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North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 25 Apr 1907, p. 1

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Queen St., Port Petry m; 1to3 pm, - ©. SAVINGS ies promptaces teh, made sut sud blank notes supplied f on . Partles wishing to engage his services may consult hie Sarz RrcisTew either at the Observer or Standard Offizes, Port Perry, for dates claimed for Sales, and | Our long acquaintance with this district enables us to make ax liberal loans to our customers us Ananting will per- No Interest 81 wili '¢ Wait till you hare a Open - Small Savings form the Base of Large Fortunes. Undoubled -Kecurity to Depositors. - in Drawing Your Money 'ail or Componnded Twice a Year. an Account. Begin with us « sum td deposit. ow ! HARRIS, BA. LLB. ARRISTER, &c., and t of the ice tthe Tate FMF. Yarnold. _ Port Perry, - Ont. W. Croszier, SoLic1TOR, CONVEYANCER, at residence, 6th Con. ne mile west of Port Periy,)- Moxar To Loan. j r, Solicitor, Notary OWEN SOUND, ONT. FAREWELL, K.C., LL.B., County wn Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- Notar Prblic and Conveyancer. 8 wing Court House, Whitby, A. SANGSTER, [AL SURGEON. titi o12am., 2to6 p,m, of Royal College of ental Surgeons, D.D.S. of Toronto University. iu the Allison Black over Allison's & Ding Store. hours--8 a.m. t08.30 p.m. erry, April 9, 1002. PNET J. A. Murray, 'DENTIST, ovéx the Post Office, + FORT PERRY. clies of Dentistry, including nr aud Bridge Work successfully 3 practiced, Teeth on Gold, Silver, Alaminum or Rubber Plates. of Goll, Silver or Cement of Drawing, Painting, ¢ Design aid China Decoration hotirs--g to 12 a.m. ; 1.30 ta 30.P.W. 5 io over W. H. McCuw's "Port Perry. WE CASH SALE NOTES. BANK MONEY ORDERS. 2 'Best way to send small amounts Over 10 up to 30..70 Cts Over 30up lo 50..15 cts. f Cashed free at any Bank. For sums over 850 use Bank DrarTs. Best and cheapest way to send LARGE Amounts. H. G. HUTCHESON, Manager. PORT PERRY AGENCY. Special Rates. Fire, Life and _ REAL. ESTA! a DAVID J. ADAMS, BANKER AND BROKER. MONEY TO LOAN {British Capital) at 4, 4! and 5 per cent. Accident Insurance. re AGENT--Allan Lins and C.P.R. Steamship Com- panies. NEW STORE IN PORT PERRY The undersigned having purchased that brick building on the corner of Queen and Jobn Si reefs, in the Western portion of the business centre of the town, bas opened ont a fine Stock of -- General & Fancy Dry Goods TINWARE, CRANITEWARE, NOTIONS, &O. which he will sell Cheap for Cash. Tuesday. Friday and Saturday Bargains M. SHAPIRO. ¥=5" Butter, Eggs, and all kinds of Farm Produce taken as Cash. Wanted Scrap Iron, Rubbers, Sheep Skins, Wool, Horse and Cow Hides, Horse Hair, &c. JOB. BATRD + ICKN3 AUCTIONEER for the 4 Co | tario. Sale Register at the Ons¥RVER 'Patronage solicited Manch 9, 1899: - NEW Telephone Directory TE 6 TAPES GAY e arrang ts, or write to Lis addrees | £3 Phone at Residence, No. 31. = CHARGES MODERATE. GEO. JACKSON, Nov. 1, 1901. Port Perry I. O Jameson's Livery pik andersigned takes th opportunity #f thanking the inkinhitants of Port Perry und surrounding country for the liberal and still increasing pat rouage bestowed wpon him since commencing Carting and Livery in Port Perry und now intimates that he is better than ever prepared to supply all | requirements in his live. | Having extensively added te my stock of horses ; as well as conveyances of te latest type of eoratruction for comfort and pleasure, [am in a position to theet the requirements of the most fastidions as to style ind desirable equippage in every | respect--in every way suit able for private driving wed dings, funer Is, &c. Pu ties wishing an afternoon drive can have their choice of suitable double or siugle rigs and care ful drivers will also be suppli ed when required. | I porsess a number of good Spring and Day Wagons and will, at all times, attend to Carting with the utmost cae and promptncrs. I wink farther to state that in future suitable conveyan ad 4 haggage to the Depot in time for departing trains, on being given notice, WM. JAMIESON. Port Perry, July 30, 1903. For Sale. I OUSE AND LOTS on Cochrane St. Port the Wilcox Apply to D. J. ADAMS, BROKER, Port PERRY situated Perry known as residental property. CAUTION. All parties found trespassing huni ing. shooting or trapping on lot a5 in the 8th concession of Reach. wil be prosecuted to the utmost rigor of the law. JONATHAN BLONG, Port Perry, Dec. 18, 1906 FARM LABORERS AND DOMESTICS. HAVE been appointed by the Do- minion Government to place Toimi- ants from the United Kingdom in Positions as Faim Labourers or Domestic Servants in this vicinity. Any person requiring such help should notify me by letter or personally stating fully the kind of help required, when wanted and wages offéred The numbers arriving may not be sufficieut to supply ail re- quests, but every effort will made to provide each applicant with help requir ed. : GEO A ROSE.» Canadian Governnent Employment Agent Port Perry. Sale list. |/ cto r.'We know about this 'medicine. what he w grand old 2:d your bowel doses of Aysr's 1 We pubdlish ir medioines. Copyright, 1907, by M. M. Cunningham. b- Li Po) It was noon. The July sun blazed down over the hayfields and flickered across the group of men who lolied be- | neath the trees enjoying their Arst rest tful" she declared earnestly, after a morning of toil. Wamwright | sat a little apart from the others and delicately reticent, mopped his forehead. The muscles of his arms and shoulders ached from un accustomed labor. ¥et as he looked at the close cut fleld his feeling was one of pleasure. Two months before as assistant pro fessor of political geonomy In an east ern college he had longed to put cer- tain problems to the test, to learn from actual experience those things which other men were content to take from the text books. 8b while bis brother professors spent their vacations in Eu- rope or at the seashore Wainwright tramped the highways of New pmg- land, ipsack of back and notebobk and conventiopality : S man a s ofl "not , old confreres, would him. His clothes had ke of good tailoring and become frayed and dusty. His 8TOP |" SHE CRIED. at heel, his hat almost face tanned to a deep was young and vig- keen relish for adven- freedom of the high- if picking up odd jobs farmhouses along the eep of the travel wea- scented haylofts or, open, with the stars "Jany tender not hard. "Three from Usx- town. Terms, cash. Highest or _. + GEORGE MURTA, 5 : Uxbridge. igh the branches of Lo ge i : girly say" he added, "that if ever I'd bad a daughter I'd; ha' liked one like Mary Carter. She's as quick and handy as she can be, and my wife thinks a heap o' Her. Took to her from the first when the girl come from over by Coopersville wdy lookin' for work. She's so slim and slight you wouldnt think she could do much. But, land, she's a hustler!" Indeed, so absorbed was Mary In her work that Waln- wright only saw her at mealtimes. Even then she merely stopped for a pleasant word or nod. But one Sunday night when Waln- wright sat alone on the back porch strumming at a guitar a white dress glimmered in the doorway, and pres- ently Mary came out and sat down. "Please don't stop!" she cried as Wainwright smothered the last chord of a college gles. "I'm very fond of music!" "What else are you fond of, I won- der?' thought Wainwright, and he deftly led her on to speak of herself. She was fond of reading, she coufess- ed, and knew many of the roets by heart. Her taste In literature was as simple as it was fine, and the more she spoke the more Wainwright wondered, for she seemed utterly content with her present occupation. "Any work that Is done well is beau- and, though her allusions to herself were Wainwright found it easy to picture her primitive life, primitive and yet not humdrum. Her love of nature and beauty forbade that. "What a wonderful country it is," mused Wainwright, "where even the rustics have ideas of their own and a vivid way of expressing them." Mary's personality was the most challenging and illuminating one that he had dis- covered so far, and descriptions of her covered several pages of his notebook. In the days that followed he found that if he helped Mary with the sup- per dishes the longer they would have to sit on the porch in the cool of the evening. So while she gplashed the . suds he polished plates and cups and ' quo his_ favorite authors. Affer _ stars and listening to the eerie notes of the whippoorwill, a pleasant state of affairs destined to end abruptly, for Walnwright returned from the fields one evening to find Mrs. Rolfe alone in the kitchen. Mary was gone. "I{ad a letter from one of her folks," said the farmer, "and she went right off. Wouldn't take a cent of her pay 'cause she left so sudden." Wainwright looked blank, "Didn't she leave any address?" he queried. "Said she'd write," answered Rolfe laconically | "But wasn't there any message?" persisted Wainwright. "Not a word," said Farmer Rolfe cheerfully. Mrs. Rolfe had some of her famous | biscuits for supper, but Wainwright had lost his appetite. He stood on the back porch in the afterglow, and ev erything seemed strangely deserted. | Mary had gone, and something of the | joy of living had gome with her. Ex- | istence seemed suddenly very tame and dull to the young professor. He | was conscious of emotions not classi | fled in his notebook. "I must have overworked," he said listlessly to himself as he sat on the | Leffingwells' veranda a week later. It | was sundown. A breeze swept up from the Hudson, and a tall glass of lemonade tinkled pleasantly in Waln- wright's hand. Mrs. Leflingwell, of whose house party he was a guest, sat near him in a wicker chair and chatted irrepressi- bly. "We've had an inkling of your ex- ploits," she said, "and will expect a full account of them. Tonight there's a girl coming to dine who's awfully fond of that sort of thing. S8he spent the summer working on a farm where she met the most extraordinary young harvester that-- There she is now!" , Mary, in a white lace dress, was coming slowly across the lawn, "You didn't leave me any message," said Wainwright reproachfully the mo- ment after thelr hostess had left them | alone together, "but I have ome for 'you. 1 wonder If you will care to hear #®?" "You might try and see," suggested Mary demurely, 'When dinner was at its gayest, Mrs. Leflingwell turned to Wainwright. "Do you think," she said, "that your exper' ment was a success?' Wawmwright"s eyes met Mary's in a comprehending flash. "The greatest I've ever had," he an- swered, smiling. A Curious Bird Mistake. Mnny birds frequenting flowers for honey or insects are thus liable to get their heads covered with pollen. And since the pollen of different flowers. varied in color, a bird may become yel- RJ in consequence. folk are hustled a good deal at the court, too. Those whe are wise reach Buckingham Palate about 9 o'clock p. m. Pr to the first room Fey are then the earliest to pass before their Majesties, after the diplomatic corps has been received. Early arrivals at once take up a position on the raised seats, commanding a fine view of the show. Great Display of Gowns. It's a sight to behold some of the women wrestling with their eourt trains, which require considerable practice to handle gracefully. Talking of trains reminds me that here, teo, things are on the upgrade. Women no longer borrow the well-worn train of their sister, aunt or of a retired duchess or go in for patchwork get- rhe one object at present is to ex- hibit a gown both beautiful and ori- ginal. Lace, tulle, gauze, tisene and other flimy materials are used, and the effect when seen in contrast with the men's brilliant uniforms beats fairyland By the bye, "hock cup" is just now | in great demand at court suppers. It | was once a specialty in the days of | Queen Victoria. The recently revived | taste for light wines is largely due to the royal lead, hock being a favorite with the King King Edward has broken right adrift from his mother's prejudice Elevators' have recently been install- ed in Buckingham Palace. The writ- | ing-room where His Majesty attends to business affairs is fitted up like a city magnate's private office. He has not yet taken to a roll-top desk, but an American letter filing system is | now in constant use. A battery of new | typewriters have been installed in the private secretary's office Business Methods Used. | The King manages his vast cor- respondence on strictly "business" lines. Every letter has its number and | proper index reference. It is not gen- erally known that the King prides himself on the fact that he leaves no | letter unanswered overnight. Dictat- ing to various secretaries, His Majesty tehes a hig "bunch" of ce each morning before moet society leaders have had their second breakfast. The personal suites of rooms in Buckingham Palace have just been gorgeously re-decorated. Queen Alex- andra's bedroom is paneled in pale | rose silk, with hangings of white satin. Her bathroom is quite new, an annex being specially built for it. Tt is fitted with a bath of Grecian marble from special quarries Queen's Life In Letters. That important chapter of history covered by "Letters of Queen Victor ia" is at last to become accessible to the public, for three volumes will be issued in the autumn The forecast indicates that the work which is appearing "by authority of His Majesty the King," will be one of exceptional interest. The first vol ume covers the correspondence of the Queen until she was nearly 25 years old. Here she will be seen as a girl princess, then as a young queen under the guidance of a courtly chivalrous premier. Next the reader finds her called upon to select a hus band after her own heart. All through there is held up a mirror of public events as they appeared from the throne The second volume covers a long period, dealing with the repeal of the corn laws and foreign revolutions, of | which the most sensational incident | will perhaps be found in the story of the flight of Louis Philippe to New Haven The correspondence in the third volume bears on the eastern question, the Crimean war, the Indian mutiny the China war, the Franeo-Auvstrian | war, and the struggle for a united | Ttaly. This volume closes with the | prince consort's life, so the whole work [ just covers a quarter of a eentury-- | that is to say, from 1837 to 1561. | Queen Victoria was a woman of strong | individuality and of decided prefer- ence and even prejudices. The obicet throughout the book has been to show the personality of the Queen, her Sethi of ppproseiine and deciding questions, her outlook, her = - thies, her shrewdness, her Rate ance, and her diligence. Standatilized Sausage. oy The Lancet (London) which 'ever loves to cast a keen eye on some home- ly detail of everyday life, such as poison in postage stamps or the fu- tritive value of Christmas X this week devotes an ticle 1 BAUS! It admits that on the whole nowadays sausages are made with wholesome ingredients, " HE TY says, "it is a rommon subject of jest, since it is so often regarded as a convenient vehicle for i which, when undisguised, ce not appeal to us as being or even wholesome for food." : In spite of this improvement the Lancet is not satisfied and demands "a standardized Saag." 80 45 to prevent it from being loaded ¢ betituis, which is low headed, red headed, blue headed, etc., says the London Globe. This led | to a curious mistake in the case of a New Zealand bird. This bird was a honey sucker and a haunter of flowers, Out. | ardot suitable purposes of |' 4 any toni iP Fs'\ ou can 0. t a be ts wm the housc." Tablets are cold under the gu : tre of a Government analyst fo. contain neither oplates nor other poisonous drug ¢ They always dd od they cant possibly do harms tor sule at druggist or by mail at Dr. Wik 25cents a Lox lion The Brochville, bams' Medicine €o., Tims Table--High Kutrence. WEDNESDAY. J 8 46 9.00 School 11.00 1.oo--Arithmetie 1:30 4.00 Written Reading. Fripav, Ju 20TH. 11.00- E \ Grammar. 12,00 taken either son of 4 such othed ¢ convenient; Flag For Canada. A new design for a Canadian flag has been prepared by Mr. Ernest Gjr< of Sandwich. The design in- cludes a Union Jack in the upper left Gorner, a beaver and maple leaf be- low and perpendicular bars to repre sent the nine provinces of the Dom< inion. The groundwork of the flag may be either white or read. "YT think it is time, mow that we have just added two new provinces to | the great Canadian confederation, to adopt a new flag, a national emblem that every Canadian citizen may chers ish and revere, one that has no ob- jectionable features for any race or ereed, and one on which every pro- vince is equally recognized," writes Mr. Girardot " "Herewith iz a design for a Cana~ dian national flag which, in my hum- ble opinion, embodies all the desir- able features which should pertain to the flag or standard of the Dominion of Canada. | y "The Union Jack on ios amg torner represents our 4 {and and the tie which binds us her. Our emblems, the maple leaf and the beaver, dear to all, are pre- served. Fach perpendicular bar re- presents one of the nine provinces. When any other province will " created another bar may be added to the flag i "I believe T am saying the truth when I state that there is not one per cent. of the Canadian people who know or understand the semi-barbarie symbolisms expressed by the coat-of< arms which appears on our present standard 'We are asserting ourselves mord and more every day as a distinct na- tion. The growing importance of our commercial re ions with foreign countries and 2» glorious success we have achieve ough our participa tion at Liege and Milan exhibi« tion we have given evidence of Canada's greatness and inexhaust< wanded that we without any further delay mal flag, one which does conflict between any which compose the Cana< m or remind one of any tras ished by one class of peo hated by another -- a flag whiel s not symbolize any parti- one that is an eso i erity. the where cular blem of In Boer War, war of irregulars engaged infantry, moun artill was about 80.000, which 50,000 were supplied by the South African colonies, the overses depande »s furnishing the remaitt- der, viz.: Aus lin, 16,415; New Zea- land, 6,513; ( la, about 6,500, and India and Ceylon 500. Of the 50,000 South African colonials who took part in the war over 8,000 were killed or died of wounds or disease, whilst about 3,300 were wounded. : vite Ir The the a ery nt Tha Quéen of Spiderss Bi The queen of spiders--the largest, handcomest and most capable work- man of her tribe--is the orange-yellow; and black creature known as orange. argiope. Hers are the most beaut i '

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