Ontario Community Newspapers

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 29 Aug 1907, p. 1

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v, A H.HARRIS, BA., BARRISTER, &c., ta to and occupant of the Be oes of tho Jate F. M. Yarnold. Port Perry, - On% MONEY TO ToaN. Private Funds at § per cent. Feb. 1. 1901. Ps : A. Jno. W. Crozier, ARRISTER, SoLiCrToR, CONVEYANCER, &c. Office at residence, 6th Con. each (one mile west of Port Perry,)-- Money To LOANG N. F. PATERSON, K. C, Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pablie, &e., OWEN SOUND, ONT. . E. FAREWELL, K.C,, LL.B., Count, J. Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- eitor, &c., Notary Public and Consoyancen Jffice--South wing Court House, hitby, Ont. "W. A SANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Office Honrs--9 to 12 a.m, 2 to 6 p,m. Also open Saturday eveniuge. &r Gold Fillings, Bridge and Crown Work a Specialty. Vitalised Air, mm oabbon Luvin Dr. F. D. Mc (DENTIST) L.D.S. of Royal College of Dental Surgeons, #0 D.D.8. of Toronto University, the Allison Block over Allison's Office hours--8 a.m. t08.30 p.m. Port Perry, April 9, 1902. gi sr Interest Paid or Contpounded Don't Wait till you have a 81 will Open-an Account. Small Savings form the Base of Large Fortunes, WE CASH SALE NOTES. BANK MONEY ORDERS. . Upto $s.i.....cive 3 cle Over: &s up to $10... 6 cts. Over 10up to 30..10 cts Over gouplo 50..15 Cty PORT PERRY AGENCY. I For sums over §50 use BANKDRAPTS. ; - Bestand cheapest way to send LarGE AMOUNTS. Special Ratrs. Fivier a F large sum to di Begin with us Now Best way to send small amounts Cashed free at any Bank, § H. G. HUTCHESON, Manager. - pan ics. DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS, BANKERS 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 in any of tha Provinces, or principal Cities in the Dominion of Canada. Marriage Licenses Issued. AGEN T-- Allan Line and C.P.R Steamship Com- JOS. ENB D A County of Ontar the OpremvER Office J. A. Murray, DENTIST, Office over the Post Office. PORT PERRY. AN branches of Dentistry, including Crown Bridge Work successfully practiced. Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminum or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painless extraction when required: &ar Prices to suit the times® Cora Belle McCaw Yeacher of Drawing, Painting, _ Design and Ohina Decoration Studio hours---g to 12 a.m. ; 1.30 to 4 30 p.m. % Studio over W. H. McCaw's tore, Port Perry. North Ontario Observer A Weekly Political, Agricultural and Family Newspaper 1S PUBLISHKD AT PORT PERRY, ONT. EVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY _H. PARSONS RMA pe A W saidin - than six : sod no. paper discontinued antl arrears are paid up. ii this risk. {the law. | Port Perry, ter, Jan. 19, 1899, H. MoCAW, . ISSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES, Port Perry Ont, *| Port Perry, Dec. 19, 1883. GEO. JACKSON, Licensed Auctioneer, Valuator, &e. FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOW NSHII OF CARTWRIGHT, ISHES at this the commencement ef another Auction Sale Season to re- turn thanks to his numerous parrons for past favors. In requesting their esteemed and continued patronage he desires te state that mo effort or paine will be spared on his part to make all sales entrusted to him successes. His very extensive practice in the past should be a sufficient recom mendation as to his ability. All Sale given into his charge will be attended ¢ with promptness and dispatch. Sale list made out and blank notes supplied free, on application. d Parties wiching to engage his services may consult hie SALE REGISTER either at the Observer or Standard Offices, Port Perry, for dates claimed for Sales, and make arrangements, or write to his address 4& Phone at Residence, No. 81. ®a CHARGES MODERATE. GEO. JACKSON, Nov. 1, 1901, Port, Perry P. O CA UTIOIN. All parties found trespassing hunt- |ing, shooting or trapping on lot 15, lin the 8th concession of Reach, will] be prosecuted to the utmost rigor of JONATHAN BLONG, Dec. 18, 1906. 4 un Oi ing PRY J. MORRISH - LICENSES PorT PERRY, ONT. May 10, 1907. Miss Harrison. Dress and Mantle Maker ISHES to inform the ladies that she has moved to her fine Rooms in the Allison Block where she is prepared to execute all orders in Dress and Mantle Making in a manner unsurpassed for Correctness of Style and Charming Effect. Our charges are consistent with he value given. Port Perry, March 27, 1902. For Sale. JOUSE AND LOTS, situated on Cochrane St. Port Perry known as the Wilcox residental property. Apply to D. J. ADAMS, BROKER, Port PERRY Farm for Sale. EALED Tenders for the purchase of lot 2, concession 12, Township of Reach, will be received by the undersign- ed until Feb, 15th, 1907. © This propeity ists of 100 acres of good arable land, well drained. On the premises are said to be a bank barn; ving house and ree miles from Ux- ISSUER OF MARRIAGE | rales rate, you seem to bé rid of it & s The best kind of a. "Sold for over Janay o maBARotarors of YersS ie CHERRY PECTORAL, AAAAAAAAAAAAAAALAAAAA The Contrary. By CECILIA A. LOIZEAUX. | Appearances to Copyrighted, 1907, by K, O. Parcells. i AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALAAAA | san's room and, sinking into the near- est chalr, undid her collar. This was preparatory to the rite, sacred in Mill town, of dressing for the afternoon. | Susan, who, notwithstanding the fact that she had just returned from an ar® school and did not deny being artistic, refused to be called Susanne, was do- Ing something to her face, with the ail of A hand glass and many unbecom- ng grimaces. "What are you going to wear this afternoon?' Inguired Mrs. Holton In an elaborately careless voice. "Nothing--that is, I'm going to wash my hair, since there is not a place in this metropolis where I can have it washed for me." "But, Susie, not in the afternoon! There will surely be callers." "Just say I'm pot at home and dom't bother," said Busan, drawing out her hairpins and letting her red hair down over her yellow and brown and tan kimono. "You forget that you are not in New stooping to pick it up. "Mrs. Barton's nephew. He's from is a little more lke the men you are used to," she added. "I would," said Susan emphatically. "And ft was nice of you to think of it. Perhaps he'll come late in the after Livery es undersigned takes th opportunity of thanking the inhabitants of Port Perry and surrounding Country for the liberal and still iucreasing pa ronage bestowed upon him sinoe commencing Carting und. Livery in Port Perry oe ~Autimates that he is th pared to. 8 in his choice of uf Vly SEAR do 4 on le aud 37 Shas wil also bo sup y when véquived," . AAAAAAAAALALAAS y eordial, open- thanded!mivitation to its High [being | noon and my bair will be all dry.| School | baent ex-pupils and their glor- 0,( The affair has rated and pro- a . NL . stantial (eigizens and foreign backed by our ChampionhipBallGames Corporation 11 d large, the ohject do honor to the d worthy Principal High School, D Esq.. and all comers famous ¢ of our MecBrid will ba rizht royally entertain He Managing Com mittee Have arranged a pro aram offrare merit, besides which open house will be the order offthe day all over the Village. (It is expected that the Pa reach de of ex-Pupils will Port man om Scugog to Perry, | The of will be] taxed to describe the mind glor ha accasion, so grand i ouidbe, s it should be. {gro and one that is doing its ] w ¢ Tr 2 v. 0 on as well b festooned with flags, y and evergreens. Ex- fof the School anywhere \ srywhere who miss this spectacle will iss the f£ of a lifetime. po rt nappened that three min- Mr. Bates. It's so much cooler »d the stair cleset just fn | | | 3 their relives and friends to A Gala Day of Welcome | mmittee of sub- the Stupendous Parade ! | , onty me that I should be married. I PORT PERF August 30% pO and Rejoicing | Bands of Music to Lead ----------- { on School Campus | Sights to Behold A few of the many sights worthy o beholding by the ex-pupils aid multitude :-- An Educational Institution, famous | throughout the world, for the suc cess that invariably, attends its | graduates in whatever walk of life theirdot may be cast ! abounds in fine fist A Lake-- That the Scugog-- that requires only its bosom tickled with a trolling yield the largest and best fish to be « haok in order to generot tained in any of the inland wate: on the continent ! A Town Council that leads public opinion and 1s not destitute of en- | 3x-Pup . SHE a Grand Sucee 00S 5 Re- union y A town that possesses the most beautiful and most luxuriant shade trees, extensive well-kept streels andside walks and a Street | | Commissioner that has no peer | in the land ! | A town possessed of Water Work: | constructed regardless of cost and | : . | a Fire Brigade unsurpassed lor | efficiency; presided over by a| yief | | { The most accomplished and most | competent and indefatigable CI beautiful women in the world!!! and so does he. That's what barts the worst. I could pot help showing | it that last day. And she--{bere was such triumph in her silly little face when she came out of the studio, and we knew she had got the prize. She looked at me, and then she walked up to Dan, and they forgot I enough. All I wanted was-- If be'd there instead of telling | street display said Susan, "And that was why ran away." As she had hoped he would, the man dropped the kimono in his amaze ment, and she darted up the stairs, | leaving him looking after her with fear in his eyes. "Susan--tell me™-- She leaned over the banisters and | smiled at htm. "But of course I can't get married until some one asks me," she sald, and before he could | get to her the door of her room had slammed. Circus Folk Hard Workers. The amount of physical werk done | by the performers of the circus Is scarcely bellevable. These people make the care of their bodies their religion, and they will do nothing that mili tates against their strength or their health. When the performers rise In the morning they hurry to the cook tent for breakfast Then they must get into their trappings for the parade, failure to report at 10:30 involving a fine of £5. If the big tent is up early the chances are that the arena will be filled with performers practicing for an hour before the parade. After the the performers have thelr dinner, and then they must dréss for the grand entree, from which none fs excused, Only a very few of the circus folk escape with a single act. | Nearly all of them do two and most of | them three acts, for each of which they must change thelr costume, A woman performer often works in a gymnastic act on the ground, another in the air, rides in a menage act or two and In the flat races at the end of the performance. In addition she will very probably "do a turn" in a con cert after the show, and she must change her cost for each appear- Everybody's Magazine. me ance A Trick That Won. "Once, when 'Long John' Wentworth was mayor of Chicago," sald an old | ttme resident of that city, "a hot cam- palgn was (n progress. The rough ele- | ment was showing signs of turbulence, and Toot ' knew that the police foree : unable to gope with k tudes Bhouid be a riel [] wach OL an = those d The few officers ere were didn't have any uniform of a plug hat. On the front of this was a semicircle of tin with the man's | pumber on it. There was no money to | pay for additional officers, so 'Long | John' bethought himself of a bright | scheme. He had a figure 0' added to the number on every one of those hats. On etection day the different members of the force were stationed conspleu- ously where the trouble was most like ly to break out. The roughs saw the numbers, 250," '200' 350," etc., where they had before seen only 25," "29° and 85." The word went around that 'Long John' had added several hundred men to the police force, and the tough crowd were so intimidated that they never dared to do a thing." Add 3 crowning delight to the your meal with a jelly made from Greig's White Swan Jelly Powder Ask your grocer for the flavor | you like best--there are 15 both | Wine and fruit. He has it or can get it: Price, 10 cents. | The ROBERT QREIQ CO, Limited Torento. 3! SLEEP AND DEATH. Neither Pain Nor Consciousness at the Instant of Either. The phenomenon called sleep may be , summed up In the following proposi- SFE { i { B £ i ie sil le 1 3? £2 ii 13 } k E 38 258 if i § g E & tions, says a writer in the Cosmopoli- tan: First--Sleep 1s temporary death of the funetions of the scnsitive system, due to exhanstion by fatigue. Is temporary For our purpose death may be con- sidered under the three heads--natural death, sudden death and death from | disease. Natural death is death from | ' old age. It differs from natural sleep only in degree. The gradual loss of sensibility by the sensitive organs which precedes sleep now takes place in the vital system, and al the organs pass into permanent sleep together. There can be no pain preceding or at the moment of such a death, any more than there is pain pre ceding or st the moment of passing into temporary & k Sudden death defined as death due to a sudden injury from without or within the body sufficient ! to destroy 'at ouce all irritability of - Sa i { | not froned, onc [ and I couldn't have mein toe sensTove ava veal evatemd It requires no argument to prove that, a person who is suddenly stricken dead can suffer no pain. The element of time must be present in order to suffer physical pain, ang in the sudden death of a person the element of time is abl sent. We come now to comsider the thirl and by far the most frequent form of death--namely, death from disease. As soon ns disease 1s established dy- ing begins, which is but a more rapid than natural ceasing of all sensibili- ties, with more or less suffering, nccording to the cause which produces it. This dying and suffering; called disease, must terminate either In 80 called death, which is insénsibil- ity to it, or In recovery, which is re moval of the cause of it. But In any event the suffering has been endured, final termina- accompanied no matter whether the tion is death or recovery J No one Is conscious of or ean recall the moment he passes from wakibg in- to natural or temporary sleep. Nor | shall we, by a "supreme agony" or im any other way, be conscious of passing into permanent sleep Being born and dying are the two most important physiological events ior the life history of our bodies, and we ghall know no move abolit the latter event at the time it occurs than we did about the former A LESSON IN NERVE. The Laundry Didn't Charge For thd Ruined Shirt. "When 1 came to open my bundle of stuff gent home from the laundry gald the hachelor man, sent hack washed, but' hirt that had pinned reading like this: ate returning this shirt on ace count of it mot being in a condition' to withstand ironing . "This was a new one to me, but when I came to open up the shirt and looked it over I didn't wonder thn¢ they hadn't tried fo iron it; one ann, all but torn {rom Its socket, this morning," "1 found In It to It a ti LW The shirt was sure not in eo for froning, but how did it get so? "1 certainly never sent it to the laun® dry in that shape. I'd have had hard work tearing the sleeve out of the' shoulder the way this one was torn, made that hole in the cuff without some sort of & sharp and big punch. Clearly thd ghirt had been torn and mangled in that manner by being caught in the laundry machinery, and so I wrappea it up fn a neat little bundle and took it over to the laundry office, intending to make a claim for the value of it: I spread the shirt out on the counter' and called the clerk's attention to it and told him that I couldn't have torn the shirt in that manner; it must have' been done in the laundry, and how' about 1t? "Well! sald the clerk, 'we made no charge for it.' "As the full significance of this came | upon me--they had torn my shirt all to pieces, but they didn't meke any charge for it!--I staggered back, and 1 kept on staggering that way until had got out of the door. "I shall never make any further claim for the shirt. I got back far | more than its value in that lesson inv clear, cold nerve." 1 An Olid Song. y From the hieroglyphics on an Egyp< tian tomb comes the following song, { almost identical with one sung by the Egyptian peasants considerably over 8,000 years later than this was written Tread ye out for yourselves, Tread ye out for yourselves O oxen! Tread ye out for yourselves, Tread ye out for yourselves, The straw! For men who are your mastersy The grain! --London Chroaiciel : I Downtrodden Husbands. The middie class woman in England now generally affects to be superior to the soclal position she occupies; she endeavors to dress, live and act up to. the highest standard she has adopted himself. In time, fi becomes little better to his own wife. Forgot Himself, Her Husband (during ¢ Don't you think for a minute can impose on me. There are in our family. His you forget of Failure Is. mantic than Q once a wan is he Hmses to be Reader. We are best of eiples by what

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