k oie of Physicians & B.irgeons, Ontario, -- < eosin TO DR. wiih © D,, Master of Sergey ie Victoria ga Y versity; Licentiate ol Physians, London, Eng., ae gs Lie attendant of Soho Hospital for Diseases et men, and of Great Oriiiond Hospital iseases: of Children, London, Eng. Phiten Surgeon, &e., Offfce hotits--8 to 10 a, m., 1 to 4 p. m., aiid evenings, Office and residence, Dr. Hamill's old statid, Queen St., - - Port Perry, OHN BILLINGS, Solicitor, Notary Public, Conveyaneer, - &c. Solicifor ot the Ontario Bank. ## Office over the OR Bank, Port ay an 29, 887 r B. FARGWRLL, LL. By County I. Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol eitor, &c) Notary Public and Conveyancer, Jlfice--South wing Court House, Whitby, Ont. YOUNG SMITH, Li Li. Bj Barrister, G. Attorney-at-Law, "dalicitor in Chancery dnd Insolvency, Notary Public, &e Office --McMian's Block, Brock Htreet, Whitby. J. A. MURRAY, DENTIST, now putting in Upper and ov Sets of Teeth at from $4 T0 $76 EACH SET. ving just purchased the largest stock of teath ever brought into North Ontario Tam satisfied I can suit you both as to quality and price. Come and see. Rooms in the Blong Block, over Messrs, Forman & Sow's Stove. * _ Port Perry, Oct, 28, 1861, Veterinary Surgeon. HE nodorsioned having completed iis full Course at the Provincial Vterinary College and obtained a Diploma as Veterin- ary Surgeon, would announce that he has opetled an office for the practice of his pro- fessionat Port Perry, whereall callspersonal by letter or telegram, by day or by nigh will be promptly attended to. All {lisonses of animals treated in the latest aud best known system &4F Telephone connection--free of charge, ay ¢ ORR GRAHAM. Port Perry, April 8, 1884. € L. ROBSON. V.§. RADUATE Ontario Veterinary Col: lege, Toronto, Office and residence EveroweeN Corrack, two miles south of Manohester. 14 years practice. Tele phone iv' the house--free communication with Port Perry, Manchester, and clevator. Telegraph calls to Manchester will be for- warded "by telephone, All Veterinary Medicines in stoc Byiitan Cottage, } Jan. 2, North Ontario Observer. A Weakly Political, Agricultural and Family Newspaper, mn PUBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, ONT., {URSDAY MORNING, Baie Port Perry, Apel] 4 1886. DAVID. )J.ABAMS, PORT PERRY. BANKER AND BROKER. Good Note Discounted. Has any amount of Money to Loan At 6% per cent. on good Mortgages. INSURANCE effected af the Lowest Rates in Good English Companies. £Z Agent Allan Line of Steam- ships. Port Perry, Oct. 17, 1889, rPHE Subseriber is. J is prepared to LEND ANY AMOUNT on Farm Security AT 6 PER OENT. #4r Alo on Village Property. £4 MORTHAGES BOUGHT. Ta HUBERT L. EBBELS, Barrister, Office next to Ontario Benk _ Port Perry, May 10, 1885. WILLCOX & HOLT Licensed Auotioneers FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHIP OF GARTWEIGHT. Valuators, &o., &o:" REAL ESTATE A SPECIALTY. Sale Bills made out and Blank Notes furnished free of charge. Satisfaction guar- antee or po pay. Terms liberal, W. M. WiLLeox, Peter Hour, Port Perry, Manchester. Aug, 22 1857. it WM. GORDON, Liconsed Auctioneer, Valuator &e. pe the Townships of Brock, Uxbridge, Scott, Thorah, Mara, Rama, Mariposa md don Parties sntrusting their Sales to me may rely on the utmsot attention being given to their intrests, WM, GORDON, Sunderland. LIVERY STABLES. I EARTILY thanking the public for the received during the many years 1 have kept a Livery Listablish- ment in Port Perry, I have much pleasure in anuouncing that I have removed MY LIVERY! TO MY NEW PRI MISES Opposite the Railway Staticn where from largely extended premises and increased facilities for business the public can be accommodated with safe and desirable RIGS AT MODERATE CHARGES. : R. VANSICKLER. Port Perry, July 21,1886. H. McCAW, . ISSUER OF, , MARRIAGE LICENSES, Port Perry Ont. Port Perry, Dec. 19, 1883. | are continually g , | and invigorate and. such nights, I was Nearly in Despair, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, coughing. asleep, and awoke better, weeks my cough was cured." Attention gea, bilious macy. Harris, Tenn., says: think there is No Better Medicine, and have induced many to use it. en effort for me to walk. mended me to try Ayer's Pills, a box. I am now 80 years old; have been in my grave long ago. I buy Ingraham, Rockland, Me. AYER'S PILLS For Over Fifty Years, Meg. WixnsLow's SoorHING SYRUP children while teething. If disturbed Winslow's Soothing Syrup" ChildreP Teething, cu { What do you think of garment? Fred--'And what else? HortowaY's Piiis.--Tmpurities kept free from th into the system by '@ unwholesome atmosphere or stomach. The only Hollowny's Pills, which power of cleansing the blood noxious matters, and at the sa removing any i their pesence may Tine 'alread, duced in 'any organ. 'expel all humars ---- : poverish the blood, They are applicable to all a young or old, robust or 'delicate ng my re curative effects of Ayer's Cherty : Pectoral. During a recent attack of La Grippe, which assumed the form of a catarrh, soreness of the lungs, accom- panied by an aggravating cough; I used various remedies and prescriptions. 'While some of these medicines partially alleviated the coughing during the day, | none of them'afforded me any relief from that spasmodic action of the lungs which would seize me the moment I attempted to lie down at night. After ten or twelve and had about decided to sit up all night id my easy chair; and procure what | sleep I could in that way. It then oct curred to me that I had a bottle of I took a spoonful of this preparation in a little water, and was able to lie down without In a few moments, I fell in the morning greatly refreshed and feeling much I took & teaspoonful of the Pec~ toral every night for a week, then grad- + ually decreased the dose, and in two Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. _Promptio act, suretocure In time to any irregularity df the Stomach, Liver, or Bowels may 3 calculated on it very carefully, But prevent serious consequences. she nsked by way of opn'ng the Indigestion, |conversation, The student took off costiveness, | his blue cap aud answered her slowly Qogiey nau- ness; and ver tigo indicate certain fune- which is Ayer's Pills. Purely vege- table, sugar-coated, easy to take and quick to assimilate, this is the ideal family medicine--the most popular, safe, and useful aperient in phar- Mrs. M. A. BROCKWELL, "Ayer's Cathartic Pills cured me of sick headache and my husband of neuralgia. Wi "Thirty-five years ago this Spring, I was run down by hard work and a succession of colds, which made me so feeble that it was I consultéd the doctors, but kept sinking lower until I had given up all hope of ever being better. Happening to be in a store, one day, where medicines were sold, the proprietor noticed my weak and sickly appearance, and, after a few questions as to my health, recom- I had little faith in these of any other medicine, buf concluded, at last, to take his advice and try Before I had uséd them all, I was very much better, and two hoxes cured me. but I belleve thal if it had not been for Ayer's Pills, I should Doxes every year, which make 210 boxes up to this time, and T would no more be with- out them than without bread." --IH. H. Prepared by Br.J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Every Dose Effective been used by millions of mothers for their night and broken of your rest by a sick Sid suffering and crying with pain of Cut: Teeth send at once and get a bottle of It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon he there is no mistake about 3 arrhoea, regulates the Stomac! ves Wind Colic, softe 'WiNsLow's Will--'Sound-most certainly sound.' Will--'Nothing else--merely sound. the Blood.--To ensure health it is absolutely necessary that the Huids and solids of the human body should be pits ih nd ecertai way to expel all impurities June take]! eas i give Sr = : have dove 4 if it had Leen a busier hour of the day. tb :e morning- There were few in the groundsyet, and the young woman lock- edaround in some surprise at the almost empty avenues that stretched down between the buildings. Her limp seemed really painful to | the ticket taker as she wade her way {over to where a group of young theo: | logieul students stood silently together | { by their "Gospel chariots," as the ir- [ reverent newspaper fellows have dul- { bed their wheelitig chiws. Some of raw-looking fellows, and wore fitted for the | wheeling of chairs than the exercise of them were | appeared much | oratory in the pulpit or elsewhere.-- | Some looked rather wenk and inane, as | if they had no positiveness of character But was one among tlem who was standing athlete | to do anything but pray. there | straight on his legs, as an { naturally does, and there was some- | thing in the made the young woman go up to him lines of his head that and ask him what was the price oi his Not | any need to nsk, for she | chair and services for the day. that she bad hiad read all abcut it in the papers and and with un accent of indiffernce that just what Mary Stuart had been expecting. Her own blood was tingling iu her veins. It wos almost unbelievable to her that RRR 1 someliow was not Fair which had Leen Lefore her eyes as a sort of a glorified vision for two years and for which she had saved and planned and sacrificed. ed to her that had been working just as she bad been to get It seem everbody there, and that it was only natural that tleir with enthusinsm. ® voices should be tinged She felt for a mo- sl.e would have liked to change her young man and get one who seemed less criminally indifferent went as if tc the glories of the nioment, but she and she made herself with some embarrasment in the chair blush- was loo shy to do that, her bargain, and seated ing, as she rolled away to feel that the |eyes of the young students were on | her. She was very light weight--so light that the well oiled chair, on its easy bearings impelled the pusher to walk 6 faater than he intended, and he had to use a little resistance to moderate its The little black sailor hat she wore had no trimmings but was swarthed in a fleecy black veil, as the young man noticed on looking down The simple black gown had erinoline nor puce. ward. neither noticed also but merely wide whi and and tie hith fen has ak collar, ouffy selected with a careful refercnee to for SER each other. Oue foot wasa little But it was earlyin{ " : flounces, hel boots and gtuntlet gloves had been re (Terme : > $1 per Annum in Fives a. looked down at e had got in the , of keeping his At first to be tted hifoselt some , saying they nt he needed, and dood training. But all smarted under them, fast two weeks he Lad ell in hand, and been as persons he was push" he ground ns they were to indifferent ing arolin 4 him. No wever, there seemed to coe Into. i en existence a new con diton. tly this was a case that | involved moral responsibility. 1 And Inge was almost morbid on | the subject § moral responsibility. The red! n eyes, which matched the half-¢ { 4 hin, down at fm Ingersoll smiled with an unconscious £ came from his youth and his st "TH heartily, al of his voici is best to see it won't be nfy fault. Oh, Miss Stuart breathlesslyy* do you think it would be possibléf for me to have you--to égth and his masculinity. 8 my level best," indifference pd if you don't see what gone out almost | have this Hair, 1 mean every day ? Ingersollfianghed outright this time She wase vidently yery much confused | least there should deem to be something | personal ini this request, ¢ You ¢afi have the chair every day,' | he replied, ifiyou conie as early as you did this merging--that is if no one else gets mec that is, the chair--Dbe think I could manage | 'background and not to Ie systamationlly by having guide every day.' said 'It wonld be ja exactly what I weant,' ait, gratefully, J. pconomy of time and energy. We ould kuow just where we left off ji ldn't repeat ourselves.' med very busmess like and and grounded upou such a sence basis, the good feeling the twd began to appeared tural, and any sense of tinmid- might have been How could it be otherwise! je thoughts tit Trigersoil's mind insisted now had been stir BReaking out of their shells and their wings now that he had a the apex of the century, he thusinstically. d material, this marvelous arch this meeting of re. He looked knew her name by this time far from laughing, she hac yapt expression, as if she has shorter than the other, as was évident as they rested on the little shelf the chair. So much the young were on the alert * Where do you wish to go! ed prefunctorily, as he had ask many previous mornings of his 'fre But the answer was not forthcom Instead the young woman w around in her chair and Jooked af with eome distress on her pale fai / "IT haven't an idea,' she %! haven't been here before. This first day. I'll only have five day I might have bad seven, only it a day to come and another to-go. want to see just as much as I ca 'been ming for two years to com my the| I aint bo or aking sais eas have Sam ff me and the surroundings. ime that she ventured bits o once, 'and q leave. it whole time, and hav salary, but he doesn n I' ejaculated 'perhaps, a little thought nity student. tas,' went wan opals, 'T thought I bought him a bund! been faded.' ar ought to----' beg teous, when sudden' ig hair so perfectly, were | he said | jn the time yout are here, | vanished | ¢ This mass of the nations ba handicraft of the nations this r together of nll sorts of ener yunded a little sophorific to be | herself. down a litt'e see if Miss Stuart were laugh- ated all her thoughts on the 4 It got 80 n in tha same office three the man ver said a word to me t time except to dictate doesn't even sny good en he comes in or good I haven't missed 'a mistake in my work.-- 0 't | and tender vista, and all the flush and r mark of appreciation.' Ingersoll, on Miss iting her eyes in rapture on How was it she knew her companion ET couldn't cure him of his put them on his desk.-- he never noticed them. xt morning they were though they couldn' wrath that could hard- ed out, that there wag, velous was co'or! How full of wonder werit closer ta look at eit. She liked | that? Were they, exéf so purple? Was womanly things. She almost trembled | light on pining and' deserts white as, at the splendor of some of the jewels ; | those pictures showed them to bet) she never wearied of the china and the | Were women so beautiful 1 Was love | marvelous tints of the glassware ; she | so poetical that painters painted it] pointed out beauties in the laces and em- | always, and with such passion 1 How | broideries that Ingersoll could not possi- | fast life seemed to be tnfolding | ly discover ; and she went into/the Her startled mind showed her sud-| | most 2atepoknn raptures over the Felix |denly the interior of the office where | bing he had sat for threa long years, and | fue agrin the silence--not a silence painted, which might | § {perhaps bad all of these fine things. Shall. I|yellow face of the man the workeT Yor tell you the truth 1 I never even saw a |--the mit who could not differentiate | great mauy things of this sort before. | between the machine and the woman, | I think 1'd just as soon weur them for | and thought of them both ag type Then I could renounce | writers. Why, that had not been life | | and be just as su [it all! With a gesture born of a new awhile ag not. them after awhile, courage and a new delight, she threw | back | Inge: srsoll, with just as ninch originality | | companion. perior is the other women,' "It's a great year for women,' said her head and looked up at her | She wanted to make sure | | of manner as if there were something | he was following her thoughts. He| new in the remark. looked back at her without smiling |= 'Yes,' said Miss Stuart, indiflerent- | but with perfect comprehension. And ly, 'but I know so few women, In { from somewhere there came a wave of I'm so busy. | warmth, delicate and touched with a women at the | senitie nt joy, and passed over her Uody, | fact T know hardly any. { And there's only the boarding house, Aud they don't care find all the] pictures swam for a ifiotient in a golden | | much for me on account of my doing |® perfume and a song, typewriting. Not that IT mind.' «Of course not,' said Ingersoll with ha#e fairer than that aby of the artists | | had put on their, mountain tops. Youth He will | make gold for one any moment, if he | conviction, | By the end of the first day they had is an aléhemist, | dove a good part of the Liberal Arts is only given the right materials. * * ¥* * * * Building. 'It would take a week to do it pro To follow the evolution of a soul-- that 1 One day came when these two people fperly,' Ingersoll explained, 'but we're | adapting « ourselves to eircurfistances, who can do don't you see, were saying always : ¢It is the last day. 'I'm so much obliged to you,' cried | Miss Stuart, 'I have done if 1 hadn't met you don't know what I one soul ve hes ese would Anyone who could have heard th unspoken words, and the sorrow of or some one like you." So ended The next morning was dull and coll. | the first day. them, would have supposed that on the morrow creation would be destroyed. That day whatever they said was flip Beyond the peristyle the gray waves | dashed sullenly. | pall; But pant, They did nothing Lut jest. The sky was like a at the 'Has anyone ever been over there hour of 8 Mary | to the south end of the grotnds ¥* Mary | & i {Stunts limped in the gate, wrapped in | a mackintosh and carrying an umbrella, | gsked; Ingersoll shook his head doubt- Nathan-Ingersoll stepped out of the ingly. ; Lk * I hear Hey th of sending helped her to know if he wo trate them.' i * Ri 2 coldly. Nathan wis not a young man }dn't be'willing to pene- of much experience. He thought may He re- amusement from They got endless he he had been too familiar. solved riot to speak till she gave him the people. Mary could tell whenever she met any one who was on his _ 'first permission. ~ She was determined not s . They di , Mid Plaicatier'l to make a spectacle of herself again-- day.! They did the Midway Plaisance | that is what she told herself in the [that day. The four endsof earth | night she had been doing. They went seemed to have been swept together | to the picture gallety. He got fier {And dumped here. It was wonderful 1 L | p y ittle po iotio lis 1C cataloge for her; and took one from | It swept down little patriotic distinc his own pocket. They looked at the | tions and all narrow thoughts of local i i } ci ity These an I the S. ] | pictures silently, When she motioned | ity. These men from the Soudan, to move on he obeyed her. She want- these mighty women from Dahomey, | ed horribly to ask him about some of these dancers from Asia Minor, these the pictures sallow men from the spice perfumed ; nd : ios | gle ase ski \ 1 Why shiould those Frenchmen insist | 181€ of Java, these Eskimo women wh on making their women purple? Who | held their babies close in their arms : Pe | these n ay Jedouin hese | ever saw a lavender woman. They are, these dreamy eyed Bedouins, th | at least, scarce. Altogether there was languid Torks--were they not all the | an astonishing lot of canvas, consider same 1 To live, to Jove, to laugh, to| hope, to weep, to die--what difference? | ing the scarcity of clothes. Mary ac 'Tia the same from Martinique to cused Ingersoll of being positively in Mary Madagascar | Someway, | i f had | decent to put her chair before some of entail sleknoss v EVERY WOoMA They cure al ? ho regsions and drrogularities, which inevitably when neglected, MER should take thege Pins. They Sl oure the res 1 strengthon the YOURG sults of youthful bad habits, a Ingersoll invited her to supper, stem. should Plo J { YOURG WOHER These wil make thew regul For sale by all Sruggitn or will be sent upon receipt of price (50c. per box), by addressing THE DR, WILLIAMS DED. C0. rcleville, Ond and they ate to_ ether in the Polish resten. stew, and seemed someway to bring with it |g int; though since they had an Irish they might as well have eaten arty where else. But they didn't muelf notice what they ate, The light was not yet quite out of, they sky, when 100,000 persons stood; together in silence around the still century spoken of in ages to coma and associated quisite building was done, yorid the ed, and in the east there the pictures. But every one else ap- uever thought of that before. The | peared to be looking at them without world wag getting very large to her. i ny confusion. So she got used to it. And i was the last duy ! At least she wis almost used to it;| Thatnightshe stayed on the grounds. | Ab st | ste avi 5 o'clock 5 she | Once do remark, escaped her in spite of | instead of feaving at 6 o'clock, as sh had previously doffe, Sle wanted to} see the great basin lit by electricily +I don't care how beautiful a picture is,' she said, 'or how well it is painted | ---- --not that I'm any judge of that--un 1] less it means something,' 1 + Ab I' said Ingersoll, Then he took "her to some other pictures. There was Clirist, pale and infinitely sad, Llessing f | bread among a group of modern work- ingmen, while they, aghast, yet full of rapture and tearful gratitude, gazed on his dear, friendly face, in the midst of a time $0 alien and so' hard. There was Magdalene, the modern, in a {splendid ball room, and none to pity thie horror and loneliness of her heart There was the with Corot's or even to divine it. ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant ¢ | dawn of the spring day, mystic light stealing through each dim and refreshing to the taste, and acts poetry of the walking hour | The tears gendy yet rom tly on the Kidneys, Rtunrt' ps. BI iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- ® ih | jae 3 She tem effectually, dispels colds, head- - almost thought she cou hear a bird | 3 oc and fevers and habitual song pricking the sweet silence of that | songtipation. S up 0 Figs is the dawn. only remedy of its kind ever pro< duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, DIOP in its action and uly beneficial in its came 1| had thoughts like her own? Iow was it that little by little the silence which effects, pre ared of from the most h | bad begun in sullenness began to be healthy an RN its a delight? A fuller sense of color and ccellentqualitiescommendit form seemed to break upon her. She fo all a and have made it the most edy known. wondered if the lonéliness and dissatis: pes is for sale in T5¢ t | faction she had wlWays felt had heen by dll leading druggists, because her life had had so little how 'reliublo dru st Who may not utiful in it. Every moment slé have it on han Nill procurs it ne who wishes seemed to understand these pictures oOmPHY for SJ OHO W ly | better. She began to notice how mar- to try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG. SYRUP HI SAN FRANOISOO, LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N.¥ # TN lagoon that runs from the Administra- : 3.3 ia tion Building, waiting--waiting for n thing so much a part and parcel of this that pever can the éve be be dis sky ex The Against it the from the other, was a cold blue, and sloping line, and statue and tower, outlined' themselves clearly and delicately. Be- peristyle the blue lake gleams hung a &fiel Phe great white mountain poured its musical strenms of water down the gleaming steps, The gondolas drifted hack and forth noiselessly on the lagoon. Schubert's 'Serenade,' of all things fa, came softly down through the space, throbbing with passion, che world, solonnds afd tbs edge, from and freize, gleamed out in one slsttling second innumerable points of fire, bright as gold, piercing in their inten- sity. It was the climax! Thig #as tha best the century had done! This magie hing, born in the clouds, harnessed, | tamed, trained, subjugated, made man's best messenger, his illuminator, his { intelligencer, his motive- power--elec« tricity --the material triumph of the wwe | Whiter than ever looked the mild. in_s, colder and Lluer than ever tha | arching sky. And like a million near familiar stars leamed the incandescent ights, and from the heart of the lagoo ff, | poured the waters, lit with fre and itinted like the rainbow, If it had been any other time it might not have meant so much to the two people who stood there among tha F 8 throng in silence watching it. But ng it was--well, as it was, the beauty and, i the throbt and (le marvel vg mage. ving serenade, of it all, aud the subtle; tly netism of crowd the great brough$ about an emotion no more to be re- strained than the falling of the green waters over the Niagara, Ingersqty stood beside the chair and dfépped a, hand on that of Mury. She did not look up. She bad kuown Lic was going | to do it. *How long could you be patient he said, softly, 'a yeas) r ¢ A thousand years.' It was hard that there should have been a hundred thousand persons pre- Though, come to think of it, one spectator would have been just as bad, ; "I wou't mind the old carmadgeon,' sent, ishe said. She meant the man sh worked fer. 3 'T'll write every, day,' he said! He instinctly offered a compensation, . The people on the great porches of the Administration Building were shouting their applause of the scen®, below. The torches flamed around ther look like hrownies, as they threw ap their arms and waved their hats. -- Ingerst and Mary watched them, with their hands clasped tight. 3 '1¢1l take me a year to finish col, lege,' he said. 'You know what 1 tal you about my prospects. ¥ think Int a very fortunite fellow.' He wasn't, in comparison with . 500d many mem. .But it's all in the point of view. Good fortune is a matter of opinion. Later on he wheeled the ward the gates. The crowd [CONTINUED ON FOURTH P.