Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 6 Sep 1894, p. 2

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SEPTEMBER Ia avs busy month with us." New are arriving almost daily. These have to be opened up, marked off and put fu position. Already our big double stores begin to assume a crowded appearance, not- withstandimg the great capacity our deep shelving gives us. We began placing orders for this season's stock as far back as last Junuary, and from that time to the present we have been in pursuit of the best that could be had for each department: A few days more will complete our preparations for the Fall and Winter Campaign. Hard times and all we anticipate a good trade. The fact is, there is such a tremendous magnetism in a well selected stock of goods that we must have it, - We shall show this season the finest aggregation of Dry Goods It bas ever been our privilege to lay before our patrons. Xu. Propons fia, wack tn ak bo Jou . This is something we can't wholesale people tell us that few retail concerus get through the quantity that we do. Our buyer, in his anxiety to to place this department beyond the pro. bability of successful competition, has literally ransacked the trade for the best poesible values, CANADIAN Hosiery has been been bought direct from | the manufacturers for spot cash, and the | very best lines bave been selected from four different mills, For boys we have three lines that are specially good value. It will +{ ana ¥n,° Ge Vall Fairs a in Port Perrs, Thuteday, Fiday 5 and "0 ed Bitar, Whitby, Sept.; 18, 19, Sunde! 2 SS righ, Oct. 2 i! 21 and 2 ees Uxbridge, enh an ands. hi Rinckstock, Se wood, Let. Bund 6, NORTH ORTARIO OBSERVER. SEPT. 6, 1394. PORT PERRY, That Village Rate. There is so mich harping over the rate of assessment of this corporation and so widely different figures supplied that one might almost suppose that! thers is some difficulty in striking the | correct figures, but there is hot the shghtest difficulty, given there 1s scarcely a tnah, woman from the data or child within the corporation who eould within five minutes strike the rate correctly. The efficient and ac- curute assessor places the total assessed value of the corporation at $386,565, Our Village Cop il know how much it wil iki rin for the present year, the sum required Brase Band -- 'At a preliminary meeting of ex-mewbers of the former brass band of this place, together with a number of parties who are already expert players, it was, on motion, un: animously resolved to organize a band at once. The prospects are that in a very few days Port Perry will be poss- essed of a Band which for ability will be excelled Ly fe w pluces outside our largest cities. W © have an abundance of excellent talent, all that is required is proper organieation EZ See Mr. Vickery's advertise ment in this issue. In coal he bas the pure article at prices that cannot while in lumber, lath, stovewood, &ec., &ec., he is prepared to supply quantities and fail to please, lime; coment, qualities to suit the demands of all. In dealing with the public his motto is liberality and reliability. (See the adv.) It bas been deemed advisable to draw Mr. Sebert's "Lincoln Boy" from the Great Stallion Race at the coming Fair here, on the 22nd fost, so his name has been erased from the list in the Stallion contest, "Lincoln Boy" is, we understand, elegible for some of the other purses for which he will be entered and will is $9923 but $725 of this is already provided for so that only §9198 will have to be raised, so that a rate of | $2.38 on every £100 assessed the rate required value is We have heard it repeatedly stated that the rate is to be | £2.40 on the | Bat such cannot be the rate for §2.40 $100 assessed value. 79 more than is wanted. | | It would be a rather loose way of | | would raise § handling the funds to raise more money than the corporation requires, give you Rn idea the cheapness of woolen | goods when we remind you that we can | give you two pairs men's heavy woolen sox for 25¢. Last season we sold 300 pairs [ quite large enough without collecting | ladies' woolen hose at 25¢ a pair. This | season we give you a very much better one | at the same place. Our range of plain and | **7Y The ribbed Cashmere is the most complete we | collect enough to cover the expendi have ever shown. We gave an import order | for these' goods and caleulate es are | 8T€ but not a dollar more, if they can fally ten per cent. better value than we collect $79 more than is necessary we suspect that the ratepayers will | consider that the exact amount is a handful or two more than is neces- Council have a right to ments that | could obtain in the regulac way. We have | tow all sizes of our famous ribbed Cashmere with reinforced knee and heel. We have customers who have nsed thie stocking in their families for years. If you haven' t | tried it we would advise you to do so this | season. It has no rival, ONES & 00. Sept. 4, 1894, RED FLAG! COAL PRESENT PRICE FOR Chestnut, Stove & Egg $5.75. Delivered anywhere within the Corporation. AT COAL SHED $5.50. Leave your orders at the RED FLAG. A. SOPER Port Perry, July 18, 1804. STRAYED BULL. Strayed from the premises of the undersigned, Jot 9, con. 4, Reach, about the middle of May last, a Rep Axp Wmte YraruING Buin. A suit able reward will be given for inform:- tion that will lead to the recovery of the lost animal. i THOS. SONLEY. Reach, Aus. 22, 1894. Western Bank of Canada ND No. 24. Nisesby goes that a Dividend of Snr Ty en tock of Gr months, bein, cent per annum, 6 Soe and payable on . the 1st day of Oct. 04 o of the Bank. The Trausfer closed from the 15th to the the Board. * | men could not easily be fonnd:~ Both | what is to prevent them collecting seven hundred or any other sum more | than i is necessary, It is not optional | with wunicipal councils to clap on haphazard, any rate they please and it] is well that it is so or God pity the] ratepayers, - -- Cartwright Agricultural Society. The management of the above pros- perous and well conducted Society 'are making preparations for the Fall Show of 1894, The aim of the society has sheep been, to make their Shows what ts 2 Ity~al community. Such has ever been the aim of this society and the best proof of their success in this direction is witnessed in the satisfactory improvement of their shows from year to year, The shows of thissocicty are deserved- ly popular as well for the character of the exhibits as for the convenience and comfort provided for all who attend whether as exhibitors or spectators, The . Posters and Prize Lists are already issued (see them) and go far to | show that the coming exhibition will be one of the best ever held in this section of country. The 24th and 25th inst. | days set for the Show. are the An Important Improvement. The village and surrounding com- munity are much pleased to learn that Mr. 8. Graham, late of the Ontario Carriage Works, Port Perry, has pur- chased that fine lot on Queen street opposite the Ontario Bank. Mr, Grabaw is widely and favorably known as a dealer in first-class horses, but he is also known and highly popular as a skillful and successful Blacksmith, He is about to have a substantial build ing erected on his new property and in- tends to open a Blacksmith Shop on the rear end of the lot. The building will fll a long standing gap on the street, All wish the enterprising pro- prietor much success. . : ge 4 Base Ball Match.--For some time past great rivalry has existed be- tween the Orono Club and Salem Club as to which possessed the strongest team, and they mutnally agreed to to try conclusions on the fipe Central Fair Grounds, Port Perry, and the day fixed on was Saturday of week, The picked teaws of both lined vp at 2.30 p.m, end a more intelli- gent and finer looking lot of young Orono and Salem have every reason to 'be proud of their respective 'baseball teams. The play had uot proceeded far before it became obvious to the | panic-monger in search of bread and | found scattered in the grass along the doubtless give a good account of him- self, Teachers' Association. -- On Saturday last, Messrs. McBrien, Hen 'Port Pe The regular Council was held is the evening of Present--the reeve and Mr. Bates The minutes of ing were real and A deputation" J. H. Brown and before the Council, the management of to take place on grounds, their object electric light service # buildings during thé sh The reeve said reasonable one, their not involve an outlay poration and he kne that the request should On motion of Mr, sion was granted Mr. the contractor with cof supplying electric ligh wires and utilize sufi electric light plant to exhibition buildings du provided the 36A wires, &e., doe incaf D half. B Jarched a Jn some time after for | the hand car they found 27 deed bodies r | They say that the people of Hinckley hy to be met by the eorpo Messrs. Davis a tered and took their The. speedy | ;oo Oa motion of M ordered to be paid to Mrs: Lewis Houck, $2; O. Shechey, $3; Whitney, 81.95 for supplying: to indigents by order of the r deputy reeve, and 75 cents bo Hamilton for fare paid to ® derson, Gale, Graham, Underhill] McKee and Eddy met at the High| School here and arranged the program | for the next mecting of the Teachers' Association to be held in Uxbridge, on the 4th and 5th Oct. Mr. Houston, Director of Teachers' Institute will | oscupy time at the disposal of the Association. the greater portion of the We would call special sttention to] an article which Lady Cook contributes | to the current issue of this paper. -- Calculated arouse the levity of the thoughtless and the censure of the narrow-minded, it still embraces senti must surely commend | themselves to the minds of those who take a wide and rational view of things The questions which shesstudies and | s0 lucidly expounds, are not, it must be confessed, ngreeable ones, but it is because they are so repulsive to, and neglected by, the great majority of the writers, that she feels it to be her duty to take them up and thrust them before the eyes of the public for the public good. She writes not as =a notoriety, but as the wife of one of the wealthiest and most highly respected merchants of the city of London. et Prince Albert. Our intelligent. and villagers are still pushing forward all enterprising necessary improvements for the pro- tection of the general health, for in- had a fine new picket fence built along the front of hie residence. Our skillful and enterprising paint- er, Mr. George Paterson, is making important repairs on his residence. Mr. Lang's handsome new bLuildings are being pushed forward towards completion. An important addition has been made to our inhabitants during the past week, Mrs. Foy widow of the late Benj. Foy of Mariposa, has with her family moved into the village.-- | All are pleased at the acquisition, an | estimable and exemplary mother and three smart, not fail in proving a desirable addition to the inhabitants of the village. On Thursday of last week quite an excitement was created in the village | when it was learned that a team be- longing to our esteemed townsman, Mr. James McBrien, had run away and Mr, McBrien's eldest son had got one of his legs fractured. It appears that the team was hauling lumber from Port Perry to Mr. MeBrien's farm, Whitby, Mr. McBrien's two sons were on the load, in going down hill the reach bolt slipped out, the wagon came on the horses heels when intelligent children can- they stated to run and the wagon up- set, when the elder boy got his leg broken, the younger was thrown into the wheel but fortunately escaped without injury. The two noble and intelligent boys bore the disaster like heroes. Sargical skill was secored with - all -possible "dispatch and the brave young fellow is doing as well as could be expected. Paris Green in the Grass. Brooklin, Sept. BA second investiga: tion was held here to-day, called by Hoo. John Dryden, Minister Itare, to inquire into the increased ¥ death of cattle running upon the public highway. The follo veterinaries were present _a post-mortem and Sonat to r. Grabam, Port Perry; J. and Messrs. Vanzant and! , Stouffville. They were again baffled and gave no opinion to the public, but decided to send the stomachs of these animals to Toronto to be thoroughly analyzed. The investigation had just concluded when Paris green in quantities: was oud, and the excitement of the large crowd assembled is indescribable, they | of a street extension west Bay creasing the comfort af all and Ror g | ship purposes O. | incident that happened ine indigent to Lindsay, and said amy were ordered lo gharged tothe. poor fund, On motion of Mr. Baten: Street Commissioner was ins ? to examine the town tanks ani make an approximate ealculation | quantity of . water in each time cach tank would supply for the Steam Engine in case Bri fire before. becoming exhausted, and re- port to the Council, through the reeve, at his earliest convenience, the result of his investigations, Mr. Davis introduced and carried through a by law fixing' the fee for transient traders at the extreme limit of the statutes, $50. Mr. Willcox introduced and through a by-law christening a On wotion the Council idjourned. Cartwright Council. Tow HALL, OARTWRIGHT, Sept. 3rd 1894, Council met pursuant te 0 ment. Members all presenty Minutes of lust meeting were confirmed. Mr. Henry Poole applied Yor = pensation for two sheep killed by dogs, which on oath he values at $2.75 each. On motion an order was granted, for two-thirds of the amount. Mr. James Clisdell came bef asking the privilege of building dwelling house on the road sllow , | Millacea called for help yesterday after- . | wan. a point & mile and a and was forced to return to wiles away ou account of ening flames. Half a dozen of the pa Pasaigers, however, secured a hand car and rode through the flames to Hinckley, taking the northbound train this side of there and returning on it to this city. Oa their return on along the line of the railway ; 17 were discovered at Hinckley during the morning and 12 others have been found. to the woods when their houses caught Se and as the tiwber after- is more than probable ed. The 1 'cannot be learned for a ay or two. It is feared that several other towna have suffered a like fate. noon and the relief train from St. Cloud was unable to get beyond Bridge Nothing further hds yet bee 0 received from Millacea, and how much | may have been the suffering cannot at | this time be known, | THE GREAT FOREST FIRES. { St. Paul, Sept. 3.--The latest advices | from the scene of the big fire indicate | that there will be a total of nearly 400 | lives lost. This includes the fatalities | at Hinckley, Pokegama, Rutledge, | Sandstone and all the area of country covered by the conflagration. Search- ing for the dead under anything like | hol | rev@als what mauter of "and 'women we a rydon way be the gentlest of swains, and Phyllis the sweetest shepherless that ever carried a crook, 80 long as they meet to woq and to be wooed ; but when they exchange their pastoral pursuits for homely house. keeping, the defects of each are for the first timé exposed to the other, Tt is all very well 10 sit on a mossy bank beneath some ancient tree in the leafy month of June, surrounded by flowers and frisking lambs, and to.babble of love and eternal fidelity; but to sit by a smoky fire in winter when the larder is empty and the purse is low, and flowers" nd lambs and June are dead, and love itself fast dying, will test the strongest vows and unloose the most latent" diseords, Each is surpriced to find that th was mi But the glittering mansion is not exempt from the evi'e of the thatched cottage, There may be wealth and rank and a full measure of worldly prosperity, yet discord will enter in. Lady Clara Vere de Vere is os frail and unstable as her humbler sisters. Her lordly spouse js in his way as sel. tish and as exacting as simple Corydon Ennui aod friction are as fatal to the happiness of the great as cold and want are: to the poor. Discontent is the cause with Loth. And why? Because neither really knew each other. Be- cause both masked their failings and displayed their most agreeable qual ities and abilities, Because the role f the wan was to win, and of the woman to be won. It was his to pur charaster of the other ; Each feels. de- «| The fire covered a large area of country, | { a system was only begun this morning sue boldly and hers to coyly retreat. At noon fully 200 dead was gathered | py yg je displayed a fictitious courage, in the cemetery at Hinckley awaiting | 5.4 she au artificial modesty, with burial, There were two great heaps of | two wrecked lives as a result, naked and charred bodies in every con- These methods way Liat been suit- capeeisalie Shstorted netitude. ak There able for a barbarous age when men RErcSixleen KNOWN 10 Ln en O%€"! wooed like the birds and beasts of the gama, 51 at Sandstone village, and | : field, and lived scarcely Letter lives 1 | about 30 more in the outlying country. than they. But at - this period of human evolution, we require wore some of it very hard for searching . : | rational processes of 'mating, pro- \| further danger to be feared from fire in | parties to reach. It will take at least | a week to ascertain how many are lost and many of them will never be iden- tified, Many families are being cared | for at Pine City, Duluth and Superior. | At the former place there are ahout 500 homeless people, and it is estimated that at least 1,000 people will have to be taken care of until they can get a | new start in life, The wounded in| hospitals at Pine Qity were nll doing well this evening. It began raining at | 9 o'clock this morning, but stopped at, noon, It is not believed there is any ) the burned region. The aggregate loss | between the 3rd and 4th opposite lot 3, and for the use of the unused road from east for the year 1894, fixing h defining his duties. Three applications were the office of Collector. On motion of Mr. Fallis, by Mr. McLaoghlin, Mr. Tho was appointed Collector for the ent year at a salary of $35. Mr Fallis introduced and through a By-law to levy and : the rates of the municipality year 1894. On motion of Mr, Taylor, se by Mr. McLaughlin, the rate of for county, school and general wig fixed a three-tenth cents in the £100. On motion the Reeve signed on the Treasurer as follows: To indigents--James An Edgerton, James Kirvin, and Loughead, $4 each; John M $6; Elizabeth McGill $1.50; Kerr $2. Teas. Whitfeld, 184 loads gn $9.20, John J. Hambley, 91 gravel, $4.55; Thomas Hylan loads gravel, $2. 75 ; Henry Poo lambs killed by dogs, $3.67 ; A camp, work and timber in road d £5.50 ; John Bartlett, work on div. 45, 85.25 ; James Gale, ad ing Voters' List, $4 80. On motion the Council adj until the first Monday in O one o'clock p.m. Wut. Lucas, Tp. in $ 'West Durham's Cente One hundred years ago the white families settled in WestD and their descendants and ot going to celebrate the Centennial versary in connection with Fair at Bowmanville on 8 Sept. 22, ie patrick, Hi oh of Agriculture ; D. Burke ., barrister ; E. M. Morphy. treasnrer of the York Pioneers, T 0 to; B. Wilmot, Esq, Ottawa, other distitguished wen are to deli addresses suited to the occasion. ~If} is to be a real Old Settlers' Day all old restdents of Ontario and ham Counties ara specially invited. Speial prizes are offered for the rellics or collection of relics or articles used in the olden time, silver watch is offered for the best es by a boy or girl under 21 years pn these counties before 1850. An} nd | _| Junction and Washburn in. Wisconsin; {| Ewen and Trout Creek in Michigan. | Curtis, Cushing, Mission Creck. ly Lwill run into millions, but it is absolute- impossible to give any relfable ASarinte ore | is variously t from three to five millions, nd this does not include the standing timber destroyed. The following towns in the Narth- west have been either totally or partial- ly destroyed by the flames:-- Pokeeama Hinckley, Sandstone, Mission Creek, Rutledge, Mansfield and Milaca in Minnesota ; Bashaw, Barronnette, Benoit, Oartwright, Fifield, Granite Lake, Grantshurg, Glidden, Marengo, Muscado, Shell Lake, South Range, Poplar, Spencer, High Bridge, Ashland si Chiongo, Sept. "4, --From revised returns to-night from the horned regions | of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan the following are the total and partially burned towns and counties :-- Minnesota towns.--Totally destroyed -- Hinckley, Pokegamma, Sandstone, 8 indstone Junction or Miller. Patridge, Cromwell, destroyed-- Finlayson, Mansfield. Milaca, Ca a tates Partially destroyed--Kanabec, n, Benton, Aitken, Millé Lacs apd Morrison. Wisconsin towns. --Totally destroyed-- Comutock. Benoit 5 artonuett, Poplar, Marengo, Granite Lake. Partly burned-- Phaneets - h Bridge, Ashland Junction, at Saran, Grants iad Rice Lake, Muscoda, he, Shell fro South Range. Counties burned -- Barron, Washburne, ay Asbland, Taylor, Chippewa, Bur et, Marinette, Grant, Douglas, i partly burned--Trcut Sidnaw. nties.--Partly ton, Ontonagon (almost to- wns). Huron, Macome. .--The special of Minneapolis medical relief to the ah a ey an and vicinity p surgeons Gopi instruments 2 the time of this cesses which will promote truth and lLionescy between sexes prior to marri- age and thus prevent unplensant after | developments. And in order to | accomplish this we must first sweep away the cobwebs of superstition, par- ticularly those which render it im- modest for a woman to make the first advances in affection. Women are far shrewder than. men in the matter of sexual choice, and are less governad by Liind passion. If they bad the same freedomn to propose as men have, there would be fewer unhappy marri ages. Itis true a woman has many ways of letting a man know that he is pleasing to her without saying so in so many words. But men baye the d ontonness unless she coald be per witted to make her intentions clear by a defimte proposal. It might sound a little strange at first for a modest and pretty girl to say : "Dear Mr. Smith, I have bad the pleasure of kuowing you for some time, and have the high- est esteem for your charaeter. 1am sure you would make a good and aflec- tionate husband to a suitable wife. Our views and feelings have often been mutually exchanged in the most friendly" and unreservd manner, and I have learnt to entertain a tender re- gard for you. If you, as I flatter my- self you do, feel similarly towards me, and think T could make you a wife after your own heart, I should feel myself the happiest woman alive Ly your accepting me. Should yon con: sent tomy proposal I shall be delight- ed to mention it at once to your mother." © This, we say, might sound strange at first, Lut not stranger than now when at a tenants' ball the ladies of the great house invited the men to dance with them; and aftera few courageous maidens had essayed and succeeded, it would quickly become the fushion. Young mien, we hear, are shy of posing now-a-day, and so cultivate bachelorhood. This is not only an evil to the commonwealth, but it is also-a wrong to its fairer members, and a tacit reproach on their character, As men are not generally given to ex- cessive modesty as to their own quali- fications, it cannot be supposed that they think themselves not good enough for the. women, It would he a great slor on our marriagable young women, however, to suppose that they are not good enough for the men, and still worse if it could be said that neither are fit for marriage. 'If the young men will not do as their fathers before 8 them, and what hus hitherto been ] wnte a better state of 1 posing on their own account. After the first novelty has worn off, nn one » | will accuse them of impropriety or for- , | wardness. S In truth it seems most fitting, if there {should be any preference in proposing, | © that woman should possessit. At present marriage is of more importance to her than to a Our opponents are never tired ing us that it is her avoention, We will take them at ars | t their word. A good woman's linppiu: pss centres in ber home. There she 'mistress, mother and queen. Tt ober elighy to make all within its influence | the happier better for her rule, white: the yield successive intercourse of mutual ry tions and marks of benevolence, and they have the delight to find that each forms the entire happiness of the Le- loved object. Herein consists per- fect felicity. The most trivial con- cerns of economy become noble and elegant when they are exalted -by sentiments of affection ; to furnish 'an apartment is not barely to furnish an apartment ; it is a place where I ex- pect my lover; to prepare a supper is no merely giving orders to my cook ; it ig An amusement to regale the ohject 1 dote on. Ju this light a wo siders these necessary decupatio more lively and affecting those gaudy, which eater oti to ti and both are flection, for the ravages of time. "When a pair," she adds, "Who entertain such rational sentiments, ure united by indissoluable honds, all nature smiles upon them and the most common appear delightful. In my opinion such a life is finitely more happy and more voluptuous than the most ravishing and best regulated gallantry." Another reason why a woman should have the privilege of proposing is, that it is she who will bear the fruits of marrringe. Hers will be the pain; the years of weariness, the intense anxiety and affection for her offspring. If she endure the cross, should she not also wear the crown} If in suffering and sorrow she bring forth children, should | she not have the selection of her partner, so that she may be idemnified for all by the joy of knowing that they spring from one whom she is proud to call their father? Women are grow- ing wiser, and if free to propose would elect the worthiest they could obtain. The wiser they prove the more select will be their choice. Rakes and pro- fligates of all descriptions they will reject. They will refuse to join them- selves to any unless sound in body, mind, and morals, Maternity will be revered as a sacred function demanding every just precaution ; as an olligation to reproduce man as in the Biblical beginning--in the likeness and image of God. Crops in 8 Bngiand. Loudon, Sept. . -- Wheat at 18 shillings a quarter is perhaps the most important fact of the week, The English farmer is now face to face with both a moderate harvest and the lowest prices ever known, The harvest is only woderate indeed, when compared ith, kis prospects 'of last month. | remains large, the quality will be inferior. The wheat estimate is 31 lushels per wcre, as agnirst an average of 29.23 bushels for the last 10 years. Barley is reckoned at 34 Lushels, and oats at 42. Grass crops are still 50 per cent. above the average ; but for the last three weeks large crops have been lying cut which could not be carried on recount of almost continuous wet weather. The best prices for wheat are quite 4 shill- | ings per quarter lass than last year. 1f these low figures be maintained, the condition of the British farmer witl be, sngs a high aathority, "deplorable." Twenty years ago wheat. profits of highly cultivated furms in England were from $50 to $90 per acre. This yeai's crop is hardly expected to yield a profit exceeding §30. The conclusion of the expert I am quoting is: "Wheat to the pigs, aud agriculture to the dogs." le er The World's Wheat Yield. Budah Pesth, Sept. 1.--The anoual crop estimates issued by the Hungarian Minister of Agriculture are published to-day, the delay in their issuance having been due to the care bestowed upon the revision of the report. Ac- cording to these estimates the wheat crop of the world will be 2,476,000,000 bushels for 1894, against 2,279,000,000 bashels for 1893, and 2,280,000,000 bushels, the official average for the last decade. The deficit requiring to be covered by importing countries is 444 - 245,000 bushels, against 378,664,000 bushels in 1893. The detailed figures representing the production and deficit of the various importing ra for the year 1894 are as follows { The aie in detail of the production and surplus of exporting countries are these : Production, Surplus. Bush. Bush, . 335,136,000 141,850,000 1,008,000 45,302,000 19,859,000 5,675,000 13,050,000 | g 1,985 red, by J mutual infirmities and arabe Aurvdfe , and > oon | send by up the French river, at the head of lake Jngeen. DROWNED ON THE 20TH. North Bay, Ont, Sept. 1.-- Chatham canoeists were drowned the 20th August while running the 6 mile rapids in French river. bodies were found and buried ; the third has npt been found yet. canoe and: traps were also found party of explorers, who were ia district, Mono Mlils, Ont, Bept. 4.--At a convention of the Liberal-Conservatives of Cardwell, held here to-day to no- minate a candidate for the House of Commons, 18 nominations were made. All dropped out excepting Messrs. Boell, Ailen and Willoughby, and on a ballot being taken, Mr, W. B. Will- oughby received the nomination by a majority of 19 votes. Dr. Low's Worm Syrup cures and removes worms of all kinds ju children or adults. Price 25¢. Sold by all dealers. Mr. A.J. Davis sell Monarch Oigars for be. DEBILITY: PALE- N A, etc., are cured by Milburn' 's Beef, Iron and Wine. 3-D.0. Pills tone and regulate the liver. _ Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes --All cases of organic or sympathetic heart disease relieved in 30 minutes und quickly cured, by Dr. Aguew's Cure of the Heart. One dose convinces. Sold by A. J. David, Try Monarch Cigars 5c and be con- convinced. A. J Davis. Canadian Pacific Railway. ONTARIO DIVISION Trains will leave Myrtie as follows : GOING WEST.-- GOING EABT-- " " Bus for Myrtle, During the Industrial Fair a Bus will leave Vansicklers' Livery Stables for Myrtle Station in time to connect with the morningand eveging tains Fare - 25¢cts. ries Wanted. THE undersigned is de is desirous of obtaining four boarders, Charges noderate, Residence--Queen strect. MRS. G. BROWN. Port Perry, Aug. 28, 1894. Boarders Wanted. AVING couvenient and suitable ae- commodation, I am prepared to take xix or more boarders. School students pre Lunch supplied every eveuing, if , without extra charge. rges moderate, MRS. HOOEY. Port Perry, Aug. 15, 1894. en er Notice to Creditors of JOMN PAUL SHAW, Ship of Keach, Dealer Ate maint To TR Egos. URSUANT to "Revised tutes P Ontario, Chap. 1 wilh of given that all persons having any against the Estate of said Joh al who died on or about the 14th uary, 1894, are required to send by prepaid or deliver to Emma J, Shaw, Pore, 'erry, Ont., the Administratrix of the pro: perty of mid deceased, on or before the 5th day of September, 1804, their christian and surnames, address and descriptions, with fall particulars of their claims and statements of theif accotints, and the nature of the securities (if any) Leld by them. And notice is further given, that after the said 15th mber, 1894, the sald Administra: trix will proceed with the distribution of the assets of said deceased the™ parties entitled thereto, having only to those claims of which she shall have then received votice ; and the said Administratrix will not be responsible for the said assets, or any part thereof, to sons of whasa claimor fe KL i notice > ark' not have been in roselved by her at the time of such distribu HUBERT L. EBBELS, Solicitor for Administratrix. Dated at Port Perry, ¢ this 30th os of August, 1804. } rey it prepaid or deliver to John Gruer, As Tro, Ontario, tor of the property of the oud te statement of their names and addresses, full particulars of their claims and demands and stating the natare of secarity (if any) held by them. And farther notice is hereby given that after such last mentioned day the said Administrator will

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