een re appointed Ticket Agent fo he Grand Trunk Railway. Partie ntending to travel will consult thei wn interests Dy McCaw before embarking on a trij consulting Mr Livery iT PZRRY. H EARTILY the king the public 1 for the the tablish pleasure i1 liberal patron ring many years 1 ept a Livery I have much announcing that I Np eT MY LIVERY to my former place of business Ix + Water Street vhich Tam about to largely extend in rease facilities so that the public may he safe and desir have have removed setter accommodated with able 21G8 AT MODERATE CHARGES R. VANSICKLER >ort Perry, June 21, 1900, it's a strong Statement but a straight fact, the greatest help to the live grocs and general storekeeper in Canada is "The Canadian Grocer." You cannot read it without getting some valuable information. cent for a post card and send for a sample copy and be convinced. when we say that The MacLean Pub. Co., Limited] x Jonokss, Spend a"; F. SMITH, General Carter Takes pleasure in returning thanks to the public for the esteemed pat ronage bestowed on him since com- mencing the business of Carting and would 'state that he is tully equipped to do CARTING AS IT SHOULD BE at the very. shortest notice and at prices that cannot fail to please the public. Carting to and from the Railway Depot a Specialty. Residence--Brick House, oppo- Parsonage F. SMITH. Port Perry, Aug. 1901. site the Methodist (reneral Blacksmithing I'he undersigned business in Shp Jadley coounied by MoE. Hal Just west of Drs. Archer & Archer's )ffice, 1s prepared to do all kinds of f General Blacksmithing at Reas- nable Charges. HORSE-SHOEING A Specialty and Satisfaction Guaranteed having opened the Patronage Solicited. S. W. Sept. 16, SWITZER. Port Perry, 1902. undersi {YHE gned would take this oppor I tunity ot thanking bis numerous pat ons for their liberal aud still increasing ttronage during the time he has carried ou the business of PAINTING n Port Perry, and would state that he is etter prepured than ever to execute all orders for Painting, Kalsomining and Hanging Paper Parties entrusting their work to me may having it neatly and promptly exe. moderate. ly on: uted, My charges are I am also prepared to supply Paints, &e,, vhen eontracting A continuance of public patronage soli ited WM. TREMEER. 'ort Perry, Mar. 23, 1593, JOHN NOTT, UNDERTAKER, and Funeral Director, FORE PERRY GEO. GARDNER Wikis to inform the public of Pore Perry and surrounding country, thas after four years experience in prosecuting his business in some of the largest cities of the United States, he is better prepared than ever to execute any of the following brauches of his trade :--Stone Masonry, Bricklaying in all its branches; Plain and Ornamental Plastering. Also Artificial Stone Walks, that will remain permanent and will endure any weather: Concrete Cisterns without any wood in their con struction to decay or give out. If you are in need of any of the above, come to me and obtain prices, All material required in my line will be kept constantly on hand, and for sale after the first of next April, GEO. GARDNER, Port Perry, Jan. 3, 1594, vk ANN NAILIN SERTX, a ( ) YEARLY to Christian manZ HH Lor woman to look after our, Eh Irusiness in this aod adjoining Z Counties; to act as Manager and Corres. ¢ ;poudent ; work cn be done at your) home. Enclose self-addressed pram peat Zenvelope for particulars to H. A. Sher- man, General Manager, Corcoran Bute "ing, 'npposite United States Treasury 4 Washington, D. 4 VR NANT NT BN NANA AR aN METHODIST CHURCH. REV. G. HK COPELAND, Pastor. Babbath Serviey and 7. Week Evening ryiee, Thursday 7.30. Btraugers VERA und conducted to seats. ST. JOHN'S CHURCH. (PRESBYTERIAN) REV. W. COOPER, B.A., Pastor. Sabbath Servi os, 11.07 ud 7.00. Week Evenin Service, Thursday 7.30. BAPTIST CHURCH. REV. MR MOFARLANE, PAstoR, Sabbath Services, 10.30 and 7.00, Week Evening Service, Thursday, 7.30. CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION. (ANGLICAN) REV. G. SOOT Incumbent. Sunday Mating, 10.30 a.m. Eveusoog, 7 p.m. Sunday Bhool, 2.30 pw. Thur: sday--Evousong, 7.20 pm, R. C. CHURCH. REV -- RICHARDHON. Boe 4 - ---- Gn at " idk ANTED -- TRUSTWORTHY ANE active gentlemen or ladivs to tarvel for reaponsble, established house in Ontario Monthly £65.00 and expenses. Position teady. Reference, Encloseself-nddressesd tam ped euvelope. The Dominion (Com p vy, Dept. Y Chicago. y= YEARLY to Christian man 4 $900 or woman to lookafter our grow- Jy ing business in thisand adjoining Counties to act as Manager and Correspondent ; work can be done at your home. Enclose self- addressed, staniped envelope for particulars to A. H1. KHERMAN, General Manager, Corcoran Building, opposite United States - yy Treasury, Washinton, D. C. Wood's Phosphiodine Before and After, ves universal sal or IT cures all forms a Nervous ness, Emissions, hea, Im; and all effectsof abuse or excesses ; the ase , Opium or Stimulants, and Brain Worry, all of which lead to I Insanity, mption and an Early Grave. Price i pe! per package o Sih for One will a Sn free pammphict Garese 'Windsor, Ont, J Cabads, 27 Wood's Phosphodine is solid in Port Perry by A.J. Davis aud C. H, Allison, Third $hudey al 10 30 a. m, Druggists.

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