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North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 23 Oct 1913, p. 1

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'Reaidpnos, Queen 88, . Woo Houts--6 to 10 am; Lto3 pol and Eveniage. Telsphone: in offlue ad house, open n i .day over the lnes wooth, con the residence of G. T. Robuou, Port Pom, Nov, 15, 1804. WN. H. HARRIS, BALL. BARRISTER, &c., Buccessor to and occnpant. of the . Yarunold. - Ont. offices of the late F. Port Perse MONEY TO Lean. Private Funds ut 4 per cent, 1901. Jno. W. Orozier dre -Sori01TOR, Offios at réxidence, 6th Con. Es "(one mile west of Port Perty,)-- Monky 10 Loan. Tsvuor of Marriage Licnses. J. Crown Attornoy, Barriater, County Sol: oitor, &o., Notary Public ant Couveyanoer, Offios--Nouth wing Court Honse, Whithy, 1 Ont. "DR. R. L. GRAHAM Bucorssor 10 Dr. FD. McGraTray DENTIST PORT PERRY, ONT, J. A. Murray, DENTIST, Office over the Post Office. PORT I'ERRY. . All branches of Dentistry, inoludiny Crown and Bridge Work successfully practiced. 'ectli Gold, Silver, Aluminum Blues, Prices. to suit the times: North Outario Observer A Weekly Political, Agricultural and kantily Newspapar 18 POBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, ONT. EVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY H. PARSONS 8 er anu, if paid fn advance; not 61.50 Sl i a or oso tt, 0 wnt arvears aro paid up. fuied wEarERs ntatuing Toney, when addressed to i and registered bl lrg wipe 20 Shin Abrams ni easured charged according to the space ADVRRIISEMRNTS received for publication, with- : ut ape urdu, Shi sie nsered unt until 1 ment will be re out unl NE A LIBERAL discount sllewed to Merghs BERAL dios by the re to anh ed her THESE terms will In all cases be strictly adhered to JOB DEPARTMENT. Pamphlets Hand Bids, : Peogremy, Dodgers © Bill Heads, Checks | lester Heads, Wedding Invitations, Blank Forms Reosit Books ~ Busluesa Oars '% Bevks Olroulasrs, Assembly Curde, Visiting Curt, oe, ly Saorieh and Posters ied st have hos pinion Ske Boot mith CONVEYANGER, BE. FAREWELL, KC, LL.B., County REY. 0) v, Woraray, (Rooter, So a ries neh fmonth | TERE AEE R. LR omvRoN. : {REY RICHARDSON: > ; Third Sauday 4910 305. m, 11 JOS. BAIRD. ICKN<ED AUCTIONEER for Lica: oe rusia fale Si Fuver Office. Pat Manchester, Jan. 19, Tang sgtiied: TTT reg fied Tea DillonHinge-Stay Fence Mannfactired by the Qwen 8S ound Wire Fence Uo. Ltd. , and am bre paved to supply this 'whole vmmuiity with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this Coutinent and at prices that can uot fail to satisfy purchasers. The DiLLon Fence is without a peer. It 1s te BEST hecaus: if 1s fexible; it is a Square mesh ; its a perfect hinge-stay tence, theretore it is impos: ible to bend the stays in fact it is the best fence made 1 this or auy other country. Belore purchasing a a Wire don't [ail to inspect FENCE, Fence the DiLLox J. H. Brown, RICULTURAL ImpLE: ii Deacer Iv Ag Mu NTS AND of eed eae April Cb HARNESS 1} Ir nu tifrolug thanks tw the public for the patromaye' #xtended tome for over 3° years, I wouid respectfully intimate that T an, as ial, now ready for business, : nd bave a Large & Assorted Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS which I am determined to sell very CHEAP As an inducement to Casn purchasers =b Dissent of 10 pr oonl- will bo allowed on all Sales from now until Jaw, Lat next. All work belug 6 MADE BY HAND-€3 and no factory work kept in stock, the riled arity of my goods will at ence become Ap] Ne eoaing Barchasers will find that b giving mea eall before looking siemior Shey oan be suited Iu quality and price, m lang oxperience in the trade heing an adi le that perfect satisfaction given by any article purchased, -- line of business kept in m Band aad re Pepaite neatly and Se Toronto, 16th September, 1918. GRO. P. BSCHOLFIBLD, General Manager. Ase APPLES ----APPLES | on and after JOS. Port Perry, Angust 27, i 1913, WANTED AT THE EVAPORATOR 20 THOUSAND BUSHELS of any kind of Apples. gound and large enongh to peel-- the loth September--{for which The Bighest Price will bo paid that the Dried Apple Market will afford. Parties having apples for the Evaporator are: requested requested to bring them in early as possible, vill they begin to decay or are frosted Ro as Sri rR ci ox Don't wait Sei Jo PH Ad Or Ca igeloww. E. A. ADAMS, BellPhone No. 41 FIRE LIFE Real Estate IH. G. HUTCIIESON, Bell Phone Office No. 6 Residence, No. 4 ADAMS & HUTCHESON SUCCESSORS TO DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS INSURANGE MARINE ACCIDENT | Mortgage Loans | Steamship Tickets Office Port Perry as follows : Goiny North-- 9.00 a. m. Going Sonth--11.20 a. m, Going North-- 6.15 p. m, Going South--10 p.m, Central Livery PORT T PERRY. have k Port Perry, I rs Vay I haye removea a Livery Establish Mails Close. The mailg are deopatatied from the Pox ; | | He thanking the public for the ral prisaage 'se received daring the ve much pleasure i» | CANADIAN PACIFIC HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS ve they published a a letter without the the writer, and never allowed these confi- get out of their pos- ousands will attest. it volume of experience draw from, it is more : Out Sas except your good has helped thou- i Medicine Co., (con- fidential) Every ought to have ham's 80-page tis not a book for is free and only mall, Write for Montreal has commen ay, and all La Press :--""Autumn dd. It 1sin our coun- hers of similar Jati- ude, a scasogiat continuous labor, lor everything nrges us, In 1mitation it the aut, toifpake provision for all kids lor thy «cheerless days of winter. Ta GApada it is the scason wheu the farmer can take account ot the result, his "labor. Happy pend dy it toeghrvest be good ! The Darus are § grain, the out- y and: fruits. 'brought ill not fail to reco- the "epulchettes" 'which the young 3d [0 make seasons ol g cater ghjoyneot. In the towns, covery oe tries lo lay by something for the days thit will inevitably be lost in winters, \Woe to those who like the 'cricket in Lalontaine's fable, have sung and amused them- selves rather than laboured, in the 3 they have prepared tor themselves a terrible reckoning when shall "come the snows and nurricangs 'of winter. Autumn landscape of our Canada :8que guise. Under its gh caresses our for- ues multi-colored and before their leaves 9 the four irts.' up on the ect with ngted by the holiday brings in the domestic ore Calm perhaps than ayfof summer, but none IONS FOR INSURANCE ously: pegotiated and put vapid transit system-- ou receipt of applica- AUTHOR- stnast, ir. Pel- rl Within two 'have a telescope | ir Saaical Greal the Auto Society of i United 'States "and | other influential scientists and scien- | tific bodies, with the result that contracts have been awarded for a telescope and equipment to cost over $90,0do. The mechanical por- tion will be supplied by Warne and Swasey, of Cleveland, and the op- tical part by the John A, Brasheau Company, Pittsburg. The chief compuiient parts of the other con- tract 1s the silvered mirror, six feet in diameter, the glass for which will have to be obtamed in France. Being of such a large mass, it will take eight months 10 anneal or cool off alter being moulded. These firms are the concerns which sup- plied he telescope now installed at the Dominion Observatiory. While the location of this new and pow erful telescope has not been decided u,on, there is every prob- abuity that it will be mounted in Ottawa in the vicinity of the pre- sent cb ervatory. This would, in the first place, obviate the consider- able expense of maintaining a sep - arate staff of astonomers, which would be entailed by the establish- ment of another observatory at some distant point. Besides in- vestigation made during the past few months appears to have estab- lished the fact that atmospheric conditions at the Central Experi- mental Farm, where the existing observatory is situated, are not so greatly surpassed even in the Mouu- tain regions of the West as to justify a separate location for the new tel- escope. lndecd the work doue by the Ottawa Observatory, even with the modest equipment at the dispos al of the observatory staff, has been such as to evoke the commendation of British and American astronom- ers, a circumatance which indicates the existence of Jhighly FH ions for ghseryation, BicorsT IN EXISTENGE The new telescope will be of the reflecting kind, the cbjective of which is a mirror ot silvered glass ground to the shape of a paraboloid. Its diameter will be, as stated 72 inches. A telescope of simila di- mensions was constructed for the observatory of Lord Ross, but it is out of commission owing to inper~ fections in construction. It is pro- posed to build one of roo inches diameter for an observatory at Mount Watson, in California, but ithas not yet been demonstrated that it :s possible to perfect a glass of that size. Five feet, which is the diameter of the telescope at Pasa dena, California, isthe present limit of size of telescopes 1n use, so that the Canadian instrument, when in- stalled, will be the largest in the world. Last session Parliament appro priated $10,000 towards the intial expenses of the enterprise, Upon the return of Hon Dr. Roche, Minister of Interior, himself a man] ot scientific attainments, the pro- ject received new impetus. He fully endorsed the recommendation the chief 'astronomer, whose rosy dream of a high-powered instrument for the purpose of astronomical re- search in Canada has found realiza tion in the placing of contracts by order-in-Council based upon Hon. Dr. Roche's report. you put on your child's skin gets futothe aysicrn just as surely as food the child eats. Don't Jot 18and mineral coloring One of the "most in plicable 0 | forms of dream is the propbetic one of which 'abound. Bolaw. adian By ill be through | Marion & i "real, Ques 10ke sumer and forced d apparatus." 150,626-- John H, Gill, Dunedin, Automatic apparatus for controlli artificial illumination. 150,628--Paul Girod, Ugine (Sav- oie), France. Process for refining liquid steel. 150,711--Dr. Ridolt Adler, Amster Holland. Process for manufacturing phosphatid Albumen compoundsieem fis tgolrilie. Kidolf Adler, Amster- dam, Holland. Process of manufacturing an-elas- tic rubber like maternal. 150,743--C. Brownlee & J. Morris, Kewlttin, Oot; Grain car door. 150,760--Saluste Cloutier, St. Pam- philie (L'Islet), Que. Ace- tylinesgas generator. 150,810-- Roderick J. Morrison, Cal- edonian Mines, C. B.--N. S. Wrench. ames F. G. Roberts, ellington, New Zealand. Portable cooking appar: atus, Write for a free copy of "The Inventor's Adviser." SACRIFICES NOT REQUIRED BY 60D Sacrifices Under the Jewish Law and Their Antitypes. 150,823-- Pastor Russell's Frea::ing--W4hy Not "Fashionable" --Why It Is Doc- trinal--Eati sg God's Word--Ung ined re. [ngesisabls ert. 10: Rewards of Accepted Sacrifices. Lk Li re one of Pas tor Fussell's dis- courses for to-day, trom the text, "'Sacrifices and of- fering and burnt offeri and of or sin Thou tl wouldst not, nei- | ther hadst pleas- 8] ure sherein; which are offered by Law," -- Hebrews 10:8. Before discus sing bis text, the Pastor answered the queries uf those who ask why he docs pot preach "fashionable" ser- mons--digests of leading magasine articles, dissertations on scientific progress, pu arks, better hous ing tor the poor, discourses on intem- perance, the social evil, etc. His re ply is that he has a different ordina- tion, which r. 1, "The Epirit of the Lord God ie upon me; because le hath aupnointed me to preach good tidings to tl» meek." The Master and the Apostles set th: standard which: he believes should be followed. He follows their exawple, not considering himself wise Spoueh t) imrrove upo. their methods. Jesus' preaching was along the simplest doctrinal lines, because none of Hin hearers were begotten of the Holy Bpirit. The Divine thought is expres. that inners in the Christian w. y should 'desire the sincere milk ¢' the Word," whereas advanced Ohristians should feed upon strong meat. Noth else can satisfy souls hungering and thirsting after righ Unrequired and Undesirable Sacrifices The Pastor then discussed his text. Bt. Paul is Soin The Fr the fortieth Psalm. rub + Frophet David God declared sacrifices of the Law, a at le never teilly cancel sin, were not to His please. ment. Christ is bere noting that the typical Id not remove own sacrifices i pil, that His the period of |" Tiers. ig the Spper TOOIm cost weré the first to be | the Holy Spirit, and to | teplatle sacrifices. Since have been received from every Daw tion. Boon the joretiained 5 gumbst of such sacrificers, or have completed the L [re beyond the veil. Forthwith the Mess slanic Kingdom will be established for the blessing of all mankind, During # this Gospel Age a special fiat nea operates, by which Barc have: their Uefieliiries fo y ist's merit us maki them acceptable sacrificers." Blanket Tre «. § When a native of Ecuador wants & blanket he cuts one from a dimaja~ gua tree. UP AT HUDSON BAY. ~~ Locators of Towusite Tell of an Inter esting Members of the Dominion Govern- ment hydrographic survey party gent; to locate a harbor at Port Nelson, thé future terminus of the Hudsom B » Railway, have brought back to civili~ zation Interesting talés of a winter spent in that outpost of civilization. Leaving Winnipeg on June 10, 191%, the overland party, eonsisting of four engineers, six half-breeds and six In- dians, went by foot as far as Norway, House. From here the journey was br canoe down the Hayes River to York Factory, hich was early in the month of July. Port Nei- son, the final destination, lay across the mouth of the river, some fifteen or sixteen miles from York Factory: The locality chosen as ti > site of & future * 'snd temminusg rat! hey ground covered with p of small spruce and tamarae. Mos- quitoes and black files abounded, and added their quota to the discomforts: of the party. Tha, first few days, of course, were spent in the erection of a summer camp, tents being pitched and provisions stored for the fall. Early in October several log shanties were constructed, and into the com- parative comfort of these the men moved during that month. Tha winter sets in early in latitude. 67 degrees north, and the working day soon contfacted to the period be- tween 8.30 a.m. and 4 pm. The sounding was co.linted throughous the winter, the channel being frozen. over for a distance of twelve or thir teen miles from shore. Each morn- ing the party left the comfortable log, hut headquarters and proceeded to. the spot set out for the day's Spon. tions. Here a tent was generally, pitched on the ice and a hole broken, ; through which the apparatus could, be lowered into the water. If far: from headquarters the members of the party ate their lunch in the tent, and thus saved a mid-day trip to the, shore. In this way the channel was, sounded directly out to the opr 1 wat=, er during a winter where the average temperature was 23 degrees below! 5er0. 3 But what of the nights? miles away was York Fac Soverst its handful of souls--the factor and. his family, the ministor and his wife, and a few traders. York Factory of- fered little in the way of sdcial em; Joyment. The result was that the party spent the long evenings a, headquarters, amusing themselves with cards or reading the small lib= rary brought in under considerable. hardship. One hundred and fifty re- cords and a phonograph chased away, boredom for awhile, but reeords cal become stale even at Port Nelson, and the "canned" music gave way to! the rather less stilted of a three-piece string orch Once or twice in the long winter Ponsioy. vas | broken ny calls from Pghe Tus osiing Bais PEI

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