3 UJ % Last Une It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. : This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great Sohth American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative ent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians, brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the la each depositor semi-annually. Port Perry, April 4, 1888. DAVIDJ.ADAMS, PORT PERRY. BANKER AND BROKER. Good Notes Disounted. , versity; Lireutiate a ne 3 | ns & Sur EE et Thorotual] of women, and of Great for Diseases of Children, London, Eng. Physician, Surgeon, &c., Office hours--8 to 10a. m., 1 to p. m,, residence, Dr. Hamill's old This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength- ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of a It is also of more real permanent value in the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nery- Ladies who are approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic, almbst constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely over the danger. Quer 8t., - = Port Perry. broken-down constitution. ; SO ey, OHN BILLINGS, Solicitor, sr Office over the Ontario Bank, Port Perry. Has any amount of Money to Lown At 85 por cont. on good Mortgages. olisness of females of all ages, INSURANCE effected at the Lowest Rates in Good English Companies. EF Agent Allan Line of Steam- This great strengthener and cura- tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will give them a new hold on life, It will add ten or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen bottles of the remedy each year. IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Broken Constitution; Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, 'Weakness of Extremities and E. FAREWELL, L. L. B., Cou oJ . Crown Attorney, Barrister, County tary Public and Con h YOUNG SMITH, L L, B., Barrister, Port Perry, Oct. 17, 1889. MONEY TOLOAN ANY AMOUNT on AT 6 PER CENT. # Also on Village Property. SF MORTGAGES BOUGHT, W& HUBERT L. EDBEIS, Office next to Ontario Benk, Port Perry, May 10, 1885. WM. EDMETT, ses [ngurance and General Agent, N Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, JAM DENTIST, n Upper and Lower Bets of $4 T0 $75 EACH SET. st purchased the largest stock of brought into North Ontario Iam iufied I can spit you both as to quality rice. Come'and see. Rooms in the lock, over Messrs. Forman & 's A BY Female Weakness, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Palpitation of the Heart, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Mental Despondency, h Boils and Carbuncles, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, aL he Delicate and Summer Complaint of Infan All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful NERVOUS DISEASES. As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless in all its effects npon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual. Nine-tenths of all the ailments to which the human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tion. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when-the right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the first to siffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves, For this reason it hecomes neccessary that a nerve food be supplied. This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the "| essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- | Fire, Lirx AND AccipEnt, NortHERN Assuranck Co'y, GrAsaow & LoNpox INsuraNcE Co'y Port Perry, April 26, 1889. WILLCOX & HOLT Licensed JAuotioneers COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND Veterinary Surgeon. HE underzioned havi full Course at the Pro ~ , College and obtained a Diploma as Veterin- .ary Surgeon, would announce that he has opened an office for the practice of his pro- feasiohat Port Perry, whereall callapersonal by letter or telegram, by day or by nigh will be promptly attended to. iseases of animals treated in the latest and best known system. && Telephone connect rire of cl REAL ESTATE A SPECIALTY. Sale Bills: made out and Blank Notes furnished free of charge. antee or no pay. Terms liberal. food does not con- Port Perry, April 8, 1884. RDEVILLE, InD., Aug. 20, "86 Resecca Wr "American Medicine Co. A WiLkixsox, of Brownsvalley, Ind: "I had been in a distressed condition for- three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my I had been doctoring eon- stantly, with no relief. I bought one bottle of South American Nervine, which done me more good than any $50 worth of doctoring I ever I would advise every weakly pers son to use this valuable and lovely remedy; & few bottles of it has cured me completely. consider it the grandest piedicine fu the world." Licensed Auctioneer, Yaluator &e. of Brock, Uxbridge, ara, Rama, Mariposa Parties entrusting their Sales to me may rely on the utmaot attention being given to G L. RUBSON. V. 8. (RADUATE Ontario Veterinary Col- years with a very serious of, but nothing done me od until I was advised t REN, AGE, two. miles south of an and Liver Cure, and since using several bottles of it I must say that] am sur prised at its wonderful powers to cure the stom- general nervous sy! . value of this remedy ns 1 able to ¢upply the i 3 phone in the house--free communication Manchester, and elevator, Is to-Manchester will be for- © warde by fol hone, 'Medicines in' 3 Evergreen Cottage, ~ North Ontario Observer. Political, Agricultural and mil ivery Removal ! EARTILY thanking the public for the sy Dosti ve much pleasure in be A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., eleven years old, was severel "We gave her three and on she is completely ttles of South American Ner- believe it will cure every case of St. it in my family for two years, and in the world for Indl, isorders and Falling and wort te before me this 29, 1887. : : CHAS. W. WRIGHT, Notary Publics AND DYSPEP ri that this is the oNk and can Nervine Tonic. - 'BRATTON, of New Ross, Ii f Our Mistakes." 1 alteratives and | yearly it proves s 3 5 t ! tn do | piin. at ull. Within | used to it. cattle and dogs. ed several Jhyetcigns ut giving relief, Neoth- seemell to do any per- until I began the use of parilla, which las griul results. Soon after Improvement in my condition, my appetite began to return apd with iticame the ability to digest 'the food taken, my strength improved' each dag, and after a few months of faithful attention to your direct A found myself a well ora able to attend to all household duties medicine has given me a new | of life, and I cannot thank you too much." "We, the undersizned, citizens of Brockway Centre, Mich., hereby certify that the above statement, made by e, 48 true in every particular ed to fall credenc i P, 8, W. Waring, O. A. | long ne, nable to attoud to his oecu- ation, By reason of sores on his foot. |W hen it did not snow a driving sleet «We will talk about that later, I | flew on'a gale and cut a man's foce in The dogs could not sleep at | sent him Ayer's Almanac and the tes- timonials it contained induced him to try Ayer's Satsaparilla. After u it |i ba fri. oy | ribbons he was cured, and is now 0, THURSDAY, FEB. 2, 1893. OUPID'S MESS «1 don't think,' he said, when be ® | really began to tell bis story, says the id) hears New York Tribune, "thatany one who son is that this, | has not seen men suffer ean understand only the purest | what they arecapableof. I have seen men on & long ride across the desert, hen. they never opened their mouths take & complaiat, thotigh their eyed ! 'Oh, I am going, 8,' he answered, ity : gave & loud shout ; T couldn't he 'Try to get's little more sleep, | for though I should never have know then, I urged conxingly, pretending the man, there was no nistakinig that to humor Bim, © jamie, CF ean't,' 'he answered, fretfully. firoug} : I "I begged him t4 try; and he turned | equeesing my hand. 'I was sick for over in his blankets. He tossed for | while, but not until I had It's different with horses, You must be brutal with them to make them understand Jo that they must go on. Bat when you 1 got your blankets? *+Yes, I said, 'but I dowt want | where a' womfin got him well again; them. I can sleep in the daytime, | he's working for the road in Denved It's about all I have to do.' I now, and next spring we are going ine «Well! be said, 'propping himself to partnership in the cattle business up and looking at me with his dark | again, as we have about saved enough, eyes, 'I'm glad I stumbled into your | to make another start. By the way,' camp, I was about gone' A faint he said, pulling out a bit of pencil and smile passed across his lips. | seribbling off a note on a pirce of 0 take the Sarsaparilla X |are in desperate straits the man who leads, or a murmur because you know there is nothing else to do. * But what I started out to do was to give you ome case in point. were out in Colorado in those days raising cattle, upon us that year with a rush. cattle began to die and.we could do | nothing, for them. We lost our bron- | they were of no use to us, Brother, in England, was, for 8 | con said quietly, + Bxcuse me,' «I got through you soe,' he sid ful. *Haveleft in the ; lightheartedly. 'Pfien I gent * We will pull him aroupd in good | paper; 'cull on him when you get to shape,' I said, encouragingly, but I did | Denver. You'll like him. He's the not believe "what I said. © There was | finest fellow in the world, and his wife was something strangely unreal about | --she's an angel)' he added, with that his brightness and clearness of mind. | wonderful smile of his. 1 am all right now,' ho said, cheer-| 'Grent Omeat I! I sud to myself, | chow; Fut it made little difference, for | rp : ; ' | " 1 { fully, "Fhis warmth is goed after *vhata world this is! : what T have had. I'll get a good start| 'I never saw my friend again. 1d not ride ten feet from camp. |. 1. morning.' | Sa vad Shakespeare will please excuse us if we modify him thus : Thrice is he clad : 4 who hath bis system strength: ned 'But I am going,' he replied, quick-| with Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and he but a well Juan, Jotking in 3 sugar will { night, it was so cold; and often when ly with a little ring in his voice. | naked, though arrayed in furs, whose A. Astewall, Sharbot Lake, Ontario. | the freezened air wakened me I saw | *I did not answer him. | blood is poor or with disease corrupted.' {some poor fellow in the room crouched +1 have been at it six days,' he said An incompatable medicine { en Ayer's Sarsaparilla, | down in his blankets, holding his teeth | | tovether to keep from shouting out a | | terrible oath. | PREPARED BY i Dr. J. é. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass, Price [0 i | oe $1} six Bottles, 85. Worth $54 bottle. It got along towards spring and we [started with my pack--grub, I thik] i | were us helpless as ever, 's Pills. Travelers by land or sea arg liable to constipation or other often consequences. The mostsure looking at me. in th Severs | I've heen walking ever since," he added began to soften in the day, hardening | dreamily. q with the chill of night, any anyone who | ANY A IFE ventured into it was inviting a sure | I death in what was worse than a quick- H saved by the prompt use of | sand. A about it.' {me what he was trying to do. 3 " p 4 and his brother bad been raising cattle. pe Nn y t \ r | had all been hungry for a long time | They had got caught ina very bad | derangemeits of the stomach and bowels The men's bones began to stick out of which, if neglected, lead to serious and | their faces, Provisions had run low and we | and through their skins, Different Schools. Papa-- What is the 'triple allixnee 1 Dickey Boy.--They teach that dif- | ferent in different schools. ocan's' remember much} Papa-- What do you mean | | Dickey Boy--In the publiz school ¢ What ¥ I cried incredulously. | Bix days,' he repeated calmly. 1} 'We talked till morning. = He told it is 'Germany, Austria and Itly' and' Hein Sunday school it is the 'World, the Flesh and the Devil.' a | Pale and sallow girls and premat- | condition, His brother had fallen | urely aged women should Dr, Williams' | sick when they began to suffer from | Pink Pills ; they come asa hoon for atl of correcting these evils js the use | and At times there was a strange Hght| yo 4 ible weather, He had been all those ills which flict the: female of _they are parely ation, which at last became so for gue . Then I began to take Ayer's 1s, and soon the bowels recovered their patural and regular action, so that | gee light ahead, > mow Iam in husetts. most reliable general remedies of our ti! d hav tioms We have T ly for colds and w ul Ayer's Pills than upon anything else in the medicine chest, to regulate Jax bowels and those of the ships Crew. Pills are not severe in their ac- n with good ect for the eure of r' bles, and dyspepsia." -- Capt. Mueller, Steamship Felicia, New York City. #1 have found Ayer's Cathartic Pills tobe a better family medicine for com- knowledge. They are not only very PREPARED BY Weekly Co: ition of The adies Phi word in this advertisement spell the pkward as Forw ? Thislsa rare Bis for every Madam and Miss, every nd Son to secure a splendid Prize. PRIZES, -- eek throughout Sompedtion 'The first correct answer receiv- ark date on each letter to be eve! e 1 pective of Ye hi ta specia) prize. Southern Sates ha RL an t half a million subscribers, We propose to give away But 'I never saw a braver set of men--and they were a + 'We've just got to fable and sugarcoated ; the safest | over,' was what every one said, when pine for old aud young, st home OF | i jig geom as if a bullet in the brain : eight years T was afflicted with | would be better than fighting it out to 0 pru- | i : Bris [in their eyes, stark, staring mad most of the time for | the last six weeks. In 'his fever | oo ions {nto youy: cheeks. Alf he hand "moaned 'nd cried abOUYYdcafers or by i post paid, at 506 getting a letter sent east. ~ In his lucid | per box, or six boxes for $2.50. " intervales be had begged bis brother --nr nn piteously to write one for him and get { Getting all he can out of it. it to the railroad. It was thesame old| Wife (drowisly).--It is Sunday ; d that the doctors could do no more | the end. | One day, when at last we began to something came stag ering into our cabin and fell across Excellent Ee 20 near the stove. We picked health." Mrs. O. E. Clark, Tewksbury, |; up and turned it over to look at it. #0% regard Ayer's Pills as oneof the |I was a man with a beardless face, | ths Tifey have been in use in my | thin re for affections requiring a Brg: | ye couldn't have weighed a hundred pounds, he was 50 wasted. IR. Woodson, Fort Worth, Texas. We chafed him, tried to get something #For several years I have relied more | ,\p, jnto him and then rolled him up in warm blankets. I was 'sitting by the stove looking at his white face at Hons but do their work thoroughly. 1 midnight. The room was warm that pumatism, kidney trou |piolit, and the stove door was open so that the Jight fell on the starved but I would not shut off the mon use than any other pills within my | |ight, for I wanted to look at his face. sleeper, His dark lashes were long, - was more like a woman than a man, | 40 pe gets well, He sad. u AN and I was gazing at him in pity when SANDS IN REWARDS his eyes opened slowly, with a dark light in them, and looked at me. «What time is it 7 he asked, with a faint smile. «t's after midnight,' I answered, 'Go to sleep again.' + Huve you any whisky that you can ate received) at the elise ot ie give me? he asked. ~ ¢'Noj; haven't had a drop-in days,' I said. "+4'm sorry,' he answered, 'I think it would do me good,' among his blankets, giving a start as he looked around him. «When did 1 get here? he asked boy go away the next day without further protest! I knew it would do no good, He had told me in the night in a very calm voice, but with a light ery z in his eyes that convinced me, that he brizeswill be distribut- | soothingly. + Today," IT said. You are wel ('Good I' he said, in answer to my *] was afraid I had T. | been: sick ou your hands--that 1 had ¢ No, you have only been here about twelve hours," 1 replied. to sleep. You look ss if you needed it. You have had a worse time than we «No, I am not going to sleep again,' he said, in a tone of decision. «You'd better,' I said, 'we will have a sick man on onr hands. You need 'before you can eat--what we san system. Build vp the blood, restore shattered nerves and convert sallow story--a woman, | what is the use of getting up so early 1 "And I am carrying the letter to| you work hard all the week and have the railroad now,' he said, with a little |to get up early,--and on Sunday, smile of satisfaction. 'He is tortured | when you have nothing to do-- by the thought that she would be | Husband, --Yes, on Sunday I have worried about him. So I have lied in | nothing to do, and I want all the time the letter and said that his right arm I can get to enjoy it. is broken so that _he cannot write and | v---- - he has dictated it to me. He smiled | For Colds and Sore Throat. happily: | SS cave ar singers Yotlow off nous +1¥% selfish enough of him, T said | sxoalent; My sister had usiyims, from SUC savagely, looking at the boy's wasted | WOASCUUC, | oy op spanner, Baldwin, Ont. form and white face, 'to sacrifice yoa, - ee fn no matter how he loves her.' The Hungry Little Boy. * Oh, he doesn't know,' he answered, | Mother (severely).--Johnny, where quickly, and his eye flashed warningly | ig ¢fat piece of cake I left here when I at me. 'He doesn't know how bad it| cons out? is. He's been in the bunk ever since| Johnny--I gave it to a hungry little T: it began, He¢ doesn't know,' he added | 1,4 d. oh, he w slack 8 : Ble Vin . ¢| hoy, mamma, aud, oh, he was so gla Sali which Tat hake. thes 1t was i as Find ever before | his chin sinking. on his chest, and his|¢, get it. y by the public." -- es Hauel, |seen on the plains, a be + 3 { . gain ue mine Pa. val and handsome before suffering and Joye closing to hide the pain, that we Mother--Come to my Arms, you 2 have lost every hoof and that we are | dear, dear angel, Who was the little er's Pills, | cold had drawn it out to ge boy 7 ¢ He lifted his face again, his bright | _Johuny--Me. GC. Ayer & Co. Lowell, Mass. lay far down on his cheek, darker than | oe returning. en by all Dealers in Medicines. the terrible circle under his eyes, He | ¢1t will be time enough to tell him DE. woon's NORWAY PINE SYRIF pars oarseness and Bronchitis. URE IMPORTED WINE, Prime Canada P «Wil iv Beef und soluable scales of salis of Trou, ure. Will you believe me that I let that | Beef und aalugbie scares of oe on ee would shoot any man who tried to stop him. So we gave him the best that we had of our proyisions, and watched him go struggling trough the snow with heavy hearts. He had not made more than a hundred yards in half an hour, but then he turned to wave his hand at us. I knew he would never reach the railroad alive. t There was no time for sentiment that spring, We were wrecked bodly Both the method and results when and financially. when we were able to Syrupof Figs is taken; is . get relief to our camp. We moved | and refreshing oie ata farther from the railroad, as a cattle | gently yet prom] on th owner came along and gave u§ work, es. and Bowes, cleanses the carryiug us off to what was left of toi effortuallys his herds. patio «But two years later I reached a ona pot 5 its station on the railroad sick of the Sad lains and bound for home. A young Pe in overalls was ling os sho, progr ot barrels along the station platform, aod | healthy and ag: 1 thought just as a venture I would ask him if a dead man Shaving s letter} $0 addressed to a woman v found |" ONE ENJOYS