Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 9 Jan 1919, p. 2

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LS Lean PORT - PERRY HI HIGH pt IN 1 nis x, and is ¥ Riri No» The following. is is the standing Nisan Medium 61 ohiained by $'udents at the recent champion of the SR 3 { the more con-|eXaminations The names are in cal class of peo-|geder of merit. rite of schemers, For, iV, Honowrs-- Aleta Ferguson. J t i the Oldest nd ed ti oe Ee: in Satisfactory-- Elsie Rose, Form 111. the igi rigid and best in ig Joa and news depart shent and is Cb in the Jace of publication rt Perry. x - Honours-- Grace Rose. Satisfactory -- Mae Bruce, -- annum it advance, i not hp Hi dvance $150 will West, Elizabeth Hooey. Foru 11 Honours -- Miriam Harris, Sweetman. Satisfactory -- Elizabeth Allin, Helen Mellow. Foru 1, Honours --Chatles Cawker, Gerrow, Llsie » RN STYLES XD AT low PRICE Allen . $3u0t0 $10,000, have un placed ith me for imutediate in- | rater lowest rate, 3 HUBERT L. EBRELS, Ercest of go Port Perry. Leask, Beatrice Brandon, Orval Switzer, Allred Andrus. The United States, yes, and the World, as well, in the death of ex- | President 'man as regards all hat goes to make men great and important, for he was certainly one of the world's benefactors. His inde- pendence and orotorical powers were not the least of his many wonderful and desirable accomplish- v Oelsh hye of the People.) 10RT PERRY, JAN o, 1919 IRVIN 5 COBB SALVATION ARMY From *'The Saturday Evening Post" greatest ments. The civilized world mourns | bis departure, A fond mother in addressing her soldier, | promising 'young son, asked him to guess ber weight, The kid wisely and promptly replied: I have yetto mest any whether a brigader or a private, who, if he spake at all of the Salva-{ tion Army, did not speak in terms | 1 guess not ! The St. Mary's Journal says milk 5 : | : of fervent gratitude for the aid that! has never been so high since the the Salvation Army are rendering | cow jumped over the moon. unostentatatiously, and yet so very | effectively. Let troops move from one station 10|handsand ahead of wi another and hard on its heels came | py p "Whether your work 15s mental or a sizable body of | h your plans. | erry people bound for -Florida | haveithesympathy of home-stayers, Salvation Army. army truc a squad of men and women of the An k { Fancy Christmas without snow and may bring them, or it may be that! he thermometer eighty above in the they have a battered jitney to move! ghade! them and their scanty outfits. Usu- It is predicted that soon an air | service will be established on the [great lakes for locating missing They find lodgment in a wrecked | steamers and vessels in distress. shell of a housesor in the corner of | ally they do not ask help from any- one in reaching their destination. {the generuls whe ravaged Belgium, Satisfactory --Hiida Rose, Kathleen; AT loses a wighty had come, affer a pciiod of peace, t> think only of the glamour of war, its pretended glory und heroism. The tearing up of the very soil of entire countries, #nd the desolation of tens of thousarids of homes, the sending to bloody graves millions of the Bower of the manhood of our race, has shattered all these false notions, and we have come td know war in all its hideousness-- the nur- sery of brutality and crime, of idle ness, of disregard for the laws of map and God. That some plan may be be devised to avert war is sincerely to be hoped. One step' towards that end can easily be taken --1to treat the chief actors as mur- deters, the Kaiser, his councillors, France, Serbia, Roumania, and Poland, Tripitz; conducted the submarine 'Opérations, Their cons dign punishment will ! be a detefrent to all who, wonld imitate them for generation to coi g kindness 1o humanity, for by mark. ing the world's sense of their crimes in the most emphatic way, future generations will be spared the sor rows, the anxieties and the harrow: ing experience that have been uni- versal these past years. Toronto News :--* Mr. Widdi- field of North Ontario has won the | confidence of Le Canada and the Laurier Party, Major Cameron was at Vimy Ridge, sideration and support of his fellow and earned the con- physical keep up with it with your | a barn. By main force and awkward- ness they set up thtir equipment, spread and very soon the word is among the troops such a place the Salvation Army is serving free hot drinks 4 doughnuts and free pies. alizes in doughnuts, the Army in the field does, the real, old- fashioned, that home-made - ones taste of home to a home-sick soldier | st £00ps were i hike through rain ow, rah roads knee-deep uw half-thawed, icy slush, Cold and wet and miserable they came tramp- | ing into a cheerless, half-empty | town within sound and range of the | German guns. They found a recep- tion committee awaiting them there ---in the person of two Salvation Army lasses and one SalvationArmy Captain. The had a fire} going in the delapidated oven of a vanished villager's kitchen, One. of them women was rolling out the batter on a plank with an old wine bottle for a rolling pin and using | the top of a tin can to cut the dough | into circular strips. aman was cooking the doughnuts, and as fast as they were cooked the man served them out, to hungry, wet boys clamoring about the door, and nobody was asked to pay a cent. In town the epidemic of influenza - has run its course, and little more will be heard of it, this season at least. In the country, however, it as taken a fresh lease of life. -- in Packet. spitting hot, A Scotchman, it appears, from 'newspapers. (a Lowlander, of fourse) Has solved' the: problem of ith the Kaiser. S:nd play poker with that at such-and- and free It speci-| Salvation | The other wo-| President Schurman of Cornell | hag decided to 'make {compulsory athletics part of the course of that university A Toronto grocer has been find | {$44 and costs for selling, although} vowitting, adulterated maple sugar. { Other dealers should take warning, { The question of what nation shall | first succeed in sending an airplane {over the Atlantic is becoming an Packet, : A Swede, who lives away up north, near porcupine, has 600 bags of potatoes in his cellar which he is | holding until the price jumps up to {$$ a beg. The patience of the | Swede is proverbial. In this case Hit is likely to be all needed. **Cobourg has been wondering for long time why it cannot get in- dustries," says the Sentinel-Star. | So has Barrie. But people outside | With- | out more fire under the boiler neither town will ever get up much steam. { | these towns do not wonder. GREAT AUCTION SALE | Mr. Adam Dawson (near Can- nington) has the floor for Jan. 29 the day fixed for his Great Auction Sale of 30 head of Reg. Shorthorn and other choice animals. ulars later. IMPORTANT AUCTION SALE Partic- Mr. Joseph Flewell, lot 11, con. g, Reach (near. Manchester) has de- cided to give up farming, and in order'to expeditiously "dispose of his extensiae; valuable, and desirable stock of Clydesdale Horses, Short horn High-Grade Cattle, Swine and Implements which are of the best make and many new, has en- gaged Mr. Baird to sell all on rhe premises op Wednesday, Jan. 15 Mr, Plewell being an expert judge of live stock every animal i is a prize citizens." "For whom do you vote?" {as the Returning Officer used to ask | [ before the days of the ballot, { We think Canada has had an {epidemic of influenza, but compared | with other parts of the world, our In the | city of Bombay, it is stated, there were 5,000 deaths and in Delbi, on a population of 200,000, the death-| me reached 800 daily. | experience has been teifling. rate at one 4 Citizen 'Waldron, of the Wee | Sun is always careful to speak of | | Sir Wilfréd Laurier as Mr. Laurier, | alof Hon. Dr. Cody as Mr, Cody, and "of the | kly | | so on. If "the plain misters Toronto press cannot unhorse peo- i pleof title, they can at least stick | out their tongues at them as they | { pass by. a THE LATE JOHN 8. TODD The death occ utredbon Christmas morning at his Goodwood, of John S. Todd, after an illness of about two G Weeks; from Yowoshin ondimas 5 son of the late James Todd. He was one af the best known business men in the County having been engaged in business in Goodwood for many years, and had the esteem and con | fidence of all who came in contact | with him. He was postmaster at] the time of hisdeath, was one of the largest potato buyers in the county, bought grain, hogs and in fact al- most everything 'that a farmer had to offer. He will be much missed, in fact 'his place will be hard to fill fis wife who was the daughter of the late James Coates, Claremont, died some thirty years ago. He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Geo EvansofGoodwood, Miss Mary and Jean at home. In religion he was a Methodist and politics a Con servative. ~ The funeral was held to Uxbridge Cemetery on Friday -- Times. ! In London eggs are selling at $2.16 a dozen. Potatoes are $2.5, a bushel. This 1s thrice what in charged here. Canadians do not know what real war prices are. LATE HON. W. H. HOYLE LEFT ESTATE OF $55,889 In his will executed over three probate in the Sutrogate Court on Saturday, he late 'Hon. Willam the Provincial Legislatur ispos- ttendance sharp on time, ackson will be Auctioneer, Goncord Avenue $5,000, Be eo Gleaner : We broad accent, ' | One day as 1 {In March it is maui, i - slush in De~ late residence at] [1t's sweeping years ago snd which was granted |i erland, a gr Its record of its people For the € heritage of Boston Tra in the Ho ing Mr. Asq Mr. Adams who has wo ears in the o "He has position, cottish miner, twenty-seven e Times, "a frame; lectic, but is inch guos. Herbull ix an outer cushionagainst w oes und pines will Expl harmlessly. Sf iv expect Luin & speed oft least 40 mites an. hour. The Had will cost three and threesquatit rifle pounds sterling: Itis steed that three other | battle Cruisers € the same ¢ type are being puilt. A HOUSIKEEPER'S TRAGEDY FROM THE CALGRY "ALBERTAN." wndered, I heard a complaining And sawa poonvonian the picture of gloom; She glared ut themuil on her doors steps ('twas nining, And this was be wail as she wield- ed the broon- "Oh 1 1 life isa and love isa trouble, And beauty wil will flee ; And pleasures bey dwindle, 2nd prices they duble, And nothing iswhat 1 could wish it to be, wil {ude and riches | There's too muchof worriment goes to a bonnet, There's nothing trouble and drt, that lasts but cémber, The midsumme breezes are load- ed with dmst; In fall the leaves litter, in muggy ighe: grey, beaver, blag and -- were decreed by ihe shot travelers, who pa oe' ary and prev action iff Welting © or Glier pusil YS tout landidg fot fort' days. ee rere? BIED YINCENT-Tn Blackstock on Saturday, | ppm 4th, 1919 Bertha Hooey, be- ved wife of fames J. Vincent. in fer 35th year. ALLDRED---In Toronto. aii Sundaf, January sth, 1919 Ba Etta, danghter | of the late Charles Afldfed, aged a3 seats, 11 momhs and § Jays. Arnual Mecing ONTARIO PINE GROVE CEMETERY COMPANY The Annual Meeting of the Ontario Pine Gove! Cemetery Compatiy wili be held in the Town Hall, PORT PERRY OnMonday; Jan. 20 1919 ir the alierncof, for tle BEleetion oi Off ers aid (rancaction of other lLusuiess that may be Ag before the mecting Vol. McC AW, President JOHN 1 Rov Sect: tary, at Two o'clock a hm ie Eas iY thd briween Fianss loka foods. exhausted by. si to Sarvatien A Army an on The servicé of ¢ of the Salvation Arta, § i It is directed ri ir y has ET Lbicy or Tp Spprosche pre A 8 practical way and achieves RESULTS. Jt all--overlaps frong, Ee dh jes, red; It ig always in a night. No o CEH: To saity ou I Situs financizl help, on its Government, business men soldiers endorse this appes "LET YOUR GRA i FIND EXPRESSION IN SERVICES THE SAWNATION ARMY uiLLION DOLLAR mn D COMMITTEE 12 Agricultura! Meeting Nore [S HEREBY GIVEN, pursuaut to Statute in that belialf, that the Annual Meet ofl September The wallpaper {ots and the silver. ware rusts, | The rubbish" supposes, And ravagi aging Hien seven, It's victuals nine ; It's potting an to eleven, We scarce break plan how to t and dishes at ming With grease and with grime, from corner to centre, Forever at war. No rest for a dayy enter, I spend my with dirt, forever alert; t the enemy ina struggle Alas, it's no dre: it, I yield, | am avert," She rolled down apron she fi Then lay down a buried in dirt, SERIOOS 1 Many a serious avoided by the: Williams' Pink my fate to her jed, and was YOIDED has been he system. erves and Hepry Hoyle, former Spesker of be mortgages ictory Mr. [bonds 88,607, and the house gt 53 | from Go., Brockville, Out: bes and dam- and dusting at from ten ur fast ere we REACH, FORT PERRY AND! SCUSDG AGRICULTURAL (o Wednesday, oo y {6, 1919] at One o'clock io the alteruoon to receive, the Annual Report of the Audrors cr 19:8, and the Election ol Directors for 1g g. E32 All interested in Agriculinral Society Work are invited to be present. JAS McKEE Presiden, E. H Purdy, Secretary. OTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN. pursnant 'o Statotein that bee half that the Annual Meeting of the Gvtrigh grin! Sil wilt be held in the Town Hall, BLACKSTOCK ON FRIDAY, JAN. 17, 1819 at the hour of One 'clock p. m.. for the purpose of receiving the Aud t- ors' Report; Electing a Board ol Directors for the year, and transact- ing such other business that may be breught before the meeting. A good atiendauce is requested. N. H. MARLOW, President. ROBT. PHILP. Secretary. wearer: th nts. of. the Human Heh af thie ot fied sor Cinsdien predeeesson™ Agricultural fleet fing STUPHNDOUS AUCTION SAL Ther wile 44 by Auction on lot 24, con. 5, Brack, on On Wednesu.y, Jan'y 15, i The following Choice ana Valuabls farm a) a's, dc. {ie property of the ESTATE OF "LATE

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