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North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 28 Nov 1912, p. 1

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ta a 5 oe Ly a LE . 3 Ch i da LB [2 REVO. P! MUTRHEAD, "Weotr Prayer Ist. 3rd and 5th Benday ach month 'Cow "EERIE : R. OC. CHURCH tn Queen St, Boe hours=8 to 10 an ; 1to3 pm. sad Bvenings. Tetephoue. i in offive and house, open night sod day over the lines south. connected _ with the residence of G. L. 8, "Port Perry, Not. 15, 1804. Branches slo ct Blaclotock hy "PORT PERRY BRANCH H. G. HUTCHESON, Manager, © RE Bowmanvi -- SL EC eereC------ Frnali¥n, Claremont , mV . Oghew u, Stouftville, : REV, --. RICHARDSON Thied Sunday. at10.30 8. m, Wn. §. HARRIS, B. ALLE. AR i i BARRISTER, &¢. Je Shas f | NE NEE 0 it cessor to and qpotpant. a hd J County of Ontario. Sale Rrer ut Sue offices of the late Port Perry, MONEY TO LOAN. Privnic Fands mt 4 per eebts 190", the Omsxrykk Office . Patron solicited Oat. Manchester, Jan. 19, i i UL MPLES, AND ALL SKIN ARE COMPLETELY NEW METHOD . i wrt - b Fa b Jno. W. Crozier,' Bs Sovinyros, CONVEYANCER, &e. , Office at residence, Oth Con. ach (one mile west of Port Perry,)-- BOILS, SWOLLEN GLANDS, We desire to call {he attention of all those aflicted with any Bleod 00 1S TAINTED CURED BY THE TREATMENT Moxey To LoaN. 1t | system. Our vast caper ce in the treat- | raent of thouzands of tho most gong and 1 | Ditlon Hinge-St ay tence| Tester of Marriage Lienced, E- FAREWELL, K.C | LL.B., Comty | 12; Only for the Ee a Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- Wi factored by the Owen Sound Des ve. 1 youtare any blood diccase, con fg ie &e., Notary Public and Conveyancer. ire Fence Co. Ltd., and oo you how quickly our remedica will remove §§ Jftoe-South wing Court House, Whitby, | _prepaied to supply this whole] 58 ajferiagnces of disease 2s. Uuderthoinfietce Bi Unt. community with the very BEST ones cloar, aicers, Ni imple a er 5 - VII ol A 1p, enlarged is are redn: jen WIRE FENCE produced on this Tr 15 again. the eyes become Conttnent and at prices that ca: not fail to satisfy purchasers. The Dirron Fence is without a peer It is the BEST because it is dexible tis a square mesh ; itis a pecfect hinge-stay fence, therefore it is impossible to bend the stays, CW. A SANGSTER, : DENTAL SURGEON. i; Office Honrs--9 to 12 a.m, 2 to 6 pm 'Also open Saturday evepinge. and Crown Air. (in fact it is the best fence made i ta this or any other country. DR. Te L: GRAHAM Before purchasing a Wire Fence atin vw he ID. McliRateas Jet fy to mspect the Dicrox RS. : Lf troit, Mich. DENTIST J. H. Brown, Ey hei Deacer iN AgricuLTuraL ImpLe MENTS AND MACHINERY: : Spageave = ONT. hy ivi v: 'DENTIST, foe over the Post Office. wciie PORT PERRY. AN branches of Deotistry, including oA "Port PERRY, : 5 y call at our Medical April 6; 6; Foose TO HARNESS complica curo without experimentini on the plan--Pa; If wnalio to «owed, for 4 Cituis Lisk All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart: ment in Wi ical Institute cases enables us to pel g. Tea for the Benefit You bright, ambition and ene! Hm realizes a new life YOU CAN ARRANGE TO PAY AFTER YOU ARE CURED CONSULTATION FREZ Send for Booklet on Discases of Men "THE GOLDEN MONITOR" FREE ey retiirn, and the opened up to 8 or Home Treatment WY , Ont. If you désire tol as we sec and treat. 3. Crown and Bridge Work successfully g practiced. Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminum or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painless extraction when required: ' #& Prices to suit the times® H. G. HU MQ BE. A. ADAMS, Bell Phone No. 4t "North Ontario Observer SUCCES DAVID J. & DO '4 Weekly Political; Agricultural and FIRE ih Family Newspaper LIFE : Hs i i her ' a or. 3 Nh hina 1) the pele IEE Ee. 8 -Real Est te EVERY THURSDAY MORNING I BY have a er ------------ ADAMS & HUTOHESON Ste amship Tickets I'CHESON, SORS TO UGLAS ADAMS ANGE 'ccm ACCIDENT Mortzage Loans H. PARSONS __$1 por wnunm, if paid in pr RE are, No submorivt i Waid an Six ih oo until Arrears wre pad wp. TERA onutaining money, when RK ddroasid to this Office, prepaid snd registered will be at on; "Mails Close. | The mile are despatched froov the Pos Office Port Perry aw follows : Going North-- 9.00 a.m. Going South--11.20 a. m. Going North-- 5.16 p. m. (ioing South--10 p.m. Central Livery, PORT PERRY. Largs & Assorted Stock|---- OR DOUBLE -AND SINGLE HARNESS which 1 am determined, tp sell very CHEAP As an indneement. to Casi purchasers -b Jeet of 2 por conde will bo allowed on all Sales from now until Jan, lst.next. All work being & MADE BY HANDE3 and vo factory work kept in stock, the super rity of my goods will at once become apparent. utending purchasers will find that hy giving ine a call hefore looking elsewhere te. can be suited in quality snd price, my pers in the & trade heing an indis hE ADVERTISEUENTS Nouparie!, - charged according to the A ocogby. 454 * anvsgamS received for publication. with. out a will be Tati > adveriise- 1ABERAL discount a. A, © who advertise ba the your or half year, sin wd one russ terme will io all cases be' strictly wdhored to JOB perfect satisfaction EARTILY thanking the public for the ven Spa any hat pe urchased, E liberal patronage received during the Eh ng.in my line. of busfuess kept | many years I have kept a Livery Establish ag on hand aud repairs neatly and promptly attended to. . JOHN ROLPH. mentin Port Perry, [have much pleasure in announcing that I. have removea » MY LIVERY! So my former place of business Water Street ® Lam about to largely extend in- okich Lo He 2g thet % She public ja Port Perry, Deo. 1 Cosa SOF ARRIAGE Wc 4 J7ISHES to inform the ladies : rooms formerly. occupied. by her ove rer Me Wineh Dre Store. Shots rom THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AXD To ysis this the commencement ©f that she has moved to the wr Part of the Show. "'Ow's yore little boy gettin' on, Mrs. slack?" "Very well indeed. 'K's entered the theatrical profession now." "Oh! Wot part's 'e takin?" "Well, 'e ain't exactly takin' a part but 'e fetches the scend shifters [isms Answers, ¥ A "Defuncter er)--Where's Charles today? Walter<§ I'm sorry, sir, but 'e's gone. Customer --Gone! Do you mean he's defun Walter--Yes, sir, ap' with everythin "e could lay 'is 'ands on.--Lond Sketch. - His Wandering Wit. 3 Gibbs--Dubleigh has a bright 13 now and then. Dibbs--Yes; if Dul leigh ever has brain fever it will b intermittent.--Boston Travseript. Noné can injure him who does no Injure hi COhrysosto! © OF CARTWRIGHT, another Anction Sale Season to re- torn thanks 30 his numerous patrons fer post favors. In requesting their esteemed nd contioded 'patrouage - he desires to i ul that no effort or. five will Le spared on his. part to mak gales entrusted to him successes. very extensive practice in the past should be b sufBcient recom utndation as to his ability. Al "Sate glx into. ST Hapuioh atieuded int od an teh e made ut aad votes "supplied free, Sleeve er -- SH (rey 'Arrangements, or write 'Wit thov |bave this woman to be thy edded in i% eye, 'What do you suppose we're bere for ef | wouldn't? that the six-year-old nlece of the bride Customer (missing his favorite waits} ev bis nervioss "a omit fies LE either at eeieorged rn sus born df u' vo- qneen , expressed ber pleasure In the en- {luskism and then eld to Mme. Ris- tori: "Anything yon ask we is granted." Without an Instant's hesitation Mme. Ristori replied to tbe queen: "Madnue, If you really wish to give | me whatever 1 ask I will beg you to re- prieve the poor man who, ag I read this morning, has been sentenced to death and 1s to he garroted tomorrow." The queen hesitated a few seconds before she granted this wish. Dut the reprievé was signed, and the condemu- od man was, to his great astonishment, | relenscd on the eve of his execution, | little dreaming that he owed his life to the talented actress. It was typleal of Mme. IRistori's noble, gencrons mna- ture to ask the queen to grant ber this request ratber than to ask for some jewel or other' tangible souvenir to hand down to her descendants. --Ired- erick Townsend Martin in Ainslee's Magazine. hieagh's leading clergymen, reremonies do not always run ber thao true love, | seem to act more {nsanely at | than at any other time, save fire," declared one pastor, | msually the bridegroom Who ost fBustered. It is seldom man gets the responses mix- | § the man. One time at a | » wedding where I was offl- | bridegroom insisted upon | Jola toud and distluct voice, p the amusement of his hearers, m4 this plight' instead of the PIE ht thee my troth.' time when 1 was marrying uple at my home | asked m the usual question, pe? and he replied, with fire "It was a{ a wedding In wy church PUBLIC SPEAKING. And the Necessity For Cultivating the Art of Enunciation. Speaking 1s one of those arts which people seem fo think are unnecessary grooms caused a ripple of laughter. big eyes she watched the bridal pi igslon come up the aisle, and as it neared the altar she noticed her uncls, who had come out of the ves- try afd. with his best man and me awaited the bride In the chancel. Up | the plants on a certain morning when | By this means they deprive of their | he saw hls men recoil he dismounted ad "The virtues of Bivwae x Vety wash are also well known, remarks the Jour- nal of Religious Psychology. One leg- end tells how by licking the dew off is to afl the birds drink it ono can learn bo their language. Another folk belief is 'that "naked of with only thelr shirts on the witches at the time of the new moon collect the dew from the grass with bark sleves. ca milk the cows that have been pastured on {he grass, and @s soon Aas their sieves are full of @ew they know that thelr pots at home are full of mlik. Tho Polish people of Wongrowitz call the dew on which the birds are snp- posed to feed patasie mieko--L eq *birds' milk." for te! ih An Example of Daring. During the hottest fighting in the Shipka pass the leading battalion of the Russian General Dragomiroff's division recolled bef a hallstorm of Turkish buliets. The general was a very stout person and had the appearance of a peaceful German professor. But when vi si vi and walked slowly to and fro along a he ridge swept by the enemy's bullets. He was a hundred yards in advance of the men, occupying the position they she Jum and, pointing a small fin- 1° study and learn, and the probability : . : " a ix x Ba il lo bershrill | 18 that most speakers of the kind men: Deg abandoned. After staziag these baby voice, 'Oh, mother, If there isn't tioned are blissfully unaware of thelr ol t without b 2 ot 2 Un With his best clothes on end | Audibility. Doubtless tnelf voice re ts Sommer Di oe Je | S thes : : e you doing, ¥ bis everyday nose!' She had been told sounds comfortably in the empty rs oa y by Te who possessed an un. | SP20CS of thelr awn chest and head, ps tliore dy dunger Lero? 1 dont J (d an un find any! The men responded with a and {ls prevents them from knowing usuglly prominent nose, that w hen be {hat it does not penetrate to the aud} got married it would be shorter. "Qpa thne after reading a ceremony tory apparatus of other people. the legroom handed me a five dol- To he a lecturer it is not only neces- lar Jbl, saying. 'I'll give yon two. Ary to know your subject. but the art No woderstanding him, | sald, "Thank of enunciation and audible delivery needs to be learned tlso And the and pot it Into my pocket. He me on the shoulder nod agaln 'I'll give you two' 'Oh, you change? I fnquired. Ile nodded, nanded bim $3." laughable wedding was that of yo ton sad wa ands Ong sound of one's voice in one's own ears fslending guide. Soch peo- is a most to rend or gpeak from one end of a large room to somebody tenching them dow tho 'married one of her at the other end, when they weuld soon ss She war x womnn past for- | find out 'that toves which will prss th alt the airs of a school _ | muster In a couyersation are useless in hey a public speech. "In contersation we carelessly slur batt our 'syllables, leaviog onr {uteriocutor to guess them from the context, but {bis will not do In a public speech, vi; 'her by. oF refereDCes on occasions to her Bparted husband, John, In fact. | n pot to be a byword among all knew the widow. Among the rders was a young fellow of twen- five, who fell In love with the falr the signs. Again, a word pronounced io the ordinary English way--of throw: ithe parlor. he widow was large, tall and stout the bridegroom exceedingly small a mann, and when on the night of wedding the widow appeared et | proper moment leading her pros hoshand into the parlor, much a mother leads her little hoy. even walting clergyman had to suppress | mile. After the ceremony had been eo d and congratulatery speeches were Border the erstwhile sridow exelnim- with emotion, "Oh, if only my when sald in that manner in a luge roow.--Theosophical Path. The People of Great Britain. Ethnologlcally Great Britain is a mix- resulting frown a | ture of many races, puccession of loraslons, mans invaded Britain the fuhabitants were Celtic, m!xed with gn earlier Eu |" skarian non Aryan element. They coo. tinned to be maluly so until tbe fifth aud when the level parts of the country were overrun by put the ring on her finger his perv- ghaking fingers dropped 1t, and It led away across the floor. The de, certiin that some great calami- ¥ would overtake them, refused to go with the services and then feinted. {fter the delay of an hour or so she | g prevailed upon to allow the cere ny to be finished. Unitarian minister tells this story: ne time | was to read tbe service in church in a western state where pses are not required. Tbe cburch Fas filled, and the bridal party arrived 4 Scandinavian blood. Wales and the ed by descendants of the anclont Celtic tribes. The people of Ireland also are of Celtic origin, although there is an admixture of many other races. Rudimentary Hind Limbs. Rfnukes are not the onty animals | which exhibit the possession of rudl- mentary hind limbs. In the whale fribe there is no evidence externally of bind limbs. The fore NHmbs in them son for which was not suspected. k Ba t last word was brought that the veloped in certain kinds of whales a bony piece representing the havoch party was ready, aud | came Out | rhe tnigh bone is distinct, but there ls mn tbe Mit the Li re the | ® mere rudiment attached to It. repre- hy the w ig Lb ry Nid | senting the shin bove or tibja of other al Joo. rom: e aisle to the altar, | % pd trembling, jooking much aie- ffsom the pretty, flushed gir! 1) ©". 5 PERSISTENT ABBE. Romance of Mountain Road Bullding my surprise. when fhe In the Pyrenees. 8 beat 1 man stepped before me. a few whispered words. fat oa girl, and sbe nodded. O. L. Freeston in "The Passes of the n the service that made the Pyrenees" quotes, the story of Felix of the best wan. The ! Armand, cure of Bt. Martin-Lys, who saved from mortification, ! plerced a road through the magnificent ts were not disappointed. Gorge de Plerre-Lys in order to bring the best man had been in prosperity to bis poverty stricken vil- girl, and when the bride- lage. The-cure himself marked out t come he quietly stepped tbe route, "banging like a spider from consent to marry him. -the end of a rope over the awful preci she never beard directly pices of the Plerre-Lys. After five ant bridegroom, and her years' incessant toll the workmen the best man proved a reached the huge mass of rock which Shicago News. | blocks the gorge near Belvianes." Still A he bravely incited his parishioners to presevere until in 1781 the tunnel was plarcadt which still bears the bame "Leg Trou du Cure." a the work, but after the reign of terror the cure set to work anew. "A pity the man should be-a priest" said Napoleon When he heard of Ar mand's heroic efforts. "1 would have made him a general fn my army." The cure's personal bravery was great. Oncd when a mine was about | to explode 'a mulefeer was seen riding round a corner. The priest instantly sprang out and extinguished a slow 'match just ot its last inch. Armand wag made gn abbe. but he denlinad ta uch In the Way. do you do, Mr. Shears? | show me in the way of | day? His Tatlor--Your 1s decidedly in the way i London Telegraph, tr hs not his" tongue | paitble.--Brahmno Masia ple ought to be trnined by being made | where people are too far off to catch | Jct of the saiuted Jobn, and in a N ing a £trong accent on a single syllable | rt time the rocmers were all in- . § eke} 4 to aitend a wedding to be held and slurring the other syllables -be- : ot comes reduced to a mere wonosyllable When the Ito | highlands of Scotland are still inhabit. | The revolution: 3 are converted into the "fiippers," or # EE il io swimming paddies. Yet when the | iO | skeleton Js exaroined traces of a foe Zowing plone, yystesiesl and hawnch and attached rudimentary gues thigh bone are found. There is de roar of cheers, doubled up to him and charged so flercely that the Turks were forced to retreat. An Uncrpected Conclusion. A mistress wns summoned in a Lon- don court for having dismissed a serv- ant girl without due notice. The de- fendant pleaded that the servant was so voracious that she could not keep her in food. The judge after hearing the evidence inquired of the defendant, "will four and sixpence a week keep her?" "Not nearly," replied the lady. "Will 8 shillings?' continued the judge. £0; {hat would not keep her," replied the defendant, feeling that In the | judge's hands her case was gaining strength. "Now tuke care" sald the | cf gl judge, "and answer cautiously. Will 1 shillings?' "It takes 87 said the de fendant "Very wel d the judge. d "Then you must | r 8 shillings a fl week as board wages 2 one month." -- London Mall. | i la Good Intentions. "T do my best," sald Mr. Clumzle, "to scatter sunshine and encot e a spirit of patience and clbeerft how 1 always go wi "What has happe "] met a frlend who looked a little gloomy, so I said to him: 'Cheer up! Nothing is as bad as it wight be. Ev- ery cloud bas a silver lining, and you only make trouble worse by thinking about it'"" "Didn't he respond?" |= 0 § Cc r, dear John were Lere to see how g p ir A & bs 1 am ot this moment" Only (ERO Ra "No. [He simply said: 'Dot bother Pe b t Ie the. Ee orfect solf coutrol of the guests | Sore PY U0 UE lastly oo me. ['ve got the toothache. "--Wash- es; he says be ean sever forget navian tribes and lastly the Norman balrcut that Delilnh gave Samson." ved the situation. " fugton Star. 4 conqiiest. The inhabitants of Englund Judge's Library. gu wis: ie an Ppp shireh that and the lowlands ef Scotland. there | ht : , | Sn c iperstitious bride fain at the al= | 000 cnrang Trot ale { eredity. 5 | A g from an amalgnmation ot | A Cure For Conceit. h Just as the pridegroom was about | Ter | "Cute INittle cuss," sald Siabsides, | a 4 the original Celtic with Gerwan aud Vv r A ? x | gnzing at Hawkins' baby, "but why | ery few men will venture to tell vod 3 the dickens do you suppose he's trying to get his toes Into his mouth all the time?" "Takes after "He's trying to mak --Harper's, b me. sald Hawkins. | e both ends meet." 1 Explaining It | "There is such a queer smell aftet the automobiles here besides the gaso- live." "I gness it must come from the road scorching."--&xchange. | They know not their own defects who search for defects in others.--Sanskrit | Proverb. FIREPROOF BUILDINGS. They Must Be fins! yzod as Such Apart From Their Contents. Many people think that the term "freproof" is a misvomer, that there 8 no such thing as a fireproof build- | Ing and that the use of the term gives | one too great a senses of secarity. | This attitude has been brought about | largely by the destruction or serious damages of certain dufl@ings that were supposed to have been fireproof and by ' the fact that many persons think be- canse a building is fireproof It should in some occult fashion prevent the con- tents from burning. It Is a matter of record that where buildings called Breproof have been destroyed they have been found to bave violated some fundamental prin- ciple of the really @ireproof building. A fireproof building must be consid- ered apart from its contents, for the strocture # can in vo way pre vent the "of combustible md: terial within it except the spread of | fre. RR Is true that su yet we have not d the This I os tet eat to compensate for body waste of losing welght continuously and draws {ng continuously on its store of energy, and although the body must periodis: and evergy in order to keep a more or! less even balance between the Income and the outgo, this maintenance of: welght and strength is not the motive, | "Primitive man and the lower animals may Le regarded as quite unacquatbted with notions of the equilibrium of mats istence in spite of this ignorance. nature generally important processefy such as the preservation of the indf are not left to be determined by intel Jectual considerations, but are provided for in automatic devices. ness, driving us to action, and only by; soslysis do we learn their origin or al not In convictions about metabolism,, but in the experiences of appetite and hunger." can officers that congress has recoge pized to the extent of permitting the' members to wenr the badge with thelg; uniform on proper occasions. the Order of the Dragon, established by commissioned officers of the army; at Peking lo 1000. commissioned officers of the American army and navy who served in China. . during the Boxer troubles, and therq are honorary members from other ar-: mies and navies which took part in the the Cincinnati, founded by French and: American officers at the close of the, American Revolution, the object of tha, soclety being to perpetuate a formed during the war.--New" ing to more than one authority, is no® resembling wood rot, and this is as-: cribed by some to a low orgnoism ike. the fungi and the molds that cause the disease, or at least a form of (reatment, | that diminishes its ravages. The stones barbers." what to do for a sick horse, hit any selfl.-- Louisville Courler-!coroal. P po pios!""--Judge. great or does great thiuogs. | bacco heart. likely to bring forth the answer, 'We supply tbe body with fuel for its lad rs.' Although the body fis In lly be supplied with fresh material r taking food. 4 r and evergy in the body, and ye ey take food and have an eficient ex 1 dual and the continuance of the race, Natural de- res and impulses arise in conscious ne thelr significance. Thus our pris ary reasons for eating are to be found Order of the Dragon. There 1s at least one order of Amerfs This is The members are, ampalgn of the allies. The society is milar in some ways to the Order of; § Stone Microbes. " The decay of building stones, accords: ue to wind action or other surface ioe uence, but to internal disintegration' ecay of vegetable substances. A cure has been found for the stood: re treated with germicides, the f which appears to be a mixture o ulpbate of copper solution with bl- hloride of mercury and creosote, Still Holding a Grudge. 3 "Blinkenstein stioply abhors women Oe bas some sort of a reason, 1 supe ody will tell you what to do for your Fruit of the Trea. "They bave a family tres, od 1 sup- "Yes, and the daonghters are pip- Without earnestness no man Is eves The Real Thing. "Do these emotional actresses over shed real tears?" asked Mrs. Grouehy between acts. "Snre," replied Mr. Grouch. "Every; now and then they hit a bum towwm and get a peak at the box office res ceipts."--Clncinnatt Enquirer, : Acquiesced. Charlie--The doctor gays | have a to Madge--! knew it all; along, dear. You always cared mord for your old pipe than you did for mes ~Judge. - Fluctuations of the Sun. It would appear from the al of the astronomers that the exa shape of the son is not known. 1 generally accepted idea that the pg is a spbere is, some bold, at least oped, to question. Practically every ser of measures shows departures from & spherical form. Of course the depars, tures, considering the great size of the, solar globe, are very minci-. There : seems to be a fluctuation iu 'h= shaps, of the sun corresponding in periad with the sun spot cyele. There are o'so 10e. dications of a fluctuation hrviig A Pes. riod of about twenty-eight days.--~Bxe, change. A Wisleading Sign. buililing, since even the best Breproot- jog material we have todny 1s some: what damageable by fires, but we can and do erect structiies that are prac tieally fireproof. The term "Qreproof® in. bulldiog cot struction means a eapability of with. She the grocery store a jar of marmalade in her band fire In her eye.

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