Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 17 Jun 1915, p. 1

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Ino. W. Orozler stilizen, Sotgortin CoRYEYANGER, B &e! Office resid 6th: Con. | anh (ttle wills west of Fors Porig;)-- Cio Mowax To LoAN: = = Tgmmer of Marriage Licnses. :3 AREWELL, 0, LLB, 3 ster, | J. A. Murray ie DENTIST, Jffice over the Post Office, = PORT PERRY. 'Al -brauches -- of Dentistry, ~ eluding Crown and Bridge ork successfully ractioe (Sold, Silver, Aluminum Plates. prepared -to - suppl community with the Continent and at prices that not fail te satisfy cir of Gp The DiLron Fence peer. 1t is the BEST becas flexible; it is a square me i perfect hitigeistay fence, Mrercfore it is impossible to bend the says in-facf it is the best fence made in this or aby other coun{fyifh® Before purchasing a Wige enc don't fail to Hi he' Dirren FiNCE. J. H. Brow, Deatgr N"AGrICULTORAL. IMpLE MENTS AND MACHINERY, Bi rciavs Artifical Teeth ot : or Rublier Fillings ui-Goldl, Painless extinction when reqoi 3A gar iices" to suit the thaw er or Ceinent faid Aptik6, 1905: A Wi lpaketay = id A Dir FIRE ISU HB: PARSONS Soph "RIMS, ~9¥ pF wnoum, if paid tu advance ; nor $1.50 : 3 gE LB WE ARE ALSO AUTHOR. 1Z6D TO INSTANTAN- OUSLY ADJUST = SMALL LO BS. LIVE STOCK INSURANOE' 1 control in this districy | tance of the Genera. Animals Insurance Company. wETEERS oootalning money, hon Lddromsed to this Nonparie!, ABVERTISEMENTS po by, Nonparlel, and © AUVERTISEMSNTS socoived for pak 2 drutrutions, o discount allewsd to Merchants asd othe: arian bythe yous of half your asd aches FHRSE terms will in sll cases be strictly adhered to | + JOB DEPARTMENT. --AGEN PIANOS & ORG © Pamphlets ©. Hand Blls, | Posters Progratilly DUS Bi Heads, Patronage respéctiuily solidifed; WARD & PEARSE & i Leer Horas, Wedding Tavitations, i Stevi Worids Becelpt Books Busiuess Cards Moka | Oirsulars, Amoumbly Osirds, Visiting Cards, &0, of svery style snd color Ea ow ros 3 pr or oy ihe AE ate ed AD a H, PARSONS. HARNESS ] Pa. _ WIRE FENCE prodacalion his Phone OffieNd. & Residence No, 4 ADAMS & HUTCHESON ° SUCCESSQKS TO DAVID. J. & POUGLAS ADAMS, FIRE fe INSURANCE Mannd | ; : ACCIDEN Roa! Bstate H: 8. HYTCHESON, Bell . Mortgage Loan Steamship Tickets 5 i 'now prepated, additi i plo A be Dab, io our Ll Al A £| spiritual A hat settle: tore, = 1 rubbed on ily ced "dozens of 'my friends t ffvitine, and they dre all de- ith {ts wonderful power over d sickness. You are at liberty Ish this sizned letter, which I {UHL show the way to health to that need to use Nerviline, (Rigred) "LUCY MOSHER." ots of aches, pains, and suffer. Meranl and external--yfeld to 10, Accept no substitute; 26c tle, or five for $1.00. ilk NEV CREATURES SESURECTION BEGUN Mf We Be Dead With Him, Wé iBhalt Also Live With Him," R@urrection In the Heart -- Death fine Great Boemy of Humanity 13° fying the Resurrection Life jow--Knowing the Power of {Christ's Resurrcction --- Dead to thie World Now. Seattle, Wash., 1.8.--Pastet Ruegell preachad here to-dsy. We report his ad- dress from the text, "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things that are above," -- Colds- slans 8:1; . The Pastor showed that the EAT 2) ietgl] Juno Church of Christ, not the world. The resufrrection to which he refers begins now in thé carts and the minds of the New eatures in Christ, and culminates in the great change from human to conditions of which he speaks elsewhere. Whoever does not begin that resurrection life here and progress with it will not expéri- ence the great change to life on the gpirit plane. The speaker deplored that the Bl- ple is so little understood, and ex- "The Great Ship most costly steamer on any inland water i 3 Magnifictnt Steamers ---- "CITY OF BUFF. plained that this is partly because of the mistaken idea that its teach- ings are so deep that only the clersy can understand {ts mystefies, but mainly because of the errors foisted upon us during the Dark Ages. Therefore the Beriptural teaching that death is the penalty of sin is everywhere rejected, and we are_in- structed that the pemalty of sin is eternal torment. Both common sense and the Bible are thus ignored. The facts set forth in the Bible are that death is the great ememy of mankind; that it is here because of sin; that unless God helps us, there would, be no future life for us; and | that God's provision is that all mang GEO JACKSON, Licensed. Auctioneer, Valuator, &e. 7OR THE OOUNTY OF ONTARIO AND TOWNSHII : OF CARTWRIUIFY, ISHES at this the commencement of another Auction Sale Season to re- tars thanks trons for Cpa X offort or paius will be spared to make alé sales entr to His very extensive practice | pa h be sufficient 4 Dank Ao abut. Al Sale rge will be astendeds fod kind shall be restored from d through the- Ransom-price given by our: Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Corin- thlans 16:21, 22.) But for Him to die and then make no application of {| His merit for us would leave us in as terrible condition as before. {| Therefore God has provided that | cap velgn ute ale ; a ong to that Churel {that they have part in (2 His Tes) Preven 7s His steps." They should seek |to know God's will in all things-- | what they should eat, wear, say and do. This course fiithfully parsued will give them what the Apostle terms "the Spirit of a sound mind." This class must bs dead to self- (will. Our will is our wish, and our wishes represent our personality. If we ylcld our wishes to another, we give up our will to that extent. God | purposees to have an Order of the Royal Priesthood, every member of | which will be fully submissive to the | great High Priest 'Christ Jesus. But) ey must be dead with Him. mothy 2:11,.13,) heever : death 7 it 18 very dangerous to yield our will to anyone else. The Power of Christ's Resurrection. The Pastor illustrated his theme by reference to the life of St, .l-aul. The Apostle desired memberfhip in the Body of Christ above all things | else, (Philippians 8:8, 9.) The word Christ means anointed; and the name applies not only to the Head of the Church, but to the Body also. God is raising up a great Anointed One. He raised up Jesus first; and throughout the Gospel Age He has been raising ip the members. All things earthly aré but loss and | dross in comparison to the wonder- ful privilege of being members of The Christ; for to Christ God has promised the Kingdom and glory, honor, immortality--the Divine na- ture. . The Apostle percelved that Jesus | had fulfilled the Father's will in all His experiences; and thus knowing, be wished to have the same experi« ences. He knew that he could not | enter into Christ's resurrection un- less he entered into Christ's death. who suffer with Christ with Him. This 4 Ba Le from others of hi§ day. We look 1 back and see how much he possessed [of the Master's words and disposi | tion, His was a wonderful example to those who are fully consecrated | to God and striving to live the new life until their trial is fAnished hf the First Resurrection. | Only those Count Your Blessings. Reflect upon your present bless- ings, of which every man has many; not on your past misfortunes, of | which all men have some.--Charles Dickens. | | SALT MARSH HAY. Nova Scotia Is Famous For Greseés Grown on Dyke Lands. Nova Scotia is noted for the large and practically inexhaustible dyked marsh lands around the Bay of Fundy, which have been from time to time reclaimed from the sea. When the French cim® to Novi' Scotla early in the seventeenth cen- tury they found large areas of land along the banks of the streams em- ptying into the Bay of Fundy that were covered with water at every tide. These they began to reclaim by building dykes and this work was continued by their English succes- sors. The soll is composed of inorganic red mud brought in by strong tidal currents, of alluvial sediment con® | sisting of the drainage of the up- ands, and of pu ent vegetable matter and other particles deposited by the rivera flowing into the Bay. The action of currents and the un- ceasing motion of the tides agitate and disturb this ma nd thus dif- fuse it equally on all sides, but at the mouths of the rivera it accamt- lates to a great thickness, The fresh waters there meet with the resist. ance of the ocean and are, in a great ure, arrestod:.in their progress. . greatest. at fod: thagelt ire agus), for, kay ad y Go 'and' te the ald know | ¢ resurrec- t [tion lite. But to be risen with Christ The ; Ydesi In any organization so large as that of the O.P.R., where under nor- mal conditions over 100,000 em- ployes are on the payroll, one great preblefi 'ig that of keeping the em- ployes, so. to speak, dynamic, part of a living" organization and not of a mere machine, Zeal and ambition must b¢ t burning. One" fystem- introduced on the Western lings witb. thls in mind has proved" 8x¢esdingly efficient. Each superintendent or foreman or head of a department makes two reporis a year on bis staff. Bright men are thus earmarked for special promo- tion. If amy man js criticized the re- port is shown to him and inltialled by him beforp tt goes to Winnipeg. He gets a square deal, and If he has any life in him he mends his ways so that po. such criticism can be made twiee: Then again, there are independent scouts, looking 'for the bright men, the tidy slation agent, tbe courteous trainman, the man cool in an emergency, the inventive mechanic, the stenographer who can run the office when the chief is ab- sent. These scouts are sdarching for merit only not for faults, Over the whole gystem of the Can- | adlan Pacific ideas and suggestions | turning be | The committee bought machines made by employes are not only wel- comdd, but lead to promotio: They go to the Record Office, where a statement of the employe's career 's attached to thre suggestion before it 1s considéred by a committee. Railway Fire Protections The Canadian Northera Ontario Railway is arranging to install ar othefet firé protective system along Raeshgtween Nosth Bay and Port Arthur, In aecordance with the requirements of the Railway Com- missfon. There will be twenty-three special patrolmen with track veloci- pedes, and two head patrolmen with power speeders, eovering portions of the line where tbe fire hazard is Where the situation will permit; the sectionmen and other re- gular employs wlll perform such patrol and fire fighting work as may be necessary.--C. L. in Cowuservation, W 1EN. Interesting English Experiment Has Met With Success. The efforts to meet the economic situation createdin Britaln by the war, Mave produced no more frultful and Interesting social experiments than those which have been organ- ized by the central committee for wemen"s employment. The commlit- tee is financed througl the Queen's | work for women fund. It was rightly anticipated when the war began that women and girls would suffer greatly from unem- ployment, and the ldea of the Queen's furd, through the commit- tee, was to prevent this, by provi®' ing them with useful work fer which wages would be pald, and which would not compete with other work- ers who were normally employed in the labor market. It was clear that if the work to whieh the unemployed women were put was not to compete with that of others already employed, many wotild have to undergo speclal train- ing; @nd it was also seen that one of the Best ways to insure that tao committee's workrooms were run. on an economic, as distinct from an un- ecosotnic, basis, would be to use them to establish new industries. So this yery able and indefatigable com- mitts Tooked to Austria, Germany nd France for ideas, with the r .the Te 1 gti Féner was erected at Calcutta, Su feulin, : -- Mies AMELIA JAQUILABD," houpitoulas St., New Orleans, La. Bt 'Pa, -- "My mother W alarmed because I wad troubled ) suppression and had pains in 'my and side, and severe headaches. I pimples on my face, my complexion sallow, my sleep was disturbed, I neryous spells, was very tired and no ambition. Lydia B. PiniHgm"s Vege etably Sompound fas worked Hla [ charmpin my case and has regula A 1 td in a mill among hundreds' 5 1s aid have recommended your. ne to foany of them."--Miss ESTELLA MAGUIRS, 110 Thwing St., St. Clair, Pac There /is nothing that teaches more than experience. Therefore, such lof ters from girls who have suffered and were restored to health by Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound be a lesson to others, The same is within reach of all. If you want special advl Lydia E. Pinkham Medi¢ine dential) Lynn, Mass. Your opened, read and am woman and held in strict .#, tne work oeing entirely self-gupe porting and In no way subsi For the making of socks more struction was needed, as it invel from sewing to knitting. lent them to the dressmakefs, whom rested the producing of soe! in sufficient quantities, The eom= mittee has secured an army contract for 2,000,000 pairs of socks, whieh will give work to well over 1,20 women per week until July, » i Famous Charges : One probahte résult of the In ductjon. pf mechanical vehicles wirfare will be the abolition of the old custom of cherishing the memory, of famous war horses. When geners als conducted campaigns on horses = back, before the advent of the field staff motor-car, their . favegite: charges used to recelve many homey ors. When a statue of Lord Kitehw- the famous soldier arranged that sculptor should pleture him mounted: on a stone reproduction of his fava te horse Democrat, which carried} him through many important cams: palgns. Wellington's famous ¢ er Copenhagen, when he died, wi buried with full military honors: The Iron Duke's horse was a magni ficent chestnut, and he carried big master many hundreds of miles im Spain and at the Battle of Toulouse.' "If he fed," sald the duke, "it was on standing corn as I sat in the sadd 0. Wesley and Sortes. nied a great believes 3 7" On ene ly perplexed im | 18 should go t&@ Bristol. { al custom he had recourse to sort lege. Dut the omens were felt 40 unpropitious. The Bible opened upon this text: '"'AMaz slept with = his fathers, and they buried him: im the city, even In Jerusalem." A$ Southey, Wesley's biographer, polnt~ edly says: "here are not so many, points of similitude between Bristok: and Jerusalem as botween Mon= mouth and Macedon, and Henry the Fifth was more like Alexander tham_ John Wesley would have acknowl edged hir If to resemble ANiAz; but: it was clear language for an oracle.' Wesley went and lald the founda = tlons of Methodism in the capital the West. Pronouncing Welshy' 4 White learned professors nay difs a to the gorrect pron 1

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