«IT IS BASIER 70 MISTAKE OUR BiG I foe Rours--8 to W0'a.m ; Fto3 pm, and Evenings. : Teléphone in office and house, open ight and day over the lines south, councoted Sk Soa.residonce of G. L. Robson, V.S. Port Perry, Nov. 15, 1894, WIL AL HARRIS, BA LLB. Bu to 'and oscupant of the ehomnroR tho Jae F. Ml. Yarnold. Ont. Port Perry, MONEY TO LOAN. Private Funds at 4 per cont. Peb. 7, i901. Jno. W. Crozier, ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, CONVEYARUER, &c. Office at residence, 8th Con. each (one mile west of Port Perry, )-- Monky To Loan. E. FAREWELL, K.C., LL.B., County s+) , Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- vitor, &o., Notary Public and Conve, 3 Jffice--South ~ Court House, Whitby, W. A. SANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Office Hours=9 to 12 a.m., 2 to 6 pm. Also open Saturday evenings. a Gold Fillings, Bridge and Crown Work a Specialty. Vitalised Air. Dr. F D. McGrattan (DENTIST) L.D.S. of Royal College of Dental Surgeons, also DD; 3, of Toronto University. Office in the Allison Block over Allison's Drag Store. Office honrs--8 a.m. to 8.30 p.m. 3 , Aprile; 1902. J. A. Murray, DENTIST, )Moe over the Post Office. PORT PERRY. ge» nT Bed Rg a a rown 'an ge. Work successfully practiced. 5 1adi Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminum or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painless extraction when required: 4% Prices to suit the times® North Ontario Observer A Weekly . Palatical, Agricultural and Fapisly. Newspaper 18 PUBLISHED AT _ PORT PERRY, ONT. EVERY - THURSDAY MORNING BY H. PARSONS TERMS. $1 per annum, if paid in sdvancs ; if not $1.50 ibe Suey, to uber paper nechtioned until arrears are paid up. LETTERS countal: money, when addressed to thie Otice, and registered will be st our risk. ADVERTISEMENTS monsured by, Nonpusiel jn ADVERTISEMENTS received tor "arith od - A LIBERAL discount sllewsd fo Merchants and other 'who advertise by the year or half year. TH B termswill in ell casesbe strictly sdbered be JOB DEPARTMENT. ' Pamphlet 'Fiand Bills, Posters togroms, Dodger Bill Beads, Checks Lanter Hoods, Wedding Invitations, Blayk Farms Recep Books, Busiuess Os Bookx Olroulars, Assembly Osvds, Visiting Cards, &e aud Resldence, QueanSt., Port Pesry' i , I -ICEN ED the OBgrrvir Office rg) PORT PERRY, ONTARIO, T CEST PORT PERRY BRANCH Louis bon HO EUSCHESON Memager _ (Ziyi fied 'aver the Stars and Stripes. A school 'Il DAVID J. 8 DOUGLAS ADAMS, BANKERS ND BROKERS. | ~ MONEY- TO LOAN | (British Capital) at 4, panes Fire, Life and Recident Insurance. REAL ESTATE BOUGET, SOLD OR EXCH! any of the Prominees, or priwipcl] itis in tie Dominion of Canaila. Marriage Licenses Issued. AGEN T--Alan Line and CPR. Stcwmslep Com-| 4 and 5 per cent, JOS AUCTIONEER For wie County of Ontario. Sale Register ut "Patronage solicited. Manchester, Jan, 18, 1888. Licensed Anctiomeer, Valuator, Ss. FOR THE COUNTY 6F ONTARIO AND Townsiiy in the past should be a sufficient recom meadation as to his ability. All Sale given into his charge will be attended with promptuess made out and blank notes supplied free, on application. may consult hie Sax Rucisrew wither wt : the Observer or Standard Offices, Port Toad =n Summing lites, he has Perry, for dates claimed for Sales, wail make arrangements, or write to his ress Nov. 1, 1901. GEO. JACKSON, : OF CARTWRIGHT, ISHES at this the commuucrmtit of dispatch. Sale list Parties wishing to engage his services the 4% Phone at Residence, No. S51. =a CHARGES MODERATE. GEO, JATKSON, Port Perry P.O ATRID (Gow The denmmd (tor Whe Bread aff Win. Peas memaffunnree is such hat puttties ftvom the sumaunding wil ages ot Pott Panw ane cunstantiy drwmg to wm un ardor to alta: Pemry is asow 1m apy tickers ap @l purrs al he wand ami to supply all menesany nfl omation 10 parties msi the riheaest and bestroutes, &x. In adititiom to Ras numerous Ticket Agenaes: fan Badd Bam wom Ann-- L, $0 'm rior oo must die lhagely mioreased dena Wn. Phan has conciudiet to liygelyy menease: his bread noum bw ming mall the willagres ard] mow week wail! cane another Auction Smle Svesus tore: ENTE Whe re reufie se Be an tury thanks to his newerous purvens Foi The tod om un rhe © Gone!' past favors. In reguesting ther esteemed TW qoem ; and contioned patronage he desives, State $hat no effort or pein. willbe wparel! | rT on his part to make sil sulesentrusted 30 Mowers m0 im GF TH him successes. His very extensive pradtice Wigggp -- WW f wv Pent wn Uy IED been re mpponied Tact Agent fan Grand Trunk Rulivay. Panties mtending to ara] waill cans them own meres by awrsulling Min. WoCaw hefore cniimnfung om a tug. for Port. Perry and adjoining be dull farmers were pever more there is as'a conseguence, an in- A Reliable Local Sidesman WANTED! Bes For Sale. QUSE AND LOTS. siuated on Qodimame St. Punt Fesny Country io represent NURSERIES fpwuperty. Apply to ff Canada's: Oldest and Greatest as the Wikos pesdeotal ADAMS" Basa, Faax Pasa: While business in some lines may her, Wiss Margaret Riley, who 'natieediit: first notified the police, wi tolill the engineers to place the 'flag might. In fifteen minutes a hundred persons threatened to tear daw the Brinsh flag. gat! Nusy and haat it down, but pe would mever have been beating anly after a threat was Coin John Nicholson Mi --~ Ho. the coudh Ib She teeth uf » Oe the militia. The Canadian said he 188. ghia; WIENS coming on and Bis : "sailing masté® casting an anxious eye, ae to help celebrate Patriots' | now aloft at the straining rigging, now ¥ iat | to the eastern horizon, where the dus gray cloud bank grew hourly more om Ferrol's experience with women had Issleworth peen limited. Had it been otherwise Ther oli fashioned: way of Q03A & oak nous. Simnait __ wit An] The big white yacht made heavy pointed out: this exvor. This is why his Weather of it under her four reefs. iatesiycione 198 ; Shacks esto te She stuck ber nose into every sea and i entirely tn the cause of these gone : ailioents, the weak inside or controlli the vag flying overiher wad nerves, Ib isn't so difficalt, says Dr. | Ward in ®» manner that drenched Shuep,. tor strvngthen a. weak Stomach, | every man on her deck. Hence, al: ane it one gUseel itcor-| "Better put into Indian bay," the eetiv dh inside organ has its con- | gaiiing master trolling or inside, ferve. When these gg ot nerves fill them these organs must! Ferrol, standing by the after rail, surmly fiber: These vital truths are Srunted something that the sailing lading druggists. everywhere to dfs- master took for acquiescence, for he pense and recommend Dr. Shoops Re- gave a terse order to the man at the wheel. The yacht came about with a rattle and bauging thst shook her stneetive. Test it a few davs, and see! Improvement will surely follow. Sold hy all di uggisis. -- ee | from stem to stern and went careening MIN shoreward. IN FIVE i UTES. | Perrol watched the ragged blue black outline of the shore grow more lake your sour stomach--or % pronounced as they neared it. maybe yow call it Indigestion, Dys- pepsia, Gastntis or Catarrh of the |Stwmach jit duesn't matter -- take 'yann stwmach trouble night wih you to your Pharmacist and ask him ta apen a su cent case of Pape' Pres- ently they were threading their way Dhaspepsin. and let you ea one WLAN Toangule ee 1 woth mistutes there foe left any trace of your stomach mis GRY , The correct name for your troubi is Foad! Fermentation-- food sour- ing ; the Ihgestive organs become wealt, there is lack of gastric juice ; your {ood is only half digested, and 'yaw become affected with loss of agputite, pressure and lullness after, eating, vomiting, nansea, heartburn: gmping in bawels; tenderness in th pit af the stomach, bad taste 11 the mou hy, constipation, pain in the hmbs. sleeplessness, belching of gas, biliousness, sick headache nepwousness, dizziness and many atfier similar symptoms. If your appetite 1s fickle, and mating tempts you, or you belch gas ar if you feel blodted after eat ing, ar your food les hke a] | Ihmp of [rad an your stomach, you | eam make up your mind that at the | battom: of all this there is but one canse--fermentation of undigested foadl # | Prave to yourself, after your next meal] that your stomach is as good as: any ;; that there is nothing really gq. Stop this fi tation and | creased deéthand Jor Nursery Stock. have mew tw afer Apes im mrs sack. The 'begin eating what you want with: aut: fear on discomfort or misery | though. the score of rocky little fs- . pi . i . behind which lay the quieter aang atun relief is WANE tar qf 22 RAY. "jam 1 merely 2 mater of the wind was screaming haw: soon: yat: take a httle Diapep- through the rigging and the great seas aid | past them were flecked | | angry white foam, he was } fun for shelter. This combi- i { Washing April t4.--The in- septiam af an advertisement ia a |lneal newspaper to-day that there hadi beem found in the collection plate af tie Roscoe Methodist Epis- rial Chuink haat hese, after the | gild water and wilder wind Ms mood admirably. as be was concerned person- willing to take his chances ft 'out or sinking, it mattered way or the other to him. fen no tight to sacrifice the HN] | day might, a $1,000 ill}, developed the fact that othe cimncih officials think thie donor fie: The yeatly HH TAHT iH Hi yachi moked awhile, pacing the wet, dreary feck, and finally went bélow. He umbled on to a wide leather seat that an the length of the cabin and went sver it all again and again--their walks, their drives, their little quarrels, he happiness that had been his until hat last bitter night--umtil at last, wothed by the monotonous drip-drip if the rain, he fell into & doze. He was awakened by a hail from the arkness outside. The light was burn- ng dimly. The brass chronometer 1bove the chart locker showed that it was nearly midnight. He hurried to the deck and found a launch chafing tlongside. "This the Alfrida?" cried a voice in | the launch. "Yes. What is it?' "Mr. Ferrol aboard?" "I am Mr. Ferrol." "Telegram for you, sir," said a man, scrambling aboard and handing him a yellow envelope, which was addressed, "Mr. J. B. Ferrol, Yacht Alfrida, In- ilan Bay." Ferrol tore it open and read "Better sead the next line." That was all, save the heading, "Hotel Jackson, Wanona Beach." | He stood there for a moment frown- | lng in puzzled fashion. Then, like a fash, the text of that next line came to him, ""Tis heaven alone that is | given away." | "Any answer, sir?' asked the wait: (ng man. Ferrol seemed suddenly aware of his | presence. "Eh? No. Hold on a minute, though. Is there any train out of here { before morning? Ive got to get to | Wanona Beach at once. One at 12.46, you say? Wait just a minute till I have a word with Mr. McGraw, and | then set me ashore, will you?" | Ten minutes later the sailing master { itood by the rail listening to the launch ng shoreward through the dark- {x 2 "he saw the sheet of yellow telegraph | paper lying on the deck. He picked it | ap and read ft. | "That next line, whatever it is, must ! be a corker," he chuckled as he went | jown the companionway. | rie | The Longest Telegrams. { The longest news item ever trans- , mitted by wire was the seriding of the entire revised version of the New Testament to a Chicago daily newspa- per from New York on May 22, 1882. . The issue of the paper containing that single telegram comprised twenty | pages, sixteen of which were taken up { with the brand new version of the New Testament, which had been pro- i cured previous to its official publica- | ion. The New Testament contains | 2T books, 260 chapters, 7,959 verses ! and not far from 190,000 words. | Some years ago the circulation de- | partment of a London newspaper of- | tered a prize for the longest sixpenny ~twelve word--telegram that could { actually be sent to its office. Out of | $50 telegrams received this one gained | the prize: "Administrator general's counter- evolutionary intercommunications un- Yircumstantiated. Quartermaster gen- >ral's disproportionableness character- stically counterdistinguished uncon- stitutionalistic incomprehensibilities." These twelve words contain exact- fy 200 letters, and the telegram needs two periods, two apostrophes and one hyphen to make it proper English. And it does not contxin the longest possibility in the languszge, "proanti- rransubstantiationistically," either! -- Ohicago Record-Herald. LABRADOR MOSQUITOES. Terrible Pest to Travelers and Natives In the Nerthiand. No account of travel in Labrador can be complete without some mention of 'as we did, their remedy being rancid seal ofl. I am satisfied that were one 80 unfortunate 4s to be caught out at night without protection he would be to Sehputits" on the mu: } seh 'of g ols, came china. a Fn Sort Toma he eine of LE [oo hime Swe iC bya great common sense, with no nonsense as in exi in about him, No wasteful arts for him! earlier pari of the cen L No wonderings in the realms of fancy! on earlier, and there: No dreamer of"-- 248 io entiullral Sloae'd iiite He caught the hostess' pleading eye. touch, were, with martyr She was playing scales upon her lap. Wood Dame it bears, and who was He winked a blissfully ied" le Albans) vey But his breathless missed frareding he laurel ont Macy some thirty tl "AB" he concluded, "this fist, Canadian clergyman 1 preach Same as Now. Jack--What is the true Inivirdness of this suffrage movement? BillJust an advance notice to men to get off the earth. Jack--But where will we go? Bill---Wherever they tell us to. "It is going for a song." "1 wish I could sing." "Pm dfraid you will just have ¢o whistle for it." Likes It Then. "Do you like to work?" "Yes, when I have a good thing™ STARCHED CLOTHES. The Fashion Was Started in England by Queen Elizabeth. The practice of starching linen is at least 400 years old. It is said to have originated under Queen Elizabeth. Its inventor was a Dutch woman, the wife of a Mr. Guilheem, who was driver at the royal court Mrs. Guilheem understood se well how to improve a small deficiency in the bust of her royal mistress by means of stiffened collars, frills and laces thmt ay | yy vors and privileges and finally elevated her to the rank of chief inspectress of the court linen. The fashion introduced by the queén was of course soon followed by all the women of rank. The fad for this new "art" finally degenerated into a veritable mania for ironing, to some . There was no one 0 wi po IR Bie Boi the counter, spi i ,0ut by the collar. and forced him te make me a sale. Twelve Famous Canadians. "1 have been asked by a Canadiam a list of the twelve friend to attem j | mblest Livi anadians," says "BE. B. 0." in National Review. "T¢ : Politicians, Laurier, Mackenzie King; financiers, B; Walker, Clouston; railway, a Mackenzie ; blicists, Bandfo Evans, Mabee, Doughty; editors, Dam< seresu, Dafoe; humoxist, George Ham, A DEADLY CONTEST. Tragic Climax of a Bicycle Race Inf Austraiia. 1 on There were fifty entries, two of whom, James Bomerville and Percy Cliff, wera not only professional rivals, but deadly, Both were considered ex- plaiting, etc. Later special "profess- ors" of the art of starching estab- lished themselves in London, among whom a Flemish woman of the name of Dinghen van der Plasse seems to have occupied the highest rank. Those privileged to be initiated by her in the art had to pay no less than £5 for a lesson. Later they began to add blue color to the starch. Queen Elizabeth, who was very anxious about her questiomable beauty found that the addition of blue gave a green hue to her complexion She therefore prohibited her subjects wearing any other than pure white starched linen, claiming that blue washed linen was injurious to health. But fashion proved superfor even to "goed Queen Bess." Théy continued merrily to use blue starch, though one woman after the other had to go to prison for transgressing the "blue law."--Boston Post. Fraternity Pins. Fraternity pins are seldom lost, and when they do disappear they often turn up again, sometimes years after ward, in the most out of the way places. As they always bear the own- ers name and chapter émgraved on the back it is not a difficult matter to return them. One "old grad" who lost his pin shortly after he left college and bought another mow Has two, the pert riders. From the start of the race Somer ville led, with Cliff a close second. Somerville kept the lead throughout and came into the last lap with CLff only a few feet behind him. When about twenty-five yards from the fin- ish Somerville put on a terrific burst of speed and drew away from his rival. Suddenly at this point his grip on the handle bar relaxed. and he fell forward. The machine, however, un- der the tremendous impulse it had re- ceived, raced ahead like an arrow. the rider banging imply over the handle bar. Four yards from the tape the ma- chine slowed down a little. At this point the front wheel of Cliff's ma- chine struck the hind wheel of Some erville's, sending both wheel and rider across the tape. Somerville won the, race, but he was dead several seconds before he crossed the tape. x ANCIENT DOCTORS. Some of the Things They Knew Twelve' Hundred Years Age. The y of icin after examining a Tibetan "Baogd- book of Medicine," firSt published 1.200" years ago, acknowledges that it com- tains many truths discovered or redis- covered by modern physicians, Hers are some extracts from the ancient i Fig i ; | ; i "Number of bones in the human