Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 25 Jan 1906, p. 1

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Department -- est mers' Business--Speci to out-of-town accounts. a taken for collection at lowest rates. Blank forms (ree on application, PORT PERRY BRANCH, e subject to withdrawal at a A ¥ UR i current rates. al attention given to Farmers, Farmers' notes dis CHAS. JT GANAD ) THE UNITED STATES. | posits of one dollar and upwards received in this department Dy time without wotice or delay. Interest at high- tle and Hog Dealers; and coninted. Sale Notes Cashed or BALLARD, Manacen. R. D. ARCHER, M.D.C.M. Victoria 2 University : MB, Totoute University, har or the College of Physicians and 0s, ; Liceutiute of the Royal ege of Sucgeons, Wlinburg ; Licentiate the. Roya) College of Physicians, Edin wey MBmber of the Faculty of Physiciafis Jirrgeons, Glasgow ate Resident of $ha Rolanda Hospital, Dublin, Women, Odice and Residence, second: st of Davis' Furniture Emporium, ¥ Office h 9tolla. . 2 to'5 p.m,, and evenings. Jimve taken as partoer, my brother, Dr chen, M. D., C. M., Mcmber of Col of Physicians and Surgeons, Ont. Port Perry, June 9, 1897. "BPR. 8 J. MELLOW, PavsIAN, SURGEON, &O, se-and Residence, Queen St., Port Perry fide. hours--8 to 10 am; 1to8 pm, and Breniugs. Telephone in office and house, aad day over the lines south, th tho residence of G. L. Robson, Port Perry, Nov. 15, 16894. MH. BARRIS, BALLS. BARRISTER, &c., upant of the . Yarnold. Ont. open night connected V.8. or to and occ of the lata F, _ iPort Perry, rr _ MONEY Te LOAN. t a 4 per cents ue orn © (t residence, Gt on. ie i of Port Perty,)-- * Mosey To Loan. F,, PATERSON, K.C., ster, Solicitor, Notary abl Ha 810% 1, Temple Building, Cor. Bay chmond Streets, Toronto. ptito, March 31, 1868. GEO. JACKSON, Licensed Anctioneer, Valuator, &c. POR THE COUSTY OF ONTARID AND TOWNSHI. OF CARTWRIGHT, ISHES at this the commencement « ayuther Auction Rale Season to rc tarn thanks to his numerous rons fo past favors. In requesting their esteeme. {and continued patronage he desires state that no effort or pain will be spare on his part to make all sales entrusted t- him successes. His very extensive practic in the past should be a sufficient recon mendation as to his ability. all Sale given into his charge will be attended t with promptucss und dispateh, Sele list made ont and blank notes supplied frue an application. Parties wishing to engage his services may consult hia Sane REedlarem either at the Observer or Siandard Offices, Port Purry, for dates claimetl for Sales, and muke arraugements, or write to his addrees 47 Phone at Residence, No, 31. x CHARGES MODERATE. GKO. JACKSON, Nov. 1, 1901. Port Perry I'. O AUCTIONEER. TTYHE undersigned takes this opportuaity of returniug thanks for the very liberal rinnge he haa received as Auctioneer in pi the past, tarned to advantage of patrons, aml parties favoring me with -their sales may-rély on their interents being fully protected. No [oifort will' wile it proftshle fo sales fp my ha JOS. BAIRD I ICEN*ED AUCTIONEER for tbe, -4 County of Ontario. Sale Register. at the Usarnvex Office Patronage solicited. Manchester, Jan. 19, 1899, H. McCAW, or . ISSUER MARRTAGE LICENSES, Port Perry Ont. Port Perry, Dec. 19, 1883, , LL.B, County 5. FARKWELL, K.C add ster, County Sol- rown Attorney, Ba &o., Notary Public and Conveynancer Lr Soin wing Court House, Whitby, ££ . WM. SPENCE, Township Clerk, Commissioner, &ec. s propared to Loan any quantity of Money W. A. SANGSTER. . DENTAL SURGEON. Office Tlours--9 to 12 a.m, 2 to 6 pm. Alo opiu Saturday evenifigs. : a Gold Filings, Bridge and Crow Nork a Specialty. Vitallsed Air. F. D. McGrattan SG. (DENTIST) 1,5. of Royal College of Devital Surgnons, "also D.D.8: of Toronto University. fice in the Allison Block over Allison's 5 Drug Store, a.m. t05.30 p.m, DENTIST, he Post Cffice, PORT PERRY, ; : including és of Dentistry, wd Bridge Work succesfully ? pricrived. «og 0 on d Farm Security at 6 and 7 per cent (Trost funds), a > | All kinds o® Conveyancing executed with | ueatness and dispateh. Office--Oue door wes \lanchester. Bw Maichester April 11, 1888. t of Town Hall, | "North Ontario Observer, A Weekly Political, Agricultural and | Family Newspaper 18 PUBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, ONT, KVERY THURSDAY MORNING p BY H. PARSONS TERMS. ~§) voum, If paid in t dence; if not $1.60 a until arrears ure paid up. sddreased to thie wil be at our risk. ADVERTISEMENTS measured by Nooparie!, and churged according to the space Toes occupy. ADVERTISEMENTS % Taeived A for Bl LETTERS contain! oney, Se, Tropa | aa regi ne wid, he " ) ertise: ment will ee omy until for: I ALT Trae nt te he in all cases he stiiotly' adhered to DEPAR The increased experience 'and | extensive practice which I have had will be |: noed "best routes, &c. 'numerous Ticket Agencies for Rail- toad and Steamship lines, he has been rea £100,000 STERLING (British Oapital) Lo lend at 4, 43 and 5 per cent «2 on good Mortgage Security. apply to DAVID J. ADAMS Banker and Broker, Port Perry, Ont. . . very > PRE undersigned takes th o ppartuniry of thanking the inhp blzanta of Port Perry und surrag Ul country 'for the liberal i IN Erg . ronage bestow: dd # inca enmmienvin, Livery in Port Ps rile e Having extensively added to _ my stock of hurees ; as well as conveyances of the Intest type of constriction for comfort and pleasure, Iam in a position to meet the requirements of the most fustidious as to style nnd desirable equippage in every respeot--in every way suit. able for private driving. wed- dings, funer ls, @e™ Patios * wishing an afternoon drive can have their choice of suitable doable or single rigs and care- ful drivers will also be suppli ed when required. I possess a number of good Spring and Deay Wagons und will, at all times, attend to Carting with the utmost cure and promptucss. A I wish further to state that in futureguitab'e convevances will be at the Railway Depot to convey passengers and bag- guge to private residences, and will also convey pussenyrrs and : Haggnge to the Depot 1 time for departing trains, on being given notice. WM. JAMIESON, Port Perry, July 30, 1003, A TICKETS TO ALL FARTS OF THE WorLp.--Mr. 'W. H. McCaw, Port Perry. is now in a position (0 issue tickets to all parts of the world and t6 supply all necessary informatisn to parties as to the cheapest and In "addition to his ppointed Ticket Agent for the Grand runk Railway. tics intending to travel will consult their own interests by consulting Mr, McCaw before embarking on a trip. Canada's Greatest Nurseries want a Local Salesman for Jamieson's to you--healthy hair, no dan- druff,nd pimples, no eruptions. 'The best kind of a testimonial -- "Bold for over sixty years." i dancing on a oor tle uneasy At the sound men's hearts?" = © | Tom broke from hie bold with a Hit: EH (x away--back home~I-I bad to come," | she panted. 2 kindly and put his arm half about Then in through the door camesthe qld minister in his rasty black cost, the picture of stern, A Dancing Girl . | By Martha McCalloch-Williams' Copyright, 1905, by P. C. Bastment "I wish"-- Miranda said, then stop- ped, sighing. She was so little used to having her wishes come true. | + Miranda loved color and light and music. e in her there must have been a stain of trop: | dc blood, else how aggount for her de- | sires any more than for her silky black hair, her liquid black. eyes, her fine olive skin touched with scarlet? Her dancing as well was wholly untaught, untimed save by the sweep of the wind, the lulling patter of raindrops on the cattage roof. She danced only | when she thought herself alone. Her grandfather, the minister, thought dancing of any sort a deadly sin. | He had a heart kind and true, this bent, white haired old gentleman, and nd it was 'gh : up the feminine counterpart of its fa ther. » It was 8 queer, a piteous jest of fate that gave her, a woman born for the missionary cause, such a piece of quick- silver as Miranda for a daughter. How the girl came by the quicksilver exsept through the grandmother was a puszle of heredity. Her father was a mission- ary, meek in all things except regard- ing his chosen work. There he had a lion's heart, a Spartan's endurance. Thus Miranda had been left behind when her parents went to the far east. That was ten years back--so long ago they were little more to her now than 'memories. " Miranda picked up her mother's lat- est letter. The paper was thin, the writing fine and crabbed, but she was able to read an account of the dancing girls in one of the heathen temples. After the third reading she shut her eyes. Her mother had dwelt feelingly upon the horror, the impiety of it all, but somehow there had crept between the lines enough of the east to bewitch the reader. She seemed to see it all-- the crowd, the lights, the wreaths of smoking incense, the figures swaying in time and tune. And as she thus saw mentally there came to her a longing | not to be resisted to dance dance, dance, the night away. It was evening. Her gruadfather was away at a special service in his | mission chapel. She had been left be- | hind to finish some slight household tasks. Half a mile down the street the Brixton fancy ball was in full blast. She had a card to it--one she had not dared to display. Now, insane- ly, she made up her mind to go--not- withstanding her formal regrets. She would not go as Miranda Aé¢ton--ratber as a dancing girl from a' world un- known. ft, amase until he caught "Miranda, I en to pluck you a brand from the bu g--but, oh, you wanton! You have it certain you will burn for this fn everlasting fires." He swung upon' heel, but turned back, saying dully, *I shall be waiting when you choose e--home." Miranda sprang 'toward him, but Landon restrained: Ber. "You will only make things worse,Y Le said. "Listen! Tom Brixton will veuch for me--that I mean you no harm $n what I say. Let me take you awayito the city. It Is the place for such/as you. Here life will be a burdes to you and those around you. There you may be happy and famous and yi! "Let's get ont of this," Brixton sald, opening a locked glgor that led to his father's office and 'wihg the minis- ter 4nd Landon within it. Miranda fol- lowed then,' moving like one in a dream. There werd low, earnest words, whose import she ald not catch, then' somehow 'she Was fhisked off to the parsonage. J She did not- "that night. Next morning she was a train speeding cityward, wollen bi if she ever should case. New meh, methods, measures had crowded Lim from the place be loved so well. Now, for two years past Miranda's bounty had maintained bim. He knew the sdurce of it, although be never mentioned her name. She was no mere dancer, but an actress who had conquered her place in the world. Landon had lived up to his word--he had thade Ber rich and famous, albeit he had been unable to make her love hin. Why, he could not understand. Tom Brixton might possibly have enlight- ened him. It was Tom who kept Mi- randa in touch with what went on in the little brown cottage, and when he said simply "Come!" she knew sowme- thing of what to expect. But not all. No fancy could paint for her the mother face, wan and full of mether longing, or show the father, thin and bowed, with yet something of soldier fire in bis faded eyes. Grand- father Carter was pitifully aged. The good man had lived so sparely be was almost ¢ * Miranda came in to them, not s creature of silk and lace, but in the same stuff frock she had worn upom her outgoing. As she looked from one to another her heart rose in ber throat. Instinctively ihe ran and caught her mother in arms, kneeling to lay her head the thin breast and sob out, "I am Dever going away agaln-- wil let we stay." "isn't going, whatever you it's by your leave." although she is not ours @ were the deserters," Mrs. Ls! the two ministers bh Warrant. Your Confidence, oS ~ SAVINGS LOANS Our long acquaintance with this district enables wa to make as liberal loans to owr customers ax sound Ananciug will per- mil, No Dela; Interest Undoubted Security to Depositors. in Drawing Your Mowry 'aid or Compounded Twice a Year. Don't Wait till you have a large sum to dept. #1 will Open aw Account. Small Suvingy form the Base of Larye Fortwwes. Begin with ua Now ! WE CASH SALE NOTES. one case b thie has resolted in phetrmonia that has not _tecovered. For sid" by all druggists, fps ie - that ¢EFerully void TWinking of tnemis eelves as combines, although it might puzzle any outsider to perceiva the dif- ference, fee! virtuous by comparison with the master plumbers as they now- stand exposed. But it is ail a question of Gistance. In many other lines of" 'business men have been moving in the, same direction, although not going thé same as the master plumbers. BANK MONEY ORDERS. Uptd $5 3 cts. Over $5 up to §10.. 6 cts. Over 10 up to 30..10cts Over 3oupto 50..15 cts. PORT PERRY AGENCY. Best way to send small amounts Cashed free at any Bank. For sums over 850 use Bank DrarTs, Best and cheapest way to send LARGE AMOUNTS. Special Rates. H. 6 HUTCHESON, Manager. | very Black negro, was leanIig over the rail. A large hogshead of molasses came creaking up on the end of the chain and swung unsteadily to and fro. Finally, with a smash, it struck the rail and broke into bits, molasses flying | everywhere. There was a wild cry, | and from the wreckage came the negro, | soaked from head to foot and entirely unrecognizable. He danced madly about and shouted like nothing hnoman. A little Irishman, in overalls, regarded the apparition for a moment with mouth open awe, and, a light breaking on him, he shouted: '"Moike! Fer the love er hivin! Molket WHI yes see phat came out of the barrel uv mer- lasses!" It took the combined efforts of the supérintendent and his assistants to convince Pat that be hadn't discover 4 8 Dew stowaway method. 'MORALS IN BUSINESS. "ancial Life of Toron reader must. wonder how the to. about thelr usual! pursuits, and meet their friends #nd acquaintances, afier the exposures they have been subject- | master plumbers of Toromto can go ©OUTt that caused the dréd dnd fifty business men of prev- lous good character who are fgund to have been joimed together in an oath- bound brotherhood to extract imordjn- ate gains from those who came to them as customers. It would be reassuring if disgrace attended such exposures as these. But does it? asks The Toronto Star, which thus continues: The most discouraging feature of the whole thing is that disgrace does mot follow exposure and conviction. There is a general public censure and a collective upbralding of offenders, but for the In- dividual there is apology and excuse. He says for himself and his friends repeat that he was but one of many, but he could mot hold out alone, that he is as straight as the next man, and 80 on. Or he will go further, and say that in joining together they only aim- ed to secure a profit of twenty-five per cent.; that they desired to brace up in- competent conipetitors, who tendered below cost, demoralized trade for a time, and went bankrupt at last, to the injury of many. He will even grow . i Go i, was 4 in Perhaps it will be found that some, being so cireumstanced that they could, have gone just as far. Business needs a new declaration of a moral code. Every man in businéess- should face the fact that he himself must decide some things for himself, --what he will do and what he will not do, irrespective of what his oppon~ ent in business does or what he sus- pects his opponent of doing. Nine~, tenths of the dishonesties in trade are done under sheiter of the excuse that. rivals In business do these things or, worse, and must not be allowed to. prosper too greatly by their unfair practices. This is contemptible rea-. soning, for each supplies the other. with a pretext for sharp practices against third parties. The mam who fights the devil with fire spreads the, war. There must be a standard fromi which a man cannot depart without, tnourring moral blame--there must be a line which, if he steps over, he de- teriorates and becomes less than hon- est. Thereafter he is honest only in the comparative sense, and can omy admire himself by bringing up comn- trasts with those less nice in their methods. When men get as far as, that they begin calling In lawyers to interpret honesty for them, and the. only boundary they respect is the limitation the law imposes. They no longer ask themselves "Is it right?' They ask their lawyer: "Is it legal', If he doubts it they retain him te eoatrive it somehow. Why should not a business man test {s practices by asking himself if what & proposes to do is right, and just, and whether it is such treatment as he would like to receive were ul other v's shoes isthe 3 and, Yet the Pp judge to desig- nate the operations of these represén- tative Toronto business men of to-day as downright robbery and plunder of ed to, The reader must be ally curious as to the manner in which a master plumber will carry himself when he meets any one of those men who have been Ris customers during the past three years--men whom he has plucked like plgeons, men he has lured In to become the prey of his se- cret band. Any man who has plain, old-fash- foned ideas of right and wrong, of good and evil, will suppose that indel- ible disgrace has come upon the hup- their for the methods pursued in their. establishments so long as they are the usage of the trade, the whole conscience of busi-. ness will become no better than that of the most unworthy person or most, cl 1 firm in trade. Persqnal by practice, and long mn Why, then, are these men not so far in disgrace das Individuais--in thelr own sight and in that of others--that it would be useless te continue doing business in a community where their operations have been exposed? Simply because they have not gone alarmingly beyond the standard of "business h y™ ag It is ticed down town every day in the week. It is true that soma other combines and organisations can be. One flour other. Tt nearly pure. Your 8 it FREE, There cannot be different degrees of purity any more than there can be different degrees of honesty. If a man be honest, that is all he There is no superlative. cannot be purer than In these times when all flour ma ufacturers are claiming purity you should remember these two things: ' Actual purity in flour can only be secured by the use of electricity. 'Royal Household Flour is the only flour, made and sold in Canada, that is purified by electricity. You can get Ogilvie's 'Royal Household Flour from your grocers "Ofiies Bok for Cook, be 'more > Ne { responsibility cannot be evaded. Men who sit around a board, call them- selves business men, and do robbery, are not honest men when, they walk separately to their homes. The em- ploye who robs for his employer Is no less a thief than {f he robbed his em- ployer. It may be safer work, but on close analysis It |s no better. J How can soclety reclaim to honest ways the Ignorant and the vicious | When the very men on whom the con- duct of soclety depends are themselves taking liberties with all the principles of honesty, and respecting no bound- | ary to their conduct except that which | the criminal law sets up and maintains | against the assaults of the shrewdest. | lawyers? Business calls for a higher | moral code, and'if thé¢re is to be any | improvement it must begin with the | individual business man--it must be- | gin with YOU. Toa Cheese and Children. hoo Throughout a great portion of One fario the settlements are so small that the schools are little better than huts. A few children gather together to be taught by some immature youth at a salary of about one dollar a day--lems than an ordinary laborer receives, says The Marmora Herald. If the people thought as much of their children ag they do of cheese they would adopt the system of having one good central school whera there are now a dozen. ' A Jamacian Lady 8 Hig of Jsmacian Lady Syesks bly #Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the' superintendent of Cart Service at Kingston"Jamaica, West India Is- lands. says that she has for some' ears used Chamberlain's Cough idl for coughs, croup and whooping cough and has found it very beneficial. She has implicit confidence in it and 'would not bef. without it in her home. Seld all 8 ;

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