Durham Region Newspapers banner

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 24 Apr 1919, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Es « I 8 BASIER TO MISTAKE OUR x CORONEL YOR ONTARIO co. pAxos Qomsx St, Port Prey Rr hours; --8--10 a.m. 1--8 p.m' venings. Telephone donsestion over Bell and Independent | ines. WM. H. HARRIS, B.A. LLB. BARRISTER, &e., Sa Re FEE Poxs Perry, - On. -- MONEY TO LOAN. Private Funds at 4 per cen. 188. Jno. W. @rozier Jan. Sagiorron, CeNVEYANGER, : Offion ab residence, 6th Con £4 our mile west of Port Perry Monxy we Loan. Issuer of Marriage Licenses. B. FAREWRLL,%.C., LL.B., Coun J.8 Cyown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- Notary Public and Cenveyanoer. th wing A House, Whitby, Phones --Bell 68 r 2. Ind. goo: J.B. Lundy, L.D.8,D.D.8 DENTAL SURGEON [Suecessor to Dr. R.'L. Graham] Graduate, Royal Collega of Dental Sar- - geans and University of Toronto. Office - PORT PHRRY, Ont DENTIST & -Co., J.D. McMaster, V.S. Office In McRee's Livety PORT PERRY, ONT. : XV. J. FORD, Preven. ; | Sot sr 3 sn ts Maro | Weasigeaing Berries, y. 1.0. CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION, (ANGLICAT) 4 REV, C.F. STENT, B.A., L. Th. literostat Sarreut rele, PORT PERRY BRANC Services at 11.00 a.m. oniy. Services of I ion every at 8 p.m, R. 0. CHURCH. REV PATHNRR KRAXE Third Sunday 2110.00 a.m. ba Dillon Hinge-StayFence Manufactured by the Owen Sound Wire Fenoe Uo. Ltd, and am prepared to Aupply 7 whole community with the very BEST WIKE FENCE produced on this Continent and at prices that can not fail to satisfy purchasers. The Ditron Franck is without a peer. It is the BEST because it is flaxible ; it is a square mesh ; itis a perfact hiige-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 Fehae don't fail to inspect the Dirrow Fence, J. H. Brown, Dracgr 1v AGRICULTURAL [MPLR MENTS AND Maciingny, Seaoxave April 6, 190s. 9 Digss and Mantls Maker \ ISHES to inform the ladies /V that she has moved to the rooms formerly occupied by her over Mr. Byer's Drug Store where she is prepared to execute all or ders for Dress and Mantle MaRing in a manner unsutpassed for Correctness of Style and Charming Effect. Real Hstate G. HUTCHESON, Bell Phone Office No. 6 Residence No. 4 ADAMS & HUTCHESON SUCCESSOKS TO DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS INSURANCE ics Mortgage Loans| Steamship Tickets i [Trews - $! WHOLE No.7629 ologieal survey Department of d 70.913 pre- the last three ited in a direct it nearly $5,500, stockmen of the | tion. The total 19165, when the includes 60,473 ts, 1,829 wolves, and 137 bears. experts cstimate hat the annualidepredations among Mmm memane § 'nnomnnn 7 Mmmamarn 6 GREAT TAIN. mamean 5 aaaMANeRa®n a CN AAI a A yl i a aoa ASanAnH M COMPARED WITH OTHER NATIONS ON THE BASIS OF THE NUMBER OF ANIMALS TO THE HUNDRED ACRES OF ALAND IN FARMS ,CAUBIS RAK AS. A CATTLE PRODUCER, 7 (oF 7 7 7 BF 1 (57 0 BF °F -- Tee TTL conuany. PF OF FF BY RF (57 7 (57 7 FF 7 7 97 0 se SIAL. pT er RT RY 7 (7 1 7 RY 7 POT 07 1 4 prance. 7 (OFF OF °F 197 OOF OF 157 IF PY OT; : dada dads do dod do doll COMPARED WITH OTHER susraua OF BF FF OF 7 PY RY °F .8 NATIONS ON THE BASIS OF . THE NUMBER OF | length. A eoyote 1 Hunters Have Wolves. effected by single are as follows: | ; k-killing grizzly Main don, $5005 © eireumstances did the Sun-God pro | mise the Blackfeet that if they held coyote, $50. The | | babeat i Canada are not available, parison with this Being employed to de- s prowling animals l that prey on sheep and cattle Government hanter shot two male wolves which had kills and seven colts on two Wyoming Fnches, {ropoer bagged a pair of old wolves | rd of killing $4,000 worth of Mye stock a year A third rapper destroyed 85 coyotes and two month, using six traps over a trap line to 100 miles in was recently cap whila' another destroyed §75 HOW TO AVOID BACKACHE AiD } t Flt) Wag norvous, pn - BC hes, Ry back ached all the time. | fii I was tired and had no good, I read sbout Lydia I. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and what it had done for women, so I tried it. My nervousness and backacho and headaches en eared. = I gained in weight and feel fine, 80 I can honestly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegos table Compound to any Toman who is suffering ns I was."'-- Ars, ADELINE B. Lynon, 100 Plain &L Providence, R. 1. Backache and nervousness are s mp- toms or nalure's warnings, which in- dicate a functional disturbance or an unhealthy condition which often devel: ops into a more serious ailment. Women in this condition should not continue to ag along without help, but rofit by Mrs. Tynch 8 experiel née, "and this famous root and herb remedy, i Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- und--and for special advice write to ydia E. Pinkham Med. Co. , Lynn, Mass. But most ur te thiliy ana more stories are of Indian origin, and very pretty some of them are. The author 8 made a larger, more soberly garbed collection of Indian tales for scientific purposes, and these are a selection of the ones niost attractive to children. The blend of the natural 8 1a supernatural is ofter delight. ful Where did the Northern Lights come from; why does the bluejay stay in the north and the wood- pecker fly away south in wintertime, though they are intimate and are dr »d alike in summer; under what aft dnnuval dance in his honor their pick would be healéd! when dld the 4 | Partridge learn to drum; why does Stockmen in sections where the | | predatory anfmals are obnoxious are aided by the Government in ridding the ranges of such rogues. the bear eat fish; why does the moose travel alone, and why do the carl | bou travel in herds?---such are the In some | ok s associates 1 i questions these stories answer The Jriter Rssures us shat many. be them t Are ores Amp. fires. Some of them have a finely poetic quality, as, for example, the tale called "How Summer Came to Canada," It is slighter than the story | of Persephone, but of almost as fine stuff, 8o. with the" account of the origin of the Northern Lights a gtory of the reunion of & man and his wife after long separation and {| much tribulation They were happy again, It was a cold autumn night and the moon was full, and his wife said: "We must not stay here. This is a wicked placé | where men forget If you stay hers, 'my boy, 1 Wonder 11--'" fle put his | ¢ther hand in bis pocket and drew out a letter. "1 don't approve of this-- much, I don't have any {dea what's Inside, but Fm going to leave it with you." Philip took the letter eagerly nnd scanned the address. It was written In a wather a nr 'eminine hand on Puzzled, he slid hig trench knife un- der the flap nud drew out the closely written folded pages. The letter bes gan: "Dear Mr. Sumeloly: Before Fou r¥al hiy letter I'm going to ask | | whether or not yow are getting mail | from home and friends, ¥ you are, will you please glve this to someone who ls not, for this is not your letter, then, but his, I am writing to a lonely tah wlio has no cne to care about him =mnot to you." Philip paused. Strange that the chaplain had folloived the directions go clogely without divining the con- tefits, He turned again to the letter. Surely the letter had reached its ine tended destination. Who else had a better vight to it than he? Then sud- denly a revulsion of feeling seized him. He didn't want sympathy, he didn't want to read a lot of Sundny school stuff about patiently bearing one's lot did belly sustained by pride in what he was dolby Ills eyes ran rebelliously over the next few 'words, then be read more engerly, and before he knew it---but lot 08 read the letters "First of al)" it ran, "Tm going to wih a onto you, Mr, Somes body-----my | And I'm going to tell you all at what we've been lolng Maybe you'll want to hear sbont them and maybe you won't, but I absolutely refuse to sy your loneliness and wil things Nke that. And 'as have something to putinto will just have to be patler going to speak of as all fc "To begin, } Peahod across and gave Dad ¢ department head that he bad years age Oh, you « what It meant tous! Or, 1 of course. When p that night and tol stood. right up in the dir room table and started to regite Webster's oration, knocking over my vase of clove shrub, the first out of the ETC YE PTITR A URI TION TRDTE- | cloth that had taken me forty-seven minutes to iron gut 1 was giving humor, of course i kissed: him snd ordered hip Lott gave Dad a hug that str led him and marched right uy stairs and returned with everyone everyone-mind you, of ber old dresses over her arm." **Now, 8is,' she demanded give these to the poor Harbi away, and get that pink-embroide voile and the Peter Tom . suit tor row? to torgiYe you, sweetheart: I'm oo Bt to ise the hem ae dainty little dress, I sdore you always will. But since I got ter I determined to live and g8 es you, Befolg, I resented every. the other fellows got pie There, the post's going out and 5, but I'll write leity conducts all, "Let 'Em OR First!" Acts Like a Tonle en This Writer. we That dey does not start right when § fio net go to work by public convey: ance. I can motor to work, or I can walk, as I sometimos do, and hear ail the sounds Incident to busy st the honking of Norn, the whisties of the traffic policemen and the sh ! of nowsboys. These All help In Wa In kéy for the day's wot hey do not take the place of the con ductor's plea to the clamorous crewds on the rallway platforms, "Let 'em off first 1" > The command Is gives {A & tone of au ty that fofies the: people td staid back. You meditate upon what would happen but for the trainman's solicitude for his passengers. The little blond stenographer who sat beside you would without doubt be carried td the next station, or maybe a dozer gtotions beyond, and, being late, bé 1. You yourself, for that matter, might be whisked on past yout station and fall Into 4 passion that would cause your breakfast to sour and maké you surly all day. And there is alwi§s tragedy In that frame of mind, Shed a man has to be placid these days of lose his merves, his job, and every thing. "Let 'em off first"~the command affects ome in another way, too. If carries a suggestion that one wants té get off, and that suggestion presently works itself Into on command to you td et off--a sort Of challenge to stay est if you dare You battle the suggestioh manfully ne station to another, until, by time you reach your stop, youf mind is keyed up to tbneeft pitch} yod & thoroughly awske, and attack yout day's work with an energy that is uns known to the man who, immersed if his worning papers, is lost to what 18 going on around him~T. C. O'Doanell in Cédrtoons Maguzine. Ot u nurde 00 Pi LE} y | other night in the village Bagundi ia Bixirhat, India. It is reported that # married Mahomedan woman was i} for three days and her husband after obtaining all the available assistance without 'any effet sat b¥ thé Side of Is wife on the Verlinda when some unknown persons got over the bouns dary wall and one of them fired a gud toward the couple. The husbihd wad shot in the chest and died on the kpol end a bullet passed through the HF of his wife. Vigorous inquiry Is pré= ceeding but fio trace of the culprits had Ertl do dade dn dadn 8 ANIMALS TO THE Our charges are consistent with HUNDRED ACRES OF | Worth of sheep in ong week. Two | shuddered when she thought that her 1 wns to promige any worder ascertainoi ET of fn fn fl 4 [Ar MORTON M. GIBSON, the value given. LAND IN FARMS. { 'wol '%, seven niountain lions and a | husband might forget her again, and my dear sir, b the while was a ONTARIO & DOMINION Port Pert. Apis § d | sige grfealy eur, the largest of its | he shuddered whan ho thought that thinking how fine it woul ) have | The Reason Why People "Donk : ¥. Ap + 1909. Specivs hidod in the © Yellowstone | he 'might lose her again. And they the money f he milk and Li and "Can't Jat." LAND SURVEYOR| 7 Ss TER : ¢ { Park ateiioh aro the Kill of another { continued 0 tremble' in fear. Then ' y Fd grbeers mat witl |e Uhicle Sam's sharpshoolers. These | she said, "We must go to another fo sit uy id " ine To ar. greater extont than wi restils are typical of (he eampaign laniél It is a more beautiful land how. to make. the r possibly are aware of, mail (Buocsssor to to the late W. BE. Varnold, ~------FOR THE Ontario Land Burveyor, of Port Perry.) OLD RELIABLE : ; : han this, It 18 the Land of Wternal ongy: stretel in: govertiod by his vrejud CANADAS RANK AS A SHEEP PRODUCER ce Le er isos. | Memory, where len and women ne¥s| - "Well, that's t hi a hejulies, Ane ange country of predatory animuls ol st him more than he knows, for & RB obobobobobobol Bob RoR Badohohohakafiol 5 er forget those they love i] WHITBY lovers as they were transformed into when be was shaving I heard him =% it 3 ether respeet is this Weakness Rhone 231 f hill \ Hq NEHER ERR ERRWITW_S58 Canadian and madé immortal in the Northern ting. Wasn't it w fu y apparent as ih the Matier 62 food: Lights is a beautiful sight for Cana- "The house painted with mahogany any people were persuads on | : urseries i a) databatababs bid ih aniashohatsdalabal Wonder Tales 3 teliomings: TE was a dear of % hous beguiled. into eating things a x . ougl y "didn't like" "TI t I pvbwmyiwwns Be usually Snetived to | 4 lovely whi But Mr Emery h ad ted mile deb regarded hel ¥ say that Canada has no & ; 1 . A Letter To ime of stories collected by Cyrus 'Macmillan and entitled COMPARED WITH OTHER ¥ that. auch. is' not. the Sand J NATIONS ON THE BASIS i ; 0 seck for them. { ANIMALS TO THE given to this volume | you will forget me again." Then she yet been found tivt the motive of the smi TH & smi FH LAND SURVEYORS AND [p. .. . = Shand Tress sect lig ENGINEERS iy seplacing, nEERRRRRRRRER RRS PHONES DA ) « - 8022 WAR GARDENS MRE ER ES , T. call for small fruits, early hearing LINDSAY, ON fruit trees, Asparagus, Rhubarb sd hphadabahahahihadabe nt plants ete: mum EEwE_6 North Ontario Observer The demand Tor Ormamental Stock : whwn.4 A'Waakly Political, Agricultural and | in towns and villages is large. Fe | made a fortune in munitions and building a stone addition to it. Im % Yet our likings are almost agine! Bome way I think houses are 1 crsally a matter of habit estab- RBke people, don't you? I , they | lished by repetition, Few of us hart show what kind of people live In them, | taken kindly to ecaviare, Sveeado Our louse looks like the e of poor ' y olives, on first genteel, a8 we're ustiglly called. Vines (and things growing up to hide places where we need a carpenter and painter iinded concession to the un+ ise of whale meat was urged upon the public, people Isughed and quoted: 2 Soe The tre bo AHA sd Jooks tan 3 *ars younger. and Inst itght |'P is an expensive pripesition HNEEERERRRE ERE REE EE Re h : The trembling of these fesnited Jooks ten r n p Emerys next dour are having ) reign of the fo8d admins | dian children tholr Rabhobobabal al Bo BEY ; S4-3040 ¥ a A before ti > bought ft. Aha Jaoked so | they had never eaten before and A recent vol. " Mr. Somebody onder Tales! furnishes find folk stories if you | OF THE NUMBER OF By LCUIsE OLIVER It's like shoe po on an old pair of Family Newspaper 3 Is PUBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, ONT. Secure a paying Age ncy with liberal commissiohs, Xp rience not necessary. STONE & WELLINGTON, Established 1837) Toronto, ONT on hi to ai to him tn He wo Bath practice HUNDRED ACRES OF | LAND IN FARMS them The. Dominion of Canada offers ~ War-Savings Stamps ch ea during thls month em for §5 each that its contents are ot ofie source but two-- | french. At the very | ire transported back to en Canada was ruled pire, who came Gul as of the French King, In stately houses, sur- ng, simple in France, of astern and Eo be- i' upon 'decelving nan intrigue The Shrove ther tale that in origin I pil 'cards. Someone ha | smtyone. By George, here comes Bandy | yb lain? Well, this is my day." (Copyright, 1918, by the McClure Newspa~ P@ Syndicate.) Philip sat thoughtfully down on the | fire step of the trench. The German musrketry had ceased for the time and | was quict along the line. Three of | Ril was quie er Ae or not--but I just have to tell you the men in his platoon had been | | wounded and taken back to the first nid stations behind the lines. But he hadn't a scratch. Heside Wm, crouctilng in a varlety of attitudes, were five o the boys tudes, Rye, dow a dog-eared, muddy pack, and now they were having a round of Jackpots. The entire crowd had an aggregate of less than a dollar, all told. "Come on In, Pearson, the betting's fine," called Dorgan. "Sky's the Hmit."" But Phillp shook his head. "It hurts my finer feellngs to see my fellow be- {ngs risking their Lmwmortal souls, I| can't be a party to the oulragoe, De sides, I'm broke." "Poor Phill" = Dorgan dfew threa cards. "Lonely again." "Who's he got to be loncly for?' Kearney, new to the company, éldn't know Phil's history. "Nobody. That's the trouble. We cusses here think wc're killed becausd We can't See our folks. But did you ever think what it meant not to have amy folks to get homesick for? That's, Phil's trouble. Fe just naturally hast't got anybody. That's what he's think- ing this minute. I'll bet a fitney. Nev- er gets any mail--never hears from sow with letters. Hurrah! The mall's n, Jimmy! All those for me, chap< Philip sat stolidly on the fire step without moviag, He knew the chap- Iain had no mail for Lim. All the oti er boys were busily tearing epen let. ters and papers and hungrily devouring | t every word. Then the chaplain stopped In front hors, But I think If one's shoes are | old, it's better to hive: them polished than not, don't you? "But talking of the house and vine: brings ne to my hobby. Aly v I don't know whether yeu like flowers about it. Just now I'm writing out here In an old green swing under a pink heaven of blossoms. The troes are all out and the birds are fairly bursting thelr little throats for joy. "And the bed of white and red (4- fips over the fence is blooming so bravely---it Is as good as a sermon on courage, And over by the shed--but of course you can't see the ghed for the bushes. : I'll just have to tell you it's there--the lilacs are coming out. Can't you Buell that exquisite deliciousness away over there in your trench? Surely heaven will have hedges of llack. And the shrubs are out--the snowballs a lovely tender greenish white. How I wish you coull sce It, Mr. Somerody. "And now, I'm going to tell you a secret. I hadn't Intended to, but some- way I feel that you are sympathetie, that you'll understand, "I have a soldler, a lonely soldier. Ie must be away over In France, and it Is my fuult he is lonely, for we quar- reled and he went away, and now I can't find out where he in Ro after all, this is his letter you are getting. Oh, I wish someone would write to him --for he is lonely, I know. He had no- body but me. And, ob, if I only knew, 80 I could ssk hini to forgive. "This is all for this time, Mr. Some: body. If you like my letter and send me your name and address, I'll write again, "Faithfully yours, "Elizabeth Downing, "Somerset, Mass." This was Philip's atiswer! "Dearest Little Betty.--Mr. Some- body got your letter, and what do you think? It was L You see God must of him and put a hand on his shondder. | have guided it here. So vou went me He baited his hook with fgets talls; at. on a rock and fished for Whale meat is purchasable in many parts of Canada, but where is the steward or chet brave enough to place it on a tel menu? As a mats | ter of fact, there is nothing in the | glightest degree objectionable tg eyes | nose or palate in whale # those SArresndioad ra¥ learn. It resembles corned b less. : possibly alittle so; a ST and served with a sauce, &f drawn butter or a lemon sauce, is tasty enough for a sccond help noe we have overcome our dread the untried. © That this meat eventaslle be recognised aH & f adjonet 15 ludicated by two large tanneries doing a good business on the Poeific Coast and the concessions | granted to the syndicate supplying them. The ficsh of the shark is said {& resemble hat of the sturgeon -- the. fish that 'goes to the Caesar's nis hut it's cannibalistic reputa firmly fixed in the popular mi against ¥t, Man's dread of the: | tronorifeally untried is only equal bv his curiosity, which after all gets. he Lotter of his fears. Truly, he I was a brave man who first swallows {ed a raw oyster. Prejudice plays a large part in our food purchascs. Take the ease of . Butter versus I Be perts in the former have been { to fail in abillly to aistinguith two, yet Wwe are willing to pay per cent. iore for butter than the substitute. The prejudice goods from storage helps bolst cost of living, Were it not ate facilities butter and cg would be luxuvics for. thé ouly. The public wis resent ably informed tat proved fresher than rabbit would furyish food tur if our 'don' in the way. As. "can't eat' and. "f« mainly payehclogieal hati and prejudice,' i

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy