AN pata 4 4 ad | enna jn yo | PHYSICIAN, sud Residence, Queen 8t,, Port Petry Jin pours--3 tolg am; lto3 pm, ings, Telephone fu offioe and bouse, open night and day over the lines south, connected with the residence of G. L. Robson, V.8. ~ Port Perry, Nov. 185, 1804: "WMH. HARRIS, B.A. LLB. BARRISTER, &c., ccessor to and occupant of the » Bucs of the late F. ¥ Farnold. Port Perry, - Ont. ten MONEY TO LOAN. Private Funds at 4 per cent. Feb. 7, 1901. Jno. W. Orozier, SoL1c1ToR, CONVEYANCER, &o. at residence, 6th Con. ach (ome mile west of Port Perry,)-- Morwxy To LOAN. N. F. PATERSON, K.C., Barrister, Solicitor, Notary * Public, &c., OWEN SOUND, ONT. ARR! KE. FAREWELL, K.C., LL.B., County sJ . Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- itor, &e., Notary Public and Conveyanoer. Office--South wing Court House, Whitby, Ont. W. A. SANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Omice Hours--0 to 12 am, 2 to 6 p,m. Also open Baturday eveninge, ar Gold Fillings, Bridge and Crown Work a Specialty, Vitalised Air. mere Dr. F. 'D. MoGrath (DENTIS T) L D.S. of Royal College of Dental Surgeons, also D.D.S. of Toronto University. Office in the Allison Block over Allison's Drug Store. Office hours--B8 a.m. 08.30 p.m, tort Perry, April 8, 1902. J. A. Murray, DENTIST, Office ever the Post Office. PORT PERRY. All branches of Dentistry, including Crown and Bridge Work successfully 8! practiced. Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminam or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painless extraction when required: && Prices to suit the times® Cora Belle McCaw Teacher of Drawing, Painting, Design and Ohina Decoration Studio hours---g to 12 a.m. ; 1.30 tO 430 p.m. Studio over W. H. McCaw's tore, Port Perry. North Ontario Observer A Weekly Political, Agricultural and Family Newspaper ® IS PUBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, ONT. EVERY THURSDAY MORNING nw All tea | ing, hiv Our long acquaintance with this | 4 ndoubte district enables ws to make as liberal loans to our customers gr wound financing will per- mit, Interest 1 Security to Depositors. No Delay in Drawing Your Money aid or Compounded Twice a Year. Dow't Wait till you have a large sum to deposit. £7 will Open an Account, Small Savings form the Base of Large Fortunes. WI, CASH SALE NOTES. Begin with us Now !. BANK MONEY ORDERS. Upto $5...........48 cla. Over $5 up to $10... § 1 Over 10 up to 30..10 cts | Over 30 upto 50..15 cts. PORT PERRY AGENCY. Best way to send small amounts Cashed free at any Bank. For sums over $50 use Bank DrarTs. Best and cheapest way to send LARGE AMOUNTS, Special Rates. H. G. HUTCHESON, Manager. DB! in any of the Provinces, Dominion DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS, NKERS AND BROKERS. MONEY TO LOAN (British Capital) at 4, 4} and 5 per cent. | Fire, Life and Accident Insurance. REAL ESTATE BOUGHT, SOLD OR EXCHANGED | or principal Cidics in the of Canarla, JOS: BATRD I ICENED AUCTIONEER for the 4 County of Ontario. Sale Register at | the Opsewykr Office Patronage solicited. Maucheyter, Jan. 19, 1899, H. McCAW, i ISSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES, Port Perry Ont, Port Perry, Dec. 19, 1583, he Aa } GEO. JACKSON, Licensed Awnctioneer, Valuator, &c. FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHI OF CARTWRIGHT, V ISHES at this the commencement ef | another Auction Sale Season to re- turo thunks to his numerous pairoms for past favors. In requesting thicir esteemed aud continued patronage he desires to state that no effort or pains will ba spared on his part to make nll sales ontrusted to him sucvesses. His very extensive practice in the past should be a sufficient. recom mendation as to his ability. AH Sale given into his charge will be attended b with promptness and dispatch. Sale list made out and blank votes supplied Iree, on application. osx Parties wishiug to engage his services may consult hie SarLz KramTwn either at the Observer or Standard Offizes, Port Perry, for dates claimed for . Sales, and make arrangements, or writs to his address £ar Phone at Residence, No: 31. ®a CHARGES MODERATE. ¢ GEO. JAGKSON, Nov. 1, 1901. Port berry » Oo CAUTION rties found trespassing, hunt- on lot 15, ch, will r of ooting or trapping inthe 8th concess ot R "fand-a Hmited namber will be sold in Cu Miss Harrison. that she has moved to her fire Block \ ISHES to inform the Rooms in the Allison where in Dress and Mantle Making in manner unsurpassed for | Correctness of Style and Charming Effect Qur charges are consistent he value given. Port. Perry, March 27, 1902 For Sale. I OUSE AND LOTS, the Wilcox Apply to D. J. ADAMS, BROKER, Port PERRY known as property. Farm for Sale. 'lot 2, concession 12, ed until Feb. y5th, 1907. This ists of 100 acres of good arable well drained. On the young orchard. ridge town. any tender not necessarily accepted. GEORGE MURTA,. Uxbris erin) | maguificent Ae view of the City Jernsalem iu all her Grandeur and glory The pictureis 21-2 x 31-2 fest ins da for only 85.00 each. Send piap fo Instrated. d on. of this wud o Olengruphic productions, ~~ Liberal allowance will he made to & who will show samples to-their frieads. PEERLESS PUB, CO. eee Dress and Mantle Maker smiled approvingly uf ladies she is prepared to execute all orders with situated residental EALED Tenders for the purchase of Township of Reach, will be received by the undersign- foperty and, mises are said to be a bank barn, driving house and Three miles from Ux- Terms, cash. Highest or dge. J rately reproduced by © | © Olegea "eon? showing 1. , TORONTO, ONT. | 1ndian Carlos Wanted for ourr etail store, 5 Yonge St. | - 'adding the column of figu upon which he had been working. Andy would have replied In precisely tha | game tone and would have started on | The trip in precisely the same spirit. Nominally the assistant bookkeeper, Andy Brant was the general utility man. It wes he who had given first aid to the injured water pipe with a | plece of rubber overshoe and some ad- | hesivo tape from his bicycle kit and who had treated the office cat when it had fits. | But the present (quest was not so A correspondent had asked that his daughter be located. "We | Know that she was to have gone to the | XY. W. C. A." wrote the wosterner. "No doubt it will be easy to locate her." Andy grinned as he replaced the let- ter in his pocket and started for the association office, | The elderly woman In charge was willing to tell what little she knew EXPLAINED. when Andy showed his letter as ao- thority. Miss Filson had come to them three months before, but had soon moved to an address far uptown. She thanked her. liked this clean skinned, honest eyed young fellow, and she even unbent so far as to venture She the hope that he would meet with sue- cess. | in New York. association three months before. { that length of time. endurable for less than a month, His suspicions were verified when he reached the uptown address. Miss Fil | son was dimly remembered by the rosy * | cheeked servant girl who answered the | Goor. Bhe stayed only two weeks and | | departed on an express wagon, ex.' _{ Had Lowell & Lowell told him to go . | out and find the north pole pon Andy as he Andy's answer was a grimace. Young | women had a trick of losing themselves |. Miss Filson had left the It was not likely that she could endure lifo In one cheap boarding house for & Most places were ance. 'of rich, thick, glossy hair Use this splendid hair-food, stop your falling hair, and get rid of your dandruff. The best kind of a testimonial -- "Bold for over sixty years." J.C. Arproe. , Lowell, Mass. #0 manu turers of J SARSAPARILLA. Yers ii. up her residence thers he was willing to remain indefinitely. Andy wus not susceptible, but the first time Dess had come into the stuffy dining room he had fallen in love, so deeply In love that when she had lost her position as ste nographer and could not pay her board bills, unknewn to Bess, he had ar ranged with Mrs. Lennon that he would be responsible for the bills until Bess found a new place, when the land lady shoald reimburse him "Any luck?" be asked as he slipped into his seat opposite the girl. Bhe shook her head. "Weil, I have some good news for you," he went on. "Our typewriter Is to be married week after next. She's going to quit the job, and the 'old man' gays you may have it" Bess clapped her hands delightedly and Andy beamed "Let's celebrate," ho suggested. "I've got an order that I can't fill Let's go to the matinee, will you? Might as well do that as tramp around town for | nothing." | Bess nodded, and Andy sat on the front steps smoking a cigarette and bullding air castles while the girl dressed. They had only cheap seats In the rear of the balcony, but it was a treat, and occaslonally Andy could feel the slight pressure of the girl's arm against his own, emphasizing her near ness, He did not think much of the {lle 'performance. upon her tn ho , Co ean "Back wi rlosed eyes conjure up visions of was earning enough salary for she need not take that pice with Lowell & Lowell {| "M1gn't that great?" asked Bess. Andy fter "Ponsed himself with a start to observe fhe accomplishments of a pair of acro- hits. 1% Sure he assented. "1 was nking something bigger and ater." de What's that?" she demanded. #1 was th ng" he explained, "that rhaps you wouldn't need Miss Aus- 3 place in the office. What's the tter with our getting married? We 1d get a bit of a flat and live--not rd." SAndy's made the distinction Bloquent, and the girls gray eyes grew I #But you don't know anything about 3) * ghe protested wistfully. £241 know you're the girl I want to marry," he insisted stoutly, "Mrs. Len Pon's known me for a year, and the volce plaining that she could not rust the Tana man's' had me working for him driver with the trunk. | most of those who came and went. - : It was this In. on Cochrane St. Port Perry | cident and the fact that she did nef. leave her new address that fixed her r three years. You can write to Brew- rville and find out the rest about me you want to. I'm wot from Mis- "here was a sudden darkness as the | moro clearly in the girl's mind al where you're concerned." | "Andy mterviewed express | wagon drivers in an increasing circle for the remainder of the morning and wou up so conveniently near bis own board: ing place that he stopped in for lund Mrs. Lemnot's estdblishment was difs ferent from the average New Yo Jamieson's Livery HE sndsrsigned takes oy unity of thanking the a a ha "eouutry ! liberal and still increasing Bt ron bestowed npon him - since commencing Carting and: © Livery in Port Perry and now iutimates that ho is better thun 'ever red to supply all requirements in his line. | 'Having extensively added to my stock of hurses ; as well as conveyances of the latcat type ~ - of construction for comfort and pleasure, 1 am in a position to lie requirements of the ous as to style and sir -eqnippage in every respect--in every "way shit. able for private driving, wed- divgs," A, 8, &o. Parties wishing an afteruoey drive can have "their oholoe of mnitable lo rigs and care- 'will also be euppli h a number of good Spring-and Dray Wagons and willy I times, attend to Carting with the utmost care mpiyess: rid rem, % ts went out for the motion pictures, 3 in the gloom a tiny hgpd sought and was quickly captured. "1g it yes 7" he asked, his breath com- in sharp aspirations, «] can't write back home," she sald ty. "But it you will take me as 1 Andy, it's--yes." *There's nothing wrons," he declared atly, "but if you were a shoplifter $d marry you just the same." The Sbdience was fillng ont before the last ctures were thrown .on the screen, ut he leaned over and kissed her. "We're cugaged," he declared, "but ow'll have to walt until Saturday for | : | the tomb of Waltet Scott In Bt. Mafy's What mat- | plishments of the ight house- ! pping with Dess as the housekeeper? | "Do' you mean it? You still want to marty me now you've won your father back?" - *You know I do," she said reproach od ii alsle. A noble block of Aberdeen granite marks the last resting place of Sir Walter and Lady B8cott. The simple Inscription records the dates of birth and death of the husband and wife. Here also are the mortal re malns of the novellst's children and of his. son-n-law and biographer, John | Gibson Lockhart, of whom Scott wrote affectionately, "Lockhart 8 Lockhart, to whom I can most willingly confide the happiness of the daughter who chose him and whom he has chosen." As we turned from the grave of Walter Beott and wandered across the now roofless and grass grown refectory we recalled his last conpected words to Lockhart: "My dear, be a good man--be virtnous--be religious--be a good man; nothing else will give you any comfort when you come to lie here.--Book News, The Change In Burgeons, "The surgeon of the past was a huge, coarse, red faced brute, a very terror," gald a surgeon ef the present "And no wonder. What type of man but the brute type could cut off legs or saw through the skull while the patlent, perfectly consectous, howled and wept? In the past surgery was barred to gen tle and refined men. Whatever thelr interest tn anatomy, in medicine, they shunned surgery. They could not en dure to operate upon a conscious sub ject. The advent of anaesthetics caused the advent of new men into surgery Men of delieaey, of sympathy, of im agtnation--na higher type--took the pro- fession up. That Is why surgery Is continually advaneing now, whereas in the past It stood dead still."--Cineln- nati Koqulrer That Little Bill. Hewitt--1 always know what I am going to get at my boarding house Jewett-- Why don't you pay it and get a receipt Instead? -- New York Press, Do you know that you can make a delicious des- Aart in mq minutes, with In 15 true fruit and wine flavors. Get a package from your grocer and try it to-night. Price, 1oc. The ROBERT GREIG CO., LIMITED Toronto, 6 WHAT TRAIN DO YOU TAKE? In Wiking Give Its Number, Name of Road and Time of Arrival When you telegraph a friend tha pext time you are going to visit him and that you'd be delighted to bave bim meet you atthe train the next day, for heaven's sake telegraph him intelld gently. It the money, frritattons and dlsap- pointments of the year were aggre. gated for the United States in hope lessly umintelligible telegrams of this kind, the average political economist would hive a fit. When the average person in the small city or town de- cides on the jump té go to see a friend in the eity and decides to telegraph that friend what train to meet, he be- comes an unconscious imbecile. win ve for Chicago tonight on 8:20 train. t me. | This is the test of a ten word mes sage which I received the other night from a friend in an Ohio city. He bad started for Chicago before the tele- gram was received by me, and while I wanted immensely to meet him at the | station instead of making the least ef- fort to do so I took it out in swearing. { In sending a telegram announcing an 1 { Lap {l x E RYGHIES. /the Tree Tops to ate. 3 * es, f who have have returned appear at the ion throughout | tes with those nd counteas Their | Ty seven. Reg The party is Just the same as 'Lon- doners knew it before, except that the women, Amuriane and Kuaki, are both now wives of Matuka. The lat- ter bought his secpnd wife at Scar borough by handing over the regula- tion three nrrows, that being the pus | chase pries for a wife in ria. | In the autumn they will return to their native forests, ascompanied by Mr. J. Osborne, who is preparing a voeabulary of their dialeet. He will remain in the Forest of Itaria for an- other two years. For eight months of the year torrents of rain convert the forest land into an uninhabitable swamp, and during this i the pygmies and their white friend will live, like Peter Pan, in the tree-tops Mr. Osborne is looking forward to this extraordinary experience, and after his sojourn in the treetops hopes to complete the only record of the Iturian dialect in existence Indian eorn, roasted bananas, boil- ed mutton, which somewhat resem- bles the flesh of the African goat, fish, and eggs are the favorite diet of the little people while in England. Un- like other savages they are fond of hot baths, and take one every morn- ing. Foy have absolutely no religion, and in this respect they are probably unique among the known races of the world, A PAPER OF PINS. d Pins were mtroduced In the six- teenth century. Theu they wera costly and highly prized as gifte A paper of plog was more acceptable | than a bouguet, An pet was passed in 1543 making it {llegal to eharge more than eightpence a thousand for metal pus. Persens of quality often used pins made of boxwood, bone and silver, while the poor put up with wooden skewers, In those day husbands were eften surprised at the great amount of mon- | ey that went for pins; bence the term "pin money. so meng. gears ase the fragel housewife was wont to teach pin ecomomy by teaching her children | that canny couplet, "See a piu nod pick it up, all the day you'll have good nck." The Indirect Method. | Homemade ce cream was a regular ftem on the bfll of fare at Willie's house, and while be liked the cream he drew the line at tarnhg the freezer One day when his mother returned | bome she was agreeably surprised to | find him working at the erank as if bis life depended on it "1 don't see how you got him to turn the jee eremm freezer," she sald to her hnsband, "I effercd hin a to do it, and be just mughed at me "You didm't go sbout It the right way, my dear," replied her husband "I bet btm a nickel he couldn't turn it for half en boar." 'A Dog's Jealousy. Dana is a buige 5t. Bernard whe has bs own ideas as to his Importance Whenever he wishes to atiract atien tion be knocks his water pall over and then rolls it around, growling at {t and making a great fuss. Then he puis his head tn and throws the pail high in the afr, bafting at ft with Lis paws as it comes @own. If this does not have the desired effect he picks up the pail by the handle and takes it into the barn, where the noise is increased hy far owing to the wooden floor. This performance is given whenever the horse is petted or when strangers come to the house, --- 167" | Grepmwich Observatory | In the y % King Charles TT. of Bugland founded the royal observatory at Greenwich in order that astronern- ical observations might be made for | the nssistance of sailors. The history | of the observatory has been the his- tory of chronology and of this practi- | cal side of astrooomy. Its work and its standards have become distinctly futernational. The meridian of Green- wich now determines the longtitude of eT an to She Had & Substitute. Infl fice, doctor, that your wife never turns her head to see Who ebwmes Into church tate on Sunday merning. The Rev. Dr. Goodman No, But she makes me tell her all about them after we go home. ~Chicagp Tribube. USED BIBLE AS CIPHER A Verge From 8 .lomon Told of a Mar- riage Engager : When she left bet home in the smal town to come to New York to take up a special gourse of study her pet sis- ter was fgst Jove affair. The.pet sister was a most winsome young lady and bad long kept a goodly train suitors a-sighing. Was this affair # be the grand affair? The older sister hoped so, for she liked the man' cordially--thought he was to sort to make a praper brother-m-law. © LS But the weekS passed, and not a bit of definite news about the progress of the affair did wider sister receive in her city ng house. She: be- came anxious. ® Louise, she thought, must not go Om recklesst trifiing in such important matters. Then one Herd shout 0 o'clock, fst * a VHOLE N Leh i 140 on otioniess ji r, Member--I am glad to no- | punctual so clean, so smart, ag reaching the crisis of a | 0. : A fii x i . ey Catarrh To prévenmnuestonahiy, cud beyond cub hat (: en of te 0 eos ca Bas i 1 aun torali fice a Th Noihing "Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Cure A. J.RAVIS. nr ioe ras ovis ees Ev we gram. 'The servant brought it' aps The eer sister was country girl encagh to be thoroughly frightened by, the pale manila, hiack inked enwelope. How ominous it losked! At leugth she gathered courage to open it. This ig what she read: Bolomon six three. Solomon six three! Whatever in tho world] Oh, why, yes, stupid, it of course meant the Somg of Solomom, alxth chapter, third verse! But--and her cheeks flushed with shame-sha had no Bible! There was a great zenrrying abound the boarding house fo find a eopy of the sacred book. The girls were ront ed out In vain, On nll sides the ery arose, "Who's got a Bible 7'- Just think of the sister trying to t night without knowing what that verse wasji It would have been just Ii TOUTS sleep fi woman to lie down te pleasagg dreaas, contend to know that she could satisfy her cu« rlosity In the morning--not! The landlady, good soul, came to {he t hen rescue, Khe was © a Bible. Up to her r the sister and shut the reat turning over of pages £OT, nerve ons fingers! Bolomon six three, She found it, and then she cried "Iorrah!™ and laughed, for the verse was ¢ and my beloved ia I am my beloved's, -» 8 THE SPECTER SWIMMER. A Legend of the Sea That Still Appeals to Sailors. The sallor as a cl still to the superstitior Ly especial heritage throu out all ag To him the fs still peopled with phantoms. Mea there are still who ail ls fast hol eR § er of the Swimmer, men who believe in the Wal rus of unholy faue aud In the exist ence of the spacter bark Lucy to ba secn-at any time u nd out of Ina coast, This la mers Near ( fisher ma asked few: with her lve. b f r Or thelr w smuggler a thievi left, I could bad ¢ or y. ¥ n. Inst pint w 1 most v 1, sh fn men's « $ 1 him, dead o For 5 dis- nally afte from an J prison at sen, men er has her still in and hailln sailor, be matter of grossly superstitions that if you hear the b mer on a dark night at sea and aoe mwer it not woe follows swift sich' orift she ne Yank r Port he fact in 1 tk S € be firmly; Swim- ox at Their Friendship 3 rd--Are you 00 speaking terms with Maud? 3 Bella--No; we only kiss. { ------------ -- ¥ The Perfect Servant, The thoroughly trained English serw ant 1s In his way the most perfect Kind of servant to be found anywhere, and tn his station apd for his duties he is not to be matched tn the workl, Where whl you find any men so competent in thelr work, so completely trained and apparently Bm English butler, coachuing, footiman or valet? Certainly not on the continent of Europe, iu the United States, im | Canada or in Australia. 1 -- 3 Fide Metals and Metaphors. : | "It Is most amazl sald a -metald Jurist, "how the world relies on mets als for its metaphors snd simies. Thus an orator is silver tongued or goldem: mouthed. An explorer 8 bronzed by, African suns, A resolute chap has am fron will. 4 stuggard moves with lead= en feet. An ostrich bas a copper lineds ston'ach. A millionaire bas th... swindler is as slippery as quicksil A borrower has brass.™ 1 aed in | Mamma Remembered. Papa (enraged)--Well, Con daughter, I've never in all my: as soft, green, unsophisticated, an idiot as young Puddingtons wa (emphatically)=I 'havel i A son never realizes How | own father knew until he st | yi-a childrem of hig | Pumes-Unicn. ea ny