Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 25 Sep 1907, p. 5

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'be nece ging to keep these - chopped up, dried and WE ging SpHiee te £8 - 4 -jable fruits. L sr) H yi. p s a Jew, Kippur Ins Majesty did not shoot, went on an excursion in his own totobile and at passed the eveniug ry quietly. ; % ; DIED. Pettet--On Scugog. on Wedies: *, Sept. 18th; George W. Pettet, aged 60 years, 8 months and 22 days. MARRIED. a il. Brown --~CROXALL. At the re sidence of the"bride's mother Sept, fligih- by Rev. John Harris, Mr. a Remar RES 0 The 'packers of the varions firms. 870 busy these duys poking apples Tlie Honeydale Y. P. G. held its first fortnightly gathering on the lawn in front of the town hall. The "programme, wlifch consisted (f} songs, recitations ete, wai very beautifully rendered alieravhich the ladies of the scoiety prepared avery sumptuous repast of specially pr: pared vegetables and all the seas m- Miss Lulu Vickery happened wiih' the misfortune of hurting -her avkle and was absent from s:hool for & day asa result, en 7 A number from here attended the fair at Ochawa on Wednesday lust "Mr. R. Doubt, of Port Perry, was the guest of Mr. J. Ross on Sunday QUE Ce Pe Ne ie - We are sorry to say thas Mis. J. Irwin ison the sick Jist, Dont forget Blackstock fair on the second of Oct. 2a : «Mr. Collins of Borelia was packing: apples at Mr "C. Honey's last week "Mr. Leo Honey was 'visitiog Mr. W. Wilson on Sunday lass" Miss Mary Dowson. was visiting friends in Linsday for a féw days last wec RelA 3 Annie Mark was visiting Mrs Bethel lust w € | rice, hay, straw, roots, bread epity oR vhiows a bu he from: Jangary 'to | for them, have been received Gilbert J. Brown wholesale merch- nt Toronto to Miss Eda Croxall My daughter of late James Croxall Esq. Brooklin, © +7 § ™N "THE WORST CLIMATES. Three Places Where Weather Condi- tions Are Unbearable. "Speaking of rank climates" said a globe trotter, "1 have experienced the three worst, "Or these three unspeakable climates L give the palm to the strait of Ma- 'gellan. There 1s rain on an aver | age 250 days in the year, The wind | "December. The thermometer never rises much above the freezing. point-- aoyear round of raw, bitter days of raln and spow. "Next comes Slerrd Leone, on the African west coast ' That low lying | marshy region has an avernge temper- 'ature of 81 degrées, and the annual rainfall is 189 inches--enormous! There are, too, the 'smokes.' ' These fre mists, Bmelling like oyster mud, 'that rise continually from the marshes, giving marsh fever to nite out of ten of the white men that breathe them-- a. year round of hot and sticky days, with vile smelling clouds of mist and whirring clouds of mosquitoes. "Last come the high tablelands of. °° Mr. central Asin, where the lack of mois- ture In. the air makes the days Saha- ran and the nights arctic--days like a redhot furnace, nights like a January blizzard. 'Before this range of fem- perature no human "constitution can stand up." : \ | THE Z00 CATERER Special Knowledge Required to Run a | . Wild Animals' Hotel. "To ran a wild animals' hotel--for what Is a #00 but that?--requirés a lot of special knowledge," said an animal keeper, © "How would you, for in- stange, know how to provide for a rhinoceros or a tapir? If you don't cater-right for your animal guests, if | you don't give them what they want, they pack up and quit the hotel, you know--that is to say, they die. It aniounts to the same thing. "Yes, It takes special knowledge to feed a zoo. You wouldn't know, would | you, that an elephant 150 | pounds daily -- no more, no less -- of and bis ~ Ton of raw {and from ing. Yom, ; mother information hich 33 of vital interest to her young aughter. : Too often thisis never imparted or ia withheld until mr has resulted to the growing giil throug of nature's mysterious end wonderful laws and penalties 2 Girls' over-sen id modesty uiten puzzle their mothers end Lafile physicians, as they so often, withhold th ir conficlenzs from their mothers gnd concer] tha symptoms which ought t5 Le told 0 their phyeician at this ert Vhen a girl's thoughts Lecomo slug: gigh, with headache, dizziness or a Cir« position to eleep, pains in the k or loyvar limbs, eyes dim, degire for solitude; when ghe is a mystery to herself and friends, her mother ¢hould co: aid, and remember' that Ly< ham's Vegetable Compound will time prepare the system for tho coming changes, and start this trying period in a young girl's life without pain or irreg- ulavities. . Hundreds of letters from young girls mothers, express their gratitude for what Lydia IZ. Pinkham's Vegetable Componnd has a omplicled d by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., at Lyfin, Mass. t Miss Mills has written the two fbllow- ing letters to Mpg. Pinkkam, which will be read with interest : Dear Mrs, Pinkham :-- (First letter,) "T am but fifteen years of age, am de pressed, have dizzy spells, chills, headache and backache, and as I have heard that you can give helpful adyice in my=eondition, I ugh her ignoranca | 1 ga writing you,"=Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-- (Second letter. "It i3 with tho feeling of utmost gro; & that T write to you te tell you what your valuaiile ne has dona for me, © When y 1regard to my condition I had several doctors, but they failed to and my cosy and I did not reccive nefit from their treatment, 1'follow- r advice, and took Lydia 1. Pink- 8 Vegetab!s Compound and am new healthy and 'well, and all the dist 3 which I had at thatt ("== Myrtle Mills, Oqu Mies Matilda Borman writes Mrs Pinkham as follows : Dear Mrs, Pinkham (-- "Befo g Lydia E. Pinkham's Vo- getable C periods wera irreg- ular and ys had such dreadful I am ng all my E. Pinkham's Ves done for me." --) ton, Iowa. \ If you know of any young girl who is gick and needs motherly advice, ask her to address Mrs, Pinkham at Lym, Mass., and tell her every detail of her symptoms, and to keep nothing back. She will receive advice abeolutely free, from a source that has no rival in the experience of woman's ills, and it will, if followed, put her on the right road tou strong, healthy and happy womanhood. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- poand holds the record for the greatest number of cures of female ills of any medicine that the world has ever known. Why don't you try it? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Makes Sick Women Welk . His Own Portrait. Mr, Misfit (savagely)--Before I mar- ried you, was there any doddering idiot" gone on you? Mrs, Misfit--There was Misfit--I wish to goodness you'd married him! Mrs, Misfit--I did. The 'charity that opens its hand and: closes its mouth is the best kind. --Ter-' rell (Tex) Transcript. I Old newspapers for sale at THR STAR Office, twenty cents a hundred. Just the thing for lining carpets or wrapping parcels. | FOR SALE. A good team of general purpose "horses, good to work- single or An Old Time Playful Prisoner. Over a cenfury ago there occurred in London what the Annual Register call- ed "a most unparalleled atrocity" It was only the theft of a pocket hand- kerchief from a pocket, but the clrcum- stances of the deed explain'the vehe- mence of this denunciation. Four men were on their trial for assaulting i man in his house at Ponder's End, putting him in fear and stealing from him, and one of them relieved the tedium of the trial, which lasted eight hours, by pick- ing the pocket of, one of the turnkeys as he stood in the dock. An official had the presence of mind to order the res- toration of the handkerchief, apd the prisoner had enough presence of mind to obey "with the most careless {ndif- ference," but the court, we read, "were horror struck." Justice, however, pull ed itself together sufclontly to sen tence all four men fo death, §'mple Home Kecips. Get from any prescription pharma- "of | 188 the following :. Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce ; - Compound Kargow, one onnee; Compoud Syrup Sarsaparilla, png and'[ three ounces. ; ke well in a bottle and take a onful dose after each meal and "Apply 10 "double. ning Mill. Also a nev Chatham Fan- Will be sold cheap.' . Gee. Lyle, Lilla St., I'ort Perry. Farm for Sale WORTH THE MONNEY Good Grain Farm, 150 acres, lot 'No. 6, 2nd Con. Reach. House and barn nearly new, Apply F, J. HYLAND, 72 St. Mary St, Torontoe Farm for Sale \ Lot 22 on the 12th Concession of the township of Reach, contain- ing 200 acres more or less; 15m acres of good clay, loam under culti- vation'; 45 acres of pasture and timber land ; 2 niiles from railroad station ; 1 wile aud a half to good general store : 5 miles to Port Perry ; buildings and stables in good condi~ tion including windmill and water works ; good orchard and plenty of stall fruit." Price, Eleven Thons--- aud dollars.' Easy Terms: For further information address, "ALMA V. WHITEWAY, : Administratrix of the Estate of the George G. Whiteway, deceased

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