Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 22 Aug 1912, p. 1

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PORT PERRY. ONTARIO, THE Maneger. Ys Spam. R. 0. OHUBOK, . at | Brasiches ole at ot go, pcr | date is Ee PORT PERR Y BRANCH REV --. RICHARDSON. © Thtind Sunday et 10.30 a.m, TOS. BATRD Nay (A UGTIONKER for "the Comitty of Ortardio)" Safe" Register at the OBsrkvikr Office EPatrouage solicited: Manchester, Jan. 19, 1899. Bankers and Brokers. aS MONEY "TO LOA Private Funds at & bL 1901. W. Crozier, 'SoLioiroRr, CoNVEVABGER, Sense redidenec, 8th Con. | dle: west of Port Perry, )-- oxy 70 Loan. © 0. ~~ INSURANCE REAL ESTAT LL.B: Count} County. Sol- nncer. hitby, Dillon Hinge-Stay Fence Manufactured by the Owen Sound Wire Fence Uo. Ltd., and am prepaied to Supply this whole community with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this Continent and at prices that can E. FAREWELL, K.C; Crown Attorney, Barrister, Notary Public and Convay wing Court: Honse, W. A 'SANOGSTER, : &F Agents CP. R., &e. MONEY TO LOAN (4 per ent upwards-- British Oapital.) E Marriage Licenses, Claremont 4 - P DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS, not: fail to satisfy purchasets. The Dion Fence is without a DENTAL: SURGEON. oy Office Hodts--0 to 12 a.m., 2 to 0 pyro. - Algo open Saturday evenings. pecr lt is the BEST because itis wis) AER . na or Gold Fillings, Bridge and Crown Hexthe i it is a square mesh; it is a 8 Work » Specialty. Vitalived Air. T Hper ect hinge-stay fence, therefore ° A Er it 3 jmpgerile to bend the stays, | § 5 s RT i infact it is the best fence made. in } PR. RR. L. GRAHAM |this or any other country. DE ILITATED RAEN Spegsssor 19 Dr. F. D. MoGratran | Before purchasing a Wire Fence ¥, ' WI TIST Jers: Ign to inspect the DiLLon Ba ' ; PORT PERRY," -- '-- ONT. J. H. Brown, = pari of i ana Vin. Beni eivs wv wot baka t sarah Deater Iv AcwicuLTORAL Lupre- asad electro' belts and ; TSR IT WO Ti en oe } Ey pis DENTIST, : April 6, 1905. Office over the Post Offive. ; ) ¢ fu DRM PERRY, g All __ branches f Dentistry, fnoliidin, . . iden. abd Bikdge Work vocoemiully N E S S le practiced. - Ar@i6ai Téeth op Uold, Silver, 'Alaminam i or Rubber Plates Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement > Painless extraction when required: ' OR NO PAY ; ."t 8% Puch fo suit tho Himes Ed JEAD! Aon Yo emai 13 marty? | ? 5 ¥ as your n disor ve you N { 0 t * 0b Sno ithas one for oes vl * [Of L. hy 0 orth Ontario Observer CIEE he ; . Spinlen 1 Eres ots Sar hood = (Husirab: A Weekly Political, Agricultural ana| ed) on Diseases of Men. : Family Newspaper NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT, No names on boxes or | a roms ar i Figibina Confonial. Question Lik and Cost Te ames eo HOME FORT TREY ORY, N returning thanks to the public for th . . returning thanks to the public for " EVERY..1 HURSDAY MORNING I mae eraind to why for over 3 Drs KENNEDY & KENNED years, I wouid respectfully intimate that am, as usual, now ready for business, and > have a Large & Assorted Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS © ur W. sw. PARSONS EET EE to our Canadian eg NOTICE ment in Windsor, Ont. a us ly call at our Medical Institute in Detroit Poo in sn 'Windsor offices which are for y for rhimgownlh Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich, All letters from Canada must be addressed Correspondence Depart- all letters as follows: ap. FH PLIES" which 1 am determitied to sell very CHEAP | Ml Tab a : kau , {» onpatil, and of 1 atl ol pr purehasers Bs Das} KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Out. Sow oneh of 10 por ome _- followed it anxiety to p en added y answer to the from more than eix thousand pAfsons, A pleasant of "As I was the to i of sottled upon -Blm 8s be slowly up- 'It stared back at bin convincingly. | find us--to find me, I should say, for Toqumnt primed copes ot Hi serd dressed, and ot sense of tnter- | Then the door opened. my stupld mald was having hysterics | both unprecedented and ualooked fort est touched a8, crossing to the | Bo keen was his sense of unfitness | further up the line, and Ko Ko was | Another evidenoe of his pularity, dressing table, he caught sight of Chil- | that, still trying to. fuse his impression lost. 1 remember the first thing I did | on the other side of the rolling blue cote's engagerjent book, taken with | of Lakeley with the idea of silver door | wag to send him In search of Ko Ko'-- | ie the publication of his weekly eer other things from the sult be had Attings be stepped into the ball with- Notwithstanding his position, Loder | ORS in something over three hugs changed nt. digper time and carefully out the usual preliminary question. | found occasion to smile "Did be suc dred papers in land, Ireland, laid aside by Bemwick. | Suddenly realizing the Decessity, be | coed? ho sald dryly. Scotland, Australia on He picked if up and slowly turned turned to the servant, but the man fore- "Bucceed? Oh, yes, ho ectesded." oe Sh of Neoet Briss Jor; the pages. It beld the sugges- | stalled him: Pi agiatiogtindede oc ie Lagi Lp Se 7 , bas so aptiy comment and act-s tion of a lottery, this dippldg into an- Will you come into the white room, | Ko Ko was stowed away under the lug: | ed on the matter that we can do no | other man's ts and drawing | sir? And may I take your coat?" 3 van, and after quite a lot of trou- | better than to quote here the heart- a prize or a flank. It was a sensa- | The smooth certainty of the man's | ble he pulled him out. When It was | to-heart talk be gave his readers. He tion that even fustom had not dulled. manner surprised him, It beld another | all done the dog was quits unhurt and | said At first he tjrned the pages slowly, | savor of disappointment, seeming as | livelier than ever, but the Buglishman "It {8 not the ron-church-going then by degreds his fingers quickened. | little In keeping with the keen, bust- tendencies of the Age that 1 want tor Beyond the fact that this present | nessiiko Lukeley as aid the house. Still talk to you shoity although my evening was fee he knew nothing of | struggling with his impression, be al- Reng thote or less cloesly con- Ma promised fovements. The abrupt- | lowed himselt to bo relieved of bia bat pues ih hue suit LY ving, ness of Chilegte's arrival at Clifford's | and coat and In silence ushered up the | 3 ral A un hE = | inn in the oon had left no time | shallow staircase. | has just been inducted to the © agg | } | for superfluot | med the writh ested haste, th and smiled. | "Big enoug] sald below a ed on a larg Fuiled again 4 light. a "Dine 23 8 Talk with Kay softly to himasd "He stood for] thie entry; th face end. | his eyebpaws cleary | away. | membered Lakelq cuss the political out! Hk. days of hls return boi 'a, 80 he argue cross staring lmperad 'white paper. false step. he next morning's work And 1 his second press' ! | will be allowed on all Sales from now until Jan. 1st next. All work being Central Livery pon SF MADE BY HAND€3 striotly adhered to | abd mo Factory work In stock, th 3 - super arity ty goods wi at ne rn porous. Gold will king elsewhere | : lity and price, my jeg can he suited EARTILY thankis tic for th long experience in the a an indis ARTI anking the public for she liberal patronage received durin many years wentin Port Perry, 1 have much pleasure announcing that I have removea MY LIVERY! to my former place of business Water Street oh Lam about to largely attend in- b 8 ic' ma; fis siti with sae sed ybe_ and tntom pans putaole rantee that fect antisfaction will be by Any artiolapurchased, Eve: bing i» my Yusineas Kept cons ly on han repairs nea tant 2 ie ¥ thit constitute "oould be thus mi tions are that the es saying discrete partic! - pletely. This is expressed eo ether is a continuous medium { ble wit! ren Ether and Matter. The densest matter is more or less absorb mercury as Pp RT PERRY a lump of sugar will absorb water, # | showing there muet be interstices or i interatomic spaces in it, but the ether shows no ruch property. It a dro of water could be m the have kept a Livery Batatiish 1y one would ultimate in ent atoms of hydrogen and oxygen the mol | water. If a_small volume of ether ed the indica. would nfl look like the first, which is the same that it is not made up of les, but fills space com- ook h mater. np ------ -------------- sufficient soe the differ. PASS. once before the weight of questions. He skim- ig with a touch of Inter- pn all at once he paused for a tombstone!" he breath as his cyes rest- blue cross. Then be ld held the book to the hdogan grrdens, 8 o'c. he read, still speaking he meweunt pondering on thep once more his glance 'the pum'led frown between | With & Peeling « satisfaction be re- 3 frequent and | Suggestion hat be should dine with him at Cadogan sardens and dle | 'Lakeley must buve written during | | his absenge, und Chile 2, having mark- | pulse. | ed the sngagement, f. no further re- Lilian bad risen slowly, and as be | sponsibility. The itation could. | ;5qreq her she held out her hand. | scarcely have been wrbil. as Chilcote, | be knew, hnd lain vey Jow In the five | as hi stood with the book stlil open In his "rods, the blue Lely from the And from the argument rose thowghts and suggestions that 4 fn his mind long aftsr the lights gwitched off, long after the in darkness in the great esnopied Ded. $ 1t came about that be took Once during the s rind to verify his convic- glance at the directory, but he strong wish that evolves | conquered his caution. His absorbing; the need of veri- med very small. He lot the k be dressed carefully. His tull of Lakeley and of the the night might hold; for rge's Gaette, with Lakeley ck, bad turned the politicil 0 be marked by him as 8 nan was at any time a (avore- t: to be singled out by him sent juncture was momen thrill of expectancy, almost t, passed through bim as he | | house, strug his. The door was white; ndle and knocker were of mass As the last step was reached It came to him ngain to meation his host's name, but simultaneously with the sug- gestion the servant stepped forward with a quick, silent movement and threw opea a door. "Mr. Chilcote!" he announced In & subdued, discreet volce, Loder's first Impression wns of a | room that seemed unusually luxurious, soft and shadowed. Thou all impres- sion of Ipenimate things left him sud- | dernly. For the fraction of a second he stood | in the doorway, while the room geeined oti _erorriling excep 0 owly y the fire at sound of Chiicote's name. Then, with a calmness that to himself seemed Jucredible, he moved forward into the room. He might, of course, have beaten a retreat snd obviated meny things, bot life 1s full of might have beens, and re- treat never presents itself agreeably to a strong man. His Impulse was to tace the difficulty, and he acted on the im- "Jack," she exclaimed softly, "Bow sweet of you to remember!" The voice and words came to him with great distinctness, and as they came one uncertainty passed forever from his mind--the question as to what relation she and Chilcote held to each other. With the realization came the thought of Eve, and in the midst of his own difficulty his face hardenedy Lillian ignored the coldness. Taking bis hand, she smiled. "You're unusual- ly punctual" she said "But your | hands are cold. Come closer to the | fire." i Loder was not sensible that his | self to be drawn forward. Ove end of the couch was In fire light, the other in shadow. By a for- tunate arrangement of chance Lillian | sclented the brighter end for herself | and offered the other to her guest. With a quick senee of respite he ac- [ cepted it. At least he could sit secure | from detection while be temporized with fate. Kor a moment they sat silent, then Lilllan stirred. "Won't you smokeT' she asked. Everything in the room seemed soft and enervafing--the subdued glow of the fire, the smell of roses that hung | about the air and, last of all, Lilllan's | slow, soothing voice. With a sense of his 14 of his ig the house. ouched ES the her her whole she sald. ally; but the le. inspiration, B the hall door; but almost as 1t he halted, attracted on the landing above keley. him intently while be ;meafiing of bls "It 4s. qutte--~quite 'smiled: , warm, r prep | PD! he stiffened and sat straighter in his place. downstalrs, he moved at "No," be sald, "1 don't thin) I shall smoke." She moved nearer to him. "Dear Jack" she sald pleadingly, "dor't say you're In B bad mead. Don't say you want to postpone again. up at him and laughed consternation. Loaer was at a loss. lan walted; then she frowned game mma, "oh ing down into it. "Jack," she began amazing thing has bis do so want you to throw some Nght." hie | Loder sald nothing. man | she looked up at him. who, 'of the » AN he di w hands were cold, but he suffered him- | * She looked a little In mock Another silence followed, while Li} ly, and rose from the couch. Like now that she had vindicated her right to command him, ber original purpose uppermost again. Cold or inter- ested, indifferent or atteutive, she In- She moved to the fire and stood look- gently, "a really to me. k There was a fresh pause while she softly. smoothed the silk embroidery that edged her gown. Then once mare «Dia 1 ever tell you," she began, 5 «that J was once In a railway accident on a funny little Italian railway cenm- turies before I met you? She laughed | goftly and with a pretty air of confi- dence turnod. from the fire and Te- + | sumed her seat. meres meeo---- '| wastrupp bad caught a fever in Flor- Canada's Papers. ence, and I was rushing away for fear | Canada has morc than 1.200 news. : are dailivs. intection; when our stupid little P bad his finger almost bitten through Ko Ko was a dear, but his teeth and his temper were both very sharp." She laughed once more ln soft amusement. Loder was silent for a second, thea he too laughed--Cbllcote's short, sarcastic ugh. "And you tied up tbe wound, I | suppose 1" She glanced up, half displeased. "We were both staying at the little inn" she said, as though no further explana- tion could be needed. Then again her manner changed. Bhe moved imper- ceptibly nearer and touched bis right band. His left, which was farther away from her, was well In the shad- ow of the cushions. "Jack," she sald caressingly, "it isn't to tell you this stupid old story that I've brought you here. It's really to tell you a sort of sequel." She stroked his hand gently once or twice. "As I say, 1 met this man and we--we be- came very fond of each other. You un- derstand?! Then we quarreled--quar reled quite badly--and I came away. I've remembered him rather longer than I remember most people--be was one of those dogged individuals who stick tn one's mind. But bo has stayed in mine for another reason"-- Again she looked up. "He has stayed because you helped to keep bim You know bow 1 bave sometimes put my bands over your mouth and told you that your eyes reminded me of some one else? Well, that some one else wae my Buoglishman. But you mustn't be jealous. He was a horrid, obstinate person, and you--well, you know what I think of you™-- She pressed his band, "But to come to the end of the story. 1 never saw this man since that ago time unti--until the hight of Blanche's party!* he spoke slowly, to give full effect to ber Words. Then she walted for his surprise. But the result was not what she ex- pected. He sald pothing, and, with an abrupt movement, he drew hia hand from between hers. "Aren't you surprised?" she asked at last, with a delicate note of reproof. He started slightly, as If recalled to. the necessity of the moment. "Sur prised?" he sald. "Why should 1 be ? Ono person more or Jess at a big party isn't astonishing. Besides, yon expect a man to turn. up sooner of later In his own country. 'Why should 1 be surprised 7" p> [ro Bx conTINURD.] Criticlsing the Critie. #Crittick read your fusay, said De Riter's friend, "and ha insists that ou're beyond your depth." "Ah," replied De Riter, "I thought he would." "You lid? Then you know what he means?' "Yes, He mears simply that 1 am beyond his depth." 1 ! of the London Tabernocle, known over the United Kingdom and thous- the has achieved a position in the world gf pias thought unequaled by any i J peo; ever be brought walls of the larges Universe. have won for themselves an extra am Russell's printed books on religious, subjects src exoclled in Heated) : only b: AKinke, lions of peopla all over the world: hava found something in Pastor Rus. sell's which they have been unsble cover in any other religious writings! majority of my Lie that wee. Russell himself calls an ides {4 will be fou thin merely a conden been reading a selection o Pastor's religious writings, and they; appeal nature serious subjects than sermons of p pit deliver description. easily un : | | faith, and he says what he hes to on the great truths of reli; morale In plain but alwa; only to we accept the phrase, but to all ine: telligent men snd one can quite well unparalleled populari achiev feel convineed, ha will very soon equal! wi thia countr; an extremely popular feature Journal. does not deprive him of .| and abroad. ds of miles beyond, as the pulpit of revered Spurgeon. Mr. Russoil Divina. And, curiously enoughe Figs his message to far more ple 'outside' the church than could ether within tha! temple in the: His eermons and wrifim i] ularity ino America and T' nary po) informed that Pastor credibly the Bible itself. Just: It means that hat means. mil sermons, essays and lect to dis to oome to the crux of the! 1 feel sure thet the vashl readers will learn with) 1 have arranged foesg) contributien from the pen of} A 'sermonette' Mf. it, but 1 have{ nd to be somos! more, something fuller, than. sed sermon. Y have, { the famousy ly astor Buseell. to me as being more of the of quict, discursive talks off; ances of the conventional Pastor Ruasell is a clear, | derstood thinker; be eschews d all subtleties of form and: fo anguage. He speaks a writes the ordinary church-goez, as. ma an women, and I for appreciate tne! ty which ha has/ 1 od in America--a popularity, begin in 1 am hopetul Te Dig puterty sbeoed tor Russell's popularity to the largest oom ca. Surprising se it sermons are at present pub- in more than one thou Wabi in America reaching roximately fen million homrs Last ane and July, while mals transcontinental tour to ble Students Convention at Russell made seve! reach: 4 me seem, his ig . A the Bi Francisco, Pastor the great Pastor Russell--who has swayed dreds of thousands in this coun "Do they come to hear him? went rather! Bo far it has been impossth! to engage a hail large enough "to the crowds. Dreamland Rink has been hired for this occasion. In Kansas) ty. Denver. Balt Lake and Los Ame lea the Pastor and his faithful crew: ave taken the populace by hi given him more space than a war scare and print specches like a Presidential moesage- "4 » «that is the proper thing for. man to do hen, bie wife asks i for money and-® hasn'i ny? papers, of which cue'ted -

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