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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1914-01-01, Page 3--'411111, II Tille e I le F F e • s HURON COUNTY LEADS. The figures jut issued by the On- taeici department a agriculture for the Year 1912 show that ()ntario produced 2,560,000 pounda more cheeee and 2,100,- 000 pounds more butter than in the previous year. Leede county with 99 cheese factories made 13,012,961 Pounds of cheese, valued at $1,65t3,853. Hast. ings County comes next with 81 fact- orise. mtikirg 10,98 Pounds valued at$1,554,454; Oxford comes. next with 43 factories, making 1,129,610 pounds valued at $1,199,517; Durelas is fourth With 70 factories, making 8,780,253 peunds, valueat $1,085,207. York tenuity is the lowest in the province, with one factory, making 44,803 pounds, valued at $6,345, while Frontenac, Stor- mont, and Russell and Addington come tiext in order, following Dundas. The trItal output of cheese from On- tario in 1912 was 129,053,063 pounds, valued at $16,437,532, against 127,123,- 016 pounds, with a value of $15.491,448 in the preceding year. There ha > been decline in the number of factories from 1077 in 191 to 1,055 last year. In 1908 there were 1,177 factories in On- tario. There are 16 more butter creameries in Ontario than in 1911, The output of the 135 creameries in the province last year was 15,835,801 pounds, valued at $4,451,839, against 13,738,203 pounds in 1911, valued at $3,288,303. Huron leads the butteritaking coun- ties with nine factories and an output of 1,798,831 pounds, valued at $476,908; Bruce comes next with ten factories, making 1,357,381 pounds, valued at 359,051; York is third with seven creameries, making 1,692,781 valued at 1,692,781 valued at $604,480, and Middle- sex is fourth with eight creameries, 1:flaking 1,260,388 pounds, valued at $338,091. The farm property, implements and live stock in Ontario have a value of $1,405,950,940, compared with 1,341,- 469,232 in 1911. Value of lands increas- ed $34,000,000, buildings $17,000,000 im- plements 32,000,000 and live stock $10,- 500,000. There were 1,500 fewer milch cattle in Ontario last year than in the pre- vious year, when the number was 1, 045,610 cattle. Christmas turkey was cheaper than beef for the first time in a century. DOES IT MATTER? Dom IT MATTER to you thee of all the znen, women and children who die each year in Canada. one in seven is a victim of Consumption DoEs IT MATT= that one in every three of these is cub off in the full glow of life, with plans and hopes and, loves that must be given up? Dos IT MATTER that a few persons have joined hands and within a. few shorb years have saved thousands of these unhappy ones and can save them all if only there is a little more help and a little more money? Perhaps it doesn'b matter. It is all very interesting but it is no immediate coneern Of yonrs, Bra WOULD IT MATTER if ieisteaci of entering somebody else's home and carry- ing off their loved ones, Consumption name into your home and laid its hand on the one you love the best in all the world? Woven Ir IVLeTTEn then if you saw your husband, wife, child or friend d yieg for lack of a little bit of the money some other fellow was throwing away? WOULD IT MATTER when Christmas came if there were nothing for you to do but sit on the edge of the bed and stroke the white hand on the coverlet and realize that this was the lasb Christmas? i Thi e is how much it tters in thousands of homes in Canada thin year and will con- tinue to matter until eifinegh people like you tests the burden and %el how crushing it is. It DOES matter -4b is the most iinportant thing in the 1i9e of some unfortunate eufferer-what nem do with the attached 'or form. o help the 1Pluskoket Free Hos. for Consumptives continue.its -saving work, I gl wily enclose e sura of Name Address , 15.00 will providemaintenanee for a week 20.00 will pay for four weeks. 250.o0 will endow a bed for a year. I. ...Since the need is such a permanent one, X should also like to subscribe 1 liegister my name accord - *Wk. Contributions may be sent to W. J. Gage, Esq., gt spadina Ave., Toranto. or to B. Dnabar. flee..Tre2s. National Sant. lad= Asenetation, 50' Yang St. W., Toronto, WANTED. Good Local Agent at once to represent the Old and Reliable Foothill Narsuries A2 splendid list of fruit and • ornamental stock for Fall Delivery in 1913 and Spring Dilivery in 1914. Start at once and secure ex. clusive trrritory. We supply hanthorne free out fit and pay highest con - missions. Write forth° particulars. Stone& Wellingtons Toronto Ontewrio ••••,. ()1111eirOTI ()Ty FOR FLETCHER'S cAsoroRiA CHEAPER FENCE -POSTS. As a tesult of the many inquiries in regard to the praservative treatment of fence -posts to th,. Forestr:e i,raneh, ottaWa, ha e now iesued a it-cut:.r on this subject which (.'4:1 l't. bed ny apply- ing to tqe Director of Forostry. The various methods deecrikeel of treating the posts with the preservatives :Ire all illlestrated by diagrams, and tin, appar- atus required is eimple 1111,1 ek,otz3 little. The great advantage of T.hese treat - meats is that they keep even cheep woods frets from decey from ten to fifteen years. Many kinds of wood found in farmers' woodloto will last, when used in posts, only four years or thereabouts; after treatment, such as described, they last twice or three times, even four times, as long. Creosote, which costs in Canada, from ten to twenty-five cents a gallon, is the best preservative. When a boilinfehot creosote is applied liberally with a brush -a paint brush or whitewash brush, for instance -to the butts of well -seas- oned posts from which the bark has been removed, it sinks into the wood for a distance of about a quarter of an inch. This should add at least ten years to the life of a post made from a nondur- able wood, such as poplar, balsam, fir or spruce. This is not the best method, but it is the simplest and, on a small scale, probably the cheapest. Other methods require that the posts be kept covered in tanks of:hot creosote for a longer or shorter period. Besides lengthening the life of the post, the preservative treatment also tends to reduce the cost of the posts in another way, for, as cheap local woods can be used, the first cost and the cost of transportation are usually much ower than for cedar, oak or tamarack. Moreover, as posts will need to be set less often, the proportionate cost If setting the post will be less. Taking into account all the items that go to make up the cost of the post, and com- paring this with the number of years it will last, it will be found, in the major- ity of cases, to be muCh less for, treat- ed posts. ABSOLUTE SEM III Cermine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Dear Signature of Sec Pau -Simile Wrapper Belnw. Very rir.ladI and as easy to take as CAITTEaS ITTLE I VER PILLS, 1 FUR OtAutrate, FOR Dinotisuas, FOR DIZZINESS. FOB Timm LIVER. ) COMTIPATION FOB SALLOW SKIN. FON E COMPLEXION I&V.Z.M.i1VIX M.= tiAVLAO NATUA gran I IP may vegetalne.,..6-e4 CURE SICK HEADACHE, '''—'411"""11.1111.11111.1r1 4 , THE. W:i.NWIAM, was. JANUARY 1 1914 MOT THE SAFE T1M13, Preparation and Proinsrt!es of the Ta•o Different Produets, To many persons the "ceinent" and the "concrete" that nowadays enter so lorgely into building e"e- struction are synonymous tet They are by no means the mete thing. In the Iiret place,. Portland ecilleitt is a maltelaetured produet obtained from Iiite rock and elay or shunter alutninn ; taw materials. Lt a [Wo- nt/ration in volvee drying, burning and grinding, in ;y der that, when finished, it shall In. in the form of u light gray po-eder or flour. This powder ie of ouch exceeding fineness thet the grains .thereof may be made to peas through a sieve containing. 40,000 ,holee to the square inch of eurfaCe. Modeled into any desirable form, cement shows a high crushing re- sistance, together with a high ten- sile strength. It will sustain al- most any load without injury to itself, showing no cracks or other elements of decay that attack other materials. "Concrete" implies the use of ce- ment in conjunction with sand and crushed rock and in such proportions: as will develop the highest value of the cement for practical purposes, at the same timebringing it within the range of buyers who do not wish to employ Portland cement. "Re -enforced concrete" means the use of concrete in conjunction with steel so placed as to contribute the tensional value of the steel to the total mass. Columns thus construct- ed will sustain almost any concen- trated ,burden and are being exten- sively used in engineering -Techni- cal World. The Stage Gag. Claude Flemming, the famous English actor and baritone, an au- thority on stage history, and Oke oth- er evening, at the Greenroom 'Club, he talked in a most interesting way about stage gags. "The best stage gag in history," Mr. Flemming said, "was undoubted- ly an impromptu of Mrs. Keeley's. Mrs. Keeley was playing a boy's part In 'Genevieve.' She was taken before a judge in this part, and the judge asked, sternly:- " 'Now, then, where are your ac- complices?' "To this question Mrs. Keeley ro- guishly replied, as she gave a• nauti- cal hitch to her trousers - "'1 don't wear any. They keep up without.' "This impromptu gag was so suc- cessful tha from that night on Mrs. Keeley did' 4. require to answer the judge's re -the gallery, in re- sound]' ..e• did it for her." Women's Rights In Roumania. All the rights for which the women of the west have striven so long are in the hands of the Roumanians, says a writer in a German contemporary. Though they are too luxury -loving and too idle ever to exert themselves very much, they are free to earn their living by any profession they care to exercise. All higher educational or- ganizations are at their disposal. The. universities are open, and their choice of a career is not dependent on the caprice of any professor. ' They .are at liberty to practiee as doctors or lawyers, they may be chemists or dis- pensers, they may hold official ap- pointments, and married and single alike are eligible for , posts as teach- ers in schools. Removal of the Tonsils. The operation of removal of the tonsils is a much more serious one than it is popularly considered and shoulcl certainly not be entered upon . lightly, but discreetly, advisedly and Isoberly. Tonsils should not, be re- moved for trivial symptoms. Ton - I silotomy is not justifiable simply be- cause the tonsils protrude in front of the pillars, or because they look rag- ged or for occasional sore throat, or ! because they contain plugs, or be- cause the patient is under ether for adenoids, or for any remote symp- toms not of a serious nature, or to protect the child from indefinite In- fection, or for an occasional attack of i simple acute tonsiljtis. How To Acquire Riches,, BUSINESS AND In, "Maximilian the Dreamer" is SHORTHAj).TD Subjects taught by expert instructors at the '41, M. C. A. BLDG.. LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in se,ssion from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J. W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Chartered Accountant 37 Vlce-Principal ••••••••••••111.1.1.1111.1.0.11111.0.6., Winter Term irom Jan. 5 CENTRAL gyAW asanweimemereswen,_ STRATFOFID. ONT. Ontario's best Business training school. We have thorough courses in COMMERCIAL, snonT. HAIID and TELEGRAPHY De- Mirtments and nine competent in- etrectors. We Offer you advantages not offered elsewhere. You do not know what an up-to-date business echool can do for you unless you have reeeived our free catalogue. Write for it at once. O. A. MCLACHLAN PRINCIPAL. " this anecdote: A certain beggar once stopped the emperor on his way and appealed to him for help on the ground that "all men were brothers." Maximilian smiled and gave him a penny, with the remark: "Well, my friend, go and ask all your other bro- thers for the like sum and you will be richer than your emperor." The em- peror himself was ever in debt and had constant recourse to the banker Fugger (with whom he Pledged the crown jewels) for loans. Preparing Themselves. "Felton seems to be rather unpopu- lar with his felloW clerks." "Yes. There's nobody here who likes him." "What's the trouble?" "Oh, he always manages to be the ' first one here in the morning, and he always sticks around and keeps 'Working until they get ready to look the doors at night." "I see. The rest of you are prac- ticing so you will be able to cordially hate him when he gets to be your boss." Solicitous. An old lady unaccustomed to trav- eling innocently seated herself in a first class carriage, althotigh she only had a third class ticket: The guard, thinking she had made a mistake, popped his head into the earriage and inquired, "Are you first elas, ma'am ?" "No, sir, not altogether," he rept'. ed, "but much brighter than I was, thank you," --London Scrape. The Biggest Aerolite. The largest aerolite ever found Wati discovered in Greenland, and weighed twenty-three tons. CRIPI LLrrw RHEUMATISM tired Four Years Ur ll H?, rook "Frult-a-iNs" RIDGETOWN, ON't.„ May :ITSt. 1913 "Your " Vied t-a-tive3 " cured me el Rheumatism. It W.14 the only medicine that made any impression on me. I was a terrible sufferer from Rheumatism. I was laid up for four winters with Sciati- ca aud Muscular Rheumatism, and. was a cripple completely, not beiner'able to do anything. I doctored with four ferent physicians, but they did not help me. Other advertised remedies were equally unsatisfactory, and I have taken several. Some neighbor of mine told. me that "Frnit-a-tives" helped him, and I took them faithfully every day and the result was marvellous. For over two years DOW, I have been free from any Rheumatic pains whatever, and give "Fruit-a-tives" the full credit for making a remarkable cure", W. T. RACHER If you are subject to Rheumatic At- tacks, Sciatieat Lumbago or Neuralgia, take "Fruit-a-tives" right now and start the permanent cure which " Fruit-a- tives' will complete if taken faithful- ly.. noc a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size, es. At dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottaeve, . - - - • gimoun Hymn. 4.1` t.011(1 tiit't 1)71 t • ei,,t ipti• tfi *: ny • !. 1 .,10 tome, but n • ne • met, the poptent %rennet riebt .•1 e.ietent .1" (Irk tq' s.,i,.;:tdo.:U 10 Lit..., 141.1 Lo he river in whieh he had purposed I rown Ing himself, being suspicious ot Is easterner's intention, drove him 'round in the closed carriage and teeny set Win down at his own door. Atepping out, and finding the old 'amine r svelte% the poet, now repent int. rushed tete tbe house and instant - 3, composed the Immortal hymn -"God 1141'ts$ In a Mysterious Way Ethl Won- riers to PerfOrni." — New York Amer - wan. No Chance For Leopard. Willie -Mother, the Sunday school teacher seys we should all of us try to he it ootless as we can. Mother-Cer etifdy, Willie; that's right. Willie. bb'een,, e puttee, and thoughtfully -Then b lee 4'117 not a Ieopard.-Ohicago oenne ne, • Fellin a Faint. Mrs. Edwin Martin, Ayer's Cliff, Que., writes: "Before using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food I was in a terrible condi- tion. Dizzy spells would come over me and I would fall to the floor. I could not sweep without fainting. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food has so built up my system that I can wash and do my housework. Your medicine cured me when doctors had failed." CHRISTMAS APPEAL FOR The Nespital for lick Children COLLJOGIS firr" WORONTO' Dear Mr. Editor: - Thanks for your kindness in allow- ing me the privilege of appealing at this Chriatmas time on behalf of the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto. It would take more space than you can spare to tell of the good work done for the sick and deforraed children of this Province. Let me, however, in a few words, tell you of the progress of the work of the Hospital. One nurse, six little white beds, a few dollars, a few friends-thie was the beginning. The beds have grown to 250, the dollars to thousands, the friends to hundreds. 1875, the first year, 44 in -patients, 67 outpatients; 1913, last year, 1,648 in -patients, -25,507 out-patients; 1875, 1 nurse; 1912, 70 nurses. Since 1876, thirty-eight years ago, the Hospital has admitted within its walls 21,018 children as in -patients, and 159,231 as out-patients, a total of 180,249, or an average of 4,743 per year. Of the 21,018 in -patients, 15,200 were frsm Toronto, and 5,818 from other parts of the Province; 10,150 of the total in -patients were cured, rd 6,367 were improved. In the Orthopedic Department ' it year, of the 1,648 in -patients, 278 e treated for deformities, 25 hip di- ...se, 37 Pott's disease, 2 knock-knees, 19 bow-legs, 62 club feet, 8 lateral curva- ture of the spine, 44 infantile paralysis, 6 wry neck, and 76 tubercular disease of knee' hip and ankle. In 1913, the SurgicalApparatus Shop manufactured 427 appliances for in -patients and out- patients, including ankle braces, spinal braees, hip splints, bow-leg splints, club -feet splints, plaster jackets, etc. In this Department in 38 years near- ly 800 boys and girls have been treat- ed for Club Feet and 650 corrected. Half of these came from places out - aide of Toronto. Surely we have a fair claim for help from the people of this Province. Will you, the reader of this letter, help to give crippled childree a fair start in life? Busy dollars are better than idle tears. The sympathy that helps is good, lint the Hospital has to have the sympathy that works. While Carittmars Bells are ringing to the glory of Him "Who inade the lame to walk and the blind to see." give, give, give, and help the Hos- pital to help God' a little ones, upon whom the heavy hand of afflietion has haen laid. Will you please send dollar, or more, if you can spare It, to Couglaa Davidson, the Seeretary-Trepeurer of Ike Iloopital, or 3. Ross ttomurrsoN, Chairman of the Trtiee.oes, Toronto, BEAUTY CAUSED ROTS SEVERAL CASES RECORDED OF WOMEN WHO ATTRACTED MOBS. The Celebrate:. Gunning Sisters Who Reigned Supreme Among the Belies of London In Eighteenth Century Drew Crowds Wherever They Went-----liand Stopped to See Countess of Cr liglione Go By. "They can't walk in the Park," Wrote Horace Walpole of the beauti- Gunnings in 1751, "or go to Vauxhall, but such mobs follow them that they are generally driven away." Elizabeth, Maria and Kitty Gunning were three beautiful sisters who, coming over from Ireland In 1750, took London by storm, Nor was the furore that tlaelr beauty cre- ated of brief duration, for nine years later we read in The London Chron- icle of Maria Gunning, by that time Countess of Coventry, and Lady Wal- degrave, "that two ladies of distinc- tion (who had, it seems, been incom- moded by the x:aob, as the phrase is, the Sunday before) walked up and down the walks in St. James' Park preceded by soldiers from the Guard -a precaution which gave no small offence to the rest of' the company, who were frequently obliged to go out of their path to make way for the procession." Equally potent was the beauty of the Countess of Castiglione, who, at her first appearance at a ball given ber Napoleon III. at the Tuileries, cre- ated sueh a sensation on her entrance that the dancers stopped motionless and the strains of the band ceased, guests and musicians all pressing for- ward in their eagerness tq catch a glimpse of the newcomer. Wherever she went afterwards her peerless loveliness produced a like effect, peo- ple climbing on to chairs and benches to see her pass, while 'when, in 1862, she visited the London Opera the audience stood upon the seats and struggled for every place of vantage from which to gaze upon the lovely Florentine. Whatever opinions may be express- ed on the character of Fanny Murray,' who, about the middle of the eigh- teenth century, was one of the toasts of the town, her beauty was beyond question, and created such a stir, at Tunbridge Wells, whither she went to drink the waters, as to necessitate the formation of a •special guard of her admirers, who kept off the crowds that flocked and pressed round her when she walked on the Pantiles and other public resorts. Indeed, such was the fame of her beauty that from miles round the country folk came In wagon, carts, or any vehicle that could be procured and when ono was not available they hesitated not to walk -that they might feast their eyes on the celebrity frcm town. • The good looks of Julie Durrier always drew after her a crowd when she walked through the streets of 1Vlarseilles-a fact that the proprietor of, an eating -house was not slow to avail himself when he engaged the, girl to serve in his establishment. For a few days all went well, and Boniface was beginning to rejoice over his fortune, when he suddenly realized that one can have more than enough of a good thing when the crowd, of which the dimensions grew larger every day, swarmed into his establishment in their eagerness to view the beautiful Hobe, and, on his attempting to eject some of the most persistent, broke into open tumult, destroying the tables and chairs, breaking the glasses, and, in short, wrecking the restaurant, whence the cause of the uproar was lueky in es- caping by a back exit. The next day the place was closed, and soon after- wards Mlle. Durrier left the town. More extraordinary atill was the sensation created at Toulouse towards the close of the sixteenth century by a paragon of beauty known only to fame as La Belle Paule. Whenever she appeared in public she was at once surrounded by a crowd of men and women belonging to all classes, whose admiration grew to be a posi- tive danger to its object, who ran more than e chance of being crushed to death in the press, as, indeed, was to.ore than one of her worshippers. In these. circumstances, appeal was made to the civic authorities, who, after due consideration, agreed :ato supply her with protection against her too ardent admirers, on condition that she should at certain hours walk abroad so that the public might look upon her face. This, after some de- mur, she agreed to do, so twice a week the populace of Toulouse were permitted to collect in orderly throngs to view her whom they re- garded as little less than a goddess. Danger In Uncooked Food. ; Never eat uncooked food. I plunge bananas into boiling water before eating. I always pass my knives, forks and spoons through a Bunsen burner before using. All dishes are cooked. Water is filtered and then honed. I never eat uncooked food. Strawberries ought to be plunged into boiling water a few minutes be- fore consuming. It sounds trouble- some, doesn't it? But it helPil to avoid the cancer germ. -Professor Metchnikoff in a Paris Interview. Voice of Experience. Great Picture Buyer (to hostess) -What do you think of an artist who painted cobwebs on the ceiling so truthful that the servant wore herself tete an attack of nervous prostration trying to sweep them down? Hostess (a woman of experience) -There may have been such an artist, but there never was such a servant. -London Tit -Bits. After the Storm. "Fred and Mabel must have had a dreadful quarrel lest night." "How do you kpow?". "She expected a telephone (mil froze him before breaktait that morning." **PR 'A ••••••• now's vim We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any ease of catarrh that can- not be cured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure, F 3. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known Fol. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe birn perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDING, KINNAN & MABviN, Wholesale Dreggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern- ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucuous surfaces of the system. Teo- timonials sent free. Price, 'Mc per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall's Family pills for constipa- tion. Parcel post is not yet a year old in the 'United States, but it has carried already over 600,000,000 parcels. The record next year is expected to be at least a billion. Experiments with various chemical extinguishers for fighting national for- est fires have not been very successful. The unlimited supply of oxygen in the open, forest officers say, tends to neut- ralize the effect of the chemicals, Alfred Sleith of London was instantly killed at Glencoe by a Wabash express just after alighting from a G.T.R. flyer. George Kett, a lake sailor, whose par- ents had given him up for lost in the great storm of November 9, walked into their home in Harriston on Christmas Eve. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA MO•1•1110.1. G AND TRUNK IgIntir GIVISTMNS and NEW - YIAR RATC,S. SINGLE rA'RE Dee. 24, 25, good for return, until Dee. Se: also Dee. 010.918, aud Jan. 1,1914, good. for return man on, 41, 1914. PARE AND ONE THIRD Dee 22, 28, 24, 26 valid for return until Dec 27; alko 1.4.0. 39, 80,81, 1918, aad Jan. 1,1914, valid for return mail Jan. 1,1914. .-- ..141.14,...1 Between ell Stations in CarlACIA enat of Port Arthar'also to iktmit and Port Huron, Mich., Buffalo, Black Rock, Niagara Balls tied Susi pension Bridge, N. Y. Imiuswerair.......... V til 1 particulars. 'Incepts. *t., etoe from Ti. B. ELLIOTT, Town Piltlqi nger and Ticket Agont. Thom) 4. %V. P la1J.11.0- MAlsi , Station Agent. 'Plume 60 C1RISTA/1AS,, 1913 NEI/IL:YEAR'S, 1914 EXCURSION RATES Between all stations in Canada, Port William and East. and to Sault Ste. Marie, Detroit, Mich., Buffalo and Niagara Falls, New Itoik, ' SINGLE PARE Good going Dec, 24, 25, re tr n limit Deo. 23, 1913; also going Dee. 31, Jan. 1, return limit Jan. 2, 1914. FARE AND ONE.THIRD Good going Dee. 22, 28, 24, 25, return limit .Dec. 27, 19111; Also going Deo, 20, 30, 81, Jan 1, return limit Jan. 8, 1914, MINLYIUM FARB, 25a Partioularsfrem W.11. 2iI11s,1 own Agent, phone 74, J. H. Beemer, station agent, phone7. el* i. 4' + + 4. + 4. + + + + 4. 4 Times and Saturday Globe + Times and Daily Globe a + Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... * Times and Toronto Weekly Sun ...... ......... 4' Times and Toronto Daily Star + + Times and Toronto Daily News,,........ , + + Times and Daily Mail and Empire...-. + + Times and Weekly Mail and Empire........ + Times and Farmers' Advocate ......... .... + Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) 4 4, + Times and Farm and Dairy Timee and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press.— ..... + + aTimes and Daily Advertiser . ... .. ... .„ , , + Times and London Advertiser(weekly) .... kla9 ... .... Times and London Daily Free Press Mei nix g + + + + + Evening Edition .• • • • + Times and Montreal Daily Witness + + Times and Montreal Weekly Witness + + + Times and World Wide + Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg. ... + + Times and Presbyterian. . ..... . .... + + Times and Westminste'r *Times, Presbytella' n and Westminster.- + Times and Toronto Saturday Night ... + Times and Busy Man' a Magazine + * . Times and Youth's Companion' . • • + + Times and Home Journal, Toronto.......,, + Times and Northern Messenger. .. . + + Times and Daily World ..... ........., + * Timea and Canadian Magazine (monthly). Times and Canadian Pictorial.... - + + Times and Lippincott's Magazitie + Times and Woman's Home Companion ..... .... + + Times and. Delineator + + Times and Cosmopolitan + $ Tiimmeess ndaandStrand TSuccess. Times and McClure's Magazine + + ...,:t Times and Munsey's Magazine .... . ..... Times and Designer 4.. Times and Everybody's 41 4. These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great :1:' +it Britain. . 4,. + The above publications may be obtained by Times 1: subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica. 4 tion being the figure given above less $1.00 representin Q the price of The Times. For instance: )i .. i The Times and Saturday Globe ..$1,90 .. The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00)......., 1.35 ,Ii• a : making the price of the three papers $3.25. . a,.4 + The Times and the Weekly Sun.... 1,70 a The Toronto Daily Star ($2,30 leas $1.00).....a%. 1,80 t The Saturday Globe ($1,90 less $1.00) .... A • • • • . 90 a o o a t the four papers for $3.9o. .t. 1 4 i: The Times 1•10101..101•1=11111111•111=111•0•••00111•11.11 nesresmaasaarararge.......04....m. mannirormira, Clubbing List t 1.90 4.50 1.85 1,70 2.30 2.30 4.a0 • 1 CO 2.85 1,f1() 1 80 1.60 2 .85 1.60 8.50 2.90 3.50 1.b5 2 25 1.60 2.25 2.25 3.25 3.40 2.50 1,75 2.90 1.35 3.10 2.90 1.60 3,15 2.60 2,40 2.30 2.50 2.45 2,60 2,55 1.85 2.40 $3.90 If the pub icat on you want is not, in above list, us 'now. We - n supply almost any well-known Ca dian or American publication. These prices 'are stri cash in advance S..,nd subscriptions by post office or express order he Times Offe Stone Block WINGHAM ONTARIO it+44Eivt+03111MtiiiitAitiiiitilitt