Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 11 Sep 1890, p. 1

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"+ satisfied I can suit you both as to quality . Forman's Store. EEE DAVID. ADAMS, tems iat aero. BANKER AND BROKER. * jon. DEPARTMENT. : 3 Good Notes Discounted. 3 d Bills, Posters, ER --- la" Forme a ' ni Ball Cards, = &o. of every style and color 6icy ty! eo '------ "Has any amount of Money to Loan At 8 per cent. on good Mortgages. » iris i: INSURANCH effected at the Lowsst Rales in Good ] English Companies. - H. PARSONS, ET Agent Allan Line of Steam- | ships. Port, Perry, Oct. 17, 1889, MONEY TO LOAN HE Subscriber is ANY AMOUNT on "JR. CLEMENS, Physician, Surgeon and DE is wad. Bowdonce wp the Town Hall, Port Perry. (pel 22, 1885, / JORN BILLINGS, Solicitor, Notary Fable Conveyancer, hi Solieite : e Ontario Bank. oe over the o Ongar Buk, Fort Perry. nD Be -- AT 4 PER OENT. EB VAREWELL, L L. Bs Cougty "#2 Also on Village Property. 3 Fol Notary Pablio and Conve; who AF MORTGAGES BOUGHT. A Offs South wing Court House, Whitby, HUBERT L. EBBELS, _{{- YOUNG SMITH, L L. B., Barrister, © elven Nol Pal bn oe 'wad Insolvency, Notafy Public, &0. wo MoNjan's lock, Brock Street, Office next to Ontario Bunk, Port Perry, May 10, 1885. WM. EDMETT, NORTHERN ASSURANC) PraNix Assurance Co'y. Crrizeng' Insurance Co'y. Grasaow & Lonpox INsuraNck Co'x - DENTIST, now utting in Upper and Lower Sets of id iD Upper from $4 TO $76 EACH SET. 4 urchased the largest stock of 3 RE into North Ontario Tam Licensed Auotioneers ¥OR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHIP OF CARTWRIGHT, Valuators, &c., &c. REAL ESTATE A SPECIALTY. Bills made out and Blank Notes furnished froe of charge.- Satisfaction guar- antee or no pay. Terms liberal. A Sale Register will be kept at HENRY Gorvox's ce, Port Perry, and at the PRACTITIONER 18 | Office of War. Spence, Township Clerk, Manchester, where ties can make ar- gements for sales; Acall is solicited. 3 3 Peter Hour; and price, Come and see, over Fort Perry, Doc. 30,1685. "3. 0. COTTINGHAN, DENTI Manchester. s 'WM, GORDON, Licensed Auctioneer, Valuator &c. OR the Tow of Brock,, Uxbridge, Scott, Thorah, Mara, Rama, Mariposa and Eldon ' Parties entrustin, rely on theaitmsot attention being given fc their intrests. L WM, GORDON, | ! Sunderland. WILLCOX & HOLT] their Sales to me may | % ents the h , insures its vigorous wth, an te and clean," --. "Ayer's Hair Vigor is a most excel- lens Preparation for the hair. I speak of it my own experience. Its use promotes the growth of new hair and makes it glossy and soft. The Vigor is also a cure for dandruff." --J. W. Bowen, Editor * Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio. "T have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for the past two years, and found it all it is to be. It restores the natu- to grow fre yf or al a hae reely, an 08] t Soft an pliant."'--Mrs. M. V. Day Cohoe, N.Y. "My father, at about the age of fifty, lost alk the hair from the top of his heed, After one month's trial of Ayer's Hair Vigor the hair began coming, and, in' three months, he had a fine growth of hair of the natural color." --F. J. Cullen, Springs, Ayers lair Vigor, PREPARED BY & Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowel, Mass, Sold by Druggists and Perfumers, "Like Magic," TE effect produced by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Colds, Coughs, Croup, and Sore Throat are, in. most cases, im- mediately relieved by the use of this wonderful remedy, It strengthens the vocal organs, alluys irritation, and pre- vents the inroads of in my family fo always found it th pst for croup, to which complaint By children have been subjot,==Capt. . Carley, Brooklyn, N. Y. "From an experience of over thir years in the sale of proprietary medi- cines, I feel justified in recommending Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. One of the best recommendations of the Pectoral is the enduring quality of its popularity, it being more salable now than it was twenty-five years ago, when its great success was considered marvelous." -- R. 8. Drake, M. D., Beliot, Kans. "My little sister, four years of age, was 50 ill from bronchitis that we had almost given up hope of her recovery. Our family physician, a skilful man and large experience, pronounced it use- less to give her any more medicine ; saying at he had done all it was pos- sible to do, and we must prepare for the worst. As a last resort, we determined to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I can truly say, with the most happy results. After taking a few doses she seemed to 'breathe easier, and, within a week, was out of danger. We continued giving the Pectoral gutil satisfied she was ent Joly well. as given me unbounded fait! in the preparation, and I recommend it confidently to my customers."--C, O. Lepper, Druggist, Fort Wayne, Ind, For Colds and Coughs, take | Ayer's Cherny Pcoral, Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowgil, Mass. Price §1 ; six bottles, $5. Worth 85 a bottle. us ly Jl Do her. rtion up is to be tested at the Oxford Co Assizes, which open on the 18t September and which will in fut ' "years be spoken of as the occasion Burchell's trial for the m Benwell. judge the case, the story of the crime as the Crown will seek to establish it may be given: The murderer cooly cut frig his | judg victim clothing every mark which could leab to identification, but, by one of those oversights which even the most COLD-BLOODED, CALCULATING VILLAINS sometimes make, a new cigar cuse was left upon the ground, the name upon which--"F.C, Benwell,"--led in the first place to the identitication of the body. Benwell was a young English: man, son of Col. Benwell of Her Majesty's army. The young man came to Canada in the steanier Britanhio, sailing from Liverpool on the 5th of February. His object.in coming out was to investigation a project which had been submitted by one J. Reginald Burchell, to establish a partnership |i in a stock farm wear Niagvia. Falls, of which Burchell claimed to be the owner. Burchell had sought to get money from |. Benwell and his father, but without avail, the old gentleman declaring 4h when his son repo to him: fy Cat t ith Burchell to engage in farm Canada. The party after a short sti at New York, went on to Buffi thence almost immediately to Niag Falls, whence Burchell and Benwel wor! started on the 17th February investigate the alleged farm and th got off at Eastwood station and star to wallk, Burchell was recongnized the road having been well know that section of country. He had liv at Woodstock for a time where he wad himself x KNOWN AB LORD SOMEREST spending his own money and oth people's as well, and ommitted in hi departure to settle a number of bil The Orown will seek to establish th man dreaded exposure, that he wal his victim into the swamp on pretext and there deliberately shot killed him. So far as has yet made public, they have no di witnesses to prove the deed, but: claim to be able to show that he seen with Benwell near and goin, the direction of the swamp and that was seen returning frow it alone is true that when the discovery body and the cigar case was publ 8 Burchell promptly went to ton from Buffalo and there idel the remains as those of bis rederick ). Benwell. : car Without desiring to pre-| is impossible [any given #'work is committed to Orown Attorney or some In this ease the wn Attorney, Mr. F. R. #0. will be the junior counsel. Eloriey General will be specialy fited by hs deputy Mr. J. R. i while the weight of the cution will rest upon the Mr. B.B. Osler, QO, Mr, Canadien, and a member of a ad family, being a brother of and of Mr. E. B. Osler,the n directorof the Canadian lway, Lawyer Osler 1s gars of nge: He has been a 'of the bar for years. He Welland for the Dominion ent in the Liberal interest in unsuccessfually. He was Oounsel for the Orown in bf Riel for high treason and is + ledding counsel for the Grand p immense suits for damages gic t of the St. George accident. ; ni other side are to be found nouth of Loudon, who has the case from the first. The wp of the case or the ground largely to Messers Finkle, McMullen of Woodstock iy being 'the active man in The senior counsel will be e T Blackstock of Toronto. tock is a young .mio,-- : 8 8 "In the great case of the ian Pacific against the Dominion i nment over the state of the coast lon of the road--a caseginvolving s--Mr. Blackstock was junior fisel to that peerless lawyer Hon ard Blake, and made a brilliant tunent in hisclieuts' behalf, These nt legal gentlemen will be called L to. { FIGHT THIS CASE OPT Judge MoMahon and a jury of brd yeomen. Without disrespect b her judges the Province may be ratulated upon the choice for this 'having fallen upon as good a man. jge McMahon wbs an able barrister ibe is a sound and upright judge. Ooncluded on Second Page.] Ignorance and Crime. riter in a recent number of an 1onal journal asks this question : morance is the cause of crime, hot society as much right to place hild in school as it has in later fs to put that same child in pris- | Thereis no muse which the more at heart than that of ir edacation, and yet we cannot 'that the above question is quite . | Letus consifler for a hat sense ignorance is terime. ~ What is ignor- rst place} Itis want of oes all want of | fiot produce this ignorance does? ing. Which of the manual laborérs and a dearth of pen- men, the most dangerous ignorance then and there would be the ignorance of scholastic education. If the condi- tions were reversed, then the danger- ous ignorance would be ignorance of a' handicraft. But, as we have hinted, although a man may be able to make a decent living he may be unable to con- tent himself with it; he then becomes dangerous, not through his ignorance of a handicraft or of reading and writ- ing, but through an ambition--no matter how produced--outrunning his practical abilities. There is another kind of ignorance which is dangerous ina different way--ignorance of the physical laws of life, Men who under- wine their health by unwholesome eating and drinking or by vicious prac- tices, render themselves more or less apt for crime. They are at any rate dangerous to the state as centres of moral infection. Such persons do not always err ignorantly, but yet ignor- ance plays a considerable part in their degradation. They assume that be- cause they have certain appetites, they must give way tothem. They are ignorant of the means of controlling their appetites, they are ignorant of the motives that should lead them to make the effort. They live in society without any sense of what they owe to society, and without the slightest de§ sire to fulfill any social duty., Such ) pel rsons often es ¥ expos! 'are in what is commonly esteemed good society it would not be pleasant to count. Yet these have all been educated, some in what is considered a very superior manner. When society claps any one into prison it is because, by some overt act of criminality, he has proved himself dangerous to the community ; but of those who are thus treated how many have become crim- inal for want of school education ? Crime is much more common to-day in the United States than it was in the days when public school education was much less developed than it now is, The educational papers themselves as- sert - that crime in that country is rapidly increasing. We doubt, there- fore, whether it is'safe to argue from the undoubted right of the to'state pun- ish criminals, to its right to dictate a system of education and render it com- pulsory. The igaorance that is really dangerous is not got rid of by a little infusion of the three R's, and we do not hesitate tosay that more danger: ous than ignorance, as commonly understood, is the vice of laziness. For one victim of ignorance in our prisons there ane probably ten victims of lazi- ness, often unfortunately an inherited and ineradicable condition of mind and body, due to vicious parentage. There is crying need for moral reform in the land. Tha Common School left merely to the action of ordinary polit- ical forces, that is considered as a u icip of the world, ; 3 ery by weak r impure blood can be vitalized | Doss or restored to new vigour and purity by means of internal and external reine- dies is of 'intivite value, * The resourves of vegetable chemistry as developed and applied by Thomas Holloway have proved equal to this' mightly task. His famous remedies impart to the steam of life a @isinfecting principle which frees the system from all impure and poisonous elements. The powers of chemistry are almost beyond calcula- tion, and as he has brought them to bear upon all the varieties of diseasein |. those invaluable vegetable compounds known as Horroway's Piuis Ann OINTMENT, they have compassed their highest and holiest object. * Steam, as the great motor, is a subsidiary agent, Its usefulness con- sists, mainly, in conveying substantial benefits, with speed and certainty, to the fields in which they are to operate, It is simply the VGearer of blessings, not their originator, Of all the freight which it carries over land and sea, there is perhaps none so precious as Holloway,s remedies. It is scarcely a figure of speech to say that whitherso ever it conveys Sthem it flies * with healing on its wings." Under the influence of the Ointment, the skin, however disfigured by erup- tions or excrescences, be€omnes & tabula rasa, pure, spotless, and transparent 3 and this erasure of blemishes is not 'accomplished by driving back disease acesseg of the initary principle. * They destroy the serid particles subjected to their chemical action, as infallibly as an alkali. neutralizes an acid ; and at the same time impart a wild and contmst electric action to the secretive and excretive machinery. The sanction of governments, tbe patronage of princes, the approval of all Christian nations, the gratitude of pagan millions attest the worth of these twin curatives. In fact there is no region with England or any country has any commercial intercourse where Holloway would not find him- self at hgme. Some estimate may be formed of t he extent and variety of his foreign correspondence, from the fact that sixty corresponding clerks, of which number sixteen are accomplished linguists, are employed in conducting it. He is the centre of a sanitary circle that belts the world.--Daily Republic. ------ ap rrem Five yearsago 1 had a constant couchl night sweats, was greatly reduced in flesh, aud had been giving up by my Jhysicans. ' began to take Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and after using two bottels of this medicine, was completely cured." --Anga A. Lewis, N.Y, -- am Ex-Mayor Robert Bowie, Brockville, Ont, say: I used Nasal Balm for a bnd case of catarrh, aud it cured me after having ineffectually tried many other remedies. lt never fails to 'give immediate relief for cold in the head. The S8amboro Lighthouse For three daysl suffered severely from ve'me relief the laws of fife, of health and of hap-| piness, will enter on a crusade in the schools and out of them, in the churches and out of them, on the plat- form, in the parlor, at the fireside and in the press agaiost the prevailing evils of our social state--who will preach with conviction the gospel of a purer and wiser manhood and woman- bread of life to Mr. Reuben of Morris, Man. states that he was troubled with a over his body which was cured with less than rdock Blood Bitters. He raising industs rs. Where are they '--The| than ever con strong. known, many lives would be saved, Erastus Wiman's fortune start E a penny madely him at the age nine as a newsboy. a A Mogside Story. T54 used your Burdock Blood Bitters and Pills and find them everything tome. Thad dyspepsia with bad breath and bad appetite, but after a few days nse of BBB. © Ifelt stronger, nould eata good meal aud felt myself a different mau. W.H, Story Mosside, Ont. The Sultan's wives are divided into' three classes, There are five of fir 24 of the second and 250 of the third: To avoid catching cold, many plans have been suggested. Probubly if oue uever we anywhere or did anything out of the usual routine of life, the¥ would be free from many of the ailments that flesh is heir toy. but this isnot a satisfactory solution of the question. People must have recreation and enjoyment, and frequently catch cold in the pursuit of them. Wilson's Wild Cherry will cure a Cough or Cold in the shortest possible time, and by its tonic effect, - strergthen and the invigorate the system at the same time, Sold by all druggists, in white wrappers. Why is it that a brass band in a pro- cession always stops playing just as you have rushed to the window to' listen to it}! If you could see your own scalp throught an ordinar magnifying glass, you would be amazed at the amount of duet, daudraif, and dead skin thereon accumulated, The best and mostgpopular preparation for: cleansing: the sculp is. Ayer's Hair Vigor. So long as Mistory repeats itself the schoolboy need not commit Mental depression, pr F< loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of sight, palpitation of the heart, émissions, Tach of energy, pain in the kids uneys, headache, pimples on the fuce or body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the mustles, eye lids and elsewhere, bash! 1 ness, deposits in the urine, loss of 1 wer, tenderness of the scalp and spine weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleepy failure to be rested by sleep, constipation, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, sunken eyes surrounded with LEADEN CIRCLE, oily looking skin, ete., are all symptoms of ner- vous debility that lead to insanity and death unless cured. The spring or vital force having lost its tension every function wanes in consequence. Those who through abuse committed in ignorance may be permanent ly cured. Send your address Ek book on all diseases peculiar to man. Address M. V. LUBO ont St. BE. Toronto, Ont. Books sent aled. Heart disease, the symptoms of which are faint spells, purple' lips, numbness, palpitation, skip beats, hot flushes, rush of blood to the head, dull pain in the heart with beats strong, rapid and irregular, the second heart beat quicker than the first, pain about the breast bone, ete., can positively. be cured. No cure, no' ay. Send for book. Address M. V. UBON. 50 Front Street East, Toroutoy Ont. - - ES. School Books and School Sup- plies in abundance and popular prices' at Mr. McCaw's. me Wilson's Wild Cherry: |, For nearly twenty years this valuable medicine has been largely used for the eure of Coughs, = Colds, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Conch, Loss of Voice, and Lungs. Those who know its valuealways recommend it to their friends, knowing that Wilson's Wild Cherry never disappoints. The ges nine is sobd by all druggistin white wrappers only. x E

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