BLU IE OF PAGES RY HOLDS A MOST UNIQUE "PLACE IN ENGLISH HISTORY. of That Name Fought 500 Years _Sifewsbury, ih common with most of tho heroines in moder comedy, has & past. But what is. not, 'tis to be fearcd, always the case with the lad- ies mentioned, it is not a past to be cy of. It is a page, almost, in- ~ deed,*a volume of pages, in English ~ pistory, and Shrewsbury did not mean that Englishmen at home, or the world abroad, should remain for- getful of this. It does not happen that the picturesque town on the , Welsh border has any very famous docal name upon her annals' which could be commemorated. But she had something more considerable; she had a great and terrible battle to remem- ber which turned aside the whole current of the kingdom's story and formed the beginning of a fresh chap- ter in the chronicles of the throne Five hundred years ago, upon the verdant plain which, three miles north of the ancient town, is bathed by the Silver Severn, was fought that desperate conflict, wherein Hot- spur fell, with more than 2,000 of the best-bred gentlemen in the realm, : ue bf the day being to confirma Duke of Lancaster . Last Tuesday, July actual day to be cele brated, that being the date of the famous battle of Shrewsbury. The ermy of King Henry IV. met that of young Percy in Shrewsbury's gieen meadows, when, out of a force not exceeding 12,000 on either side, those rivals left pearly a third of the Rotal number dead in the clover and the corn, or limping, wounded, from the dreadful contest inte the market place. All these things have been | called into life again by the little | border town | Shrewsbury, however, had already a magnificent contributor to her his- toric festivities in Shakespeare, and with much good sense she made a Shakespearean week out of the show Appropriate structures had been raised; Mr. Denson's company had been engaged, and the program pro- mised every day, besides lectures Bermons, discourses, and excursions pertaining to the events to be reviv ed, included one or more plays of the immortal dramatist These of course, comprised 'Henry IV." "'Richard I1."' and "Henry V from the historical plays; nor could any better way be found for bringing back £6 all minds that blood-stained and tumultuous epoch Most of if truth were told, get our English his- us fory from the Bard of Avon; and even those who go deeper into re- €ords never really shake off the pro- found impressions left by his majes- tic genius Wherever and whenever we study those plays--and most of all if studied or seen on the stage within eyesight of the battlefield--it is as if we lived in those fierce times "Henry IV and you want no grander guide--nay, you will hardly accept any other guide. The pages of any prose history seem dull and barren in contrast with the superb power and piercing insight of Shake spearec. We see, as if they lived, the armies draw nigh te Shrewsbury Ilotspur marching swift and fiery hoping to meet Owen Glendower's fevies hastening from Snowdon and Plynlimmon; while Henry of Lancas- ter, with his equal force of 12,000 men, presses on from Coventry to in- terrupt the junction, if that may be At noon the armies come together In that fair spot beyond the town which still bears the name of battle field. From noon till cvening they fight with such ferocity that long be fore sunset 6,000 or 7,000 are killed or wounded. And this slaughter, be ft remembered, was all wrought with sword and spear on one and with bows and arrows upon the oth- er. King Henry IV. owned indeed, a big gun, with which, afterward, he side, terribly frightened the Scotchmen ut Berwick, and Falstaff in the play talks about having his fat body fill ed up with lead. But the carnage at Shrewsbury was mainly done by the deadly cloth-yard shaft which has perhaps been too lightly abandoned as a weapon of war Prince Harry himself, for whom this field was the first of \his warlike experiences re- ceived a wound in the face from an arrow, and Hotspur was slain by an arrow which pierced his eye When that dauntless leader broke by an | early charge the ranks of the King's army, the Royalists closed up be hind him, and then for two sangui nary hours "by Shrewsbury clock" showered their steel-pointed shafts into the clubbed and huddled rebels There must be plenty of those fatal weapons, winged "with the gray goose feather,"' even now lying undsr the grass and the market gardens by the side of the Severn Shakespeare scems to have koown almost all that was to be known of the hot battle. He lets us learn the sxact counsels of the leaders, the characteristics of each great noble- man and chieftain on the field, and how the King attired several of his captains in garments of the fashion worn by himself in order to lessen ais own personal danger, One by one the magic of his invention shows us the proud and selfish Northumber- wmnd, his brilliant som, the young Percy, the gloomy and astute Wor- tester, the foremost of all Prince Harry. Owen Glendower, the Welsh Prince, has not kept his promise of his Hic ateinsee in time to y "people of the bor- ' to be hall-widard half , and many among 7 attribute to his witchcraft the wil weather and heavy floods of the wason. King Henry, with his son, he young Prince, who will be here- after the hero of many a victory, has Hrust forward by well-judged _ marches, and is eager to strike Dbe- ore the Welsh leader can join Hot spur. That headlong soldier burns Lo "Reep the of that day to hii welf, and the battle is joined with _alacrity on both sides. Nover were 'more splendid pictures of war; onc forgets the savagery of court and gamp in reading such lines as these, where Hotspur inquires about the Frince, asking: mon, madcap Princeof Wi his comrades, a ow "wort | " and nérciless hatreds of the conmict [ the, great poet -intermingles those patches of irroeistible comedy Which make his plays all the more closely resemb! e blending of tears and laughter in human life. For here, side | by side with the magnificent pictures of wrath and ruin, and the slow mak* ing of Emgland in blood and travail, we read such keen wit and subtle sa- tire as where Sir John Falstaff medi- tates upon "homor"' or slowly and nervously rises from his pretended death couch to comment upon the promise which Prince Henry has made to see him disembowelled. {As everybody knows, the battle was won by the King's army and se cured the Crown and the throne of the Red Rose ®f Lancaster for thir- teen years--stormy but successful. The power of the great Barons was brok- | en upon that blood-stained field, and Shrewsbury had good reason to re- mind us all of the share which she bore in our chronicles Shrewsbury will teach us, with Shakespeare's aid, how then, as now, the noble ahd ig- | pop noble, the lofty and the base, the rightful and the unrighteous, were interwoven in our annals, and while | we laugh at the ragged recruits with whom that pleasant rogue Falstafl refused to march through Coventry, and who, by the way, were so "pop- pered" in the battle, we can see that even to Feeble, the woman's tailor. | and to Peter Bulcall the kingdom | owes something, however little, of | her proud and powerful upgrowth.-- | Sir Edwin Arnold, in London Tele | graph, July 25. NAMED FOR CANADA CHRISTENED GREAT BATTLESHIP IN HONOR OF THE DOMINION. Princess Louise Performed the Using Pelee Island Ch rible Fighting Machine--Oneé of Five New Warships Which Arq the Most Formidable Afleat---Cananda's Interest | in the Event. "Dominion" is the name which t British Government chose when wisha | ing to christen a great battleship in { News, One was a cream-colored big butter- fly, the other a phantom of white | | wings. They cut a pair of foam- | spitting curves, pointed their fib | booms at the buoy and bore down | like a pair of swans. Just at the | second when to the man without a | | smoke-line | our honor. The newest of Britain's huge men-o'>wan Was launched = at | Barrow on the last Monday in Aw | | gust, in the presence of a distinguish ed company. The ceremony of nan | ing the ship was performed by Prin | comet | just those two patches of sail cess Louise, and to add 'local « or' to the event Pelee Island cham pagne was used. The vessel being new and unsophisticated was just ns well pleased as though Veuve Cliquot had been permitted to trickle cown | her nose. | Terrible Fighting Machine, | The Dominion, when she is com | pleted, will represent the highest | type of battleship ever built She | will be one o, the largest vessols im | the navy. Her guns are of the most | powerful ever constructed, and in one | minute they will be capable of fir- | | ing one projectile of 850 pounds, six | tee n of 880 pounds, and eight of | | 100 § nds In pursuit of an enemy, | the Dominion can fire ahead four pro- jectiles of 8350 pounds, eight ofy880 | pounds, and sixteen of 100 pounds | Anything that she can approach within twelve miles she can throw a | shell aboard of. In other words, the | Silver Spray would have little | chance in an encounter with her Hor speed will be 184 knots an hour, and hor officers and crew cost will exceed $5,250,000, and she is named after Canada. Five New Warships. The Dominion, as stated, belongs to the most powerful type of battle- ship in the British navy. She shares | with four sister ships the honor of | balng the most formidable man-o'- | war floating the Union Jack They | are the King Edward VII, launched | at Devonport the Commonwealth, | building at Fairfield; the Hindostan, | bullding at Clydebank; the New Zea- land, building at Portsmouth. These are all 16,850-ton ships. The weight of metal discharged by one of these vessals in a single round is 5,920 Ibs., and is greater than that of any other British ships. Two American men-o'-war, the Georgia and the Connecticut, exceed this figure, trem endous as it is, the latter being cap- able of unloading 7,380 pounds of | sudden death at onc discharge Theeretical Improvements. Experts declare that the Dominion and the four other ships of her class exemplify the new tendency of battle- ship designers to afford better pro- tection to the secondary battery, and | te increase the ealibre of the guns The improvement--for such we must assume it to be--was first noticeable in the Mikasa, a battleship built for the Japanese Government by Vickers and Maxim, the builders of the Do- minion. In lieu of the scattered case- ment system, a central battery is used. It must be admitted, however, that most of the 'improvements' which each of those great ships shows on its predecessor are of a theoreti- cal nature. There is no finality about them They represent experiments The reason .s that there has been little or no opportunity to test in action the merits of the different sys- tems of armaments. The bombard- ment of Alexandria in 1882 was the first and last time that modern Dritish ships have been engaged. Tho Spanish-American War was not as suggestive of the power of these leviathians es it might have been had the navies of the tio countries been more evenly matched. The samo remark applies to the naval battled botween China and Japan. Where Canada Stands. Canada's interest in discussions of this sort will be more personal now 1oat she has a ship for which she will stand sponsor. True, the Do- minion {8 not ours, in the sense that the Good Hope belongs to Cape Colony, inasmuch as this magnificent vessel, which bore Joscph Chamber- lain to South Africa, was a free gift of Cape Colony to the Motherland. Canada, however, through her Gov- ernment, expressed her unwillingness to make any such contribution te the Empire's navy at the colonial coun ference. Australia ts giving a mil Hon dollars a year for this purpose, New Zealand $200,000, Cape Colony $250,000, Natal $175,000, and even Newfoundland has promised to con- tribute $15,000 annually, besides $9,- 000 for fitting up a drill ship. The ancient colony alse maintains naval reserve force of 608 men. where is Canada? This country is standing modestly by, and permit- ring the rest of the Empire to name vessels in her honors . present, beautiful dinner plates being he favorite gift. Most of large American men-o'-war have axquisite mervices, and niuch rivalry shown by the various States, ish being anxiols to outdo her Sisters. The Dominion Government will prob- ably not allow the opportunity to pass without presenting to the Do- minion some present to show that we are not insensible to the com- sliment that has been pald us. Nhatover gift is chosen, it must he worthy of a great country. The best {s none too good for the Dominion, and only the best would be worthy of Canada. - : A YACHT RACE: Excellent Description of Watching Ohe by a Writer Who saw Strathcona Win First Race From Irondequoit. The pale blue was busterflied with timid gray wings. Flags fluttered. A lazy sou'wester fanned out of the smoke-shot sky-line. And fifty-one lopsided big sails and little sails, fat with the wind, were crawling along to westward--just as they felt inclined; all but two that since the of a gun froin a steamer had been doing a windy waltz anywhere within a furlong of a bobbing buoy, says a marine writer in the Toronto telescope on the breakwater it look- | ed as though one boom would put a | pencil of daylight through the other's | fore-sail, they wheeled side-long. A | gun popped--to signify that all the previous manoeuvres had been mere ly skirmishes; but this was the race. The butterflies glided after--just as they felt inclined. Most of the crowd sat leisurely along the rocks, somo | with their books open again. Some headed off for a stroll. That is one | advantage of yacht race over a horse race--you may go away and leave it withouf missing much. For it is not | highly exciting to bore long-distance holes in two dabs of sail out on the The best frame of mind to wait for the finish is one of sus- pended animation. Of course, there | are a good many wise aquatic folk who can sce signs and symptoms in a pair of hazy white wings on a mile of mist. But you never hear them shout or swear. It as subdued a pastime as betting on the clouds Watching a yacht race in a lazy wind is a good deal like gazing at a There are always some folks who can soe a comet in any patch of the milky way that looks as though it had a tail. And there are a lot of people at a yucht race who can tell the Strathcona: from the Iron dequoit, when they both look much alike at five miles as a of Indian tepees on the prairie takes considerably tenacity of pose for an average man is almost ay pair It pur watch and others--especially if which is which. FPrac- tically, it is about as useful to quire that from the average with the "binoculars it to fish in a pond when som tells you to tells you the Strathcona front of another little from the perpendicular to your of shoes the one in front is the Iron dequoit Another tells you to sight | hig shoulder fair in the direc forgetting that his ignore all the he knows not en man try as is to sec a else One is fair in boat--when pair body man over | tion of his finger, { { shoulder on the beach represents about five miles on the yacht-course, and that his finger wobbles like the end of a pole on a man's back The man subjects you to a series oi next categorical questions "You see that steamer?" "Yes." The bunch of sails next te it?'" 'Sure.' "Well, then, you see the little black sell?' "Black sail?" you murmur incoher- ently, not quite eure that his ideas of a rainbow are quite the same as sce that white yours. 'Well, you tloud that looks like a Sheep--?" You mumble stupidly that they all look like sheop, When he says, Well, the one with the tail on--d you sce that? Y--yos-- "Well that's not the Strathcona--for she's going to come out head And that man's laugh pretty near< makes a dead calm of the wind begin to feel cool again then a half a guns-- ly You scarcely before there comes a chung! charivari of whistles like dozen circus calliopes, more and by the way the hats are cutting circles on the breakwater you know that a lot of people are trying shout louder than the guns whistles. All which signifies that in | the long lazy crawl home the Strathcona has crossed the line first mea to and nada's Trade With Japan. Cn The United States are being made aware that they will have to encoun= ter competition from Canada in the markets of Japan. EB. C. Bellows, United States Consul-General at Yo kohama, in a report to his Govern- ment on the foreign commerce of Ca- nada, states "The imports from Canada and other parts of British America to Japan now amount to only a trifle over one per cent of the value of those from the United States, but the people of the Domin- jon are making a strong effort to in- crease their trade in the east. At the Osaka Exposition, now open, the Ca- nadians are spoken of as having the largest and best of the foreign ex- hibits They are striving especially to advertise the merits of Canadian flour. Bread is baked on the grounds and sold or distributed freely among {he natives, to whom the superior quality of the Canadian product is explained; and it is reported that large orders have been received for flour as a result of this work. Tho United States have been furnishing from 96 to 99 per cent. of all the flour imported into Japan, and last vear this commodity ranked third in value of the imports from the United States, raw ginned cotton being first and kerosene oil second. The most important import from Canada in 1002 was salted salmon and trout, of which she furnished nearly twice as much as the United States, fol- lowed by timber and lumber--boards and planks--of which her quota was less than two-thirds of ours. 68,000 Specimens Added. A magnificent tollection of 68,000 specimens of insects, plants, reptiles, batrachians and shells has recently been added to the Ontario Govern ment museum. E=7 Port Perry now possesses the most extensive Evaporating Works in the world. The Regal Packing Co., Ltd., have just located here. E7 Mr. Vickery has just to hand a car loadof Portland Cement, which he is selling at $2 75 per barrel, and in lots of five barrels and upward, lower prices will be quoted. Grand Trunk Railway. 'TIME TABLE. d future happiness of an early age, at the b 'weary, #8 of age and married. W ns pa 1 lute ty treaed me 80 why patronize Quacks -W. A. Beltod. 2 & NETHODIST CHUR REV. G. H COP Sabbath Services, 11 and 7. Wi Service, Thursday 7.3 Strangers welecme and conducted to ST. JOHN'S CHU RAV. W. COOPER, B. Babbath Services, 11.01 «nd 7.00. Servico, Thursday 7.30, REV. MR. MCFARLANS, Sabbath Services, 10.30 Week Evening Servioe, Thu CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION. (ANGLICAN) REV. G. W. LOCKE M.A. Inottmbent. Mating, 10.30 s,m. Evensong, 7 p.m. Sunday School, 2.30 p.m. Thurcaday--Evensong, 7.80 p.m. R. C. CHURCH. REV RICHARDSON. Third Sunday at 10.30 &. m, Sunday Mave You Criminal Eyes? A Russian savant lays claim to a discovery for @gtecting criminals. According to M. Karloff, you can tell a criminal by the color of his eye Murderers and thieves have maroon or reddish brown eyes, tramps light blue, and so forth, M. Karloff has classified eyes into fami- lies and has drawn up rules which he declares to be infallible Honest folk have dark grey or blue eyes Bilious? Dizzy? Headache? Pain back of your eyes? It's your liver! Gently laxative; all vegetable. Sold for 60 years. §.SATSee: Want your moustache er beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Farm for Sale ortoRent, For Sale or to Rent, lot 31 and 32 on. 10, Darlington cShtaining 165 acres more or less. On the premi- ses there are a good stone house. stone stable, well watered, plowing done. For further lars, apply to the proprietor; J HER, ton. 3urketon, Mar. 24, 1903. MONEY TO LOAN. We have funds n private parties for investment or ENT. and those who wis sre land or bui ay ut suy delay, (ar crs who want to | ho would exchange = and description of and a general f LUND & ( 8 Victoria Street, T Cook's Cotton Root Compound. Led Tees of strength. No. 1 No. 2. No. 1.--For ordinary cases is by far the best dollar medicine known. special No. gtronger--three dollars per 2--For Ladles--ask your druggist Cook's Cotton Root Compound. no other as all pills, mixtures and i are dangerous. No. 1 and No, 2 are sold and recommended by all druggists the Do- minion of Can Mailed to any address on receipt of nt postage rice and four 2-ce Cook Company, 'Wiadser, Ont. wa No. 1 and No. 2 are sold in Port Perry yy C. H. Allison and A. J. Davis, Druggist: F. SMITH, General Carter thanks lakes pleasure in return to the public for the e ronage bestowed on him mencing the business of Carting and would state that 'he 'is fully equipped to CARTING AS IT SHQ at the very shortest ni prices that cannot fai public. Carting to Railway Depot a Specialty. Residence--Brick Ho site the Methodist Parson F EA Port Perry, Aug. 1901. 5 AIST: Our fee returned if we fail. Any of sketch aud description of any inves promptly receive our opinion free i e patentability of same. Patent' sent upon req t 1 through us a for sale at our EXPER Patents taken out turough us reg notice, without charge, in THE P, en as 'Send for sample copy FREE. VICTOR J. EVANS & (Patent Attorncys,) Evans Building, WASHIN "How AGENTS WANTED. FO! 8 ile SCA. JAG jo! Magazine," Ont. who has returned thi ' tras, jn Bouth Africa for adian Publishers who have Bouth Africa for ul ad: in Canadian ingents better illus rival work. Roiswee are wo of comparison our Br opectan to a rid Patti Company, Gucish, Ctl WANTED--FAITHFUL PE TRAVEL for well blished few counties, calling on reta and agents. ' Loca! territor 1024 a year and expenses, pay ek in cash an expenses A Le tion 1066 Port PERRY. 'GOING BOUTH, GOING NORTH. 7.25 am. 9.51 a.m. 11.35 a.m. 5.40 p.m. 1.33 p.m. 7:33 p.m. rmanent. business ble udard House, Ch , 3 ennedy , physically and sex: Use Avyer's Pills. on nS | prayer-hall assembled, a taste of his safe, reliable woman | "int é hour cases--10 degrees | M: & Kergan. six years ago. 148 S Street, Detroit, Mich Kergan, AW 'Tewn in Britais. in the old days when might was right the city that was walled about | was common cnough, but there are very few towns in Britain which preserve their walls at the present day. Of those few, undoubtedly the most unique is Berwick-upon-Tweed, the old Border town, which has oc-/ cupied many a page of the past his- tory of the United Kingdom, and which to this very day enjoys the distinction of special mention as a place apart from the United King- "dom In every Royal proclamation is- sued, Hore the old battlements built in the time of Queen Elizabeth re- main intact, with all but one of the ancient gateways, and even in some cases the very ponderous gates themselves on their old rusty hinges. In reality there are teo walls, the | outside and older one, of which now only some fragments remain stand- ing, dating back to the far-off times | of Edward the First, who in the great hall of Deftwick Castle--only a small part of which now remains-- decreed that Baliol should be King of Scotland, a decree which, as every schoolboy knows, was soon set at de- fiance hy the DBruee and his hardy | warriors. On this outer nme OI tne ' ramparts still stands the tower in which the warning notes of the war | | tell wore rung to demote the ap- | | proach of an enemy, an object na- | turally of great interest to all visi= | tors to the town | | A Rémarkable Record Chambetlain's Cough Remedy has a remarkable record. It has beeu in use for over thirty years, | | during whic time many or | | bottles have been and sold u It | | hag long been the tandard and main reliance in the treatment of croup | {in thousands of homes, yet during | | all this time no case has ever been | reported to the manufacturers ir | which it failed to effect a cur [ When given as soon a the child | becomes hoarse or even as soon a {the croupy cough appears, it w | prevent the attack. It isy to take, many children like I | no opium or other barn substance and may be given as cor fidently to a to an For sale by A. J. Davis. --a-- baby as adult Story of Principal Buchan, Not a fortnight after Mr. Buchan's _gave the whole ge, Toromito, in quality es a disciplinarian. There had arisen some slight friction re garding, if memory serves, Day hy Day in Toronto News, a change in the rule allowing members of the | Sixth Form, two, in place of three, | | afternoons' leave down town each week. Mr. Buchan made the change after deep consideration, and, after | receiving a deputation from the | Sixth, promised to announce his fin- al resolution the next afternoon at | prayers The statement was duly | made, and it Was that the change | must take place. Suddenly from | where the Sixth sat, came a sibilant, | | long-drawn hiss. The boys were | amazed Nothing of the kind had been ever heard in that hall before, | Mr. Buchan gazed towards the Sixth, | and, in cold, even tones, said "The boy who hissed, stand up.' In a cecond a tall, broad shoulder- ed youth was on his feet | | | | { | | | | { | "you | ----,"" said the Principal, will take ten demerits." The boy turned white and sat down. He and anether were running neck and neck for the headship of the school, and the Prince of Wales scholarship Ten demerits meant that a number of marks representing a fair month's work Would be de- ducted at the end of the year. The judgment of the Principal meant death to the offender's chances; {it was about the stiffest sentence that could be imposed, short of expulsion, The culprit, who is one of the lead- ers of his profession to-day, took his punishment gamely, but it was neith~ er mitigated nor remitted, although his rival and conqueror--as subse- quent events showed--begged Mr, Buchan to let him take five of his demerits himself. This might have allowed a third boy to gain the cov- eted distinction, but. this was doubt- ful, as the two lads mentioned were head and shoulders above their form- mates. Mr. Buchan sternly refused to make any change, so the friend and advocate of the boy who hissed went ahead and santored in with the honors. He was as much provoked at being denied the centest as he ap at his success. a {Ran a Nail Through His Hand While opening a box, L Cc. Mount, of Three Mile Bay, N.Y., ran a ten penny nail through the fleshy part of his hand. "I thought at once of all'the pain and soreness this would cause me," he says, 'and immediately applied Chamberlain's Pain Balm and occasionally after- wards. To my surprise it removed {all pain and soreness and the injur- ed parte were soen healed." For sale by A. J. Davis. Goop SHOE VALUES. Women's shoes, adapted for short skirts, new manish shape--hand sewed and welted in box enamel-- patent leather and viei kid lace or utton ; the new Louis XV. heels in all leathers for 'dress wear--high arch--haund turn flexible soles See wy window. It affords a view of fet stylish footwear that is not to be found any place else. Every shoe shown, every price named can be uplicated in your -size 'inside, A. F. CARNEGIE. yl The mails are despatched from the Post 0} Office Port Perry as follows : Going North-- 9.30 a. m. Going Sonth--11.20 a. m. Going North-- 5.15 p. m, Uoing South--}0 p.m, i Sled Tenders | Wl four months, $1. Sold b | better accominodated with safe and desis EALED TENDERS will be received by the undersigned for the purchase of all or any of the Parcels-- Farm Properties---belong ing to Mr. John Adams, advertised to be sold by auction on the 23r¢ November, and withdrawn at the sale. J. A. McGILLIVRAY, Temple Building, Toronto. Nov. 39, i899. 80 YEARS® EXPERIENCE Traoe MARKS D at ketch and d may pong nine ae ent des table. Commun! . Handbook on Patents free. Oldest agency for securing patents. atents taken hiro oe receive special notice, or rou ih Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. . Largest cir- culation of any scientific journal, ya 'Terms, $3 a newsdealers. UNN & Co,zererosev. New York Bran! - 625 ¥ t-. Washington, D. TICKETS TO ALL FARTS OF THE WorLp.--Mr. W. H. McCaw, Port Perry, is now-in a position to issue tickets to all parts of the world and to supply all nécessary informatien to parties as to the cheapest and best routes, &c. In addition to his numerous Ticket Agencies for Rail- road and Steamship lines, he has been re appointed Ticket Agent for the Grand Trunk Railwa Parties intending to travel will consult their own interests by consulting Mr, McCaw before embarking on a trip. SN rs eT TR N * Ge ntral Liver PORT PERRY. EARTILY thanking the public for the | liberal patronage received during the | many years I have kept a Livery Establish | ment in Port Perry, I have much pleasure in | | announcing that T have removed y TID Y MY LIVERY! to my former place of business Water I am facilities 0 y extend in public may be about to large which r that the Tens | | able RIGS AT MODERATE CHARCES om homes RV ANSTOK LER. Port Perry, June 21, 1900. 'Chamberlain's Remedies. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. For Coughs, Colds, Croup and Whoop ing Cough. Price 25 cents; large size soc. | Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For Bowel Complaints. Price 35 cents, Chamberlain's Pain Balm. An antiseptic liniment especially valua- ble for Cuts, Bruises, Sprains and Rheuma- tism. Price 25 cents; large size 50 cents. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. For Disorders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Price 25 cents. Every one of these preparations is guaranteed and if not fully sat- | isfactory to the purchaser the money will be refunded. | | | | | | ft's a strong Statement but a straight fact, when we say that the greatest help te the live grocer and general storekeeper in Canada is "The Canadian Grocer." You cannot read it without getting some valuable information. Spend a cent for a post card and send for a sample copy and be convinced. The MacLean Pub. Co., Limited] TORONTO. MONTREAL, Nw AVA AVIVA NANNY, YEARLY to Christian man i UU jor woman to loak after our Ni eat os and RRL Counties; to act as Manager and Corres: pondent § work cwn be done at your home. Hhclose self-addressed stamped Yenvelo e for particulars to H. A. Sher- Jue, Sern Manager, Corcoran Build. ing, opposite United States Treasury ZW ashington, D. C. YD NN TAD ON Farm for Sale. OUTH-HALF lot g and South- west quarter of lot 10, con 3, Township of Brock, covsisting of about 80 acres good Farm Land with house and barn; "also 20 acres Hardwood, and 50 acres Pine, Cedar, Hemlock and Tamarac. Apply to owner. HB CLEMES, / 2 Port Perry Dec. 8, 190 patented. PATENT RECORD, Baltimore, Md. aes $0 Justin Time. --Mr. W. H. Doubt of such goods as all should wear for health, comfort and appearance during the present season. He makes them up in finest styles. treet! has provided a magnificent supply |- EGGS IN WINTER AS MANY AS IN SPRING YOU CAN GET THEM FROM INGRAM'S Prolific Laying Strains ----OF---- BUFF ORPINGTONS aly BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS WHITE WYANDOTTES Some excellent Trios and Upto Date Cockerels for Sale, EZ 25 Utility Pullets 3 N. INGRAM & SONS, . Cochrane St., Port Perry Ceneral Blacksmithing The undersign busine Just west of Drs C ed SS h Archer & Archer's | n aving the opened | dice, is prepared to do all kinds of of General Blacksmithing at Reas onable arges. HORSE-SHOEING A Specialty and Satisfaction Guaranteed Patronage Solicited . W. SWITZER Port Perry, Sept. 16, 1go2 ; a as oh ay 73 Apples Wanted. | [he w k yD, Te yd Hamburg, Germany sienments of Canadian ples. Highest prices to be ob d assured. fReasonable allowed. Com- mu \ Nurseryman, 1 you to ship to the firm Jacobs & Sons. ront P ISH TO ANNOUNCE that that they are now comfort: ably ensconsed in their new pre. mises in the AR Purdy Block where the Public will always fin an ample supply of GHOICE, FRESH MEATS at prices that cannot fail to please: A full supply of Meats of the very best grades, and cut in dimensions to please the most fastidious. All orders will receiv attention. We proaps S. T. CAWKER & SON, March 5, 1902. HARNESS N returning thanks to the public for a patronage extended to me for over 3( years, I would respectfully intimate that am, as usbal, now ready for businces, and have a Large & Assorted Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS which I am determined to sell very CHEAP A an inducement to CAsH purchasers 4 Discound of [0 por ome will be allowed on all Sales from now unit 1st next. All work being gzr MADE BY HAND§3 and nc factory work kept in stock, the super ovity of my goods will at once become appa ent. Intending purchasers will find that by giving we & call before looking elsewhere | the ycan be suited in quality and price, my 4 experience iu the trade being an indis putinle guarantee that perfect satisfaction Jun. | will be given by any article purchased | Everthing in my line of busi kep onstantly on hand und repairs neatly wn | promptly rttonded t JOHN ROLPE | ) erry, De 18 were Rariultural Machines It 0. BLACKFORD will pay PAINTING Kalsomining, &c AND IMPLEMENTS SUNDERLAND (HE undersigned keeps on hand apd for sales the following Agricultural ines and Iwplements manufactuied by the PIR BAMILTON MPG GO. OF PETERBURO [ue uridersighed would take this oppor | Binders, Crown Mower, Daisy tunity of thanking bis numerous pat Seder, lg {ay Rake. Two Furrow ns Tor ahelr diberal and still itcreasing | Flow, Three Furrow Gang, Cowbina: patronage during the time he has carried ou the business of PAINTING 1 Port Perry, and would state that he is jetter prepared than ever to execute all orders for Painting, Kalsomining and Paper Hanging Parties ontrasting their work to me may ely on having it neatly and promptly exe uted, 1 am also prepared to supply Paints, &e,, vlien contracting A continuance of public patronage soli itod Port Perry, Mar My charges are moderate WM, TREMEER. 23, 1893. GEO. GARDNER \ and for reapon Monthiy $900 to act as Man: ci age "4 Wood's Phos Don't fail to give him a call, Port Parry, Jam 3, ing business in this og. go os T AN rrespondent | wo! your home. Enclose sell- envelope for particulars . N,Gemeral Manager, Corcoran Building, opposite United. States Treasury, Washington, D. C. ~ Al ph re ol odine is sold in Port, If you are YEARLY to Christian man or woman to lookafter our grow- and adjoining Counti » ISHES to inform the public of Porc Perry and surrounding eountry, that «ter four years experience in prosecuting fis business in some of the largest cities of the United States, he is better prepared than ever to execute any of the following branches of his trade :--Stome Masonry, Bricklaying in all its branches; Plain and Oroamental Plastering, Also Artificial SPRING Stone Walks, that will remain permanent will endure any weather. Cisterns without any wood in their con struction to decay or give out. in need of any of the above, come to me and obtain prices, All material required in my line will be kept constantly on hand, and for sale after the first of next April, GEO. GARDNER, 1804 Concrete td ANTED -- TRUSTWORTHY AND active gentlemen or ladics to tarvel sble, established house in Ontario $65.00 and expenses. Position teady. Reference, Encloseself-addressed tam ped envelope. The Dominion Com p ny. Dept. Y Chicago. Perry by A, J, Davis and C. H, Allison, oy a : tion Plows, Champion Plows, S Cultivator, S. T. Harrow, Laod Roller, Steel Frame Spring Tooth Cultivator, Binder Trucks, &e. Jso the following, the munufacture of JOBEN ABEL, Toronto High class Threshing outfits, Traction Engines and Machines, Victor Clover Huller, Portable Tiiumph Engine. I am prepared to supply everything the farmer requires in way of Machines, Imple ments, Repairs, &c. gar A call solicited. McDonald's Hotel One door West of R BRYAN1 K Sunderland HOUSE GLEANING. I am prepared to de all kinds of Papering, Painting, &c. Paper and Paint furn equired. % Wanted Immediately. 100 GIRLS and 30 ME] "Apply a Good wages given Evaporator. 2. REGAL PACKING Co., Lp.; Port Perry.