HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-01-02, Page 6i
1t
HELPS FOR HOUSEKEEPERS. PAINTS UNDER WATER
Brighten up the kitchen with a nit•..' p
Boat of light-colored paint.
Cut out the parlor anti make a living -
xoom of it. You will all live the longer
#or it,
A common ten -cent file will give a bet-
ter edge to a carving knife than the
most expensive steel.
To polish kitchen knives mix a little
bicarbonate of soda with the brick dust,
and rub them thoroughly.
One ounce of coarse salt dropped in
the sink will prevent the drain pip
from freezing over night.
A tablespoonful of washing soda and
a cup of vinegar poured down the sink
'Will clean out the most stubborn of
clogged pipes.
To clean white and delicately colored
plumes not badly soiled, rub themgent-
ly in a pan of equal parts of salt and
flour.
CERT AHD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHiLD.
Mas.Wtxsrow's Soorrrtnro SYRVp has been
used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES the CHITD SOFTENSNS the GUMS
ALLAYS
hAT an PAIN' CURES V ND COLIC, an
13 the best remedyfor DIARRHCEA. It is ab
.
solutely harmless Be sure and ask for "Mrs,
Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other
Sind. Twenty -live cents a bottle,
Some Peculiar Events in 1913.
As a result of the peculiar astronomi-
Cal situatioi next Easter Day will be
the earliest for years, and it will not be
so early again for 1t'0 years. It comes
this time on March 23rd. The fixing of
the day of each year is based upon the
changing phases of the moon. Easter
Day is always the first Sunday after the
full moon, upon, or next after the 21st
March.If the full moon happens
PPens
upon a Sunday then Easter Day his the
first Sunday following. Next year there
is a full moon Saturday, March 22nd,.
Sunday the next day is therefore Easter
Day. Astronomy also foretells of no
less than five eclipses next year. There
are two total eclipses of the moon early
in the morning of March 22nd and Sept.
15, and three pa. tial eclipses of the sur.
on April 6th, August 31st and Sept
29th, but none of these latter eclipses
will be visible in North America.„''l,,;yO
Dr. de Vari's i-7efailta . Pill:
A reliable French regulator; never fails. Thee
pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating th,
generative portion of the female sv,tem. Must
all cheap imitations. Dr. do Van's are sold at
F5a box, or three for 110. Mailed to any address
lhr Scobell Drug Co., St. Catharines, Ont.
The Cost of War in Human Lives.
A Bavarian newspaper recently pub-
lished the toll of lives lost in the wars
of the last fifty years. All the principal
wars seem to have been included in this
record, with the exception of the Boer
War, but even with that out the total
showed a loss of 2,213,000 lives in the
wars of the last half century. The
losses were divided as follows:
Crimean warItalian war of
750,000;
1859-60, 45,000; American civil war of
1861.65, 800,000; Danish war .,f 1864_
8,000; Austro -Prussian war of 1866, 45„
000; Franco-German war, 215,00o;
Russo-Turkish war, 250,/140; Russo-Jap-
anese war, 200,000.
Electric Restorer for Men
Phosphenol restores every nervp in the body
to its privet tension ; restores
vine and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual
weakness averted at once. Phosphonol will
make von a new man. Price SI a box. or two for
55. Mailed to any address. The Seobell Drug
Co., St. Catluerinos, Ont.
A silent man never has to eat his
words.
Almost any little restaurant can pose
as a chop house.
YOUNG 'RISHMAN IS CREATING
AN ARTISTIC FURORE,
A Lunnbernian's Opinion.
"I was troubled with palpitation of
the heart and sleeplessness,"writes Mr.
Wm. Pritchard, Lumber Inspector,Lums-
den Mills, Ont., "and used Dr. Chase's
Nerve Food with very great benefit, as
my whole system was strengthened and
built up." Dr. Chase's Nerve Food
.,forms new, rich blood and restores the
' feeble. wasted nerve cells.
Welter Howison Pritchard Finds Un-
dreamed of Colors and Forms Un,
der the Surface of the Ocean and
Has Received Great Praise—Sarah
Bernhart eve Him Twenty Pounds
to Help His Dream C• -me True,
The very newest thing in art is the
painting of pictrres urder the sea.
This is impressionism with a ven-
geance. The artist is Walter Howison
Pritchard, an Irishman who has de-
veloped a specialized style of painting
and eketohing that shout make him
world famous,
Several years ago he conceived the
idea of painting under water. He had
painted et the bottom of a shallow sea
in his youth, and, being an artist
born, readily recalled the wonderful
tints that are impossible to obtain on
lend. He sketched his "dream” land,
bet it was not real. Friends help up
his pictures for praise and the world
laughed at them. He decided that he
would stop tl•^t laughing. He would
prepare an outfit, and, descending to
+' bottom of the sea, would work the
atmosphere,
in oil i 1 its own a m s
endure it p
with all its glorious color and mysti-
cal tone.
But he wanted money. He rent to
L indon and offered some of his
sketches for sale. They were rejected.
He had little money, but, a lover -f
art and poetry, he spent almost his
last shilling to see Bernhardt. He was
tv enty-four years old then, but yet a
boy. He saw the great Bernhardt,
hut was level-headed. Tie criticized
her gown. He said aloud to some
young men in the foyer. "That cos-
tume is supposed to be that of a sea
sot'eress; it is lacking in detail. I
will see Bernhardt; she will listen to
me; I
will su_nest.n !"
His associates laughed at this pre-
suming young Irishman, who with
threadbare coat would see the divine
Sarah in her dressing room. They
followed him to the stage door. He
was rebuffed, but insistence gained the
d y, and the actress called him in.
Th -e she stood, with three great pier
mirrors about her.
The young man trek one of his
cards and made a few rapid strokes.
I e showed it to the actress. He talk-
ed swiftly, smoothly, and in twenty
minutes she was with him in senti-
ment. She accepted his suggestions
ar.d presented . him with twenty
pounds. He was tend with delight.
"I know you are a dr-r.mer, and I
know that dreams come true. Did, not
rl.y baby and I live for months on
milk alone when I was a young moth-
er in Paris? I know how bard it is to
get along, and I believe you have
genius!" dec'ared the actress. And so
later, when he made the first great
painting of the depth of the Pacific,
Bernhardt bought it and, naturally,
prizes it very much.
While he descends to the bottom of
the sea and paints directl; from na-
ture in that wonderful quivering ter-
ritory of light end shade his prepara-
tions are eminently practical. He has
a huge iron easel, a large piece of
heavy plate glass, double elephant
de awing paper soaked in cocoa oil and
placed en the glass with surgeon's
tape,
solid colors in a glass box.
With these he descends,
harehanded,
bat with body enveloped in the usual
diving suit. He first fits the box to
his face by holding the wooden edge
in cis teeth and swims downwards and -
along, all the while looking for his
sketching ground. When he locates it
he arises to the surface and dons his
outfit. He descends and his parapher-
nalia is lowered to him. And there he
sit. and dabbles in the colors on his
iron palette.
ele uses his thumb -nail in working
up his "sketch"; brushes could not be
used. The oil paper combines with
the pigment and the water has little
effect on it. He sends i' to the sur-
face in fine shape and later works it
out in detail in his studio. He -stays
on the sea bottom but forty-five•min-
ules at a time, but he now is working
on plans to eonetruct a large diving
c..ge, made entirely of glass at.d steel.
in which he and his pupils may sit
and sketch t their hearts' content.
Pritchard h .s made 11' k. best work
in Tahiti, but of late h- has' found
some splendid' material off the coast
of Santa Barbara. Ho tries to en
down at low tide, as there seems to be
less distur'"ance in the sea, thus mak-
ing it easier to work, and to see the
colors more distinctly.
One shows a variet • of fish
picturey
seldom seen, the tins causing the fish
to resemble huge butterflies. This
painting was made beneath the water
in a "sub -marine glove" on the south
coast of England. Another painting
shows a wonderful grove, with what
are claimed to be some splendid types
of the ehatadort, a fish that makes its
home among polyps and corals. This
was painted under the waters of Ta-
hiti.
Some people seem to live a long time
just to spite other people.
Don't crowd the laying hen; :Ole needss
plenty of room, says Farm, Stock and
Home. From four to five square feet
of floor space is very necessary, with a
small flock of a dozen hens five square
feet each will be found very desirable.
One hundred hens in one pen will get
along nicely with four square feet per
hen. The larger the fowl the more room
it needs. If the leghorn demands four
square feet of space, the Plymouth
Rock needs four and a half and the
Brahma requires frvesquare feet,
Persons troubled with partial
paral-
ysis -
Y
sis Sro often very much benefited by
massaging the affected parts thorough-
ly when applying Chamberlain's Lin-
iment. This liniment also relieves rheu-
matic pains.—For sale by all dealers.
The London (Eng.) Economist notifies
financiers and investors to expectin the
coming year loans totalling $400,000,000
with which to repair losses caused by
the war and the mobilization in Russia,
Austria and Italy The newspapers es-
tirAate the cost of the war et ;175,000,••,
eCO, using as a basis of reckoning the
fact that there are 1,090,00n men under
arras -400,000 Tusks, 300,000 Bulgars,
2l$l,000 Serviette. 150,0011 Greeks, and
41,1,000 1vientenegrias' -at an .average ex-
pense of ten shillings daily ±der elan.
Their Hotel Life.
Friend—Given up housekeeping and
gone to a hotel, eh? How do you tike
hotel lift?
McTiff---hir: t rate. Never was so
ha pies hi my life.
Friend—Indeed! And how does your
a ,ie like it-
McTiff—First clans.
' (--- � youstaying?
I' rn.n l
Friend—Where arc.
McTiff--I'nt at the St. Charles, and
she'.: at the let. James.
Relieving a Frost.
"And if I refuse you?" faltered the
Boston ;;ire.
"Will y0 ,u promise me not to take
to drink%"
"I will." replied the Chicago youth.
"The worst I shall do will be to go out
and get a cup of hot chocolate."
A Drawback.
IinicIer---Do you like the revolving
door?
Beoker--Nag'you can't slam it when
yell are mad. ...t
I 14, Al It r'
ANOTHER PRI."a1' FARM,
Hon. W. J. Hanna Is Trying Experi-
ment in thi North,
While the Centra. Prison Farm at
Guelph has been developing a contin-
ental reputation for i .proved and
successful methods in dealing with
ordinary misdemeanants, a new and
perhaps more ambitious scheme has
been introduced by Hon, W. J. Han-
na, Provincial Secretary, in northern
Ontario. Six or eight miles from Fort
William lies a tract of land compris-
ing some six hundred acres, hitherto
avoided as being unsuitable fa- agri-
cultural purposes. Hon. Frank Coch-
rane, late Minister of Lands, Forests
d Mines, saw the land, found its
value and immediately withdrew it
from settlement. The tract has now
been turned over to the Provincial
'secretary for the purpose of another
t`entral Prison. Unlike. the Guelph
Farm, however, the Fort William pro-
position was virgin land, uncleared
Ind u
n nt.n
lched.
On June 6 last a party of men went
in, not criminals, just ci Unary mis-
demeanants — first offenders. They
set to work. First, tents had to be
erected and provision made for eating
and . !eeping the gang. The first field
of seven acres was clearsu by June 8.
en the organization was perfected
they went to work, sixty of them in
ell, brawny, willing, delighted to be
outtheair.I l a few days they
in i i
Y
made a big dent in the surr.unding
Wrest, and are now clearing at the
rat: of three acres a day. Field crops
have been put in, builtlines erected
for the winter and some permanency
civ n to the settlement. The scheme
is just unfolding, and the way they go
at it is proof that they prefer their
work to jail yards.
Three acres a day and more! What
will it lead to? Those who are prat-
ing about prepared farms, clearings
wit:, a little shack and a barn where
a settler can go in and get busy at
once on his land, these are some of
e things that may result from the
new idea. At the present time the
menaregiving the province a better
vl g
return than if they were held behind
bri,k walls, and the province is giv-
in, the men a better chance to start
right again, and the settler, too, in
the long run s benefited. Perhaps
u
this is a bigger scheme than i; looks,
en : Fort William may sea an agri-
cultural development that will startle
the remainder of the province.—Tor-
°Ilte Globe.
A Tramp Newsie.
Pittsie Ryan, a newsboy, left Mont-
real recently on the second stage of
his trip around the world from Ed-
monton, Alta., for a purse of thirty
thousand dollars. Pittsie was in
Montreal for four days selling papers
on St. James street and his attempted
exploits so captivated the newsboys
of the city that they formed a sort of
trust with the traveler as receiver,
Pittsie started on his trip from Ed-
monton on April 28 without a cent
in his pocket. He is to pay his way
by selling papers and is to have in
his pockets $500 on his returr.
He is clad in a white suit with the
inscription "Pittsburg Ryan, Edmon-
ton, on a tour of the world," in black
letters on the collar of the jacket.
He says that he has covered 2,800
miles- since leaving Edmonton and
he has sold papers in Calgary, Reg'sla,
Moose Jaw, Saskatoon, Portage la
Prairie, Winnipeg, Kenora, Port
Arthur, Ottawa, Toronto, Rochester
ar..l Montreal.
years -seven
twenty-seven Pittsie Ryan is w y
of age and he has been a newsboy
almost from the cradle. He went
around the world in 1905-10 in four
and a half years on the same teams
as the present trip.
Asked how much he has saved since
he commenced his present tour Pittsie
said nothing yet. He was too busily
engaged in attempting to secure
enough money for h'• passage. At
this juncture a young man who had
been listening to his story to the re-
porter stepped -forward, asked him to
call at his office, arid said he would
get him a free passage to Great
Britain. .
Woman -Worship In the North.
James Oliver' Curwood, author of
"The Flower of the North," tells the
following story about the men to be
found in, the country about Hudson
Bay, where the scene of his story is
laid: '1 was at Prince Albert," he
says, "sitting on the .verandah of the
little old Windsor Hotel, facing the
Saskatchewan. During the few days
previous a number of factors, trap-
pers, and half-breed canoemen had
come down from the north. One of
these men had not been down to the
edge of civilization for seven years.
Three of the others had not been
down in
two,
and this was the annual
trip of the other eight for there were
just eighteen of us sitting there to -
gather. We were:smoking and talk-
ing when a young woman turned up
h
leadingto the veran-
dah.the narrow v
Immediately every voice Will
hushed, and as the woman Caine up
the steps those twelve, roughly -clad
men of the wilderness rose to the :r
feet to a roan, eachholding his cap
in his hand. Thus they stood, silent
and with bowel head_, until the
young woman bad passed into the
hotel. It was the roost heautitul tri-
bute to wontanh',cal I had ever seen.
\nd 1, the man trots, civr!izute u, was
the only one who rern'ined ritti:i ,
with my hat still on uiy head:"
A Big Province.
With the recent addition, now
knewvu as Patricia, the province 'I
Ontario, contains 407,2G2 square mese ,
an area fully three mid 'ue•tlur,l
times that of the Untied Rhee, ,m,
u1..1 alme-t equal to France and tier
many combined. This latter tact.
perhaps, conveys more vividly than
tiny et..er an idea of the varines., , I
the territory snaject to the juri-d;e-
tun ut the Provincial ti ,vernmeet
and Legislature.
$1,000,000 building Permit,
The biggest permit issued in \Cin.
nitwit this yeas hue bee -1 taken out
by the i itiouo! Construction Cu. for
the Ncw Low Courts at Winnipeg.
The permit, wet for $I.1t00,1't10. Wore
tin the touicdatians has already been
et miaowed.
See
#A' 1',S e7.NUAli).' , 1913
HAD L3 O I L S
)N FACE AND BODY
WAS TROUELE4 FOR 8 YEARS.
Boil, in themselves are nota dangerous
4d
oubte,, but stilt, at the same time are
:try painful.
they are caused entirely by bad blood,
d to get rid of them it is absolutely
• :weary to put the blood into good con -
.ion.
For this purpose there is nothing to
• ual that old and well known blood
vlicine, Burdock Blood Bitters.
;Mrs. James Mageean, Floral, Sask.,
rites;—"1 was troubled for eight years
rth boils on my face and body, and 1
led everything I could think of. My
•i ghbors told me to drink water off of
it corn meal, but I kept getting worse
it one day a woman'in town asked me
ty I didn't try Burdock Blood Bitters.
r husband got me two bottles, and
ore onev"t, gonem • boilshad all dis-
v,9
•reared, and I feel like a different
'pan. I can't tell you how thankful I
;or your re dicine. I will recommend
o all suffering women."
tnufactured only by The T. Milburn
, Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Ernest Reilly, a Beaverton young man,
was near the Grand Trunk
found dead ea
station there, the circumstances point-
ing to murder.
La Libre Parole, a weekly paper, pub-
lished in Quebec city, owned by Senator
Choquette, was burned out. Loss $I5-
000; about half insured.
If your children are subject td at-
tacks of croup, watch for the first symp-
tons, hoarseness. Give Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy as soon as the child be-
comes hoarse and the attack may be
warded off. For sale by all dealers.
By a margin of sixteen votes, the
town of Warrenton, Ore., elected Miss
Clara Munson its Mayor. Miss Munson
has the distinction of being the first
woman Mayor elected in Oregon.
StTrouble.
Signs at Kidney Tulle. r
b
In the early stages kidney troubles
are known by backache and urinary dis-
orders. Later conic dropsy,stone,rheu-
matic pains, and perhaps diabetes. But
don't wait for these. Dr. Chase's Kid-
ney -Liver Pills will help you in a few
hours. Their therough action on the
liver, kidneys and ' bowels will clear
away the pains and aches and make you
well again
Where bulls are kept stabled there is
danger of them becoming impotent. In
order to overcome this difficulty Hoard's
Dairyman recommends a regular system
of exercise, and says there is nothing
better in the way of exercise than work-
ing the bull on a tread power which can
be used in separating the milk, pump-
ing water, or any other like service.
no%'S TBXI.?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J.
CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be-
lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi-
ness transactions and financially able to
carry out any obligations made by his
firm.
WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0.
'. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter-
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. per
bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
' Take Hall's Family Pills for constip-
ation. -
For a Shorthorn bull, which he bought
in the spring for $682, George Campbell,
of Bieldside, near Aberdeen. Eng., has
secured $15,720 at a sale in Buenos
Ayres. Mr. Campbell, who exports
Shorthorns to the Argentine, obtained
an average of $4,880 for eight bulls.
Mrs. A. R. Tabor, of Crider, Mo.,'had
been troubled with sick headache for
about five years, when she began talc-
ing Chamberlain's Tablets. She has
taken two bottles of them and they
have cured her. Sickheadache is caused
by a disordered stomach for which these
tablets are especially intended. Try
them, get well and stay well. —Sold by
all dealers.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Cenuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
Must Bear Signature of
See Pac4lmlIe Wrapper Below.
Very 'Mail sass eery
'tR_Uil*e.ne sagas"
¶CARTERS
1
IVER
PI LS.
FOR'HEARACHL
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR $1LIOUSNES3.
POR,TORPID LIYEK.
FOR CONSTIPATION
FOR SALLOW SKIN:
FORINE COMPLEXION
M - fs 5 UINUO MUST MAY[
o C� is l Pure17 V'egetable.,
GIME RICK HEADACHE.
VENTILATION,
How the Northwest Ha Solved the
Freeh Air Pro 'sm.
The Canadian Northwest ha; solved
the, ventilation problem—solved it in
the simplicity of I, 2, 3, says Lila E.
Clenden"a in The Globe.
The name of the particular individ-
ual who first applied this method
does
1 11 G p p
not appear to he generally known. In
all probability he was some Scotch -
man in the employ of the Hudson's
Bay Co,
Having built his log shank, he cut a
space for light. The mud -and -stone
or mud -and -pole fireplace came next.
After chinking the inside of the shack
with mthere would be plenty of
time for mudding it during the au-
tumn• when mud holds to the logs.
lint some cool night as the embers
,lied on the hearth and the wind rush-
ed and whirled through the lighting
space the pioneer was chilled out of
his dreams. Drawing his warm four.
point blanket about him he would
de
��
• -1 r• "IISshall I keep w that
draught out in cold weather?"
Bright and fertile -brained with the
morning, he picked up an empty un-
washed flour bag or a piece of white
Cotton—it must have been theformer,
for ire set the pace — and nailed it
over the space with hand -beaten nails.
The flour -bag window has been in
use in the north, country for years.
:Many half-breeds and some Indians
have used it vet
very satisfactory re-
sults as to healthin their families.
Indeed, there is nothing will hili the
Indian quicker than unventilated
housing. Alternately feasted and starv-
ed, sunned and exposed, as game and
weather hail the native, fresh air is
un imperative necessity to his exist-
ence.
How can this system be adopted to
the city house? We have all used
wire screens. Why not use white or
green cotton screens when the wires
arc discarded for autumn and winter?
These could be made on the some slid-
ine principle. For sleeping rooms they
are particularly to be recommended,
as they can ha placed in the window
shutin the morning
night and out
if desired. In an emergency tack or
throw factory cheese cotton over the
wire screen end tit it back into the
window.
There are man rooms which would
he the better of a permanent cloth
screen. With all the fabrics of coarse
and fine mesh displayed in the stores,
the handy man or the handy woman
need not require long to make an in-
vestment which will add years to his
or her life, and right here and now in-
crease mental alertness and general
health.
Think of the ill -ventilated churches,
schools theatres and other public
buildings. Think of the annoyance,
discomfort, illness and death resulting
from icy draughts on perspiring peo-
ple.
The cotton screen—preferably plac-
ed
laned at the top of the window—modifies
the danger and admits pure air. The
janitor's objection to "heating all
outdoors" is overcome.
Until such time as perfect .ventila-
tion tion is established in every home,
church, theatre, office, factory, store
arid stable, the flour -bag system will
if used prove invaluable in building
red corpuscles into young Canadians'
blood.
Dry Farming Congress.
Announcement has lately been made
of the seventh international dry farm-
ing congress, which is to be held at
Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, Oct. 21-
26 next. This movement had a small
beginning several years ago. In the
coming congress representatives are
expected from every nation in which
dry farming is practiced, and this re-
fers particularly to western Canada
and the dozen or more western states
in which the production of cereals has
been greatly increased through the
adoption 'of dry farming methods. In
the several days given to the conven-
tion there will be conferences on
soils, tillage methods and machinery,
crops and crop breedings, agricultural
education, farm management, scienti-
fic research, agricultural colleges and
experiment stations, while one of the
most interesting features of the con-
gress will he a special 'section whose
discussions will be devoted to the in-
terests and problems of farm women.
Interest in the congress is being in-
creased through the offering of sub-
stantial, prizes for best exhibits of
farm products and for the best anti-
cies treating of various phases of
farm problems.
Wealth Underground.
Oaptain Janes, of the Canadisn ex-
ploration partaboard Captain per-
nier's "Arctic," tells of virgin forests
beneath ground in Baffin's Land—the
best coal areas, in the world, and
tuel can be dug up with a shovel.
Captain Janes is of the belief that
the two largest coal fields in the wo ld
have been discovered on Ga,nadn
soil, located in Baffin's Landd. e
two are about one hundred mien
apart. In spite of their high altitu e
he says flat ter will be workable all year round. The coal is so easily
secured that it can be dug from the
s i with the shovel.
•:,.,•a will
be the greates country,In
#, : world,"
says Captain anes. " be l woe that
the report of the Arctic's 1 • veliyage,
when it is made public, be of
great value."
Demonstration Farms.
The Dominion Commission of (Jon -
servation has established a n • ber
of demonstrating farms th . . • out
Canada for the purpose of its ' in
agriculturists how they may get the
best results in the most economic
manner. They are under direction of
John Fixtor, formerly of "Macdonald
College, and C. Nunnick, agricultural
expert. In Ontario eight farms leave
been leased, in Quebec six, and in
the Maritime Provinces three each.
Arrangements are being made for sin.
ilar demonstrations in the west.
Firmness Of Purpose.
Firmness of .purpose lel one of the
most necessary sinews of character
and one of the best instruments of
success. Without it genius wastes
its efforts in a maze of ineoneistencies.
--Chesterfield,
W
,4044404444404444444404004 44.OP4440044404440440004.00+
0 s
d
+% $3,00 •
•
4 40
4
WILL RENT A
•
a
0 •
RIGHT
TOUCH MARNOCHI
FOR ONE MONTH
1.•••011•1••••••••••••••••••••••
$15.00
WILL RENT A
o-
0
•
O
•
4
4
0
•
•
a
•
4
•
o-
•
•
4
TOUCHME1T MA ON RCe
P.
FOR SIX MONTHS 4.4
•s
9
Sold Easy
Paymeifl
Plan_j
••••••=ww•moo•s
7 4t
Illustrated Literature mailed 4
.
upon Request
4
v
4'
o-
4
M a.
•
Monarch Department
b •
Remhgton Typewriter
o-
o-
•
•ri
0
m
•
0
0
,S*000.00.0400000.40,0444,010* 00.;. i.*0004•0048.0t000^0000004v0
7
S
S
ip
C.
b
8
r
a
Compaoy LIMITED
18-20 Vitoria Spuare, Montreal, Que.
Children Cry I Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S ( FOR FLETCHER'S
1�iA I CASTOR1
C A S �" O A
PRINTING
AND
STATIONERY
We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple
Stationery and can supply your wants in
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PAPER
PAPETERIES,
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYIUG CARDS, etc
We will keep the best stock in the respective lines
and sell at reasonable prices.
JOB PRINTING
We are in a better position than ever before to attend
to your wants in the Job Printing line and all
orders will receive prompt attention.
Leave your order with us
when in need of
LETTER HEADS
BILL HEADS
ENVELOPES
CALLING CARDS
CIRCULARS
NOTE HEADS
STATEMENTS
WEDDING INVITATIONS
POSTERS
CATALOGUES
Or anything you may require:in the printing line.
Suibsosiptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers
and Magazines.
The Times Office
STONE BLOCK
Wien wham,
4
-44