Ontario Community Newspapers

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 5 Sep 1912, p. 1

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aIT 18 EASIER TO MIS and Moe Wours--8 10 10 am; 1to3 pms office and house, open at ad Souk: "mareed a. L Robuod, V.8.: Port Perry, Nov. 15, 1804. WNL HARRIS, BA. LLB. BARRISTER, &ec.,. isons MONEY TO LOAN. Private Funds at § per cont. Jno. W. Orozier, Office at residence, h (ome mile west of Port Perty,)-- x E. FARKWELL, K.C, LL.B, Ci thorney, Barrister, County otary Public and Conyeyanoer. TW. A SANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Offios Hours --9 to 12a.m., 2 to 6 p.m. Also open Satarday eveninge. Bridge and Crown | Work a Hpeeialty. R. L. GRAHAM Spoosssor 10 Dr. F. D. MOGRATTAN DENTIST PORT PERRY, -- -- ONT. J. A. Murray, Office over the Poa Office. Crown and Bridge Work suocessfuily Artifical Teoth on Gold, Silver, Aluminum or R Fillings of Gold, 8ilver or Cemont Painless extraction when required: && Prices to suit the times® ~ North Ontario Observer A Weekly Political, Agricultural and Kamily Newspaper EVERY THURSDAY MORNING H. PARSONS sunmm, J poi tu advise} not $L.50 o 3 discontinued ET oe prepaid sod regisicred ADVERTISEMENTS measured by charged according to the space they ADVEETISEMENTS received tor Tord and sherget phi No 'will be taken owt until for. terms will inall oases be strictly adhered to JOB DEPARTMENT, Pamphiots Huod Blils, "GJ MOBRISH |. "ISSUER OF MARRIAGE Por PERRY, owt. PrayorsTlat REV --. RICHARDSON, Third Sunday at 10.30 a. m, ICENSED AUCTIONEER for the 4 County of Ontario, Bile Register st the UBaekvir Office. Patronage solieited: Mauvchester, Jan. 10, 1809, "PORT PERRY, ONTARIO, LE oh % 3 > hes pd H. k HUNCHESON, Branches at Blackstock (R. Manager), po ee AER LO Y" itera soe marae DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS, relaxation) pe Bankers and Brokers. : Tg tH -- 3 = E oy I ak Dillon Hinge-Stay Fence Mannfactured by the Owen Sound Wire Fence Uo. Ltd., and am |- prepared to 'supply this whole community with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this | Continent and at prices that cau nol fail to satisfy purchasers. | what perth Uke a | sharp and | van hiaz@nd Hy sheer mastory of will | he put other dorations out of sight. | 11e forgot Ohi not because BE} MONEY TO LOAN = (4 per ent upwards-- British Dapital.) INSURANCE REAL ESTATE Marriage EF Agents CP. R., &e. ae J Licenses, peer It is the GEST because it is i flexible ; it is a square mesh ; it is a perfect hiuge-stay fence, therefore it is impossible to bend the stays, in fact it is the best fence made in this or any other country. | Before purchasing a Wire Fence don't fail to inspect the DiLiexn Fence. { J. H. Brown, | DEALER IN. AGRICULTURA N. { L; LupLg. MENTS AND MacHINERY. © - | = £3 \, > Ps April 6, 1905. ® HARNESS a SIS = Seas TE, 25 Se N retarning thapks to the public for th] patronage extended tome for over 3 years, | wouid respectfully intimate that um, as usual, now ready for busincss, nnd have a Large & Assorted Stock OF. DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS which I am determined to sell very CHEAP Ag an inducement to Casi purchasers will be allowed on all Sales from now until The DiLron Fence is without a | A RA INDISCRETIONS AND} EXCESSES HAVE UNDER- MINED YOUR SYSTEM The nerves contro! all actions of the body so that any- thing that debiiitatcs thom will weaken all organs of the system. Early Indiscretions § thousands ruined of promising young, Drainssap their vigor znd vitality and nevet elop to a proper condition of manhood. They remain weak- H iy, phyaically snd sexually. How you foel? id us cand tvoak, despondent end gloomy, with dark circles under them, ritable, palpitation of the heart, § tating dreams, sodiment in urino, pimples lo el able moods, prewature decay, boue pains, bair loose, ete. § This is the conditionour New Method Treatment is GUARANTEED TO CURE We 5 treated Liceases of Men for almost a I time #ud do mot have to experimen Coasult ther you are curable or mot. We guarentee curable cases of NERVOUS DEBILITY, VARICOSE VEINS, BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES, GLEET, BLADDER URINARY AND KIDNEY COMPLAINTS Free Booklet on Diseases of Men. 1 unable to call write for QUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT EDY & KENNEDY and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. AT letters from Canada must be addressed tq our Canadian Correspondence Depart- ment in Windsor, Ont. call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat [) 'Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian 'business only. Address all letters as follows DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. -b Dawa of 1 pr onde] Romine ond we will tell you whe! )es. KENR Drs. KENN Jan. lst next. All work belug super rity of my goods will at once become giving me & call before looking elsewliete i é In the trade bejog ao | a ee oot cialis | 1. Liberal verthin, my line of business t on he and repairs pel. n1 : Our char A bill was once stuck on the shop window of a tradesman in the richatrasse, . Berlin, setting forth that "these premises are temporurily closed owing to the marriage uf the proprie- tor--to De reopened In twenty mig ewe io (Bantpal | jyery sian peitimsere. will find thatihy PORT PERRY. they can 16 snited in quality and price, my RARTILY thanking th | many yesrs I have kept a Livery Establish il be given by any article purchased. ah Port Perry, 1 have much plossure in announcing that I. have removea MY LIVERY! to my former place of business ater Street way Star, A star of the sixth magn! Bwan, 6t Oygni, is 400,000 times as far away as the earth is from the sun. Figures fail to give an idea of a dis- 90, therefore It takes Mght about . | years to reach us. from be. 18 AT MODERATE The mails are despatohed from the Pos Office Port Perry as follows : oi Gaing Sonth--11,20 8. m. 2 'R. VAN Port Porty, June 21, 1900, Miss Barrisen, Dress and Mantle Maker ISHES to inform the ladies that she has 'moved to the rooms formerly 'occup quer Mr. Fliot's Drug |she is prepared toe ders for ress and 'Mantle in a manner UnNSuUrpass Correctness of Style: and Charming GEO. JAUKSON, Licensed Auctioneer, Vajuator, &e. tof the value given, | Port Perry, April 1, 1909. Eh ---- re HE OUR MISTAKES" \ Y a AN (. Y. SEPT. 5 1912 Tab Eo I 3 #4 z z ia po Bae? 7 ; Rh -- : fs conviction that EEVS. Sup. TYREN Te Tak. Rese PORT PERRY BRANCH | By oa a Manager. - 4A weeks that planned with tireless uently forgot to eat through sheer exhaus- lest sonse of tho word _culminatitig hour that failure or success. Groavrenor square in lowed oxeept to confer All his tntevest, all hid lay In bis work and to It. His strength was hig Intelligence was os steel The moment He sold e and forgot Lillian, escaped his memory, chose to shut them from Of Tova Bo dw but little in this time | of Ligh pressgige. When a man touches | the cere of his acities, puts his best into the worl that tn bis eyes stands paramount, 1s little place for and no need of no. She comes beford | --and after. he spires, compensates | or completes; bt the achievement, the | creation, {#' mnt's alone. And all true | women undetstand and yleld to this unspoken ¢ Fve watehed the progress of his ia- bor, end in the depth of ber own beart the watching eume nearer to nctual living than auy-activity she had known. She wag an onleokor--but an onlooker who stool, ag it were, on the stops of the arcnfiy: who, by a single forward | movement, cdild feel the sand tinder | her feet," the lfeath of the battle on | ber face, in this knowledge she rested sat! i. There ware pours when Loder seein- | ed sear us 'of her existence, | but on she smiled In an DOT .Iontaon waltiog. . Bhe lpew 7 beforo the afi i bad Pissed he would eome inte | | ds sitting m, his face thoughtful, hie hands of books or papers, and, dropping Loto one. of the comfortable, ! studious chalrs, would esk lacondcally | | tor tea. THis was her moment of trl | | ne whistled a bar or'two of an fnspirt- hg tune. > I the morning room Eve was sb ready waitiug. Shé looked up, colored {and smiled as be entered. Her face looked very fresh 'and young, and she wed | wore a gown of the same pale Diue ratde's firsposal he gave | that she had worn on hls first coming. |. ngly to big work. Ho | { She looked up from an opes letter as * | he came to the room, apd the mm that fall through the window caught ber In a shart of lght, intensifying Ler blue eyes, her blue gowti aud the , bunch of violets fastened in her belt To Loder, still under the influence of curly memorles, sbe seemed the em- bodiment of some youthful idea!--some- thing lost, sought for and found again. Realization of Lis feeHng for her al- most came to him as he stood there looking ot Ler. It hovered about him, it tipped hhn, as it were, with Ita wings; then It rose again and soarod away. Mon like him--men keen te grasp an opehing whers thelr careery are concerned nnd tenacious to bold 1 when once grasped--are frequently the last to look into their own hearts. Ile glanced at Eve, be acknowledged the stir of his foellng, but he made no atterupt to define its cause. Ee could no more have gived reason for hig sonsations than Le could bave told the precise date upon which, coming downstalrs at 8 o'clock, be had first found her walting breakfast for bhlm. The tiue when all such incidents were to stand out, each to a nicety in its ap- polnted place, bad not yet arrived. For thee moment his youth bad returned to him; be possessed the knowledge of work done, the sense of present com: panionshlp In a world of agreeable things: above all, the steady, quiet cou- viction of his own capacity. All these | things come to him in the moment of his entering tbe rootn, greeting Hve and passing to the breakfast table; then, while bls cyes still rested con- tentedly on the pleasaut array of china and silver, while his senses were still alive to the fresh, earthly sceamt of Brve's violets, the blow 80 long dreaded 2-30 glow In coing--tell with accom Jated force. CHAPTER XXIV. In a dizguised hand, and tho contents covered only half a page. umph aod 'recopénse--for the very | Loder read It slowly, mentally articu- aueonsclousuoss of bis coming doubled 8. value. }le would sit for half an | hour with preoccupied glance or with | xeen, alert eyes fixod on the fire, while | bis 4deas ported themselves and fell nto line. Sometimes be was slient for "he whole Balf hour, sometimes ho com- ented to binself as he scanned his notes, but on other and rarer occa- slons he talked, speaking his thoughts and his theories aloud, with the en- joyment of a man who knows himself fully In bis depth, while Eve s!pped ber tea or stitched peacefully at & strip of embroidery. On these occasions sbe mado a per- fect listener. Here and there sbe od- couraged him with an Intelligent re- mark, but she never interrupted. She tion, tu flame quickly ivto ber cheek, = while Loder worked | + t effort and d knew. when to be silent and when to speak, wheo to merge her own lndivid- Ag 2 3s aality and when to make it felt In Ji ghess Mure' biomed inh on 2 A Ye was unlike hor to be insistent, but she | me. & = + b; treaged ber as he might have treated a ls the impulse by the pecu- younger Brother--relying on her discré- moment, ping to ler as by right for sympathy, comprebetsion aud friend: !thould have got it last night." ship. Sometimes se they sat silent tn 7 _fpevitably break off and 'the Jy. With each-day that brought the | erisis of Fruide's scheme nearer his ac- ty Jucreased--and with it an inten of the mervous strain. For If | s hours of exaltation he also ute or black apprebension. t; and Chilcote's possible | matters of graver con- there were times when very dark and sinister. moment of fulfill. fnvartably he snapped the supposition and turned ardor to bis work of prep- last morning. of his pro- : i ped, and for the first time to ro. | be DIS freely. ne for y on the day that was to ressed es § splendid morning. of the spring seemed: em- lating every word; then be laid it down, and as he did he caught Eve's eyes raisod in concern. Again he saw { something of bis own feelings reflected | In ber face, aud the shock braced bum. He picked up the letter, tedting it tate strips. "I must go out," be sald slowly. "1 must go now--at once." His voice wae hard. Eve's surprised, concerned eyes still rearched his. "Now--at once?' she re- peated. "Now-- without breakfast?' JT'm not hungry." He rose from lls seat and, carrying the slips of paper | across the room, dropped them into the | fire. He did it not so much from cau- tion as from an Imperative wish to do something, to move, If only acvosa the room. "No," he sajd shortly. "It's--busi- ness. This was written yeeterdany; I Her eyes widened. "But nobody does the Heb) colored, homelike room Live ' oe 8 i ope over Ler embroidery and business at 8 iu the morulng"-- she be Jot Der thcughts spin momentartly fof )v ypoe off nu toward the point where, | gan lo astonishment, then she sudden- of the room. But there her thoughts | "yr 1useed (Brough the ball hurried- ly, picking gp a hat as he wernt, and, 0D Bamauod, a > canie {0 him HD letter through which the blow fell was pot voluminous. | It was wriiten on cheap paper "2 pace of eterprieen, dead ambitions, 13 the onward warch of lle it Lad been tor- ten. The very oir hed & breath of stratively agalnst hls jegs and with af- fectionnte perelstence followed him np- stalrs. Outside his door he paused. On the ground stood the iisual morning can of tilk--cvidence that Chilcote was not jak i : iad i: 3 Hh, g it, £ - I: the day bef! No; be bad himself ta fodlt to. The survival of the fittest wag the true, the oaly principle Chflcote bad bad iatellect, education, opportu yet awake or that, Jike himself, be bad | nity, az Chilcote had aalbarint Bo appetite for breakfast. He smiled | ironically as the idea strock him, bot It was a smile that stifféned rather than relaxed his l'pa Then be drew | and, inserting it quietly, opeted the door. A close, unpleasant guiell greet | od him as he cotered the small passage them aside. Postifytng himself ay knowledge, he Srned from the window and moved slowly back to the bed. "took bére" he began, "you | out the duplicate key he aiwayd carried | (of me last night" His voles was He had come fo ght Chilcote glanced up quickly. His moath was drawn and there was & new --a smell of whisky mingling With the | claimed quickly. "Loder, come here that divided the bed apd sitting rooms | anxiety in his eyes "Loder!" he ex odor of stale smoke, With A quick | Come nearer! gesture he pushed open the bedroom | door. Then on the threshold be paused, | a look of conternpt and repulsion pase Ing over his face. In his first glance be grasp- | od the detalls of the acene, for half drawn curtaine kept the light dim, but i | ag his eyes grow accustomed to the ob- | scurity he gatbored their significance. | The room had a sleepless, jaded alp-- | the room that dhder his own gecupation | had shown a rigid, almost monastic se | | verity. The plain dreesing table was | | littored with cigarette ends and marked | with black and, tawny patehes whero | the tobacco had eon oft to barn itsel? | | out. On ofie comet ot the table 6 | | carafe of water and a whisky decante? rested one against the otber, 8s If for | | support, and at the other end an oves | turned tumbler lay in a pool of Nquid | | The whole effect was sickly and nause- | ating. , His glance turned involuntarily to the aod "Ou ; "piattepes, from which the sheets and blanicets had fall en in a disordered heap, lay Chiicote. | He was fulty dressed In a shabby | tweed sult of Toder's; his collur was | open. his Hp and chin unshaven; ane | hand was Umply grieping the pillow, | while the other hung out over the side {2 the bed. His face, pale, "almost earthy in hue, might have been a mask | save for the sight convulsive spasme | that crossed it from time to time and corresponded with the faint, shivering starts that passed at intervals over his | whols body. To eomplete his repellent | appearance, & lock of bair had fallea loose end lay black and damp across | hls forehead. | Loder stood for a space shocked and | spellbound by the sight Even ln the | | ghastly disarray the likeness--tbe ex- trnordinary, sluister likeness that bad | bacome the pivot upon which be bho | self revolved--struck him like a blow. | | The man who lay there was himself, | | bound to him by some subtle, Inexplic- | able tie of similarity. As tbe Idea | touched hin he turned eside and step- ped quickly fo the dressing table. | There, with unnecessary energy, be | | window wide. Then again he turned | toward the bed. He had one dominant | tmpulse, to waken Chicote, to be free | | of the repulsive, inert presence that | chilled hin with so persona! a herrof. | Leaning over the bed, he caught tha | shoulder nearest to him ond sbook it It was not the moment for nicetied and his gesture was rough. At his first touch Obtlcote made no | AP | Without apelogy or farewell Loder | the bruut of his ordeal passed, he must ),,4 jert the fireplace and walked out of Decosslty peck something beyond p air, iy the pale biue sky, more _eool sunshine that self by vious change fa Chileote. HERO 10 Hh re Ho hind ov bis mcon¥Fetien SY. "dress g table 9 ously excited, never before rat [T20r wavd ached a guibrund by wen bm ciel Gemorelied WI ntly with its dancing | ent oatside, he went 2 ng of inipotence and disgust | "ot the distant past-i |r, git forward until Grosveaor square | J-sivuit by be cloned nda. ning focgotten days w el ba Tan, - Af the | Jnbceinely 8 be opposite d been bidden to watc risk of tion, at the loss. of dig- | "TE bad ahi nity, he ran until he siw & cab. Hall aa Cleats 24 Mollarelt bis mone God te ing 1t, Be sprang inside and ss the hoi Teta; = witch bim curiously A cohman whipped up and the hosé re- a fiicket of excitement eromed To thn call bo realised for the Ds face. "God, Loder" he anid again, | time the ful significance of whet 'Tes 8 ToS 10 BS 1 dreamed | had ocenreed. . ... . ose oe oo hella orsibie hell. wpe | ay Fa Again other ral; then be turned quic! and or 10 der? he doubtfilly. 'Yoder? Then his face changed. God" ; k : fhe Reluctantly Lodo ¢loser to the sile of the bed, he ben! down. J | The other put up bis hand and ctugh? his arm. [iis fugers trembled and jerks | od. "I say. Loder," be sald suddenly, =]--F've bad such a beastly night--mg perves, you know" -- With a quick, involuntary atsguetl Loder drew back. "Don't you thin we might shove that aside?' he asked! Dut Chllote's gaze had wandered from bis face and strayed to the dress~, ing table; there it moved feverishly) from owe oliject to another, "Loder," he exclaimed, "do you we ~eon you see if thete'd a tubs of tab lids oo the manteisbelf of off dressing table" He lifted him nervously on his elbow, and his e wandered uneasily about the roem. --1 had a beastly night; my nerves boeribly jarred, and I thought -- thik" -- Le se. TUWith hy + nervous collapse became more At the first moment of waking the res lef of an unexpacted presence had sur, moanted everything else, but mow, af one by one his facititles stirred, big wretched condition becamé patent] With a new senss of perturba Loder made bis next attack \ "Chiloote," he began sternly, 1 But again Ohllcote caught hig army | plueking at the coat slceve. "Where id tT" he said "Where Is the tube of tabloids--the sedative! I'm--I'm obligy. od to take something when my nerves go wrong." In his weakness and ners vous tremor he forgot that Loder was the sharer of his secret Even in his | extremity his fear of detection clung té him llmply--the Mes that had bes come second nature slipped from hin without effort. Then suddenly a fresi¥ panic seized him, his fingers tightened spasmodically, his eyes ceased to rove about the room and settled on hid companion's face. "Can you see It; Loder?' he cried. "I can't; the light' in my eyes. Can you soe it? Can yo see the tube?' He lifted himse higher, an agony of apprehension ir | his face. "Seis. {90 am conTINT:D. | | How Would You Like a Berth onl the "Ship of the Desert? Camel cradles are not designed for rocking young camels to sleep, buf they afe & contrivance by which travelers in the desert. may journey br night and yet not lose all sleep, r nedell {n his book of travels describes them in an eatertaining way in telling how he journeyed bf cemel train from Khiva to the Oas- plan: ' "About 7 o'clock all was In veadk ness, and we wore to get into oul queer sleeping cages. Let the rea imagine two narrow wooden crates; such as earthenware is. packed in/ each sufficiently large for a man a | lie Im when twisted to the 'shape the letter 8, and let him further im- ine them suspended on either sidg ol the huge p of a kpeeling

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