exces Qussx RY Offi» hours :--§--i0 nme : T y "» te; endont lines An nd Evenings. alashnna » aestion 'over Ball aad WM. H. HARRIS, B.A. LLB. BARRISTER, &o. nodasaor to nl of 'the | : oicts of 1. 1A ER Varnold. Port Perry, - Oat. a ONEY TO LOAN. Private Funds at 4 per cent, b'190L Jno. W. Orozier Pa SoL1CTTOR, CONVEYANCER, te at residence, Reach (ope wile west of Port Per y,)-- Moxsky To Loan. Tesusr of Marriage Licnses. JR NE E. FARRWKL! C:, LL.B. » County Crown Attornsy, later, County Sol 8% &c., Notary Public and Covveynnoer. Dffice--Sauth wing Court House, Whitby, Out, DR. R. L. GRAYAM 81 0 sow ro Dm FD, McUBATTA DENTIST rOR1 PE IRY, 0: J. A. Murray, DALNTIST, Jive over the Pont Office, PORT PERRY, branches of Dentistry, including Crown and Bridge Work successfully practiced. (Ais 1 feet on Gold, Silver, Alamintin i or Rubber Plates, i Korth Oatari Observe A Weekly Palitical, Agricultural and Family Newspaper IN PUBLISHED AT PONT PERRY, ONT, THURSDAY MOBNING »Y H. PARSONS MB. $1 por annum, | it paid fu advance ; not §1.5¢ BRN per \' Sabecriphios t#ken' for loss thar wa ofa wd no paper discontinued antil ey oy. BVERY ETT tall moirey, when addressed Lo tiie EC ovehuel Sad toststered wil, bs at our risk, Eide moral by None', and irerged avcording to the space they poou ADVERTISEMENTS » received for Publication, ieatlon, with, lo Tnetry racsionts will Forbin and charged soconlingly, Jo adteftise- suent will be taken out until paid 8] discount sllewed. toMurduitsuid thor 4 bo tr BAH Lhe gear or half 5 HERD terms will in all case be strictly, adhered to JOB DEPARTMENT. Pumiphicts Hund Bils, Posters * Piogranis, DoBgers + Bill Heads, Choaks Jattor Heads, Wedding lavit:tions, Btauk Forms Recetyt Boks Busixess Onrds Bovks Celis, Assembly Cards, Visiting Cards, &e, SER other astinithmen: the Cvanig... dista ting Posters, Re, cpkaroe fio a Sizience suse getting ater H. PARSONS. HM. MoCaW, LC LICKNSES, Port Perry Ont, ott Perr; Doo. | 3 rd ad Fa 6th Con. |- 'mE. Oommuniyn, 1st Sunday of * hot, Wednead ie AA ORUBOR. REY --. RIOWARDRON Third Sunday ot 10 Wn, m, Jos. BATRD ICKN<ED AUCTIONEER, for thi bi Canuty 'of Ontario, Sale Register at Omverver Office Patronage solicited: i Trt Jan. 19, 1809. anti Sil. jn | I -t ert Dilion I or Fence Manufactured by the Owett Bound Wire Fence Co. Litd., and arh prepaied to supply this whole community with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this Continent and at prices that cau not fail to satisfy purchasers, The Durt.oN Fence is without a peer. lis the BEST because it is Hexible pit is a square mtsh itis a perfect hinge-stay fence, therefor: itis impossible to bead the stay- wi fact iis the best fence made wn this or any other country. Before purchasuig 4 Wire Fence don't fail to ins pect the Dues Enc. J. H. Brown, aii Cp DEALER. IN AGRICULTURAL IapLE: 1.6, 1905. WARD & PEARSE FIRE INSURANCE AGFNTS PORT PERRY, ONT. PPLICATIONS por INSURANGE CX expidition-ly wegotiated and put throui - on the rapid transit system: you a usured oir receipt of applica tion, . hid * WE ARE ALSO AUTHOR. ZED TO INSTANTANE- OUSLY ADJUST SMALL : LOBE: ---- AGENTS FOR---- Pla & ORGANS Pat ge respectfully sol cited. WARD & PEATSE I" cerning thanks to the ble or A I Som pi i to me for tfull infthi J ve randy or E. A. ADAMS, BellPhoue No. 41 DAVID | FIRE LIFE ] N 3 4) R Real Estate H. G. HUTCHESON, Bell Phone Uffieno. 6 ~ ADAMS & HUTOHESON SUCCESSORS TO . & DOUGLAS ADAMS Steamship Tickets " 'Résidence Noi 4 MARINE A N H E ACCIDENT Mortgage Loans Mails Close. Thd mails are despatched from the Post Olfice Port Perry as follove : ing Novth-- 9.00 a. m. South--11,20 0. m (ioing South--10 p.m Miss Harrison, Dyess and Manila ¥aker Vis to inform tle that she has moved to the rooms formerly occupied by her over Mr Fhnts Diug Store 'where she is prepared to exceute all or ders for Dress and Mantle Making anner unsurpassed for ¥ ladies and Charming Effect. © Qur charges are consistent with the value given. Port Perry, Aptil 1, 1909: GEO JACKSON, Licensed Anctioneer, Valuator, &c. FOR THK COUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHI! OF CARTWRIGUT, ISHES at this the commencement cf ¥ another Adction Sale' Seawon™to re. turn thanks to his numecrons pa-rooxs for past favors. . Lu requesting their axteemed atid continued patronage he desires to atate that Ho «font or pains will Le spared on hin part to make nll énles cutrusted to him snocesses.. Hin very extensivd péactlce in the past should be a sufficient recom. wendation as to his ability. All Sale given into his charge will be attended: with promptness wid dispatch Sule lint made out aul blank notes supplied free, on application. Partics wishing to engage his eervices may cofwult Hie Spa Bxci=TeR either at the Observer or Staudard Of wen, Port Perry, for dates clnimed foF Sales and make arrangements, or write to his adidves 4 Phone at Residence, No. 31. 3 CMARGES MODERATE, G ECG. JATKSON, . Port Perry P. Nov. 1, 1901. GRAND TRUNK RY SYSTEM TIME'TABLE. Port PERRY. _GOING 80OUTH, GOING NORTH. 11 55 am. 5.55 p-m. "1:40 p.m «} .7-33 p-m. "6:40 d.m. g.of a.m: ; R. Time Table. | agent in this Count ty. DISTRIBUTION OF SEED G:iaIN AND POTATOES #ROM THE DOMINION EXPERIMENTAL FARMS: 1014-1015. By instructions s of the "Hon. Mina ster of Agriculture a distribution of stpetior sorts of grain and potatoes will be made duridgy the coming winter and spring td Canadiail farmers. The samples ff general distribution "will conslst of spring wheat (abubt 5 1B); white oats (bout 4 Ibs.), Ba ley (ubout 5 Ibs.), and field peas (about § Ibs,). The {wireless. | When we got { printed tay, and in the morlih§ of st, bot could ngt find her. We into Cornell in the evening of st to send off and receive bums for the Admiral, and in. ally, to buy provisions. We rly next morning i d met the man called the Otranto, about We were informed that the s had been left behind to (Here lasgow) were sent ahead northwest to scout. At they ere warships, so we prepared for-aclon and Went "nearer to in two large armored cruisers un and Scharnhorst, ace compan d by a ¥tnall ship, so we turned a d ran back to our other hips, informing the Admiral by together line 'ahead was formed, the order being, Good Hope, Monmouth, Glasgow and Otranto, and we altered course, running parallel will be sent out from Ottawa. distribution of potatoes. samples) tll be ciltrivd | several of the Kp ying only the pro d Qlighée. All samples sent free by mail. Applicants must give parti in regard to the soil on their fai and some account of their eX] ence with such kinds of grain ptitatten) a3 they have grown that & Proniising sort for their ditions may be selected. Each application must be ate and must be signed by the plicant. Only one sample of gn and oné cf potatoes can be sent #6 each farm. If both samples @n asked for in the same letter one will be sent. Application: any kind of printed form cannol accepted. As the supply of seed is limit farmers are advised to apply el but the applications will not n sarily be filled in the exact ord which they are received. Pi ence will always be given to most thoughtful std expHeit quests. Applications feceived the end of Januaty will probab too late. All applications for grain' applications trom the proving Ontario and Quebec for Po should be addressed to the on Cerealist, Central. Experi Farm, Ottawa. Such applica require no postage. If oth addressed delay and disappoint may oceurs Applications, for potatoes, farmers in any other provi should be addressed (postage paid) to the Superintendent 'nearest Branch Experimental 3 5 oe affice, Port aly bot green Ontario County Is the hemo: greater, part of this baok and | comme by Beat "ndgen applications ' should be' sent in El 00d man shonld ea _|d Mcult to distinguish g | fourth with 'he enemy. At this time the un was low behind us, ie., away rom the enemy, and the light good ; dazzling g fort i engage 'Alicm, ds they were ore 'upetior to us in guns and armor 4nd we were all going south, and consequently would meet the Canopus next morning, which would give us, if not superiority, at feast a fair chance. We altered coulst inwards, obviously trying to engage them when we had the ad- vautage of hight; but the enemy altered course also, which brought them parallel to us again and kept out of range, The sun was now setting fast, and as soon as it set they closed in on us. Now they had an enormous &dvdnlage in lLght. Our ships to them were silhoueted against the afterglow of the sunset and theirs were very at all A ship, a light cruiser now joined them. Still we could have avoided battle and contittted on our way to wards the Canopus, who had now been ordered up at f#ll speed, but had evidently the Admiral felt he must have a go at them, The Otranto was ordered to leave the line and to escape togsouthewest, as she was useless against such ships, and very iikely to catch fire if she was bit. Both sides now opened fire (at 7 § Flpm)at a tange of about 12,000 | yards. The enemy's order was | Goeisenau, Scharnhorst, Leipzig Dresden. The two big ones us, while we fired at the| only. 'at afl. The squadrons lly closed in to about 5.000 Very soon after the start nmotrth canght fire forward, put it out, the same hap- the Gneisenat. Then the out coliers, and we were| Carn a0 pewspa {lin The" New Yor lingaess to fight for righteousness which must be attained before' they guarantee small, well.behaved, civ- ilized nati t cruel di er." The former President of the United States does not spare the 'preachers of diluted mush of makerbelieve morality." He says: *| "The ultra-pacificists, the peace-at any-price.men, have appeired spar- adorically everywhere, but they have of recent years been most hutherous and noxious in the United States, in Great Britain, and in France." In Canada, up to the very outbreak of the war, they ridiculed military titles and unforms, and even sneered al the great general who to.day leads the British (roofs to the tescie of Belgium. Mr. Roosevelt accuses ultra- pacificists of callous indifference to the rights of weaker nations. He charges Mr. W. J. Bryan with fetbly serving unrighleolisa€sd by making "absurd, all-inclusive arbi- tration treaties," by delivering *lo- quacious speeches" before Pedte Societies on the abolition of war, and by neglecting to protest against the hideous wrongs done to Belgium in the namie of twentieth century culture, In Mr. Roosevelt's view, "the lowest depth is reached by profes- sional pacificists who tontinde to scream for peace without daring to prolest again concrel T comm a te Thess include all our fellow-countrymen who at the present time clamor for peace without explicitely and clear ly declaring that the first condition of peace should be the righting of the wrongs of Belgium, reparation to her, and guarautee against the possible repetition of sucn wrongs at the expense of any well-behaved small civilized power in the future." The former president points out that by conventions signed at The Hague during his regime, the United States became a guarantor of Belgium's integrity, and he ar gues that the national honor will not be vindicated until the oulrag- ed little kingdom is freed of the oppressor. The charge is one to be weighed by Americans them- salves, but without question millions of them #gree with Mr. Roosevelt. 'the nerve forces so that Indiéates indies iio, constipation or liver 3 ind yes FIG PILLS will regulate your system and build up you can sleep and enjoy life. At all dealers 25 or 50 cents or The Fig Pill Co. St. Thomas, Ont. Thunder of, A dtins Does Not Bfidg Rain London, Dec. 28.--* Like the supposed influence of the moon up- on the weather, the popular belief that powder brings rain is base- less," writes. a scizntist in The Times. "About four years ago the First Lord of the Admirality was gravely asked in the House of Com- mons whether he would instruct the fleet to carry out its heavy gun practice at some other period of the year than in the middle of harvest time, 'when the resultant rains may cause serious loss to the farming community." The idea is absoltitely without foundation. Experiments made in America and on the coo. tinent show that in dry weather no amount of concussion has the slightest effect in the production of rain. , - At the present litie ther€ is one fact which should at once dispose of the cherished theory. There is no more reason for thinking that gunfiring at the front is more vio lent than it was in the earlier stages of the war. Therain should there- fore have commenced' shortly after fhe couhrasl of tha war. As a matter of fact, nothing of the kind took place. [n August and Sep- tember the rainfail was much below the average. "At Shoeburyness, where big guns are being tested also daily, year in and year out, the average reinfall is smaller than in any other part of the United Kingdom. War Lords as War Prophets At the beginning of the war every German high in office was a soothsayer of victory. Ministers and diplomats of the Kaiser confi- dently predicted that that the Allies would be crushed and brought to submission before the end of 1914 They considered that about three months of war would take all the fight out of the British, French, Belgian and' Russian armies. At the end of two months Count Bernstorff, the German Ambassador WHEN RAEI CKAG | at Washington, anfiounced | Secretary k that his country's foes were shattered, and that she was willing to grant them peaee. At the end of four thomths Herr Détnbuig, the Kaiser's financial . agent in the United States, published in The Independent a statement of the terms upon which Germany would conglude peace. It was another case of the hunter's selling the lion's skin while the beast lived. Now. five nfonths after the war, the were wroog at least in the tite, Heft 7, 'Foreign Affairs in Gerttiany, ls jist issued a new hedule'of German convest. = This Catching Whales a "Dying Industry New Bedlord, Mass., Jan 8. -- The decline of the whaling industry has brought it to a point where it is oo longer feasible to maintain a periodical devoted to its interests, hheh ding *0 the of the Whaleman's Shipping List, who wday annotriiced that this week's igsue would be the last of the weekly e [journal. When the gaper was to the |! The col- blishéd in 1Bvc, the number of vessels engaged in the whale fishery {was 675, with an aggregate tonnage of 199.174. Of 1hese sinps 240 hailed from New Bedford and its and 75 from Three years lated the ark in the industry | lifter of the veil that shuts out the view of the future has be hind it:in "a .very deliberate and searching. nianner, and has take some qu circumstantial notes of the luck that is in store for his country, notes which he communi- cates to the public. He gives the dates at which France, Britain and Russia are Sustined to be. severally uj e 'world will be over Before the month of June," He may be cor- rect cn that Point, but the vital error in this prophecy, as it has made' by German prognosticators, i$ as to the side on perch German-'forecasters have to admit | « Later he becam manager and fn 1899-1800 vice-president Bs i hia § 3p the d 1 a MeNieo! dent of the , Bi. John B way Co,, and a"director 's Bank: In in he was by the King ad Esquire Order of Bt. John. George J. Bury was on in real 48 years age Do C.P.R. as a clerk in the purchasing §opartment in 1888, and: has sincd the following positions: H Haass snperintehdent In ai fon, Chal Jw! : Saporintendent at y Le lam, superintendent st Cranbi C., dent, Lake Superior aj visiant tendent of at vision; oof ave tendent of Rod eaterd division, headquar peg; vice] of western fines fas, president (1911). He is highly regarded thro the west, and among railway men the continent he enjoys a most eo, reputa ock Island and Pacific Rallway. His gieotion to Moreton mong ob 0 Was JO foo. Sk "Willém Whyte 7 War Makes New Industries. Under direction of Mr. Joseph: 5 trial Banner, toy engines, stov men#geries, and bake-wagons have been made for the past few at St. Andrew's Market unemployed metal oy smiths, painters, iy men of all sorts of trad Oe -- It amasing the ingenuity with which toy stove can be manufactured from some scraps of tin artistically pafab | 22a £ tin-hinged, wity a minute) umber for benches plied by the city, an 3 ola building on Eastern avenue. Wi modern tools there will be good pros- pects for a permanent Canadian jm dustry. In pe Pretty dolls are bein inade oa "unemployed" women at the thead< quarters of the Toronto Wom Patriotic League on Sher! street, out of rags plus celluloid faces. Girls are employed to stuff them, and are paid by piece while the women maké the li dresses and caps. They sell at 8 cents, and are being disposed of as soon as made. y The plan to have pretty rag rugs and portieres woven by feeble women is still being worked at, and may be, put in operation within the weéek, as; the Women's Art Association have oftered the use of their hand loo These rugs form quite an industty Quebec, and the fad is growing Ontario and the United States, 80 that Toronto may in the future have the picturesque experience of w 2 weaving at hand looms as in the aid Drumtochtie days. Will Opens With Prayer. The opening clause of the will~of. Hon. 8. H, Blake, K.C., probated re<. cently in Toronto was typleal of the great Canadian jurist and church worker and strikes a deeply religious note. It says: "In the first place, § render unto Almighty , my Hea: enly Father, my greatest 'thanks for all his marvellous loving kihdness 5 me during the long life that He granted me, and I join humbly confidently with his servant of old his commanding words: 'Into hands I commit my by psi: redéemed me, O Lord God pm DALLES OF THE THE ST. its Quaintly Shaped Rests. BEY or hurls ed Trade has offered the use of a fi IP Marks, editor of the Toronto Indus: 2,