atisfying meats. ~~ If you want it good : BERT MacGREGOR | Wildotherest. Ringup Phone". "i. and Rubbers 'bag 'of our Reindeer Flour. It Tey 2 bap of or "$A per cut. : : Our grocery r stock is alwa lete. Almost anything Sok need in this line you ean get here. We have a few pairs of heavy rubbers left which we are going to sell at cost rather than carry them over. This is . aE : -your opportunity } Our stock of Clover and Field Seeds are all in now. If you save n't cost you any more you money. "PORT PERRY, ONT. buy early you will be sure of g what you want. It makes great bread. n | H. Smith, an published in Toron old | the north by to see his 80th birthday. : The funeral which was held on Sunday from his late residence and was largely a ed. 4 Mrs. Ferguson and friends have the sympathy of the whole community in their sad loss. ' i Mr. John Millman has returned to his home here after spending the winter. months with his daughter in Toronto, . = - : 'Mrs, Ed. McCulloch and Mrs, Find- lay Munroe, spent a few days last week with friends in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Amos Rodd of Green- bank visited one day last week with Mr. and Mrs. Pascoe Luke. . Quite a number from here attended the supper and play at Bethesda last Friday night. 2 Mr. and Mrs, Milton Prentice and family of Sonya, visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Millman. Mrs. Barkey of Stouffville and Mrs. Shortiss of Toronto, visited recently with Mrs. John Ferguson. *. Mrs. Ed. Lyle and Mrs, S. Porteous of Prince Albert, attended the funeral of the late John Ferguson. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kerry of Utica, visited recently with Mr, and Mrs. Walter Rogers. In the issue of March 10th it should have been reported that Utica Young e took charge of the service, in- stead of Epsom, as reported. --0iin SEAGRAVE The flooding of the Nonquon creek during last week was the greatest in many years. It was necessary to use explosives to remove the jam of ice 'at the b that was holding the ut fifty people ered at the ; of Mr: sd Mi. John Marks on | Smith, published | was formerly called Windsor, and the settlement on the shore of "1 order to distinguish it from G a os was obtained c id advance we I a 'accurate idea of the conditions met by our 'conditions moulded by them in such a way perous opportunity. "Smith's Canadian Gazetteer" edited by W. * _ A township in the Home District; is bounded on the east by 'the township of Cartwright, and a small portion of Mariposa, on ¢ Brock; on the west by Scott and Uxbridge, and on the south by Whitby. In Reach 24,152 acres are taken up, 4,678 of which are under cultivation. The South-western extremity of Scugog Lake projects into the east of the township. The town- ship of Reach contains some excellent land, particularly in its west and centre, where the timber is principally hardwood; in fhat portion of the township bordering on the lake, the timber is mostly pine. Five hundred acres of Crown lands are open for sale in Reach, at 8s. c'y per acre. A village, called "Prince Albert" is situated in the township, on the road leading from Windsor Bay to Skugog, and there are also five saw mills in the township. Population in 1842 1,052. - Ratable property in the township, £14,932. PRINCE ALBERT A village in the township of Reach, situated a little east of the centre of the township, about fourteen miles north from Oshawa, (The Port Office for the township of Reach is kept here; post ev Thursday. Population, about 200. There is in the village a Methodist church, five stores, two taverns, two asheries, one blacksmith, one wagon maker, two shoemakers, and two tailors. WINDSOR A village in the township of Whitby, situated on the eastern road, two miles from Windsor Bay, and about 31 from Toronto. The plank road from the bay to Skugog Lake passes through the village. There is a Congregational church in the village. Population about 500. Post Office, post every day. Professions or trades--Two physicians and surgeons, two lawyers, two druggists, one bookseller and stationer, three tav- erns, one watchmaker, one brewery, three saddlers, two cabinet makers, one chairmaker, one fanning mill maker, two wagon makers, one tinsmith, one baker, three blacksmiths, four shoe- makers, four tailors. About one mile east from the village is a small settlement called "Windsor East." ' WINDSOR HARBOUR A village and shipping place in the township of Whitby, situ- ated on Lake Ontario, about thirty-two miles from Toronto. An excellent harbour has been formed here, by constructing a break- water and building two piers; within the breakwater is enclosed a basin of about 120 acres in extent, which when completed will have a depth of ten feet. The width of the channel, at its en- trance, between the piers is two hundred and fifty feet; and there is a light-house on the west pier. Up to July 1st, 1844, £15,355 was expended on this harbour. A plank road is in course 'of formation from the harbour to Skugog Lake. The Steamboat "America" (a British boat) calls here daily, on her passage to and from Rochester and Toronto. Seven schooners whose collective tonnage amounts to about 400 tons, are owned here. Windsor Harbour is a port of entry and has a resident collector of customs. There are two churches in the village, Episcopal (built of stone) and Methodist. Population about 250. Professions and Trades--One brewery, three stores, four taverns, one saddler, two blacksmiths, two shoemakers, two tailors, one wheelwright, one baker, one ship carpenter. Exports from the Port of Windsor during the season of 1844 21,697 Barrels 1,485 Barrels 610 Barrels 285 Barrels 120 Barrels 14'563 Bushels 1,682 Bushels 290 Bushels 1,176 Bushels 1,240 Bushels 32 kegs 32 Firkins 14,000 pounds 646,000 feet caves Ge stses ranean rans oe ¥ Extracts from "Cangda, Past, Present and Future" by W. H. in Toronto in 1851. "From Duffin's Creek to Whitby is six miles. This village known as Windsor Bay and Windsor Harbour. In the frequency of mistakes from the name, and in Windsor in the Western District, an hanging the name to Whitby; | Big Bay was consequence of the village at the bay was included in the limits assigned to it. and Wllage 21 known as Port Whitby. Whitby or Windsor, how- ever, been long known as "Perry's Corners," so called after "old and enterorising settler M3 Tote Parry 3 and, hia og continues to hold with a large y of the old settlers in ghborhood; and will -to do_so while the present tion lasts, in spite of Acts of Parliament. | Whitby is a place of considerable business, notwithstanding estitute of what is generally considered in America a sine non, in the selection of sites for the erection of towns and water privilege. The formation, some years Scugog by the Government,.as an ad- the effect of considerably increasing y giving the farmer facilities for e hn nd in the forefront of nations in point of whole-| [fi hod ney . is the simplest, safest and most convenient way send remit- tances by mail in the Dominion; if the mail astray nq loss is sus- tained. hould you desire to send money to a point outside the country, a Standard Bank Draft will serve your purpose for forwarding money to foreign places. STANDARD BANK Branches also at Blackstock, Little Britain, Nestleton Station, Sunderland ee ee) Reporter" is published here. A small settlement, about half a mile to the east of the village, called East Windsor, is now in- cluded in the limits of Whitby. The population, including East Windsor and the Port, is said to be about eleven hundred. Between Whitby and the Port, a mile and a half in distance, the land is level, and the soil composed of rich loam. The harbour is capacious, but its borders are bounded by a considerable quan- tity of marsh, through which a small stream enters the bay. A number of houses have been erected here; but the principal business transacted is in storing and forwarding goods and pro- duce, for which purpose there are large ware-houses, and others are in course of erection. There is also a brewery, and an Episco- pal church built of stone. The following tables of exports will show a considerable increase in the quantity of principal articles of produce shipped within a few years: Export from Whitby for the year 1843 : -28,662 Barrels 1,666 Barrels 1,064 Barrels 860 Barrles 231 Barrels 133 Firkins 29,674 Bushels 6,684 Bushels 1,000 Bushels 140 Bushels Total value in currency £44,746.10.4. For the Year ending December, 1850 £ 141 85,337 2,744 21,420 322 72 10 102 266 90 4,362 3 677 38,429 300 3 280 267 450 840 63 barrels of Pork 35,337 bbls. Flour 549 bbls. of Ashes 107,101 bushels Wheat ... 5,466 bushels Oats 83 bbls. Oatmeal 84 bushels Peas 274 bushels Timothy Seed. 52 cases Panel Doors 241 M Shingles 1,745,004 feet Lumber.... 4,500 Ibs. Bran 17,700 Pipe Staves 457,210 W. India Staves .. 200 firkins of Butter 50 bushel of Potatoes 59 bales of Wool 158 boxes Saleratus 1,200 cords Hardwood ... 420 packages sundries ... NONI BROOD cocomooe omooaawooooR CHMIOH-IN NOOO OCOoOoTIH-IN ccoccocovomomcoomcocooo® Total value £71,021 10 38 Prince Albert, which contains about three hundred inhabi- tants, appears to be a busy little place, being at a sufficient dis- tance from Oshawa and Whitby to enable it to command a toler- able trade of its own. It is pleasantly situated, and will probably in time become a thriving little town: it has been settled about eight years, and contains two tanneries and three asheries, and a Post Office. There is no church at present in the village, but one is now building by the Methodists. _ About one mile from Prince Albert, on the plank road from Whitby to Scugog, (which here crosses the Simcoe Street, about distance north from Prince Albert), is the small settlement called Borelia, which contains.about one hundred inhabitants; and from thence to Scugog village (or Port Perry, as it has been recently named) is about half a mile. The village contains about one hundred and fifty inhabitants, and two steam sawmills. Lake Scugog, on the larger portion of it, as it at present exists, has been artificially made; the formation of the dam at Lindsay, many years ago, raised the water and forced it bagel: over the land, thus flooding a large extent of country, From ti cause the lake has not yet been properly delineated on any map; all maps, hitherto published, having been copies from the original plans of surveyors. At the time these townships were surveyed, the whole of what now constitutes the southern portion of Lake Scugog was dry land. The back country being but thinly settled, it was sometime before the mischief was discovered, when legal proceedings were instituted by the owners of the y, and the dam was ordered to be lowered two feet. This ad the rise of water to some extent, but the mill was required to supply the necessities of the country, and without the dam the was useless, The proprietors of the land, put up with the loss. Sia : At the southern extremity of the lake, there is quantity of marsh, but at Port Perry | is a of water to allow of vessels lan at or as the Indians pronounce |