Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 19 Nov 1903, p. 4

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ie cough racks and tears the er tissues of the throat. Infla- supervenes and then serious pehial or lung trouble is estab- 'the time is at the begin-- Stay he progress of the gh by using tragrant healing tarrhozone which reaches every : of the brouchial tubes, throat, id lungs. Catarrhogone destroys : germs, stops the couch, sore spots, clears the nose and t of discharge. Ca arrhozone hs, never irritates, Guaranteed torm of catarrh. For cure use Catarrhozone, month' treatment $1.00; trial 25¢c.' SEATS THE DEAD CHICKADEE. 'Ditles Full of Birds on Their Fall Migra. 5 tiemn--Thelr Perils. Yesterday I picked up a little dead g of the asphalt pavement in the heart of the city. The little + w had probably been "telegraph- ed"--that is, had flown against a telegraph or telephone wire during the night and been killed 'he had tnet his death bumping into a flats glass window against which he flown, attracted by the light within. At any rate, he is dead, and coes, or black snowbirds, breakfast- ing in the garden. To-day there was a shy thrush of some species and & me white-throated sparrow, The mountain ash trees and grape vines are favorite resorts of the robins, and plenty of warblers may be seen in the taller trees, Moding and flitting, ever flitting to the sun- ny South. Vast numbers of birds meet the tate of my little chickadee in spring and fall. They travel much at night, and they cannot see the . thread-like wires which the necoessi 'ties of modern civilization have spread, like huge spider webs, all ov er the country. Also, they do not appreciate the virtues of glass. Like some foolish humans, they do not believe in the existence of what they cannot see. The lighthouses on the great lakes and along the sea coast prove death-traps to thousands and thousands of birds every year The glare of the lights attracts them and crash! they go to their doom against the plate glasses which en close the lights, which to the sailor are a beacon of safety, to the little feathered traveler of the air a lure to destruction But, to go back to the little dead chickadee, useful in death as in life his little body served to-day as an object lesson in nature study to the Pupils of one of the city schools.--H D.C., in Toronto Star Canadian Justice in the Fifties. The recent arrest of the fakirs at the Brampton fall fair, recalls to C. W. Young of The Freeholders Cornwall, a case of rough and ready Justice in the same direction a good many years ago, not very far from Brampton. Somewhere in the fifties there was a circus at Georgetown which was followed by a large num ber of fakirs, who we more ag gressive then than now. The favorite game was a sweat-board, a kind of large checker-board, with money watches, and jewelry on the number- ed squares. Dice were thrown (usual ly loaded), and the player got the money or article his throw called for generally of small value. Sometimes the table was round, with triangular spaces radiating from the center, on awhich the prizes were placed A long steel needle like that of a com- pass swung from a pivot in the cen tre. It was revolved by the hand of the fakir, but its stoppage was con- trolled by a magnet underneath. The swindle was the same in either case Two countrymen tackled the sweat- board and, as a result, lost a good deal of money. Not being thorough- | bred losers, they began $ ooking for | law, and interviewed the J.P. and | ' Jeading citizen of the village, the late James Young. This gentleman had a senwe of humor, and told the young men that he didn't pity them much; they were fools to run up against a swindle of that kind; "but," he add ~"ed, 'if I were in your place I think | " I wou,d go back and kick the d---d | thing over." In a few minutes, after a drink or two to screw up their courdge, onc of the yeung men sent the table spinning, and scattered the money on the grass, where most of | was picked up by the crowd. It was now the turn of the fakirs to look for law, and they also called son J.P. "The only law I will give 2 you thieves," said he, 'is to advise you to get out of town as soon as * you can, and don't come back." They made themselves scarce in- The Madsen Bay Wilderness. © Alfred E. Preble, a senior at Tufts § College, Boston, Mass., has returned " to his studies after a trip of 3,000 miles into the Hudson Bay wilder- 'mess, 1,200 miles of it in a canoe. 'His assistants on the trip were his A and Merritt Cary. The ex- 'pedition, which was in the interests ' the United States Government, was for the purpose of gathering c of rare birds and mam- o party reached Athabasca Land- An the Province of Alberta, on 3 after a trip of 100 miles by n from Edmonton, the northern Vi. adie Wisgaud > o the mouth of the ver. The course down the "River to Great Slave Lake 'almost due north for about 200 Phare the party arrived the this point the purty sep: rated, MacKenzie to survey | Mountains and the country he MacKenzie as far north as ey, one of the Hudson Day posts. By the Possibly | his delicately-tinted soft little gray 'and black body lies on the table | me. The city just now is full of birds their fall migration. You may fiotice them, but they are here Gots | this remedy freely as soon as the to children for it contains no Buy it and you will get the best. It always cures. For sale by A. J. ¢ | Davis. : PEOPLE NOW WORLD FOREMOST. People Recall the Temper a m of B. Their F land. Britain, was first made known to the civilized world by the famous year 55 before the birth of Christ, Caesar had conquered Gaul, a coun of his conquest he learncd that to | the west of Gaul lay an island nam- | ed Britain, whose peoples were main- ly of the same race with the Gauls and gave them help in their | gles against the Roman armies | resolved, therefore, to invade Bri- tain, and in two successive descents he landed on its shores defeated the | lishmen pushed faster over the sea | Britons, and penetrated at last be- | Bands of English rovers, outdriven | yond the Thames. No event in his-| by stress of fight, had long found a tory is more memorable than this | Home there, and lived as they could landing of Caesar. In it the great- | PY sack of vessel or coast. Chance cst man of the Roman race made | has preserved for us in Sleswick peat known to the world a land whose | Pog one of the war keels of these early people in the after-time were to re. | pirates. The boat is fat-bottomed, | call, both in their temper and in the | Seventy feet long, and eight or nine | breath of their rule, the temper and | feet wide, its sides of oak boards Empire of Rome. Caesar, however, fastened with bark ropes and iron | was recalled from Britain by risings in bolts, Fifty oars drove it over the waves with a freight of warriors Gaul; and for a hundred years ore the island remained unconquered. It was not till the time of the Empet- or Claudi that its it was tian at last brought all the south- of Rome. Britain remained a pro- vince of the Roman Empire for more than three hundred years During this time its tribes were reduced to order, the land was civilized, towns were built, of the isiand to the other, mines were Bonsint With & pARLY ENGLISHMEN... INITIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE Dissevered by Julius #esar, Britain Re | mained = Reman Provisce for Three | " Oenturies, and In the Aftertime Its Roman general, Julius Caesar, in the | try which included our present France | wave-floater,"' and Belgium, and brought it under | the rule of Rome; but in the course | Wave-crest, strug- | He | q! galleys again Minder takes, x , and a war jyvhich | Middle Ages, such boats could only { only ended under thd Emperor Dowmi- | creep ern part of the island under the rule | roads made from one end | which gave color and poetry te the life of Englishmen. Fach sword had {ts name like a living thing. And next to their love of war came their love af the sea. Everywhere throughout Beowulf's song, as everywhere throughout the life that it pictures, we catch the salt whiff of the sea. The Englishman was as proud of his sea<raft as of his war- craft; sword in teeth, he plunged into | he told of his whalochasc amidst the icy waters of the North, Hardly less than his love for the sea was the Jove he bore to the ship that traver- | the sea to meet walrus and sea-lion; { sed it. In the fond playfulness of English verse the ship was "the the "foam-necked," "like a bird" as it skimmed the "like a swan,"' as its | curved prow breasted the "swan- | ol the sea. for the sea marked road" Their passion | out for them their.part in the gen- eral movement of thé German na- tions. While Goth and Lombard | were slowly advancing over moun- tain and plain the boats of the Eng- whose arms, axes, swords, lances and knives were found heaped together in its hold. the of the cautiously along from harbor to harbor in rough weather, but in smooth water their swiftness fitted them ad- mirably for the piracy by which the men of these tribes were already making themselves dreaded Its flat bottom enabled them to beach the vessel on any fitting coast, and step | on shore at once transformed the boatmen into a war band From the first the daring English race broke out in the secrecy and sudden ness of the pirates' swoop, in the fierceness of their onset, in the care less glee with which they seized either sword or oar Foes are they sang a Roman poet of the time, "fierce beyond their foes, and sunning as they are fierce; the sea is their school of war and the storm their friend; they are sea-wolves that prey on the pillage of the world opened, and London grew into one of the great ports of the world But much oppression was mingled with this work of progress, and throughout these centuries the pro | vince was wasled from time to time by inroads of the unconquered Bri« tons of the North, whose attacks grew more formidable as Rome grew weaker in her struggle against the barbarians who beset her on every border. At last the Empire was for- ced to withdraw its troops from Bri- tain, and to leave the province to | defend itself against its foes. To aid "Babs When Lord Roberts was in India, a xz a Private in doing this, the Britons called in bands of soldiers from Northern Ger eomplaint once reached him of the many, who gradually grew into a | Quality of the beer served out from host of invaders, and became in turn | & particular regimental canteen, and a danger to the island hose were | he resolved to look personally into the first Englishmen wt 't foot in | the matter He singled out a sold Britain. The characteristics of these | ior of small stature, and asked him remarkable men are thus described | for his uniform This astonishing by John Richard Green in his fam order naturally paralyzed the small ous 'Short History of the English | "Tommy," but he obediently made a people parcel of his uniform and left it in For the Fatherland of the English the chief's room Later in the day race we must look far away from | the private soldier's uniform issued England itself. In the fifth century | from the quarters with the Com after the birth of Christ the ome | ander-in-Chief himself inside his | country which we know to have | face a little disguised; and as a borne the name of Angelin or Fn, humble item in his army, the chief land lay within the district which is | entered the canteen, taking a seat now called Sleswick, a district in | on a form How's the beer now?' | the heart of the peninsula that parts | he asked Beer!" remarked a dis the Baltic from the northern seas gusted comrade Call this beer? Its pleasant pastures, its black-tim Why, it's mor'n arf water! The bered homesteads, its prim little | Chief called for a pot, and he found townships looking dowr inlets of it was more than half water T'he purple water, were then but a wild | next day the same neat, wiry figure waste of heather and sand, girt | crossed tho square, this time in the along the coast with a sunless wood- | full uniform of his position, and an land, broken here and there by mea- | other order for a mug of, ale was dows that crept down to the marsh giverd to the sergeant who was mak- es and the sea. The dwellers in this | ing money out of "Tommy Yes district, however, seem to have been | sir--certainly sir!"' said the ser- | merely an outlying fragment of | geant, and he drew a pint of very what was called the Engle or Eng | good beer from his own special tap. | sprung The energy of these peoples vent in & restlessness which Em and tack of the German race on the pire of Rome. For busy tillers were at heart fighters, and their world was world of war. Tribe war- red with tribe, and village with vil- lage; even within the township it- self feuds parted household household, and passions of hatred and vengeance were handed on from fath- er to son Their mood was, above all, a mood of fighting men, ven- turesome, self-reliant, proud, with a dash of hardness and cruelty in it, but ennobled by the virtues which spring from war, by personal cour- age and loyalty to plighted word, by a high and stern sense of manhood and the worth of man. A grim joy in hard fighting was already char- acteristic of the race. War was the Englishman's "shield-play" and re 1 , ; the 8 verse, Hn, ie. Their arms and Wwoa- pons, helmet and mailshirt, tall spear and pavclin, sword and Seax, the short broad dagger that hung at each warrior's girdle, gathered {uo them much of the legend and the A Timely Suggestion. This is the season of the year when the prudent and careful house wife replenishes her supply of Cham. berlains Cough Kemedy. It is cer- tain to be needed before the winter is over, and the results are much more prompt and satisfactory when it is kept at hand and given as soon as the cold is contracted and before iz has become settled in the system. In almost every instance a severe cold may be warded off by taking first indications of the cold appears. There 'is no danger in giving it to ] 2 ful substance. It is pleasant to take --both adults and children like it. J W. BURNHAM, Clerk of hie Third +) , Division Court. ~ Office in Psot Office Block, Port Perry. drove-| them to take part in the general at- | busy fishers as Englishmen were, they | esque Excellent! the Chief, fixing | lish folk, the bulk of whon lay said probably in what is now Lower Han his keen eye on the sergeant over agd Oldenbufg. On one side of There's no fault to be found with them the Saxons of Westphalia held | this. But this is not the same beer the land {fem the Weser to the | You sold me yesterd when, as a Rhine; on the other the Kastphalian | soldier, I sat on that seat and paid Saxons stretched away to the Elbe. | my money I'he Chief pushed his North again of the fragment of the | enquiry "home, and the canteen- English folk in Sleswick lay anoth- | keeper was promptly court-martial- | er kindred tribe, the Jutes, whose | led | name is still preserved in their dis = trict of Jutland. Engle, Saxon, and Temperance in Australis. Jute all belonged to the same Low Temperance and prohibition bulk German branch of the Teutonic fam largely in the latest New Zealand ily, and at the moment when history | papers. Mahuta, the third and the discoveres them they were being | last of the Maori Kings, who re drawn togetber by the ties of a com- | cently renounced his sovereignity and mon blood, common speech, common | accepted a seat in the upper house social and political institutions. | has publicly taken the pledge by way There is little ground, indeed, for | of encouraging native chiefs to do believing that the three tribes look likewise In the districts around | ed on themsclves as one people, or | Dunedin, the Caledonian centre and that we can as yet apply to them, | the commercial capital of the colony, save by anticipation, the common | some scores of public houses have | name of Englishmen But each of | ceased to exist as such through the them was destined to share in the operation of the local general elec conquest of the land in which we | tion As this was the big-option live; and it is from the union of all | poll that accompanied the recent of them when its conquest was com- | gest compulsory closure of public plete that the English people has | houses in New Zealand history some of the leading dailies sent down some found | special correspondents to report and describe anticipated "scenes But editorial foresight was at fault in this instance. T'here were no scenes | worthy of the attention of a pictur- reporter, probably because | there was no liquor available as a motive power. I'he hotels had timed their supplies to last just up to com pulsory closing day Many private from | houses in these districts are now pri- vate hotels, well supplied with liquid refreshments. | Wonderful Bird Musicians. { Mr. George Henschel tells in Nature of a musical feat by a canary-bird, | which, he says, seems to him 50 | wonderful that he should consider it | incredible if he had not, with his own ears, heard it, not once, but | dozens of times. A bullfinch had been taught to pipe the tune of "God Save the King,' and a young canary learned it from him. Finally 3 stopped after the first half a little longer than the proper rhythm war- ranted, the canary would take up the tune where the bullfinch had stopped, and finish it. This happened when the respective cages containing the birds were in separate rooms. For a Bad Oold. If you have a bad cold you need a good reliable mdicine like Cham berlain's Cough Remedy to loosen and relieve it, and to allay the irrit- ation and inflammation of the throat and lungs The soothing and heal- ing propertivs of this remedy and the quick cures which it effccts makes it a favorite everywhere. For sale by A. J. Davis. Grand Trunk Railway. TIME TABLE. Port PERRY. GOING SOUTH. GOING NORTH. 7.25 a.m. 9.51 a.m. 11.35 a.m. 5-40 p.m, 1.33 pm. 7.33 p.m. EZ Mr. Vickery has just to hand a car load of Portland Cement, which he is selling at $2 75 per barrel, and in lots of five barrels and upward, lower prices will be quoted. | about | not to the permit $l ow Medicine sent C. Everythin 3 m FRE § DRS. KENN No. 148 SHELBY pes of their honest 1 and are rogues, wi hy not first demand er Kl can ly and responsibility as give best of bank you lost hope? Are you contempla- rv blood been di ?_Hi Jatment will cure you. 'What it has K ho has 0 BEFORE AND AFTER. "I'd care not for homors or wealth, sald, "If your love should rove a Ii g I'd care not for pleasure or healthy nald; "I'd chiefly desire to dle." "I'd care not for home or for she sald; "Life's joys would seem a jest. When your passion wavers or e sald, "I shall seek for eternal res'. Vi Yet to-day he digs deeply ih Dawson, the say, ' And In politic cut there he wins. She rules in a Toronto home, they say, | "And rocks a cradle of twins. PIETY OF CREE INDIANS. Interesting Information Given by Bishop of Kecwntin, visit to Toronto, | During his recent Bishop Loftus, of Keewatin, gave some remarkable instances of the piety and devotion which he said was Babbath Jorvices, 11.09 «nd 7.00. eek Evenin toe, Thursday 7.30. METHODIST CHURCH. REV. G. H. COPELAND, Pastor. Sabbath Borvices, Rervice, and 7. Week Evening Thursday 7.30. Btrangers welccme dad conducted to seats. 8ST. JOHN'S CHURCH. (PRESBYTERTAN.) REV. W. COOPER, B.A., Pastor. rvice, BAPTIS Rove REV. MR. MCFARLANE, Piston. RCH OF TH (ANGLICAN) T CHURCH. Co Pada 1.30, | E ABCENSION, 'REV. G. W. LOCKE M. A., Incumbent. Sunday Matins, 10.30 a.m. Erensong, p.m. Bunday School, 2.30 p.m. Thursday R. C. REV Third Sun, Evensong, 7.30 p.m CHURCH. RICHARDSON day at 10 30 a. m, universal among the Cree Indians of | ___ 5 the Hudson's Bay District, in those regions not invaded by civilization, which was killing off the Indians and virtually destroying the value of re- 1 "efforts among them Our fee returned if we fail. Any one sending 1Zi0US crioris. 8 g ¥ sketch and description of any invention will Bishop Loftus, who has labored for promptly receive our opinion free concerning years among the Cree Indians and patentability of same. "How to Obtaiu a ID Iudsor Day, said that [FRtent" sent upon request. Patents secured Eskimos of Hudson's Bay, through us advertised for sale at our expense he had seen Indian men and women | 'Patents taken out through ns receive special walk 10, 15, 20, or 25 miles through | neéee, without charge, in THE PATENT RECORD, % 0. Db an illustrated and widely circulated journal snow to attend a church service, be- {iconsulted by Manufacturers and Investors ginning at 8 a.m. on Sunday, and for sample copy FREE, Address, he had known them to travel 200 to VICTOR J. EVANS & CO. 400 miles to kneel at the Lord's (Patent Attorncys,) table. In 95 per cent. of the Indian | Evaas Building, WASHINGTON, D. GC. tents on the shores of the Hudson's Bay family prayer was conducted night and morning aod he had seen F QR ITH the Indians fast all Sunday rather . PIA 3. than kill game on the Lord's Day, which was a marked contrast to |g = io SRE iy - ao o many professing Christians, who, | FCN EY & Car tex when relieved of the constraints of xa the city, had not scrupled to go hunt~ Fakes pleasure i velar ' ing on the Sabbath for sport The he ul { } aay : Diocese of Kcewatin was an immense [#0 the public lor the esteemed | o embracing a portion of Ontario | Onage bestowed on him since cor on the south running north 1,600 |'mencing the business of Cartir miles, and covering 450,000 square | {nd would state that he is tull miles equipped to do Goverament Lightship "The Lurcher" | CARTING AS IT SHOULD BI On the 17th October Miss Belle Jeffrey christened the new Govern t the very shorte tice and a ment lightship "The Lurcher,"" which | srices that cannot fa please th is to all intents and purposes 8 | yhlic. Carting to and from th vg lighthouse 5 « N floating lighthou and it was then failway Depot Specialty sent into the waters of Toronto Bay R Yer Bricl I The Lurcher is intended for light- Jesience prick Hou opp ship duty on the Lurcher Shoal, near | {ite the Methodist Parsor the end of Nova Scotia. It is very I stiffly built, and stands high above | 9qrt Perry, Aug 1GOI. the water. She will have a crew of ¢ 30 men The measurements of the Kull are: 112 "MONEY TO LOAN. Length between perpendiculars, feet; breadth moulded, 28 feet, 6 | We hare funds from private parties for investment or inches; depth of hold from top te}. 4 CENT te Whe rial u keel to top of maindeck beam amid= { biain money mt and ver ships, 14 feet 10% inches. The wves- | ity) We Live ous sel has three decks, the main and spar decks being continuous and the lower deck extending from the stem to coal bunker bulkhead, and from OND & 00 the sternpost to the engine bulkhead. The machinery includes the engine, surface condensing single cylinder, 2 inches, and the propeller is of solid type fect 8 inches diam= eter Each boat has two navy type boilers, 9 feet diameter, 16 feet 74 inches long, designed for a working pressure of 100 Ibs. per square inch. The boat is to be fitted out with fog signals, whale boats, windlasses, cables, mushroom anchors, etc., the regu can and is b. fog singals being sufficiently power= No. 2-For ful to be heard for 25 miles. The | gtronger--t! craft is fitted with electric lights for Lad k your lighthouse service and with a large 1,000 1b. bell. The Lurcher and its | gangerous. companion craft, which is built on the same specifications forsuse in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, at the end of the Island of Anticosti, are worth in the neighborhood of $200,000. It is the first time lightships have been built in this country, and they are in excess of Lloyds. Destroying the Indiana A deplorable state of affairs is re- ported to exist among tha Indians in the Peace River District and con- tiguous sections of the Northwest. Mr. J. M. Macoun, of the Geological Survey, who has just returned from an exploring trip, says the natives are being destroyed by alcohol sold under the guise of perfumes and es- | sences, The law permits cach resi- dent to import twenty gallons of spirits 'annually, a proportion of which probably finds its way ihto the stomachs of the red men. But it is system that the hy CH Is the only safe, 28 Victoria Strest, TORONTO Cook's Cotton Root Compound. Ladies' Favorite, reliable lator on which woman depend "in the hour time of need." Prepared In two degrees of strength. N No. 1.--For ordinary cases No. 1 and No. 2, y far the best dollar medicine known special hree dollars per box. cases--10 degrees druggist for Cook's ies--as] Cotton Root Compound. Take no other as all pills, mixtures and imitations are No. 1 and No, 2 are sold and recommended by all druggists in the Do- minion of Canals. Matled 1 any address on receipt of price and four 2-cent postage Btamps, The Coo. lk Company, 'Windsor, Ont. 2 No. 1 and No. 2 are sold in Port Periy Allison and A. J. Davis, Druggis: Farm for Sale ortoRent. ne stable, Bo done. , apply to the proprietor, 3 Burketon, Mar. 24, 1903. ~~ For Sale or to Rent, lot 31 and 32 con. 10, Darlington containing 165 acres more or less ges there are a good stone house, 3 well On the prem watered, most For further particu J. GALLAGHER, Burketon. prevailing drunkenness is attri The law is well enforced by the Mounted Police and the quantity ef spirits that enters un dians, special brands of essences ami perfumes are manufactured inf Kast for the trade of the Northwest. It is almost pure alcohol, flavored as "peppermint," 'Florida water" and "'cau de Cologne." These decactions are sold at ehe trading posts, and the result is the moral and physical | Of degeneration of the Indians to a |}. point that promises their speedy ex- | | tinction under the most lamentable | jo conditions. 4 i The Ticket-of-Leave. ) The probation system, sometimes known as indeterminate sentences, and called in Canada the Ticket-of- leave Act, is and has been regarde® 9 by the Congress as the greatest fac: a tor in the reformation of criminals. if it is properly administered. Sev- eral States have adopted this sys- tem. New York and Indiana have the best probation laws in the world. the best probatioo laws in the world, The Canadian system is inferior, ac- cording to the annual report of the National Prison Congress recently held in Louisville, Ky: The Ticket- of-leave Act is good, but its applica tion {is unsatisfactory. Different in- fluences can be brought to bear an< it often happens that a worthy pri- soner is refused a ticket-of-leave while it is just as often granted to undeserving prisoners. What is need- ed is a commission, such as exists in New York and Indiana, to adjudi- «ate upon the merits of every appui- tant or ticket-of-leave. 352 = same @ = 8 er and vici kid lace or he new LH ers for and turn ow. It otwear ly place s, adapted for shor! Louis XV heels it dress wear--hig! flexible soles Ser affords a view o that is not to be else. Every sho: every price named an be d in your size inside, GIE. A. are despatched from the Post erry as follows : g North-- 9.30 a. m. ing South--11.20 a. m. oing North-- 5.15 p. m. ving Sou th--10 p.m FOR "STORY OF 8OUTH "by John Clark so. A. "who has South wi DFAT EL.D., Edward i, ue FH , of ons week from 12 for us. We are the only ve a in Al bo branch THFUL PERSON 'TO well established house ina di ; sig on retail 'merchants territory. Sulalary penses, ble $19.70 on. Posi- House, 334 Dearborne Seale SEALED 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. 30, 1899. 80 YEARS® EXPERIENCE TrAapE MARKS oon An for secur; ts. Patents ied HH oTh "Munn & Co. receive special notes, without charge, in Scientific American, A handsomely fllustrated weekly. lation of any scientific journal, Term: iil ou oatha Br. Bold by all newsdealers: NE, AN fn New Jo TICKETS TO ALL FARTS OF THE 6 ¥ Bt Waretnsioth WorLD.--Mr. W H. McCaw, Pert Pi position to to supply all necessary 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 Railway. Parties intending to travel will consult their wn iuterests by consulting Mr. McCaw before embarking on a trip. {LY EARTILY thanking th patronage € i f 8 nany years [ have kept a Livery Esta nent in Port Perry, I have much pleasure in announcing that I have removed MY LIVERY ! to my former place of business Water Street lihera vhich Iam about. to largely extend in reuse facilities so that the public may be setter accominodated with safe and desir able IGS AT MODERATE OHARGES R. VANSICKLER. Port Perry, June 21, 1900. "s a strong Statemen' when we say the live gre the greatest and general storckeepe: in Canada The Canadian Grocer." You cannot read it without getir some valuable information. Spend : cent for a post card and send for a sample copy and be convinced. The MacLean Pub. Co., Limited: TORONT MONTREAL, 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. OP BAVA AAV LSAT BS, 840() YEARLY to Christian ma Jor woman to look after our ome, - Enclose self-addressed stamped nvelope for particulars to H. A. Bher- man, General Manager, Corcoran Buildy ing, Dpporite United States Treasury 1] ashington, D. C. ANAS SAC LX SRDS AN Farm for Sale. OQUTH- HALF lot 9g and South: west quarter of lot 10, con 3, Township of Brock, consisting of about 80 acres good Farm Land with house and barn; also eo acres Hardwood, and 50 acres Pine, Cedar, Hemlock and Tamarac. Apply to owner. H. B. CLEMES, Dec. 8, 1902. Port Perry Justin Time. --Mr. W. H. Doubt has provided a magnificent supply for health, comfort and appearance during the present season. He Don't fail to give him a call. makes them up in finest styles: | basimess EGGS IN WINTER AS MANY AS IN SPRING YOU CAN GET THEM FROM INGRAM'S Prolific Laying Strains OF ---- BUFF ORPINGTONS ARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS WHITE WYANDOTTES _ Some excellent Trios and Up-to Date Cockerels for Sale. EZ 25 Utility Pullets §€3 N. INGRAM & SONS, Cochrane St., Port Perry General Blacksmithing The having opened in the undersigned cong atley cooged by Mn B. Just west of Drs. Arclier & Archer's Office, 1s prepared to do all kinds ol of General Blacksmithing at Reas onahle Charges, HORSE-SHOEING A Specialty and Satisfaction Guaranteed 4. Apples Wanted. I'he well known, reliable house ¢ Edward Jacobs & Sons of London Eng., and Hamburg, Germany want Consicnments of Canadiar Apples, Highest prices to be ob tained assured Reasonable ad- vance against B/L. allowed. Com- municate with E. P BLACKFORI Nurseryman, Toronto. Jt will pay you to ship to the firm of Edwar. Jacobs & Sons PAINTING Kalsomining, &c Fae undersigned would take this eppor tunity of thanking his numerous pat rons for their liberal aud still increasing patronage during the time he has carried o: the business of PAINTING in Port Perry, and would state that he i better prepared than ever to execute al orders for Painting. Kalsomining and Paper Hanging Parties entrnsting their work to me may rely on having it neatly and promptly exe cuted, My charges are moderate 1 am also prepared to supply Paints, &e,, when contracting A continuance of public patronage sol cited WM. TREMEER Port Perry, Mar. 23, 1593. JOHN NOTT, UNDERTAKER, and Funeral Director, PORT PERRY. ~ GFO. GARDNER \ ISHES to inform the public of Porc Perry and surrounding country, tha: after four yoars experience in prosecuting his 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 :--S3tone Masonry, Bricklaying in all its branches; Plain and Oruamental Plastering, Also Artificial Stone Walks, that will remain permanent and will endure any weather. Concrete Cisterns without any wood in their con struction to decay or give out. If you are in need of any of the above, come to me and obtain prices, All materisl required in my Jioe will Ye kept constantly on hand, aud for sale alter the first of next April, » a GEO. GARDNI of such goods as all should wear | ANTED -- TRUSTWORTHY ANC active gentlemen or ladivs to tarve! for reaponsble, established housc in Ontario Monthly $65.00 and expenses. Position teady. Reference, Encloseself-nddressed tam ped envelepe. The Dominion Com p vy. Dept. Y Chicago, 8 Wood's Phospbodine is sold fn Port Perry by A. J. Davis aod C, H, Allison, Druggists. 2 8.1. CawkeraSon Wh ae ably ensconsed in their new pre- mises in the Purdy Block where the Public will always fin an ample supply of CHOIGE, 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 attention. S. T. CAWKER & SON. March 3, 1902. HARNESS receive prompt N returning thanks to the public for ar patronage extended to me for over 3€ years, I would respectfully intimate that an, as usual, now ready for busincss, and have a Large & Assorted Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS whieh I am determined to sell very CHEAP As an inducement to Casi purchasers | Lila { of 1 A nl -b Dawuk of pr onde will be allowed on all Sales from now unit Jan, 1st next All work being gs MADE BY HA "<3 und ne fastory work kept in stock, the super ority of my goods will at ence become appa' ent. Intending purehasergwwi that } ne a call befor un he suited Mg eX] e giving the ye SUNDERLAND THE under d keeps on hand and for | sales the following ricultural Mach nes and Implements manufactined by the Ld £1] 13 NUR DAMIR NF [| deVtdd ba b dv OF PETERBOKR( Binders, Reapers, Crown Mower, Iai Seeder iger Hay Ruke I'w Furrov Plow, Thr Furrow Gang, Conbina tion Plows, Champion Plows, 8. 1 Cultivator, 8 rrow, Land Roller, Steel Frame Spring Toot lf 5 Cultivator, Binder Trucks, &« Uso the following, the munufacture of JOHN AEEL, Toronto High class Threshing ontfits. Tractior Engines and Machines, Victor Clover Huller. Portable Triumph Engine Tam prepared to supply everything the rmer requires in way of Machines, Tuiple (ents, Repairs, &c oF A cull solicited One door West of Mel onald's H tel. f BRYANT Sunderland, April 8 COPYRIGHT SPRING IS THE INE FOR HOUSE CLEANING. I am prepared to o all kinds of Papering, Painting, &c. Paper and Paint furpished if cquired. : Wo of your in- tion orimprovement and we willtell ous 4 Sr, opiulon as to whether it is p'obably, ve often, Ybeen successfully prosecuted 'by us. We conduct fully i offices in Mortreald and Washi: qualifies us to prompt-¢ gton ; t ly dispatch work nnd quickly secure Patents) oe thoy D High ref {Rarniahed. Patents procured through Marion & Ma- "}rion receive special notice without charge in over 100 Spaciety = Patent business of Manuf Lon e888 anufac- turers Engineers, MARION & MARION Patent Experts and Solicitors B'id'g, Montreal hndhs 'Washlagton D.C. Wanted Immediately. 100 GIRLS and 30 MEN. Good wages given. Apply at Evaporator. ¢ Regan Packive Co., Lo, = Port Perry, o'

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