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The Wingham Times, 1913-04-17, Page 3
TUE WINGIIAM TIMES, APRIL 17, 1913 Apply Zayre -Bak to all wounds and sores and you will be surprised how quid1:ly it stops the smarting argil brings ease. It covers the wound with a layer of pro.. teative balm, kills all Poisoiii germs already in the wound, and prevents others en'ering. Its rich healing herbal essences then be Id op from the bottom, fresh ti:sucl and in a wonderfully short time the wound is healed' tarn 13uk'n pnpt,larity is boned on merit. Imitationsr•ex,rwork cures. Bose olid get the real thing, "Zara-L'uk" is 1 rii ltd on every p::eket of tl:e genuine. Reuse alt otherv, Si,. all drugg,ets and store or Zam•l)uk Co., Toronto. Mr. Justus Miller, a prominent citizen and ex -Mayor of Ingersoll, succumbed to a chronic tfisease aggravated qy a fail ten days ago. Cannot be Cured, with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot react, he seat of the disease. Catarrh is a Mood or ,;onstitutional dis- ease, and in ,...der to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is take» internally, and acts di- rectly on the Flood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Cater h Care is not a quack medicine. I. ,vas prc_scribed by one of the best ph_ ; i..ians in this country and is a regular p.• scription. It is compos- ed of the best ..onics known, combined with the best Wool purifiers, acting di- rectly on the raucous surfaces. The perfect comhi ,tttion of the two ingredi- ents is what • reduce; such wonderful results in eerier Catarrh. Send for testimonials F. J. C IENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Bold by Dru rgists, price Take Hall'- Family 1'fils for consti- pation. • • If your lain• butes dimly, or smokes, look at Or trick. It may be dirty. Boil the burn,': in soda solution, wash the wick welt ;aid dry, or put in a new wick; use only coed oil, and keep the • chimney clean. CUR :Sick headache and relieve all the troubles Incl. dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, P..la in the Side &a. While their moat xemarineblesuccess has been shown in curing SICK. ]deadoche, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuablein Constipation, curingand pre. 'venting this annoyingcomplaint whiletheyalso correct:dl disorders of the stomach, stimulatethe liver and soak regulate the bowels. Even if they only HEA D Achetbey wouldb©almostpricelesetothosewho suffer from this distressing complaint; butfortn. mutely their goodness does notend hero,andtbose who once try themwill find these little pills value able hi se many ways that they will not be wi1- lingLedo without them. But after all sick head ACHE jls,t€tebanoof so many lives that here is where wemake our great boast, Our pills curoitwhile others do not. Catlor'sLittlo•Livor Pills are very email and very ease tetoke. Oneer two pills make a dose. Thayareetiidtly vegetable and do dot gripe or mega, but by their gentle action please an who athe tea Qi18TIt8 ttEI Xlffl Oa VW tegg, 'lilt, Ill Watt Bust Prig, WANTED A live representative .for R FLIGHT FOR LIFE Dodging Death in the Path of an Onrushing Flood. THE FURY OF A CLOUDBURST. A Solid Wall of Water Swept the Can- yon, Uprooting Trees and Toying With Huge Bowiders-Exciting Race In a Storm on Lightning Creek, ';Co understand what follows you must know something of the country where the incident occurred. Light- ning creek, a famous trout stream of northern Idaho, rises among the gla- ciers of the Cabinet mountains and comes tearing down through marrow canyons heavily forested with pine and cedar. At all times the stream is swift, lu the spring, when the ice caps are melting, It is a torrent. • July 3, 190(1; a fishing party of five were hauled from the nearest railroad station to the end of the wagon trail on Lightning Creek, where we made camp, The next morning the professor and myself decided to ascend to the head of one of the creek's tributaries. Shouldering our Freels, we made our wily I brough the timber toward the glacier. gleaming in the sunlight. Five miles from 'camp we came to a fall, where we began to fish. There were plenty of trout, but they were snail. "Let's see if there are larger ones above the fall," my companion sug- gested. "Agreed." l replied, and we clam beret! up the steep rocky walls. Our hopes were realized. We fished up the stream until punt noun, when we sat down to luu,'h. By the trite we had finished eittitig a tiny cloud had crept above the mountain top and hovered over the glacier. in a few minutes another cloud crept up and joined the first, then another and an- other until the mountain top was cov- ered. "It is time here," I said. a wetting." As if to emphasize my words a flush of lightning quivered through tile black mass, and in a few seconds the tlsundef rolled down the .cnuyon with a roar like a battery of siege guns. As ire hurried dowu the creek the lightning become continuous and ter- rifying In its brilliancy; the roll of thunder was tncessrtnt. We made all the speed we could and had nearly readied the falls when the rain came in a duwupour. "Suppose we get under this spruce anti wait until the storm is over?" my coin pauiou suggested. "Suppose we get Into more open country as soon as possible!" I. rejoin ed and kept on. Suddenly the lightning ceased, the thunder died away. and there was no sound save the dashing of rain. The sudden calm was startling, and I pans ed and looked toward the mountain 1 saw a great column of fire shoot downward out of the clouds. The girt• eler shivered as though struck by some titanic force, split apart and crashed down into the canyon. 'There was a roar of thunder, and I saw the water pour from tire sky as if all the windows of heaven had been opened, "A elondbnrst!" I cried. "itun for your lifer' Fear lent wings to our feet. • We sped down the errnyon, leaping fallen logs, tea ring through dense under brush. clambering over rocks, fleeing from the pursuing flood that roared down the carryon, uprooting trees aid hurling great bowlders before it as It came. •A few rods below a small ha• saltie cliff, with some stunted fir trees growing on It, stood ill an open space. To ontl'nn the water was impossible; the cliff was our only haven. f dashed np, with my companion to my heels. Rellintl us we saw a solid column of water that bore a UUIg:!e,i Mass of drift and advanced with tit' speed of the wind. We had only time to seize upon a tree before the flood was upon us, ]t struck with a grind: ing roar: the rock trembled to its very base; the water surged over us; we were battered by the rushing. logs. scratched by the drift, suffocated by the water, but we clung on desperate. ly. in a minute, at the furthest, the flood swept on, leaving ruin in 'ts wake. About the cliff the trees lay piled in a tangled, broken heap. We crept down, drenched, bruised and bleeding, and made our way to camp. lint the spot where the camp had stood was swept clean. We sank upon the water soaked ground to consider what we should do. In a short time we beard the voices of our friends. They had been fishing the main stream above where the branch entered and thus had escaped. - There wag nothing left for it but to make otlr way back to the railroad sta- tion, where we arrived after dark. For months fishermen discovered articles Cif our camp et#uipage scattered along the stream. --Youth's Companion. WINGHAM and surrounding District tosell high-class stock for THE FONTHILL NURSERIES. we were getting out of "I believe we are in for More fruit trees will be planted in the Fail of 1911 and Spring of 1912 than ever before in the history a Ontario. The orchard of the future will be the best paying part, of the farm, We teaeli our mew. ,Salesmanshi p Tree Ctlltttrt' and how big profits in fruit•;rowing can lie made. Pay weekly, permanent employ- ment, exclusive territory. Write for particulars. STONE &3 y'Eal ,GTDN 'X OIWICTO. r ROAR OF THE ARCTIC, Sullen Thunder of the Gales and. the 'tVoioes of the ion," Most of us cherish the !den that In the far reaches of the Arctic eircle there prevails an everlasting death like stillness. Iiut those who have spent much time In the far north as- sure us that that region is ter from being silent, although so little life Is manifest for the greater part of the year. • On polar seas the ice, though thick and solid as granite, Is hardly ever stili. There are tides in the arctic, and these lift and lower the huge icefields, Causing them to give out all manger of noises. ]Oven as late as November the pack will wake up without warn- ing and pile itself in huge heaps with Indescribable crashings, groanings and roarings. Peary speaks of the "rabid roar" of the "tumbling chaos of ice blocks," His Itlsikimos were terribly frightened and set up weird howlingss. The dogs whined and barked, and alto- gether the noise was terrific. Every arctic explorer has given similar ac- counts. The movements of the ice -the grad- ual crowding and pressing, bending and pushing, the breaking of the masses of snow lying at the "Ice foot" -have given rise to the expression of explorers, "The voices of the ice." It may be that one will hear a low sing- ing, splashing or grumbling, alternat- ing with various other sounds, crack- ing and snapping. These sound irreg- ularly from a great distance, like a confusion of human voices, the racket of a railway train or the skurrying Of a sledging patty. Then, again, the noises are such as to cause the ex- plorer to fancy be bears the steps and voices of various species of animals. Spring is the noisiest time In the Vo- lar seas. -McClure of the Investigator compared the breaking tip of the lee at that season to heavy thunder or the sound of great gluts. Another writer likened the sound of the breaking lee floe to that prochu'ed ay It volcanic eruption. • Moreover, the air in the arctic' re- gions is seldom nhsolutely still. Gales are frequent. The winter winds, ac- cording to I'ecu'y, blow with almost unimaginable fury. On nue occasion in the cabins of the Roosevelt the sound resembled that of some gigantic power plant, everything vibrating to the pulsation of the machinery. The whole atmosphere was filled with the deep, sullen roar of the wind, and so thick was the cloud of now picked up and swept forward on the wings of the gale that powerful lamps were invisi- ble ten feet away. On high ground, such as that of in- ner Greenland, the wind is never still. Nansen tells of the constant hiss of the breeze laden with tiny bits of ice, which flowed along knee high like a shining white river glittering in the pale arctic sunlight. Nor is there lack of sounds caused by animal life. In the arctic may of- ten be heard the baying of wolves and the barking of seal, while In the sum- mer the harsh cry of sea birds 'echoes along the faces of the cliffs,-Harper's Weekly. Emulation, "Year brat name is June, is it, little girt? n "wed, sir: only I don't spell it the way most totkS do." "Sow do you spell it?" "Why is that, little girt? "Do you s'pose I'tn gain' to let tit Aiaee get ahead of me when tt comes to spellitt' Balms aliferent?"-'-OMcaRl Tribune. • The safest *ay ot net being vela miserable la net to nxpeet to be Very ' letpgy,--Illehopenhauer. Formation of Worlds. There are two hypotheses iii reference to the condition of the matter of the universe at the moment when science begins its discussion of the formation of the worlds. Both these agree that the matter was in a nebulous condition. As Professor Young says: "This does, not assume that matter was created in a. nebulous condition. As the egg may be taken as the starting point for the life history of the animal, so the nebula may be taken as the starting point for the life history of the planet- ary slstem." On one theory the nebula was in the form of a heated gas; on the other, it was a cloud of cold me- teoric dust. This latter many astron- omers think is more likely to be true. -Scientific American. Clever Feat. The girl was talking to the ex -col- lege man. "And what aro you going to do now that you have completed your educa- tion'?" she asked. "Oh, I think I'll live on my income," he answered airly. "I din disappointed in you. Live on your income, indeed! Why don't you do some great deed to show the world bow clever you are?" "My dear young woman, if I suc- ceed in living on my income it will be the cleverest deed any man ever ac- complished -"-Cleveland Plain Dealer. He Got on Deck. A sailor who bud landed after a long voyage, and having been paid off, call ed a cab, threw his luggage inside and lumped on top himself. "Beg pardon, sir," said the astonish- ed Cabman, "but you should get inside and put your boxes on top." "Steel the craft ahead. ja.rvey. Pas. sengers always • go ou deck and lug- gage in the hold," was the reply from the top. London Tit -Bits. Able Officeholder. "I understand that you once sang in a glee club." "Yes," replied the great politician. "And I Want to tell you when a man • with a vole like mine can hold a po- • sition in a glee elhb It spews that he is some officeholder." --- Los Angeles Listener, Breakage. "Aly Zen cook broke her word to me to come et3." "Well, if her word.t0 you is all she breaks in•.thd'hoese yon ate getting oft easy." Balton ore Attusrican. Tttisitmoditt teerta(a1ltste t i ce tit Mt Weft Stone:-Gre•lt, Provsrb, "'Fye°rt-ca4 va a" Iii l;il'4t2'j � �� •:o i Hew Brucsrfirk tilerchart to il:a<<il.., R. R4VA PentiP$ BRlsrot, N. B., Jury 25th, x911. "I am unable to say enough in favor ot "Fruit-a-tives" as it saved my life and restored me to health, when I had given up all hope and when the doctors had failed to do anything more for me. I had a stroke of Paralysis in March, r9ro, and this left me unable to walk or help myself, and the Constipation of the bowels was terrible, Nothing did me any good and I was wretched in every way. finally, I took "Fruit-a-tives" for the Constipation, and it not only cured rue of that trouble but gradually this fruit medicine toned up the nerves and actually cured the paralysis. Under the use of "Fruit-a-tives", I grew stronger and stronger until all the palsy and weakness left me. I am now well again and attend my store every day and all day." ALVA PHILLIPS. "Fruit -a -tires" is the only remedy in the world that is made of fruit juices and tonics, ' pc. a box`, 6 for 132.50 -trial size, 25e. At dealers or sent on receipt of price by krait-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. ARE YOU GOING WEST THIS SPRING WO DQTT'S Two dont's. If, 'way down in the depths of your heart, you are anxious to possess a lithesome figure, straight as a young pine, then you must do some- thing else besides yearn, writes Nancy H. Gardiner. It is all very well to wish for a thing, but what good does it do? Isn't it foolish to rest content with wish- ing? That answered very well when the world was young, because then everybody had an escort of fairies who were fairly wild to carry out one's wishes but alas! in these modern days the fairies have flown away, and we poor mortals have to do more then wish for a thing before we can expect to obtain it. Instead of wishing for a straight back, Girl o' Dreams, listen to me and I will tell you a way out of your trouble. Dont be the foolish damsel who goes through the streets with her arms heap- ed with bundles if you ever expect to straighten those bowed shoulders ' as this foolish and unnecessary habit has the effect of drawing the shoulders for- ward and down, and you then present as droopy an appearance as an ostrich plume in a heavy rain. If there are no delivery wagons and you are forced to make a small truck of yourself, at least carry your parcels in hands that are down at the sides. Don't wear your hose supporters pin- ned to the front of your corset, as the Constant pulling will make che'straight- est of straight shoulders sag foward. Now that you know my "two dont's" forget them not! If so, exceptional opportunities are now being offered by the Grand Trunk Railway System in connection with Colonist, Homeseekers and Settlers ex- cursions. The Colonist rates are one-way tickets applying from stations in Ontari) to Vancouver, B,C., Victoria,P,,C., Prince Rupert, B. C., Seatle, Wash., Spokane, Wash., Portland, Ore., San Francsiso, Cal,, Los Angles, Cal., San Diego, Cal., and other points in Arizona, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada,'Orrgon, Utah and Washington, and are on sale daily until April 1r+th, inclusive. Tile Settlers excursions apply from stations in Ontario. Port Hope, Peter- boro and West to points in Alberta and Saskatchewan every Tuesday until April 29th inclusive at loW rates. Homeseekers' round trip tickets will be issued at very low rates from stations in Canada to points in Manitoba, Saskat- chewan and Alberta and are in effect each Tuesday until October 28th inclus- ive via Chicago and St. Paul, and will also be on sale on certain (Tuesdays) during above period via Sarnia and Northern Navigation Comnany. The Homeseekers' tickets are good returning two months from date of issue. Through coaches and Pullman Tourist Sleeping cars are operated every Tues- day in connection with Settlers and IIomeseekers excursions, leaving Tor - I onto 11.00 p.m. and running through to I Winnipeg via Chicago and St.Paul without change. Reservations in Tour- ist cars may be secured at a nomial charge on application to Grand Trunk Agents. The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway is the shortest and quickest route between Winnipeg -Saskatoon -Edmonton, with smooth roadbed, electric lighted sleep- ing cars, through the newest, most pict- uresque and most rapidly developing Western of Canada, Through tickets sold and reservations made by all Grand Trunk Agents. Costs no more than by other routes. Trains now in operation Winnipeg to Saskatoon and Regina, Yorkton and Canoga, Sask., Camrose, Mirror and Edson, Alta., also toFitzhugh and Tete Jaune, B. C. Before deciding on your trip, consult any Agent of the Grand Trunk Railway for descriptive literature, timetables and particulars or' write C. E. Horning, District Passenger Agent, Union Stat- ion, Toronto, Ontario. H. B. Elliott Town Passenger and Ticket Agent, Phone 4. W.F. Burgrnan, Station Ticket Ag, nt, Phone 50. WAS SO NERVOUS COULD NOT EAT OR SLEEP. There arc many people who become worn, weak and miserable because their nerves become so unstrung they cannot sleep, and wherever there are ones ieJabled in this way they will find that .,liiburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will eeeore the deranged .'erves,to full life rid activity. i'hey do this by their invigorating 'ii: rt on the nerve castes, and will tone up .:zs whole system to a perfect condition. Mr. George Melleath, Round Hill, v✓ ri� tes:-- I take. the pleasure of :eitiug to tell you the great benefit lil,)urn's Heart and Nerve Pills did for :"e. 1 was so nervous I could not eat or !•-i' and could hot even do my work, Led.I failed to a shadow. Finally I con- ':'.+rerl to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve ,iis, and have only taken two boxes :.:dant able to work au well as.ever,•anct 'ret eat and sleep as well aaa'ever I did. i ,r'an't praise your medicine too highly. My wife is taking them now for palpita- tion of the heart and i6 impreving meetly." Vim twice of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Mlle is SO cents per box, 3 oozes for $1.25. >ior rale at all dealers or mailed direct -,n receipt of price by The T. Milburia Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. , Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S caSTA R 1 A. A contract in connection with Hydro- electric developement at Cedar Rapids has been let to a Ne AT York firm for than three million dollars. t"en in a Faint. Mrs. Edwin Martin, Ayer's Cliff, Que., writes: "Beforeusing Dr. Chase's Nerve Food I was in a terrible condition. 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." The new C. P. R. Austria -Canada steamship service was inaugurated by the arrival yesterday at St. John, N. B. of the steamer Ruthenian, from Tri- este, with 700 passengers and 2,000 tons of freight. IL Do not suffer another clay with Itching Bleed- ing, or Protrud- ing Piles. No surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly cure you. tile. a nox' all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. and Sample 2e stamp to pay postage this From the three sugar beet factories at present in operation in Canada there was produced during the sugar refining campaign of 1911-12 from Canadian - grown sugar beets a total of 22,157,155 lbs. or 11,078 short tons of beet root sugar, as compared with 20,612,276 lbs. or 10,306 tons in the previous campaign of 1910-11. The three factories are sit- uated at Wellaeeburg and Berlin in On- tario and at Raymond hi Alberta. Chan) beriain'e 't,ahlets for Coesiipatlon For constipation, Chamberlain's Tab- lets are excellent. Easy to take, mild and gentle in effect- trive them a trial. For sale by all dealers. MEN -YOU NEED NERVE Wonderfaf Ncr-vot , System W. ' ENNE Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. }}; (Rr AIT letters from Canada must be addressed 3`f t� a � � � to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- meat in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat 12 no patients in our Windsor ofTices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian Luei::c:.s only. Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY &;fwidfv .DY, Windsor, Ont. Write for our private add ea EARLY INDISCRETIONS AND EXCESSES HAVE UNDER* i11IINED YOUR SYSTEM The nerves control all actions of the body so that soy- thing that debilitates them veil weaken all organs of the system. Early Indiscretions aid Exeatss have ruined thousande of promisiig young men. Unnatural Drain, nap their vir'orand vitality and they neverdevelop to a propel- concittiouoi' eiacliood. Tliey remain weak- negs, mentally, physically and sexually. flow you fool? Are you nervous and wcelr, despondent and gloomy, specks b,,fore the eyes with dark circles under them, weak back, kidneys irritable, pail it.itiou of (ho heart, La:.hful, dobilitatiug drearas, sediment !amine, pimples on the face, eyes sunken, hollow cheeks, careworn ex- pression, poor memory, lifelers, distrustful, lack energy anistrength, tired mornings, restless nights, change- able moods, premature decay, burse rains, hair loose, etc, This is the condition our New Method Treatment Is GUARANTEED TO CURE Win have treats 1 Diseases of Men for almost a life. time sue du not bare to experiment, Consult us FREE OF CIIAIIGE and we will toll you whether you aro curabl:- or not. Wo guarantee curable cases of NERVOUS 1DCBILITY, VARICOSE VEINS, BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES, GLEET, BLADDER URINARY AND KIDNEY COMP'LAiNTS Free Booklet on Diseases of Men. If unable to call write for QUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT +++4.44.4.44144:c.0.4.4.4.44+++++++ ++++444.4.4.4.44r4547444.4.4-++++++ Times •+ •• 4.m Clubbing List i + Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S IC:ASTOR1A Direct apple shipments to Liverpool district totalled for last year, 1,639,159 cwts., an increase over 1911 of 289,105 cwts. Canada's share of this was a to- tal of 492,147 cwts., being an increase of 91,686 cwts. over 1911, The port of Liverpool increased in its apple consign- ments from Canada 104,470 cuts., and Manchester in this commodity showed a decrease of 22,784 cwts. The total val- ue of apples shipped to Lancashire in 1012 amounted to £9.50,586, and Canada's share of this totalled £253,107. Dr. de Van's Female Pills A reliable French regulator; never fails, These pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the generative portion of the female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. - Dr. do Van's are sold at 15 a box, or three for $10. Mailed to any address. The Scobell Drug Co., St. Catharines, Out, All cuts made in pruning should be as clean as eossible. Any wound over an inch in diameter should be painted with white lead. Pruning should be practiced ev- ery year front the time of planting. Pruning is better done in the spring, preferably before growth starts, but in ease it is impossible at that time it may be done immediately after they leaf out Itis desirable to have the wounds heal as rapidly as possible to prevent decay. When it is done in autumn or early Win- er the cambium layer is likely to die and the wood dry out and split. The pruning should be done when the heal- ing process is about to commence. A moderate summer pruning of small branches will not hurt, as these heal up quickly. -Farm, Stock and Home, Children Cry FOR. FLETCHER'S CAST C'RIA 'i- + + ,a - 'i' + 4, + + 4, -ll- + + + + + + These prices are for addresses in Canada or $ Britain. The above publications may be obtained by Tams subscribers in any combination, the price for any public a- + tion being the figure given above less St.00 represtntit + -1• Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times and Weekly Globe . and Daily Globe and Family Herald and Weekly Star.,.. and Toronto 'Weekly Sun and Toronto Daily Star and Toronto Daily News.. and Daily Mail and Empire. and Weekly Mail and Empire..... and Farmers' Advocate and Canadian Farm (weekly) and Farm and Dairy and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press, and Daily Advertiser and London Advertiser (r, t.ekly )....and London Daily Free Press Meinirg Edition Evening Edition and Montreal Daily Witresq and Montreal Weekly Witness and World Wide and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... and Presbyterian and Westminster , Presbyterian and Wes:rainstee' and Toronto Saturday Night Times and Busy Man's Magazine Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Youth's Companion .... Times and Northern Messenger.. Times and Daily World m ...01 ....... Timet+ and Canadil'n Magazine (monthly) Times and Canadian Plctorial Times and Lippincc:tt's Magazine Times and Woman's Home Compaek'n .. Times and Delineator Times and Cosmopolitan Times and Strand Times and Success . Times and McClui e's boa azine.... Times and 'gunny's Magazine Times and Designer Times and Everybody's 01.0 .6001. • + 1,60 4.50 1.85 1.75 2.30 2.30 4.60 1.60 2.35 1,60 1 80 1,60 2.85 1.60 3,50 2 90 3.00 1.b5 2 25 1.60 2.25 3,25 3 40 2.50 1.75 2.90 1.85 3,10 2.90 1.60 3.15 2.60 2.40 2.80 2.50 2.45 2.60 2,55 1.85 2.40 4.. .a. 4' 4- + 8- • g ,i. re Y + Great + di. 4 - the price of The Times. For instance : making the price of the three papers $2.95. The Times and the Weekly Slin.,• The Toronto Daily star ($2.30 less 61.00).. 1,30 + The Week13 GIobe (51.60 less 51.00) ti0 The Times and Weekly Globe.... .... ,• 51.60 The Farmer's Advoeate (52.35 less $1.00), 1.35 52.95 + $ the four papers for $a.7o. + If the pub icat on you want is not in above list, let $ us know. We. - •n supply almost any well-known Cana- $ dian or American publication. These prices are strictly * T. cash in ad .'ance S»nd subscriptions by post office or express order to I. Times Office Stone Block Ztk'k * ***.,'>r . 't K.4...041.:t.4; ,.++++++3f. ,* WINGHAM ONTARIO