i ! Issuer of Marriage Licnses. J stor, &e., Ont. Office Hours --9 to 12 a.m., 2 to 6 p,m. Also open Saturday evenings. or Gold Fillings, Work a Npeociaity. DR. R. L. GRAHAM Boeossson 7: Di. F b. MOGRATTAN DENTIST Artificél T Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painless extraction when reguireds 22 Prices to suit the times) Fre North Ontario Observer A Weekly Poljtical, Agricultural and Family Newspaper EVERY THURSDAY MORNING |" H. PARSONS 1 por if ERME, n snanm, it six months ; than 'until arrears ure paid up. money, when addressed Ls ES omtore wilt on oh oar ADVERTISEMENTS meamred chibrged acoording to the space ADVERTIS| S recetved for publ with: Se pee rico: i Ba inaerin antl Ee nl LIBERAL discount allewed to Merchants snd z 4 'who advertise by (he year or half year. o¥hiur LETTERS contain! Office, prepaid THESE terms will i all cases be strictly adhered to JOB DEPARTMENT. Pamphlets Programs, Lecter Hoss, Blank Forms Pastoral, Sos nd Residence, Queen St., Port Pesry honrs--8 to 10 a. 5 1 tod pm, and Evenings. : Telephone In office and honse,. open night and day over the Hues south, "with the residence of G. L. Rebeon, Port Perry, Nov. 15, 1894, WM. H. HARRIS, B.A. LLB. BARRISTER, &ec., r" to and oc! of the late F. Por Perry, - Oat. MONEY TO LOAN. Private Funda at & per cent. bo100 Jno. W. Crozier, SoLtotToR, CONVEYANOCER, Office at residence, each (ome wile west of Port Perrg,)-- Yi CWELL, K.C , LL.B., Count, 'Barrister, County Sol- Notaty Public and Conveyance Atfce--South wing Court House, E. FAR! + Crow Bridge and Crown PORT PERRY, All branches Crown and Bridge Work successfully 'eeth on Gold, Silver, Alaminum Receipt Books Business Cards Books Circulars, Assembly Cards, » (ANGLICAN) . REV. C. P. MUIRHRAD, Restos' Morning Prager--lst. 3rd and Sih Sunday fmonts R. 0. CHURCH. "PORT PER ah Commuthion, at Ruaday of Sach Month. H. G. HUTCHESON, BS a Ra of gch mouth. Branchés ols ot Rlackstock (R. RY BRANCH C , Manager. Fi I BEV --_ RICHARDAON w Third Sunday at 10.30 4. wm, ------ JOS. BAIRD [ ICENSED AUCTIONKER for the' ord Sounty 9 Qutaria, Sule Register at sERvEr Office Patra vited Manchester, Jan. 190, ison. eficizsd Tew Dillon Hinge-Stay Fence Manufactured by the Owen Sound Wire Fence Uo. Ltd., apd am prepared to Supply this whole community with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this | Continent and at prices that can not fail to satisfy purchasers. The DiLron Fence is without a peer Itis (he BEST becafige it is flexible ; it is a square mesh; itis a perfect hinge-stay. fence, therefore it 1s Impossible to bend the stays, in fact it is the best fence made in this or any other country. . Before purchasing a Wire Fence don't fail to juspeet the "Dicros Funce, J. H. Browng'- LER IN AGRICULTURAL, JMPLE- D MACHINERY. one year). Dza Dare You Marry? SECRETS OF HOME LIFE Statements made by patients taking the New Method Treatment. They know it Cures 63 No Names or Testimonials used without written consent CONSTITUTIONAL BLOOD DISEASE. Patient No. 16474. "The spots are all, gone from my legs and arms and I feel good now. I am very grateful to you and shall never forget the favor your medicines have done for me. VARICOSE VEINS CURED. 1 habits several years. Varicose Veins on bdth sides--pimples Treatment ho writes as follows: --" Your welcome letter to hand and am very glad to say that I think myself cured. My Varicose Veins have completely dis- appeared for quite a while and it ssems el 1 work harder and feel Jess tired. I have no desire for that habit whatever and if I stay like this, which 1 have every reason to belleve I will Thanking you for your kind attention, use my name in recommending it to any sufferer. I am going to get mar- ried soon. Thanking you once more, SAYS TWO MONTHS CURED HIAL. Patient No. 16765. Age 21. Indulged in {immoral haits 4 years. De- Dont in urine and drains at night. aricose Veins on both sides, pal back, weak sexually. He write recelved your letter of recent date in reply 1 am pleased to say that taking two months' treatment I er myself completely cured, as I have seen no signs of them coming « GAINED 14 POUNDS IN ONE MONTH. Paticnt No. 13522. This patient (aged $3) had a chronic case of Nervous De- {lity and Sexual Weakness and was run down In vigor and vitality. THE WORLD SEEMS DIFFERENT. am beginning to feel more Patient No. 16028. "I havo not had @ regular Emission I don't know when and am feeling fine. The world seems altogether different to me and I thank God for directing me to you. honest doctor with me." CURES CUARANTEED OR NO PAY 1 NERVO . 'BLOOD: AND one ad, cre VARICOSE XRD RUNDDER DISEASES and all Disases unable to call write fot a Question TC ESRSULTA SEE: Be FREE. If ; © tter every week." His last re- Goer ar Doctors--As I feel this i3 fast month's treatment that I will have to get, I thought ot ome time I would never be cured fidence in you from the start and yeu o Cor. Michigan Ave. and primitive its methods. The de mow prevalent is that of "Where the tree falls, fe," and, leaving the dead thelr camp to pastures 'into the forest to Le de- beats of prey, while some bes of Guinea throw the the sea. world beyond. The Par- Bh a coltured nation, called «ff ktower of sclence, and the vultures who make such towers their Labitatiog finish the work. ln Da- homey jtiwas been stated that a per- son wh body has been struck by lightningtis backed to pieces and de- voured the priests. Burisl, fof course, has many dif- ferent fopms, the simplest of which is perhs| thorns ow beasts. Pome tribes bury their chil- dren by the roadside, so that their souls may enter tito the bodies of the pas- sersby. "i3uriat in the earth is an ear- Ber ci m than tbat of cremation, crubal or drying the body by sus. pending it from a tree; snd many uations lave more than one custom-- far i@istance, merely burying thelr womef, while the men are embalmed or drig y An iBstatice of geveral customs be- ing In fommon use in one tribe Is to ng the Kaimucks. They othe Whier, pile over it a heap | aes or huifld & bat over it, dolng fhost sultable. "Fhe position of the also varies couslderably, but as eral rule the head is laid either E. A. ADAMS, Bell Phone No. 41 = returning thanks to the public for t Real Bstate patronage extended tome for over ears, [ wonid respectfully intimate tha 1H. G. HUTCHESON, Bell Phone Office No. 6 ADAMS & HUTCHESON SUCCESSORS TO DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS oe INSURANGE Mortgage Loans Steamship Tickets wm, as usual, now ready, for i A have a. .: Large & Assorted Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS As an inducement to CagH purchasers | Office ort Perry as follows : <b Doma of 0 por oobe- will be allowed on all Sales from now until Jan. lst next. * All work being t& MADE BY HANDE3 Going Sonth--10 p.m apparent. ding purchasers will find that hy giving me a call hefore looking elsewhere they can be suited in quality and price, my ole guarantee that perfect satisfaction promptly attended EUROPE Fawr X executed. a ves pric tish anid a Port Perty, June 21, I Mails Close. i In years to come when women which 1 am determined to sell very CHEAP | The mails are despatched from the Pos And have a right to mix In every wrangle on the map Going North-- 9.00 a. m. Going South--11.20 a. m. Going North-- 5.15 p. m. 'When sational conventions With bonnets inf the van, Among the female delegates Perchance Then when he rises with the rest volos And sore one asks him who will bé ice This declaration proud and pat mi rg tn ee Central Livery PORT PERRY. long experience in the trade being an indis EARTILY thauking the public for the H liberal patronage received during the 4 will be given by any article purchased. many years I have kept a Livery Establish | Everthing in my line of business 'kept | pent in Port Porry, Ihave much pleasure in constantly on hand and repairs neatly and | anpouneing that I have removea He was trying to make an fmpres- sion on a pretty nursemaid who had a little boy out in the park. : "1 wish yoo were my governess," he pered, "Ro do 1," said the girl "What would you do?" *T'd take those cigarettes away from som notes. | MY LIVERY ! to my former place of business eaxt or to the west. The Bon- however, nre an exception, for e south, and the men with the o (Lie north. ong the primitive nations the pexlons of grief at the loss of the @scd, grief not untinged with fear PBlin In bis new state, and vent in Ffndicted tortures and other tre- net de usly exnggernted expressions of The inhabitants of New Zealand aborigines that is--bedaub them- with pigment and wound them jes with Uroken shells. Tbe Ha- fps go still further, knocking out 'teeth and cntting off an ear or t joint, while, when Hawail was the rude of monarchs, at the i's death the nation at large feign- Baduess through grief, and this be signal for unbridled license of description. 4 ation is there, as a whole, which that the soul does not con- to exist after it leaves the body. be origin of many funeral rites it wives, servants, horses, money, pink are among the things buried ithe body. The lLaplapders sup- corpse with filat, steel and tin- In the grave, N AGNECY |Water Street s for of British which I am sbeut to largely don in- you 54 got your h [ez facilities so that the public may ; GEO. JAUESO Licensed Anctioneer, Valuator, &o. IY DETAR TOWNSHLS | EIES st $his the commence! A pbeh nla Maker surf. washed headlands. At ismid the the piling of stones or | the body to keep off wild, er the priest considers to be | bury the women with the fnce | belief that death means the transition from one state to an- "and that it is necessary to enter- lhe soul on the journey; bence it bus, musical instroments, ment | Kherewith to obtain light by tbe ind the Glonds even place tooth pr a touching custom Is preva- ffmong the Greenlanders, for on path of a child they bury & dog jit to guide it, certain' that a dog Ind his way anywhere. The Rus- finve a custom of placing a paper in the band of the deceased hown: to Peter at the gate of of the departed eect upon many of for the Egyptians and round so as ing charming glimpses of mountain and ocean, of peaceful bay and bold road begins to rise and great granfte mountains, snow eovered through much of the year, come into view. | Through stern, rocky, barren deflles the raliroad winds its way, occasion- | cadet walking so queerly? asks a pret- T POINT. first. It 1s a very tiresome ant'lodl [to enrtt fin erous. process aod is Shing ais the shortest waves, the C e ' mediom thickness reflects the. yellow: company street Is oberved by some. nnd the green waves, white tbe. coars~ visitors, when suddedly he throws out "est dust reflects nothing but the red." > We owe the blue of the sky to the. ! "A plebe walking quietly 'down i hig hands and digs in his toes. Them Many It Gives. Us £ . much evil arth, Tho "'Ob, Cadet Beanpole, why is that fine dust in the atmospheric heights, where the alr Is purest. When the. | ally skirting a small village of adobe tV irl . | Wind sets the dust inmotion the blue: ""That isn't a caflet; it's a plebe. turns to gray. The smoke of a cigar houses surrounded by vineyards and by | groves of olives and mulberries. The silkworm is a chief source of the little weaith of this country, and the thou- sands of acres of mulberry trees fur nish bim with food. We are now indeed in the land of the classics. This 1s the very route that Cyrus the Younger followed with his great army, 400 years before Christ, | io the expedition of which Xenophon tells us. At the town of Chal, where we ar rive at noon on the second day, the army ot Cyrus mutinfed and halted for five days, demanding an incrense of pay. Thus we see that strikes and quarrels over wages are not altogether things of modern invention. Near here, too, was fought a great battle a bun- dred years later, when Beleucus IL. the founder of Antloch and the mighty ruler of all this region, defeated Anti- gonus, the one eyed general of Cappa- docia.--Cbristian Herald BAZAARS OF CAIRO. The Curious Tiny Shops and the Nar- row, Swarming Streets. aad The bazaars of Calro are very Inter | esting. The streets are exceedingly nan | row, and the stores of the merchants are often no larger than a good sized cupboard, without doors, but with shelves on which the goods are dis played. The merchants squat down on a little platform in front You see here the workers in gold and silver, weavers | of slik fabrics and slipper makers, do- | ing thelr work In the same way it wag | done hundreds of years ago. The old. est bazaar is that of the scentmakers, -, They bave a whole street to them selves, and when you get within a bun dred yards or so the only guide you Deed Is your nose. These narrow streets are crowded with a ceaseless throng of natives: women with veiled faces; men, women | and children on donkeys; curious fiat carts drawn by donkeys, on which squat women enshrouded in black-- nothing visible but one eye, and occa: sionally along comes a great lumbering camel, quite as large as half a dozen of the native shops. Cabmen drive past with studied indifference to life and fimb, and rather than get hurt you crowd yourself into a bunch of natives, at the risk of having your pocket picked or being covered with vermin.--Chris tian Herald Ha An Incident of Old Japan. On March 24, 1868, an English minis { | ter was for the first time received with | | ceremony by the mikado, and the story | of that reception tilustrates remarkably | | the transformation of Japan under Mut | | | | | suhito. Jt had been fixed for the pre vious day, but on bls way to the palace Sir Harry Parkes was flercely attacked by two Japanese swordsmen. Bo sud- den and furious was the assault that slue of the eleven men of the escort were wounded. The nose of Mr. Sa- | tow's pony and Sir Harry's belt were cut, but Sir Harry himself was urin- | jured and pursued one of the assail ants. Mr. Freeman-Mitford "found bim beadless body of one of our enemies at | his feet." The other, a samurai, was | degraded apd executed; the reception | came off next day, and the mikado is | sued a decree forbidding all assauits upon foreigners b Creeping Salt, Here 1s something io the course of natoral phenomena that will interest | and instruct the little folk if they look | into it curiously: Into & tumbler half full of water dissolte just ms much common table salt as can be held in ition. Let it stand for a few days o how the salt ergeps ont of | ite trying to escape from demonstration. square, a triangle or any offigr geo metrical figure. Put the paper care. fully on 8 pan of water, letting it Sos{ aud leaving the surface dry. Carefully, drop water on the surface of the paper until the space within the figure in 0U¢d. The moistened pencil itues will 1 g | to be graceful' plebe heard some upper classman say: 'Fin out there, mister; dig In those toes; tear up the gravel. What do you menn by deadbeating and going bow legged? | church, to swimming, to dancing, to everything. The plebes are placed in | the seas Is condensed on the particles the rear rank of all formations. of atmospheric dust. ' mess hall with the corps is never for- gotten. Twelve cadets are seated at a | evaporated from the oceans could | come to earth on anything but tbe bearer of Its condensatlens, the dust. Were it not for atmospheric dust thers, would be no clouds, no fog, oo rain,. no snow, no splendid sunsets, no azure skies. The sworface of the ground, the trees, the houses, men and animals would be the objects on which water vapor wounld condense. The clothing. table, at least three of whom are plebes. Thé cadet in charge of the table sits at the head, while a plebe called 'the gunner' sits at the foot. It is the duty of the gunner to call the table to attention each day and to announce the kind of dessert. As there 13 no LI of fare and fhe dessert is different every day, this is not al- ways an easy job. If the gnnuer an- | of man and the fur of the amimal nounces the dessert incorrectly, he is deprived of his portion. called the cocoa corporal and on the left the water corporal. It Is the duty of the cocoa corporal to pour out the cocoa, and the water corporal pours the water. { wonderfully built jelly called 'Felix trembled." This concoction wabbles all over your plate and derives Its pam f © from a cadet named Fells, one | 4. jaeq car for invalids who cam, afford to use it. This car is fitted with every possible convenlence for the sick. A special apartinent, opening on the level of the station platform, with a, double door, so that a stretcher can be earvie@ in without the stightest. dike culty, is get apart for the invalid and. attendants. The balance of the car. contains a kitchen. where meals can be prepared. and a section handsomely: upholstered for members of the family, or accompanying friends. For invalidd who travel second or third class an apartment on an ordinary car is used,. opening in llke manner with a doubly door on the station platform. i of the oldest living graduates, who | ate some of the mixture and trembled violently. Cadets who eat it have been trembling ever since. Molasses 18 called 'Sammy' by the uppef <lass- | men. Plepes are required to call it the "Right Itev. Nr Satur, or' ao- til they qualify, which 1s done by eating seven slices of bread and mo- lasses, when they may call it 'Sammy.' are required to sit bolt upright and gaze fixedly at a potato stuck on eyes upon the portraits of the great generals that decorate the walls of the | fore sunset with fresh curiosity to see at the angle of the street with the | a of i its environ- ment. And when all the salt is ap- parently out of prison the water re- | mains as salty as beforel It is a pretty He walks that way because he wants | is blue as it issues from the cigar, | While the smoke suing from thé "The true reason is that the poor | mouth of the smoker is whitish gray because the particles of the gray smoke bave lucrensed fu volume by. fixing water vapor. The blue smoke. of a burning cigar is like the blue: sky, and as the water vapor is fixed: "The cadets march to meals, to by the smoke close to the mouth of, "The first meal a plebe eats in the "The plebe on the gunnmer's right is "The cadets often have a flerce and "After finishing their meals, plebes matches In the center of the table. They are not allowed to feast thelr mess hall, but must sit and 'brace' un- til the command, 'Battalions rise,' is given, when they fall io and march back to camp." The Drama of the Sunset. We never tire of the drama of sun- set. 1 go forth each afternoon and look Into the west a quarter of an bour be- what new pictare will be painted there, what pew phenomenon exhibited, what new dissolving views. Every day a new pictore Is painted and framed. held up for balf an hour ln such lights as the great artist chooses and then withdrawn and the curtain falls. The sun goes down, long the afterglow gives light, the damask curtains glow along the western window, the first | star 1s lit, and I go home.--From Tho- | reau's "Winter." ' Bull Baiting In England. In the old days of England bull bait ing wag as comman as football. A re- minder of this exists in the will of one George Staverton of Workingham. He bequeathed out of his estate a sum of $30 yearly with which to buy a bull for | the baiting. The bull was to be given to the poor of Workingham to be baited in the market place Dec. 21 of each year, the remains of the animal to be sold and the proceeds devoted to the purchage of shoes and stockings for the poor children. The will was carried out until 1825, when the corporation forbade any more such celebrations. Why 1a it? Here Is a question in naval science 2.500 tons: pice on It a cargo of BOC, tons. This gives yoff @ total of 6,000 tons. Hitch a little tug to this ves- sel, and she wlll yank the big craft along at the rate of sif or eight knots an hour. Now put the tag's machinery, in the. big vessel It Won't move her half a knot an hour. Why is this? A Little Persuasion. 3 Wife (Indignuntly)~What! Live in the subutbs? Indeed 1 won't--so there! Husband (who wants. to, economtze)-- My dear, a pretty wouiad lke you néy er looks so charming 8s when sitting fn a pbaeton at a suburban raliway station waifing for her husband] | | _ A Holiday Benefit, = T. was taking a holiday, How are you feellag? Skelton--Oh, I. felt splendid while you were awayi~London Matl. Fold on, bold fast, hold out. Patience genus Buffon. oh bh-- Err, doctor, 1 say, how will g,to church do?-Chicao News. . which is to the average sallor man & |. Tyke a vessel ofy'say, | Skelton--] called on you yesterday. the smoker so the vapor rised from. Without dust earth could have ne rain. Not a drop of all the water would drip with water. -- Harper's Weekly. CARE FOR SICK ON TRAINS. German Roads Have Special Cars For Transporting Invalids. 9 Excellent facilities are afforded to Germany for trauspofting invalids and cripples who are unable to walk, ac | cording to our consul at Brunswick. | The German raflroad system provides. The charges for transporting sick and helpless persons have hitherto beem, moderate. Kor invalids traveling thir@- class the charge has been the cost of. four tickets, free transport being graat., ed for two attendants. This rate is still, granted when the car containing the. invalid apartment belongs to a regular train with a fixed destination; other- wise In the future six tickets second, clags must be purchased. In addition. to the cost of these tickets there will, be an additional charge of 7 pfennigs. (1% cents) per axle and kilometer (0.62 | mile) for the time the car runs empty. before and after the transport of the | invalid to the point of destination. For example, if the invalid is trans-. ported from Berlin to Hamburg, 200 kilometers (180 miles), when the caf containing the invalid apartment forms. part of the regular train the charge. will be 35.6 marks ($8.47); if the same car is specially ordered the chage will be 164.64 marks ($39.18).-- United Btates Consular Reports. 3a A Secret Andrew Lang Kept. : Andrew Lang unraveled many. his torical puzzles, but there Was one mys- tery the secret of which he Knew but. would not tell. He knew the truth. about the famous murder of which Alan Breck was suspected and for which James Stewart was banged. Stevenson in 'Kidnapped" lays the, crime to the account of a mysterious companion of Alan's, and In so far that neither Alan of James Was the miurderes Le wis right, sald Mr. Lang. But the identity of the adsassin was &. clan seeret, revealed to Ar. Lang as fellow clansman, and sed F° 1 -., Wash Day. ; © When Eve held forth in Paredise She found much pleasure tn it~ | when she did her Monday wash i t only took a minute. + --Milwaukee Bentinele And -when-4¥e washing blew away 'Eve didn't fret or whine. . She merely sauntered forth and pl , New garments from the vine --Spritigtield Oulon. | =e. didn't scold the laundryman, - e aidn't give him slack, { Because he happened by mistake bi: _To bring the wrong leaf back. a "nL -- ~Yonkers Sta! esmam. ie ,,. Insult and Jnjury. 4 ,"She's the most insulting woman 7 ever met." { "] never liked her myself." "Just think! The last time el us she didn't ipa ber feet came in. but she wipe them she went out."--Spokane Review. < The Day of Days i: Every dog may have his 8ay, As the ancient But it does him Tet why blame the fo For his faliures to p be visit,