Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 1 Apr 1915, p. 1

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G170R, CORvETANCER, | Son Bie at veniAADse, west of Fort Dentistry, Vi rh, suoe ee : North Onfaro os samy ey Is PUBLINHED AT PORT, FERRY, HT. 8th Co Percy) Wr 3 cemfally /- thot, 'E. A. ADAMS, SED AUCTION#RR for 3 Eo a BellPhotie No: 4t rom of 'Ontario. Salty the Onsirnven Officn - "ht vatervdan 15; 1 Bs + AE ues [NS UR Rell Bstate H, G. HUTCHESON, Bell Plione OffieNo. en & 4 ADAMS & HUTCHESON SUCCESSORS TO DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS Residence No. 4 MARINE A H G £ ACCIDENT Mortgage Loans | | | | [El fo iy eRe Tickets | Manufactured Ee the wen: - Wire Fence Uo: 1, Sound piepaied' to Supply. this: whole community witht very BEST .- WIRE FENCE produced a Continent and at prices that ean not fail vo satisfy purchasers: The Dirron Fefiée Itis the BEST because it is Sorbie 3 iti8a square mesh ; it 1s o perfect lige stay fence, tirerefore it is impossible to bend the stays it is'the best fence nade § in w" WARD PEARSE & PEARSE FIRE [HSURANGE AGENTS _ PORT PERRY, ONT. PPLITATIONS ror' In: expidisionsly negotinted a throui = on the rapid traniit system vouw usured ou Tecoiph of Applica: Mis H bi | Miss Harrison, ARE ALSO #trraiod. : ZED TO INSTANTANE: "Dress amd Mantle Maker J YJ HISHES to. itform the ¥ \ : thet: she: has moved to the rooms lormerly occupied by her OUSLY ADJUST . 8MALL: . fover. Mr. Flint's Diug Store where © 'Ishe if prepared to execute .all or | ders, for 'Dressand Mantle Making manner unsutpassed "for } Covert mess of Style and. Charoniy, E ec Mails Close. The mails #¢ despatched from the Post Office Port Perry av follovs : Going North-- 9.00 a. m. Going South--11.20 a. w. Going North-- 5.15 p. m, Going South--10 p.m, aRT PERRY, ba Bi iN L GOLNG NORTH. v is fio being prepared, and additions and® éha: far itefa be reported 15 our Local 'Manager {in the p ladies | gi A NEW ISSUE of the Telephone Directory i! pou a telephone? Those who will Ch phy that it is the moat precious of m: ences, 1. GEO JACKSON, Liceused Auctioneer, Valuatot &e. FOR TIX COUSTY OF ONTARIC AND To OF CARTWRIGHT, , J {7 ISHES at this the com aencement ef \ another Auction Kale Season' te turn thanks 'to his numerons past:favors.- [i requesting theie and continued patronage be state that no effort or pains" will' on hia part. to make sll, sales' him successes. His. very extansit ¢ ahoald meniation oh to hi nto hie charge with promptaess ang mind, out aad bleu} an application, Parting 'withing to gas bis, my cangnlt-his Sary RrGires the Observer or Standard os Perey, for dates claimed. for mike arrangements, or write to hiss "ea Phone.at Residence, No: CHARGES MADERA GEO. J{ "Canadian Henry Taylo *'Obser.y: vert oe Seaeons, 5, can obtal 8, Poet Perry. 4 in green and gol greater part of this Doak, Sommended by the best J onte World says, in part: his book will ba Aoi repaid {hr ! pictures of Canadian rural He, by fi heaztia er -the true ob fields than any Canadian ory : reins "1 he fives. ink two Varieties ie Sur " .. : Hed wre "varietios of Soy." WL Japatiese And... 2 hse varieties of Hung + "Corn' ting three varieties of Mangels 3 3 esting two: varieties of Sugar Bests for feeding purposes... 2 ting three, variotics of Swed- ish Tdroips ........ Tegting two varities of Fall, Tuar- nips 8 {dete sting two varieties of Carrots WzTonng ¢ three varieties of Fodder f Millet. 8 eto two Variation of Sorghum 2 18 Testing Gras: Peas and two var- 4 oties ot Vetches . 8 19--Testing Rope, Kale aud "Field Cabbage .. 8 30% pemving three varieties of 'Clover 8 1 Fusting two varieties of Alfalfa.. 2 2 TPestiug four varieas of Grasses 4 [Fong ir varieties of Field onns 21--Testing two Co 2 ative of 'Sask . 2 G ¥ = 80-E esting three grain mixtures for Fodder production .......... of 'person in Outario may choose ONE of tho experiments for 1916 rel app!v for the same. 1he material will be furnished in tho order in which tha applications are received, while the {supply lasts. Each applicant should mike a second choice, as the material selected for first choco might be ex- hatnsted before his application is receiv- eds , All material will be furnished (ree of cfinrge to each applicant, and the produce will, of course, become the pro- » xperimeut Each person applying for an e3 periment , shoflld write his name and Address very carefully, and should give the name of the County iu which C. A. ZAVITZ, Director. "Hail im? "Hail Him" Eatth's New Sovereigi ¢| "They Knew Not the Time of Their Visitation." "to{ Palm Sundaf Portends Momentotis Events--Jesus' Triumphal Entry Into Jerusalem--Rejected by the Nation, He Rejected the Nation-- Correspondencies Between Mes- siah's. First and Second Advents. New York City, March 28.--Pas- tor Russell spoke to-day at the New York City Tem ple, W..p3rd St., pedf Broadway. His text was, . "Hosanna; bless- edis He that cometh inthe 'name of the Lord." -- Mark 11:90. ", The mgmentoue fmportance of the event which Christians commemorate on Palm sdfiday was not- understood by the Jews at the time of our Lord's First Advent. The incident occurred five day# before Jesus' Srueifzion, the Je Sabbath - had en, rest at Bethany. Af lis 0 Tataris whom Jesus had 1 i from: the. sleep of death, two litem, entertained it. ts Sign 'of Palm Tonia and what it \gaified, as the climax of 'the test of Natural Israel in respect to the acceptance of their Messiah, we are prepared to go. further-and to note that in. God's providence there is a similar test for us Christians. The Pastor called attention to the fact that while Israel as a nation was rejected, there was a emall] faithful remnant who accepted Christ and thus became the nucleus or foundation of Spiritual Israel on the Day of Pentecagst. Thus, so far as , respects the Spiritual part of God's great Promise to Abraham, it assed forever from the reach of thé Jewish nation; but there #till re- mains for them a glorious earthly portion, to which they will be fully introduced at our Lord's Second Coming. The Time of Our Visitation. Apparently very tew of Spirit Israel, until recently, noticed that gr has had a history parallel to that of Natural Israel. Few indeed have §6en that these two lsraels have been dealt with as Type and Anti- type. Small has been the number who have noticed that from the death of Jacob to the death of Jesus finds its exact parallel of 1,845 1-2 years between the death of Jesus and our day. Few have noticed that in both Natural Israel and in Spiritual Is- fdel there have been both a nominal and a real Israel. The nominal Jew- ish system was tried and all but the "Israelites indeed" failed. Likewisg Will be the experience of Spiritual Israel. The nominal Christian sys- tem will be tried, and all in them "I perly of the person who conducts the | will fail except the faithful spirit- bégotten. Just Butts In, He laughs best who has the laugh on the other fellow, for Mothers Children's Friendships. The friendships thit children form have a far deeper influence over their lives than many parents realize. It is not an easy matter to influence childfen in the formation of friend- ships, for even at the beginning that geems tc be a matter of personal selec- tion. There never yet was a child who did not bate the children whom his parents talked about as particularly desirable for companions, If let alone he might have chosen thZm of his own accord tor pliymates, but not after bearing too much about their virtues. Friendship, like love, can never be created by talking too much about it There are other ways, however, of in: fluencing both boys dnd girls, and a little tact on the mother's part will accomplish wonders. It is not always pleasant or convenient to entertain a horde' of children when only one play- mate would be more desirable, but WOMAN WEAK AND RERVOUS Finds Health in Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at ad hdr a good of b table manners and harshness haps chief to piace in'the nursery, fot. they 800 construction Fein ut _make the little, ones: siillen and bad (yrneq go New York in 1011 "tempered. 'By hier influence as well 88 goon --what numbers of the by their play afd games she shoBld copstantly hearing referred to make them feel the.value of good man- ragte of money and materials and ners, unselfishness and perseverance. . jnefficient management in. he She should insist on obedience from Having been "on the inside," she § even the smallest child This once jut how dificult a perfect learned will give the nursery .an aif of on is to effect. Thus ber 'plan; sunshine apd; contemtrikbat it cannot pot create the position of ome, otherwise have. Still she must realize practical experience, whoke time' that good disciplive does not mean pe devoted entirely to solving the' tyranny afd hard discipline. Punish- jong of hospitals effectively? ment should only be used as a means Thus it was she originated thé ross of last resource. Then it should be t0 fassjon of which she is the sole deprive the-child of some simple pleas- pine member, that of consulting ure. Any'severe punishment should in fegard to hospitals. She h be left, tothe parents, 'quently given advice of the hi 1t 15 nurse's business to see that the value in the case of hospitals ed nursery is-supplied with toys to amuse ¢, gecure more economical Mok ut the thildren. so there may be toys gervice. econouljcal asq for all, put it is equally hnportant to CHIC DANGE GOWN. % let the ch n feel that the toys are owned in comimon. She should direct Coquettish Flounced Creation Shown: Among Spring Models. their play and games, but let &fl the children piek up their toys and put them SWRY after they have finished The frilled or flou frock 1s | In her personal habits and appear- spicuous among the models ict ance she should be neat and clean, '0Bable modistes are pushing for Her work is clean, so there is no ex- 4 cuse for dirty hands and soiled aprons. i When Lessons Tire the Chid. "The child does not pay attention," the teacher says of the littla, boy oF girl in the kindergarten, whose mind seems to be upon the thing that is be- ing done and yet cannot accomplish it. But it very often happens that the child 18 Hot cap#ble of concentratitig attention for very long upon one thing. He watches the play or the drawing very carcfully for a certain length of time; then wearies through no fanit of nig"Givai, but beesuse of brain fa-| | tigue, and his eyes wander to the! i shape of the pencil he is holding or | possibly to the waving feaves of the | | tree outside the window. Mothers who study their children | éatefully can tell just how long they can bold the attention of the child without wearying it, but the teacher, having so many to think about, may | not realize that she is tiring the child with the lesson. I Many children that are voted stupid | by parents or children are only slow, in their mental processes and requife | great patience and care in the first' yéats in the nursery or school. Let the lesson be a little longer each day, apd as soon as the child seems tired change to something else. A Blackboard For the Childrbd. Many mothers want something to en- tertaifi fhe young child so well and so long that they may read or sew or at- tend to household duties undisturbed for an hour at a time. Orie good suggestion Is a blackboard and a package of colored chalks. It has been found that children work longest over blackhoards; probably ow- ing to the ease and the fun of era an act of destruction which delig thém and yet in some way is passed unchided by the superior powers. Next * series of black net flounces to this they like crayons and chalk on | With velvet. The long wulsted paper, and least of all paint. i of black velvet is softly wrinkled, with Thy enjoy the water and the mess- | low placed velvet flowers and shouldes * fig for a time, but the spreading § we | straps of large jot beads. : NET DANCE DRESS. Frills are of various sizes, but those oft. | moderate width seem most popular: The skirt is draped with ¥ paint. while they imagine it to | geean, seems to detract from the clap ity of the image which the Qhtiy Bad in view when he started. Amusing sketches and dctnal school | many French work may bé undertaken on the black- | American be board. As to the board itself, a small, | with oll as a Lutter substitute in eg light, unbreakable easel shaped board | ing Suds that it hes many adv worth a dollar or less is the one best Xa Joes 26t bus & ory Substitute For Butter. Ofltve oil as a substitute for butter ad responsible for the delicious flavor of d lta

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