Which Might V3 of the Royal Medical Society, held at 20 London, recently, read the report of the which he was chair- to consider the phy- attending asph- "by the entry of water and those which ac- | in apparent death report described the principles of tho ! might be uscd in avi in man. These are Rinds: (1) Traction--cnlarg- chest by raising, the ribs, is Silvester's traction anethod the arms forward and (2) compression, hy pressure ! the walls of the thorax, thus air out of it and allowing air to pass in, and (3) the me 2 diving of air through air passages into the lungs This - third method was neglected in the ex- poriments as not being generally ap plicable in most instances of appar ent death from drowning. Expo ments had been carried out on five medical men and physiologists to de termine the quantity of air passed {ito and out of the lungs. The re gults had been cavefully tabulated, the | | | ho fess than tem methods of inducing') artificial respiration being used, all modifications or combinations of the | and GOmMPression Processes that all the mcth- competent to ef of the blood by 'air. The committee attention to the amount of air movement obtained when the subject was placed face downward or on bis side, and both traction and pressure smployed, and advised that the rolls ing method, and the still simpler lan of placing the subject ) ownward and mittent pressure \ should occupy a all recommendat view of the resuscitation of parengly. drowned. From ments on dogs it was clear that tl presence of water in the lung after death was not to he expected th fluld exuding from a cut lung blood serum Another striking was the length of time 1 night last in onc case eight min utes--sdrmd yet be followed by com- plete recovery. There 1 ference in the results the experiments carried and salt water As one of the marked. physiological sympt death from any form of was the extreme Tow: pressure owing vasomotor syste that injections of adren of service The Hshed the fact could only be where the blood was ated, otherwise {Fh tomporary, defers result for a brief Standard was using regular in the / hack, pr ent place with the oxperi= ons made fact immer was obta on in ring to paralysis of m experiments that ch injec beneficial in efficien effect w the i periodi~L The Moon and the Earth, Professor George Charles Darwio, special study the rotation ed by mathe s once was 4a still is slowly However, by -~due in the m ~--the rotation made slower, fc 1e tide huge brake upon the earth er spihs a little it is that the length of the day the period, that is, of the carth's rota- tion--increases hy about twenty-two seconds in each century. Obviously this, unchecked, would make a tre- " mendous difference in the habits 'of the people, say a million years hence, when the day would be about eighty hours long Professor Dar win says that ultimately the day anc the month will be equal in length amounting to about fifty-five of the sent I'his by no means the end, for sLill are oceans on the earth will cause a tidal friction, « the moon has ceased to do so will eventually bring the moon to the arms of the earth to be parted Such inde the history of the solar the earth and all the and their satellites will join the sun which gave Darwin who has of the moon's gon made a effect I earth, has pre the ie moor which ev less rapidly; hence days length if the and back Never more d will system be for other plancts one day re themn birth Color Schemes in Farms. A man who goes in for scheme in farming may fairly to have a hobby. Lord Arlington has such a hobby he his white farm. about the place that can be s white. He has white horses, cows, and donkeys a white bull and white hares Siberia. The hens are all white, so arc. the geese, ducks and The fences and farm buildings painted white, and so are the farm wagons. White flowers grow in the gardens, and the farm Inborers wear suits of coarse white cloth. Lord Ar- Jington dresses in white when at the farm, but in spite of his example the wegotables insist upon coming up n and the trees still have green aves in summer Even a Dritish peer cannot change that In New South Wales there used be a black farm, which was an ob- ject of interest to stranygors The settler who owned it had everything painted black and would allow no animal on the place which was not black, He cven went so far as to have all the farm laborers negroes. J color be said n calls from and hogs are to Seventh and Eighth. In a village near Oxford a county policeman in charge of the district presented his infant son for bap- tism. *'Name this child," ed divine. 5 Octavius, 'policeman. orm... said the learn- sir," return- oi the Ded of them. I should like to from the English lan- of them by itself may tolerable, but ithe The | { locus class | proved and t | im Dump * pleases everybody Wo Like It." The appreciat Jittle st tl n of this requires a \ttic salt Dut the s of course .in the "War yinas Vawr:"' diecp are sweeter, y sheep are fatter; comed It meeter tthe latter cannot authors re- 8" instead of y substitutes? 1s it ich repetition is un- ar? To my thinking truth. And of lucid- for te is the din the following sentence, I chanced upon in a A 'board' "'--which reen, as somebody case "understands | of the 'ordinary t understand the nance). When r seldom hesi rests in the "hark sage lon hack" We are that by y sharehold- the board like an hon crigis comes to of a nn hesitate 1ihds this is. better wr, and if instead v read the direct a clear, simple.and, in i nt, a much im London: Speak- 1 ly my. hux i u Cost of Ocean Speed. tg t crease the speed has lately been t accuracy British ar ood Hop her g an the speed curves plotted trial results, it appears that to go from half speed--11.05 knopts--to full speed--23.05 knots- needed roughly, 26,000 additional horse power, of which the last knot alone absorbed R,621 horse power. In other words, incr e the speed of this cruiser 22 to 23 ) 1 d as power at 16 knots to pro~ it in other propel ropelled at an hour consumptic 19 hour d she Id no for each ton of coal burned bol while at 19 knots tance would be doubled for coal consumption This price paid Appl thus established to s Atlantic merchant 0 readily understood why bhounds"= earn more appl dividends at two ves rage At fu was 2f ize ave ts an oal n ir; at knots it was tons per full spc wo ers r high th atios of the will be Spe ing it th grey- we than HEYDAY OF THE TAVERN. sort for men of letters was in first half of the eighteenth century. Addison and Steele, Pope and Swift, in every wav. = #Wo nse 'Force' at home and like using | ates | | | Resort for Men of Letters During ral Half of Eighteenth Century. | The heyday of the tavern as a re- Fie 4 s and wife invariably ad " Force' for . When cook went out that afternoon. "Tis but a saucer and a spoon To washr--a task not m-- And all Sunday evening tea, are leased," laughed "H. R. BAUNDERS." Héad, Gerrard Street; the King's Head, Ivy Lane, and the Mitre, Fleet Street, while in addition Goldsmith is specially asso- ciated with the Globe, Fleet Street, and Garrick with the Queen's Arms, St. Paul's churchyard. Johnson de- clared "there private hot in which people themselves so well capital At Nandos, now the so-called palace of Henry VIII, Thurlow obtained hi first brief after engaging in a chance argument, and John Philpot Curran when in London, made it a point to spond a couple of hours every night at Streét; the Turk's is no can enjoy at tavern as a house order of the over which was hardly includdng a coffee The Screw," Dublin, son's coterie such celebrities as T.ords Avonmore Charlemont, Bowes Daly, Fath- | er O'Leary, Henry! Grattan and | Henry Ilood Edinburgh had its | eighteenth century tavern clubs, such | as 'the Ante Manum (pay before hand), and the Marrowbones long be | fore Christopher Nc fictitlous fame tc ! brosianac of the | A generation previously h countryman set ample of tavern haunting in er kind than that prevalent brose's, and earlier who Wrote part the « Doves met that host club has killed totype, but the ol dled hard. Lam? | eridga 'carried on | tion in tI | Newgate sot pher Wren cd Dickens was 1 "Monks he inferior of presided to John= as it did the in and emi Am- group gifted rth gave a the Noctes Blackwood is Durns had an ex a at Thon "Sens ars Am: stil son »f the Hammersmith, i th while returr Iry The | at ectly a | | his dc modern Southey the and Salutation and Ce where Sir to smoke the | id Copperfield's Lion ' d the \ personal scene arl nt Street; Leather Dottel knowledge. enjoyed a day astle His great ; | Thackeray, frankly confessed to Tik- ing "'what was called Bohemians and fellows of that sort,"' and lon, after he was a membor of sever well-known clubs he drew James Russell Lowell into Evans' to tell him he had killed off Col. Newcome. | --London Standard he at and Straw's contenporar at Jack The Gentleman. The gentleman a man of truth, of hig own actions and expressing lordship In his behavior, not in manner dependent and servile ei er on persons or opinions or posses Beyond this fact of truth and is | | sions. 3 | real force the word denotes good na- | ture and benevolence, manhood first | and then gentleness.-- Emerson. FOR "STORY OF SOUT! ) LD. re' travelling in South Af us. nadisn Publishers who have had | South Africa fo nineteen years, giving us an inymens advantage in procuring photograybs and material. Ou | suthorship, letterpress and cugravings «re superior, an | Canadian Contingents better ilastratod than in ac | rival work. Sojsure are we of this that will mail fre for compAriEon OUF Prospectus to Anyone possessing rival prospectus... Circulars and terms free. Appl World Publishing Company, Guelph; Ontario, a brane bh s => Mr. W. H. Park, Manilla Ont, has/frefitted the Commercia | Hotel and is prepared to accommo- date the traveling public. Fin Sample room. Also good box stall Akenside, Garth, and Gay have con | for horses. ferred undying fame on Button's, Tom's and Wills' coffec-houscs, all in Russell Street, Convent Garden, Dick's in Fleet Street, the Cocoa Tree, in St. James' Street, Upper Flask at Hamstead later on Dr. Johneon, with Boswell, Burke, Reynolds, and the Literary Club gave almost equal celebrity to the Crown and Ancho Street; the Essex Head EZ Great stock of Paints an Wall Paper at McCaw's. It will de and the | you good to see it if you have any A 'little | Painting or Papering to do. | | | g&} 10,000 rolls of new and up Arundel | to-date wall papersto chcose fren Cssex lat W. H. McCaw's. "Lot the GOLD DUST twins do your work." henge ro THE FREE | To tire Eorror. Dear Sir,--I the maintenance of our need, we find ib Permit me to sts in the two G which to erect a home maintenance of the $50,000 per annum, an overdraft, for the help of all. Seven years The Toronto B consumptive of death." It Muskoka Cottage opened. But the from these who could | decided to open a parent institution. patients have been number a large 80 greatly improved There is no othe tncurred tment, nor money are now in the maintenance and treatment. In Canada alone shown by experience and these could be saved, if J the philanthropy of our" appeal to you to help us to impelled to help~ Do not let soliciting your aid in ralsing for Consumptives: On an urgent appeal to the of $150,000 has already and property just outaide of Toranto. or incurable cases of consumption. The, necessitates an expenditure of over is a debt of $73,000, in' the form &f demands settlement, and 'So we 'need was commonly believed to be ingurable. editorially on our proposition to erect «The consumptive -is under sentence however, by the cures effected in the a great field for useful work had been accommodation, and the cry for help pay, became so urgent, that tho trustees was located within a mile of the began our werk 'nearly eight hundred the medical records show that of this completely cured, and others sent home able to return to their regular work. of this disease annually, aid it has been x 'of our wark that the greater number of treated. Oue hope--the only hope--is in 'their knowledge of our needs, and we these needs wo known that all may be those who cannot give large amounts feel they cannot help ; all gifts are helpful. Toronto, { Fash, yours faithfully, W. J. GAGE. P.8.--I forward a form of Subserlption Blank which may be of con- venience to your readers, Contributions, no mafter how small, will be gratefully. acknowledged by Chief Justice, Toronto. i } Dear Sir, to the maintenance of the SUMPTIVES. : I have plebsure in enclosing the sum ¥ the writer, or Sir Wm. R, Meredith, Kb., SUBSCRIPTION BLANK. of BURT A ) as a contribution NEW FREY HOSPITAL FOR CON- 4 Name emmseeseeeneanainns 3% © HF OF TIME also the robber steals from many business man the unity to become ¥iasa ? "fo plan for somethirg . good in advertising for and winter businéss, 4 ] or { | [i PORT PERRY iL . [ FARTILY thanking the public for the 1 liberal patronage received during the nany years 1 have kept a Livery Establish nent in Port Perry, Ihave much pleasure ir announging that J have removed MY: LIVERY! to my former place of business Water Street which T am about to largely extend ir rease facilities so that the public may be better accommodated with safe and desir able RIGS AT MODERATE OHARGES R. VANSICKLER. Port Perry, June 21, 1900. North Ontario Observer { Weekly Political, Agricultural an Family Newspaper k 15 PUBLISHED AT] FCRT PEREY, ONT, THURSDAY MORNINt ny H. PARSONS i nor §1 ken for le distontinm VERY § containing money, when addr id an yibue, prepaid and registered wil be 1 for. \ LIBERAL discount alowed to Marchants and othe who advertise by the year or haf year THESE Lerms wills fu all cases be strietly adhered JOB DEPARTMENT, mphlet Hund Bills, Posters, 'rogram, Dodgers, Bill Meads, Check Letter Heads Wedding Invitations, " Recap Books Business Car Cirgilben, Assembly Cards, + Wishing Cards, kot of every &:31e and color exeouted pr mptly rod AL ax low rates a8 amy other establishment in he County. dlank Forms, Books, .Partier. fiom n distance geiting hand Lills, & winted con have them printed to take home with then H. PARSONS. IRABLE PROPERT! IN PORT: PERRY FOR SALE! ht undersigned offers for sale at barguih his fine property on Lorn street; Port Pdrry, cousisting of a comme tious Dwelling House, contajuing six room: jal and three closets § there iS a good ston cellar under the main part and oundatio wder the Kitchen, ih in a good state o repair." Theére (are three lots | which hay been converted i to_a splendid Garden, i which 'are a large number of choice, thriv ing fruit trees--Apple, Cherry and Plum drape Vines, Berry, bushes and other smal wubundsncer, Thm ; fruit in abundance: are also on thr a it's a.strong Statement: x but a ¥ © the greatest. it ian general bricked Well and Cisters 3 The undersigned having dl "business in the oR Sg nel oe by MB. Ball Just west:of Drs. Archer & Archer's Office, 1s prepared to do all kinds of of General Blacksmithing at Rea cnable Charges. Lancy HORSE - SHOEING. #11 be allowed on all Sales from now unl an. 1st next. All work being 'AF MADE BY HAND-€§ and ne factory work kept in stock, the super ority of ty goods will at ence become hd % x = Xi £053 | Ty} GEO. JACKSON, Licensed Anctioneer, Valuator, &c. FOR TIE COUSTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHII OF CARTWRIGHT, FISHES at this the commenecment e V / another Auction Sale Season to re- turn thanks to his numerous pairons for past favors. In requesting their esteemed wd continued patronage he desires to state that no effort or pains will be spared on his part to make all salesentrusted to him gnccesses, His very extensive practice in the past should be a sufficient recom mendation as to his ability. All Sale given into his charge will be attended to with promptncss and dispatch. = Sale list made out and blink notes supplied free. "n applieation. : Parties wiching to engage his services nay consult his Site REGISTER either at the Observer or Standard Officed, Port Perry, for dates claimed for Sales, anc wake arrangements, or write to his address CHARGES MOURRATE. GEO, JASKSON, Port Perry P. O Agricultural Machmes IMPLEMENTS - AT en SUNDERLAND ee undersigned keeps on hand and fot sales the following Agricultural Mach ines and Implements munufactured by the MUR EAMILTOR MME CL OF PETERBORO: Binders, Reapers, Crown Mower, Daisy Secder, Tiger Hay Rake, Two Furrew Plow, Three Furrow Gang, Combipk: tion Plows, Champion Plows; 8. T. Cultivator, S. T. Harrow, Land Roller, Steel Frame Spring Tooth Cultivator, Binder Trucks, &e. ¢ Se & 5 Nov. 1, 1901. Apples Wanted. The well known, reliable house of Zdward Jacobs & Sous of Loudon, and Hamburg, Germany Consignments of Canadiar Highest prices to be ob assured. Reasonable ad- gainst B/L allowed. Com- punicate with E. P. Brackrorp Nurseryman, Toronto. It will pay ou to ship to the firm of Edwars facobs & Sons. PAINTING Kalsomining, &c VII nndersianed would take this oppor tunity of thauking his wumerons pat weir diheral and still increasing Turing the tine he has carried oi the business of PAINTING | Port Perry, and wonld state that he i stter prepared than ever to execyte al orders for ainting, Kalsomining and Paper Hanging Parties entrusting their work to me ma: ely on having it neatly and promptly ex: uted, My charges are moderate, ) dso the following, the munufacture of JOHN ABEL, Toronto. fligh class Threshing outfits, Traction Kuogines and Machines, Victor Clover Tuller, Portable Triumph Engine. T am prepared to supply everything the farmer requires in way of Machines, Imple- mente Repairs, ¥o. 27 A call solicited. McDonald's Hote vant \pples. aired One door West of R. K. BRYANT. Sunderland, April 8, 189% Laney Sealed Tenders O{EALED TENDERS will ha LY received by the undersigned for he purchase of all or any of the Parcels-- Farm Properties -- belong ang to Mr. John Adams, adyertised o be told by auction on the 23r€ November, and withdrawn at the ale. J. A. McGILLIVRAY, Tem, le Building, Toronte: Nov. 39, 1899. We have funds from priva'e parties for invertment of ~ 4) PER CENT. and those who wich to | am also prepared to supply Paints, &e, n contracting. A coutinuance of public patronage sol ited, | alro there who would r3change busi" eraes for the same. If you have fms or other prof rtien for sale, commerciul, michanical, or businos of 'ay kind, please sond us price and description of same fre aml Life Ineurance + flected, and « general finsneiaf « ud brokerage business transact LUND & $0 RTE (he Portraits of our Presidents With Biographical Sketches WA, TREMEER. , 1893 'ort Perry, Mar, 23 JOHN NOTT, UNDERTAKER, and Funeral Director, PORT a ol GEO. GARDNER V ISHES to inform the public of Por Perry and surronuding country, tha fter four years experience in prosecutin, .is business in some of the largest cities o he United States, he is better prepare. han e¥dr to exteutd any 'of the followinj ranches of his jens Stang Masonry drickliying in all its branches; Plain an yruameptal Plagteving, Also Artificia tone Walks, that will remain permanen md' will endure any weather. Concret: Jisterns, Without any wood in their econ 'truction to decay or give ouf. Ifyou ar uw heediof any of re apbee aee 'me al »btain prices; : All material required in my ine wi Lay kant constantly ot hand, an cor sale after tho first of next April; General Charles H. Grosvenor, MEMBER oF CONGRESS FOR NEARLY 20 YEARS Cantains twenty four large Photo-gravure Etshings "row the paintings indorsed by the families and near. clatives of the President: rinted on heavy plate' | = \aper emboss A very large book ; title 0 de- igned by Tiffany- Biographical sketches printed ml arge. hen type in two colors The work 1 the 20th Century, Bo beautifulighat when President feKinley saw it he subscribed immed) \gent selling 600 coplesin a vmall territory ssylvania. A million copies will be sold q { unos will be made this Inauguial year 'olasi sian or woman of good social standing can makes ittle fortune in this tewritory, Territory is gol apidly: Presses running day and night to sedors. : "Wanted. -- State Manager to look after correspond- moe and agents, J Address to-day THE CONTINENTAL PRESS, . _Corcora¥ Bemnixe 'Washington, D. C. | METHODIST CHURCH. REY. GH GOPEI por. Sabbath § %,