Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 4 Apr 1912, p. 1

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and Bvenings. & <i .s Dott Pesry 3 Pm and Residence, Queen. five hours--8 to 10 a.m ; 1 tse, open bight uth, ecounec Robeos, 1894. Telephone in offlt dil and day over df with the resideno Port Perry, Nov. | < WIL H HARRIS. BALLS. BARRISTER, &c, fuocessoy to and occupant of the! sug to sud, gp 0, Port Perry; » Oak. MONEY To LOAN, Private Funds at & pei Eehit. Peb. 7, 1901 1 errr er eee Jno. W. Crozier, Anminren. Solicitor, ConvEYANCER, B 'xe, - Office -ub residence, 6th Cou. Reach (one mile west of Port Pertg,)-- 5 hu Money To Loan. E. FAREWELL, K.C, LL.B, Consty J J Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- vitor, &o., Notary Public and Conveyuncer. Jce--South- wing Conrt House, hithy, Ont. : ; W. A. SANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Office Hours --9 to 12 a.m., 2 to 6 p.m. Also opeu Satarday eveninge. er Gold Fillings, Bridge and Crown Work a Specialty. Vitalised = Air. DR. R. L. GRAHAM Sliccessor 10 Dr. FD. MOGKATTAN DENTIST PYRT PERRY, : : P 0 A . . JRT PERRY. All 'branches of Duntistry, inclufhng C#gwiy aud Bridge Wark guocesifnlly ©". practiged. Artifical Peeth bn Onld, Silver, Aluminun Ao or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painlesa extraction when required: 24 Prices to suit the times® North Ontario Observer A Weekly [olitical, Agricultural and Family Newspaper 18 vusustiD AF voir FERRY, ONT: EVERY THURSDAY MOANING © H. PARSONS FRRMS. $1 wll be I dsm pad tn" | LATHER Souling monty, when Seat ic ti prepaid sad vegittered will be at our rink. ADVERTISEMENTS measured Nonparie!, snd anpum. if paid in advance: 'nov $1.50 No subscription takon for lesz and no paper discontinued ADVERTISEMENTS rocetveil for Ry A a J 4 ema sera Sita FHESD torma will in all cases be strictly ndhered JOB DEPARTMENT: Pamphlets Hand Bil: Pidtors Programs, ~~ Dodgers © Bi Mids, © Checks "1. Laster Heads, Wedding Invitations, * itenk Forms Receipt Books, Business Cards Bouvlks Ciroulars, Asstmbly Carls, to V.8 BRYV --. MICHARDAON. ' Third Sunday at 10 30 a. m, Dilton Hinge-Stay Fence Manufactured by the Owen Sound Wire Fenee Ue: Ltd.; and «i prepared to supply this whole community with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this Continent and at prices that cau not fail to satisfy purchasets. The DicroN Fence is" without a peer Itis the BEST because it is flexible ; it is a square mesh ; it is a perfect hinge-stay fence, therefore it is impostible to bend the stays, in fact it is the best fence made in this or any other couutry, Before purchasing a Wire .Fence don't fail to 'inspect the Dirron Fence. J. H. Brown, Deacer IN AGHICULTURAL IMPLR- MENTS AND MACHINERY. SiG: 10s. SEAGRAVE mn returning thanks to patronage _exfén ded t ears, [ wouid réspectfut am, as usual, now ready have a Large & Assorted Stack OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS whieh Lam determined to sell very CHEAP As an inducement to Cann purchasers <b Discount of 10 por ooade- will be altowed of all Sala from noW until © Jaw, lst next. All work being © MADE BY HANDE3 and no factory work kéht it stack, tite i arity of fry gootts will at onc beodme - rn op public for t Ju me for over 8 futimate that or businces, and apparent. 3 Lving i a Sls. fiefose Sesking elsewhere, they can be suited in quality and price, m 1 ori sin the tradebeing an indie ' "that perfect satisfaction vei by any article purchased. i thing in my line of businées' ke coustuiitly on hand and repairs neatly an promptly attended to. * JOHN ROLPH. Port Perry, Dec. 1: s "sat § EUROPE Indents PORT PERRY. - A ggimy former place of business e 'H. G. Hutcheson, i R. Hl. Coulson, R. H. Coulson, Oshawa, Whitby, Sunderland and Broo DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS, Rankers and Brokers. ock Branch, > Jestleton Station Branch, Branches also Bown anwvill MONEY TO LOAN (4 per cent upwarde--Britieh Capitél.) INSURANCE REAL ESTATE Marriage Licenses. gz Agents CP. R., &c. TO Ses £2 a CURED IN 24 HOURS er ORNS 1 lexely remove aly corn, otfhel ceding, by applying Putnam's ir. JUnever burs, loaves no £car cidus is harmltag because 17 gums und balms Fift LY "Gres guarenived. Sold by all © bottles. Refure rubstitutes. > SUTWAM'S PAINLESS GORN EXTRACTOR aly of hea if Mails Close. fs he | nalls al Otfige Port Perr! Uoing North-- Going Seuth--11 Going North-- 5.15 p. m. Uoiug South--10 p.m. In Centr 6¢ Shopping and Busines3 Districts 250 ROOMS --100 with Private Ba EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN A ia Carts Rettaurant SAM. H. THOMPSON, aon. GEO. JAOKSON Licensed Anctioncer, Valiator, &c. FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHII OF CARTWRIGHT, Wi ES at this the commencement cf another Auction Sale Season to re- tarn thanks to his numerous pa rons fer past favors, Iu requesting their esteemed and 'eonthined patronage he desires to state that no ctfort or pains will be spared on his part to make all sales entrusted to him successes. Ilis very exteneive practice in the past should Le & sufficient recom mendation as to his ability. All Sale given into his charge will be attended t with promptncss and dispatch Sale list male out aad blank notes supplied free, on application. | Parting wishing to cugage his services may consult hie SALE REGISTER either at] the Observer or Standard Offizes, Port Perry, for dates claimed for Sales and mukearrattgements, or write to his addrees oF Phone at Residence, No. 31.81 CHARGES MODERATE. GRO. JACKSON, Port Perry I. O ventral Livery Some Are Stamped Out With a pie, Some Cut From Tubes. BUT MOST OF THEM ARE CAST As a Rule, They Are Formed In Mold of Cuttlefish Bone, Into Which the Patéern Sinks 2s Theugh Pressed In- to Wax<Making the Molds Cuttlefish bone is familiar to most Peopl¥, as it is seen thrust between the bars Jf a bird cage for birds to peck at. Dirda clean their beaks on it, and they' lke to eat it. But cuttlefish Loné Hmi Nov. 1, 1901. other and more interesting used. 3 is used in the manufacture of tooth in the making of a. prepared food for birds, but perhaps the most interest fng of its uses is in the making of : molds in wBich to cast gold ritigd. Some gold rings are cast in tiny. flasks containing molds of fine sand; others are stamped out with a die. Wedding rings are made from a drawn tube of gold in which the rounded oft ¢ér shape of the ring is produced ona drel. the \ thus | JF EARTILY thanking the public for the liberal patronuge. yeceived during the many years I. have kopt sdivery Establ ish pid a Port Perry, 1Hiate much pleasure in ifoilcing that 1 have - - ; *. formed bel MY LIVERY !. esi Siri ie sit t ey including rings. 0; ter bat. S re bi sk and as mold- SOLID GOLD RINGS powder and of polishing powder and | ng (hen sawed Jf even | ° "* of solid gold rings produced by mandy ith stones, 70 per cemt | ° 3 500 But Is ap- | ound. of to a diseased lls beneath the skin's sur- #0 stimulated that new ue is quickly formed, This fresh healthy tissue from uk's seoret of healing, thus formed is worked up jutface and literally casts oft d tissue above it. This is i cures are peihanent. | 8 pther day Mr. Marsh, of ein Ave., Montreal, call Zam-Buk Company 2nd told for over twenty'five years a martyr to eczema. His pete at one time so covered that he had to sleep In| r years ago Zam-Buk wag | .. i to him, and In a few mouths {t curdd him. To-day---over rg fter his curo of a disease twenty-five years--he is and has had no trace of of the eczema! " | ists scll Zam-Buk at 50c. will send free trial box if His advertizement and a le. #&y retufn postage). Ad- -Buk Co., Toronto. > sa hrough from side & ay of {ts thickness. Now 'original block of bone di- | rep parts. | fe 'face 8f each of these smooth on a met! flats J him conveniently in the then the material is ready g goold. The molder turns to 'bigger blocks over on h the smoothed surface up the model ring. and sure touch he presses this | for half its thickness all the delicately fragile but ped bone--this fu the ee plece mold at one en leaving tiié Head or cap rojecting beyond the end | be picks up the other half turns ifs smooth face s that down upon the "with half its thickness face of tbe Yn hend. 3 this stage he picks tH fiat end of .the bone that tie bad sawed 4 Presses that with fits smooth own upon the rtng's head, so tak- jmpression of that, and {hen 't] fms. the mold complete, but with the . model ring inside of it. Be scores lightly this model ont- ae, across Its side edges, and bd scores lines from the top block to the sides, fo that when be has taken the moid apart he can put it togetber again pre- cisely as it should be, and then be {f and takes out the pattern. and where the molded form should touch of smicothitg fie does t d then. beginning small and is out wider. be cuts out in the | inner sides of the two balves of the big block from the bend of the ring out to the end of the block an | g the gate, through which the | 41d will be poured wher ti | 4s molded. The te puts tnd | tbe mold together again and hen with soft wire, and there's jttlefish bone mold perfect and jetimen they bind half a doen or S of such molds together and tut: { channels inside from the gate to ech me of the separate molds with- | It, 'and then when they pour the goid | they mold half a dozen or a dozen Craft Wins. did you ever manage to get or ide of that criisty old then ra?" asked Fan. Bim the things he Ifked whan -isit us," replied Nan. "Tre is a subtle form of re- receiver of a benefit Te bis. superiority in the effort wo --John | seriptio Plenarta Totlus places, and especially péop who Bap. 4 pened to possess names of a high sounding character. His method of work was simple, and only the uitra | snob could be taken in by it. He would glance through a local d1- | rectory and select a few names of the Fits Blank style. A short ¥iait to the | town would help him t6 Qétermine the character of the person--i atoli 13 eas- lly distinguished, and he would return to his place and write that he had come into the possession of a portrait which he had every reason to believe was that of an ancestor of Mr. Fits Blank. . There trjuld be a few quaint hiero- glyphich ofi thd back of the canvas showing that the original was a native of the town in which BM}. Fits-Blank | was residing. In nine cases ofit of ten thut picture sold at a price which | meant a profit of 100 per cent to the dealer after he bad paid the little Ital- fan artist, who turned out the pictures by the dozen. Ia many a countty ods today there is a fine old full leng portrait of an ancestor which was | painted in a murky studio somewhere down Whitechapel way.--Margaret Bal. Jantyne in London Saturday Journal. | em----------------------. | High Quality Tea. 5 | A vetlict in favor of high quality tea | | us a harmless drink Is given by the London Lancet. It Is pointed out that | when caffeine and tannin are in a state | of combination the harmful astrin- | gent qualities of the tannin disappear and the bitter taste of free caffeine is not perceptible. Teas of High qttaitty | yleld, as n rule, a simple infusion of | caffeine tannate, not of caffeine or of tannin, and such teas must be regard- | ed as the most desirable from a phys- jological point of view. Excessive li- fusion, it 1s stated. will spoil = good tea, but even d 8bort infusion of a Lad tea may be as objectionable as an excessive infusion of good tea. On physiological grouids, therefors, (he consumer of high quality teas runs Jess risk of digestive disturbances pro- vided the ten ogo Ancient Guidebesks. Guidebooks for the use of pligrims to | | Rome, known to exist in a rudiméentaty | | form since the time of Charlemagne, took a definite and characteristic shape | the "Dé | rbis" and with the "Grapbia Aurea" of the thir- teenth. The {institution of the Jubi- | lees in the year 1800, calling to Rome | tn the {welfth centgiry Wi | hundreds of thousands of wayfarers, | opened a new market for descriptive | | Mterature on the Holy City, and new | editions "De Mirabilibus" wéte pro- | duced at least four times each oén- tury.--London Athanaeum. | A Comparison. | "That was a tempestuous Jun | of oratory our friend indulged in," said one statesman. | « "Tempestuous' is the word." replied | the other. "Whenever he makes a speech It makes me think of a cyclond that has somehow I¥dtneéd to artict- late." His Engaging Remark. = Mr. Dumhead--Neison was coming to call, but 1 told him you would be engaged this evening-- Miss Ofénade (raptufously) -- Oh, William! ames) Hard to Please. Wigg--DBjones is pretty hard to please, isn't he? Y¥ agg--A most as bard to please as a coltege graduate looking for hia Gifs fob. There 1s hope for all Who are sof- tened and penitent. There 1s nope for all sach.-- Dickens. FIGHTING THE RATEL = | This South African Badger Has a Grip Like a Bulldeg. There is a curious long nosed little creature of South Africa called the ratel, which is sald to exhibit a most peculiar méthed of fighting its human udversaries;. The son of a Britisher tn > for the | tel. ' | The boy saw the ratel creeping round an aut bill. He cantered off 4: wa | very rapid pice, and the boy fired at easy range. The animal turned beels | orders as to their disposal. The young laird of Lochnow character in the Bcotel Hap J the early eighteenth centoly. cool In action and fult of fun tu dally life. One day he wus detailed to com- | mand a burial party. and as be strolled over the battlefield bis orderly came to him in great perplexity. "Sir," suid he, "there is a heap of fel- lows lying out yonder Who say they're t only wounded, and they won't let ud | bury them like the rest. What shall | we do' "Bury them at onée," replied young | Agnew without moving a muscle of his countenance, "for if you take their | word for it they won't be dead for a | hundred years to come." The man saluted aud started off in all simplicity to carry out the order, and Agnew had to dispatch a counter | order iii hdste to prevent his joke from becoming a tragedy. | This recalls an "o'er true" tale of border life. Some Galloway moss troopers were brought before Sir Wil- lam Howard, who was an enthusiastic | mathematiciai. He wey deep in his studies when the prisoners were | marched Into the castle courtyard, and a llentenant came running up to get, Enraged | ot being interrupted, he cried, "Hang | the prisoners!" and went on with his work. | He ffished his problem snd went down with a cheerfiil mind only to learn that his exclamation hati been taken for an order, and the prisoners were all hanged. | | The Time to Do the Counting. In the old days of impetuous war- fare caution was not regarded as so much a virtue on the part of a mili- | tary commander as at present. fn a battle between I%ench and Austrians, in which Marshal Bugeaud command- | ed the French forces, an officer of the | staff sald to the marshal: "The enemy are advancing. Shall I fend a party to reconnoiter and see how numerous | they are?" "No." slid Bugedudd; "we'll count 'em after we've beaten 'em." Reading. Were 1 to pray for a taste which should stand me instead under every variety of circumstances and be a source of happiness and cheerfulness to me during life and a shield agalust | {lls, however things might go amiss | and the world frown upon me, it would be a taste for reading. -- Sir John Herschel Its Nature. "Borely is a nuisance. No matter when you meet him, he wants to talk about his fine stamp collection." "Don't blame him for that, my boy As a rule stamps are things which are fiatufally on the tip of every one's tongue." The Mule. "Kicking 1s bad policy. Behold the wule. Kicking never gets Lim any- where." "That is exactly why the mule kicks." "En" "Ne Qoest't want tb get anywhere." 8tdrms of Life. I'he noblest chintacters are those who hure steered the life saving vessel through storm tossed seas. A bed of down pever nurtured a great soldier | yet. 1t Is success to lose the appioval of | fools.--Kural | - BO | ... Blake's Invisible Medel. if William Blake, the artist and poet, moved continually in a company of an- gels and patriarchs. J. F. Nisbet in his "Insanity of Genius" recalls the story of a friend of Cunningham Who' once called on Blake and found him sitting, pencil in band, add drawing a portrait Wh af n¢ sééiiYng anxiety of a man who Is conscious of having § fastidious sitter. He looked and drew, and drew and looked, yet mo living | soul was visible "Dist me not," | sald Blake in a whisper. "I Hiayé some one sitting to me" "Si 0 x 6 fa he? 1 ' gfe him," answered Blake "There he is. His name is ic may read of him in the 1s sitting for his portrait" 7 " 4 Wi ble pombe op] Ag from inflammation, and your Sanative- Wash relieved me. I am ; | anyone what your BALL on for me. You can use my testimonial any way you wish, and I will be to answer letters."'-- Mrs. Bi Mound St., Peoria, IIL yiich Also. Avoided 34h Alo A pop Vid Jessup, Pa.--" After the birth of my fourth child, I had severe organic inflam- mation. 1would have such terrible pain! that it did not seem as though I could stand it. This kept up for three long months, until two Jets decided that an operation was needed. "Then one of my friends recommended: ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-' pound and after taking it for two months: 1 was a well woman.' --Mrs. JOSEPH A. LYNCH, Jessup, Pa. Ey Women who suffer from female ill should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound, one of the most success~ ful remedies the world has ever known, before submitting to a suf@fiesl opers- oft: a as 1t. was known that the shot muss have been fired ©y a third person, the whole affair wus a mystery and res mafoed thus for years, when a man bi a distant state confessed on his deathi+ bed that it was he who fired the shot: that killed the belmsman of the Ae- tive. t The man said that he had fired at a' Rawk, which was circling low, and not see the schooner. which sud: , | came into range. owing to an interven ing cluthp of bushes. Then he was horrified to sce the Lay at the schoon- &'8 wheel throw up bis hands and ¢h% to the deck, while the vessel broached to-and-was driven axhove by the wind" and tide, The gunner, who was afte gulls and ducks, fled without wal to Investigate the result of his umfors tunate shot, fearing that if he-reported the matter to the authorities he might, although innocent of any criminal fue tent, be imprisoned. GONVEX LENS OF THE EYE be oper Ge A Burning Glass That Adjusts Sight to Varying Distances. y One of the manifold wonders of the! | human eye is the convex lens with which the focal distances of sight ard made Instantly and without mental ef- fort. This lens in the eye is a literal "burning glass," as the small boy styles {he glass lens with which he focuses: the sun's rays and sets fire to a plece- of paper. Just in this sense, too, is the lens of the eye a literal burning glass, as may be shown by the simplest of experiments. Let the person at midday hold © straw sgainst the face of the sun and Sa his eyes on the straw. He can ook at thé straw, with its background of a dazzling sun, and without fort. But the moment he looks at the | fiery ball of the sun itself, subcom- dciously the lens of the eye comes tds its proper focus, with the result that &~ "burning" sun spot appears on the re- tina of the eye. and fit is said that a; few seconds of such looking burn out the retina as If by fire itself. * In the subconscious adaptability of the eye lens to adapt itself to different distances lies its' value to the human. sight. The man with a camera adjusts the focus of his lenses by sliding them * forward and back. The lenses of the- Puma ete, by changing thelr curve-® tures, allow of one look ig at fine! print six inches from his nosé 08 in: a fracticn of u second to look uff Hil: away, probably fifty miles to a tnin peak that in an instant 16 in tre camera focus. 3 ® ..i,- The Rocking of Lake Brie. © 4 TH 260 mile trough of Lake Brie: a d ly. in the. d 1 west to southwest winds which pre in that part of the country. Thus' lake offers an excellent opportunity fi studying the effects of the wind co a large body of inclosed. water, and fery interesting these effects some-: times prove. Rhythmic gusts produce: a rocking motion and great blows \ fhe, west. or southwest sweep the lg lak and of the gale has swings back. n observed on days. the wind Suctuiites.

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