HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-04-24, Page 3TTIE WrIN(TT A'. `ITlESi APRIL 24, 1913
BABY'S NEEDS
Folding bathtubs made of rubber on
light wooden frames and used for babies
are especially servicable for use in
small quarters or when travelling.
They are watertight.
Nowadays little blankets for babies
can be had decorated with bears and
bunnies, chickens and other objects of
interest to small people.
Wooden pens, inside which a baby can
play, safe from harm, are made of
white enameled bars. In the centre of
each of the four sides is placed a group
of cut -out -animals -eats, horses, dogs
or squirrels.
A baby's bathrobe is made of coars-
ely- quilted cheesecloth on cotton wad-
ding, with a dainty touch of color in
the form of baby ribbon rosettes. Be-
ing of cotton, it is washable, yet it is
thick enough to be really warm.
Among the newer celluloid articles
are hoby banks, the shape of a powder
box. In the lid is a slit big enough to
receive coins the size of a quarter -
When grandparents, and other doting'
relatives are tempted to give the baby
some elaborate but absurd toy thelittle
bank suggests a more sensible gift.
Sleeping robes for babies in sizes up
to two years are made of soft white
wool eiderdown, with satin ribbon bind-
ings of pink, blue or white. They are
shaped something like grown-ups' sleep-
ing bags, with a hood over the head,
and are excellent for the baby carriage,
for the crib or for use on any occasion
when the'baby should be kept out of a
draught.
to Dread of Croup.
Every mother dreads croup unless she
knows about Dr. Chase,s Syrup of Lin-
seed and Turpentine. Given in frequent
small doses, at the first indication of
trouble, this treatment loosens up the
cough and affords relief and comfort.
Its use should be kept up until Sate
child is entirely recovered.
To mend fine lace that has torn, leav-
ing the edge attached to the gocds, run
two or three threads along the frayed
edge of the Lace, buttonhole stitch over
these and overhand that stitch to the
rest of the lace.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CAST®ROA.
And a woman can put up a harder
fight with her tongue and her tears
than a man can with his fists.
When a married man is in doubt
about anythiug, he can always prove
that he isn't by arguing the matter
with his wife.
ABSJIUTE
SECUR1TYm
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver i'ills,
Must Bear Signature of
Sae Pao-Simlle Wrapper Below.
Very small and as easy
to take as sngara
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR'DIZIINESS.
F'OR.BILIOUSNES3.,
FOR,TORPIO LIYE1I '
VOR4,CONSTIPA't1ON
FOR,$ALLOW SKIN:
FOR THE COMPLEXION
wtinENVXN Mu.TAAv. MATUn[.
all
woe,
L*ttrely Yegetable. Wowara ^...C6
,CURE SIC1G HEADACHE.
CARTERS
ITTLE
• k n
PI LLS,
WANTED
A live representative for
WINGHAM
and sur.ounding District tosell
high-class stock for.
THE FONTHILL NURSERIES
HE VA -417::1 IT.
The Prisoner Hat'. l(irlrL nse the In-
criminating '-gace.,
Tramp," "A Circuit " in Pie -Pow-
der," tell, of an amusing sequel to
the eloquence of defending counsel in
a murder trial. The real question
left in doubt was the identity of the
criminal. A common round hat had
been found at the scene of the crime,
and was said to have been worn by
the prisoner. His counsel addressed
the jury at great length upon the in-
sufficiency of the evidence,. and the
hat was produced to them for their
inspection.
"An ordinary black bowler hat,
gentlemen, such as most men wear -
such as many of us wear ourselves!
It is upon evidence of this flim=•y
description that you, gentlemen, are
invited to pronounce the doam of a
fellow -creature -to send to the scaf-
fold" -and so on and so on.
The jury were much impressed, re-
turned a verdict of "not guilty," and
the prisoner was discharged. But he
lingered awkwardly in the dock and
cast wistful glances round the court,
as if something were still weighing
upon his heart. The wartier tapped
him on the shoulder and inqmated
that another gentleman was waiting
to take his place. Then at last he
spoke, in a voice husky with emotion.
"Beg pardon, your lordship, but can
I 'ave my 'at?"
Here is another story from "Pie -
Powder." No lawyer was more sar-
castic in regard to his profession thin
the notable . Devonshire advocate
known for many years as Counsellor
Carter, who possessed the bitterest el
tongue, and did not seem to care one
iota to whom he addressed his re-
marks. Even judges sought to avoid
his outbursts. An example of Car-
ter's unconventional language is af-
forded by an incident which occurred
on one occasion when he was defend-
ing, a man at the Assizes on a charge
of obtaining money by, false pretences.
"False pretences !" said Carter, with
fine scorn. "Why, we all make them
every day -barristers and solicitors
and judges -the whole lot of us ! Talk
of the purity of the judicial ermine!"
Here heeinted derisivelyat the
P
learned judge, who sat cowering on
the bench. "Why, it's only rabbit -
skin !"
More fruit trees will be planted
in the Fall of 1911 and Spring of
1912 than ever before in the history
of Ontario,
The orchard of the future will be
the best paying part of the farm.
We teach our men Salesmanship
Tree Culture and how big profits in
fru!it•growing can be made.
Pay weekly, permanent employ
went; exclusive territory. Write
for particulars.
STONE &11 WELLINGTON
TORONTO.
Not In Sieht.
A countryman named Street owned
a runaway cow. As the season ad-
vanced Street was compelled to make
several long pilgrimages into ,the
country for the reprehensible animal.
On one occasion the trail Ind on and
on until Street had entered tlie en-
virons of a town where a flew trolley
system was installed. Just a; the cow
hunter turned a corner in the sett -
skirts, the car lumbered up and the
conductor called out:
"Cedar Street !"
The owner of the eatrayed cow
stopped in his tracks and bawled back
at the man in blue and geld:
"No, darn her, I ain't seed her,
and when I do it won't be good fer
her blamed old hide either!" •
Racine at His Work.
Racine, the French writer, composed
his work while walking rapidly about,
shouting out the lines in a loud voice.
One day while, he *as thus compos-
ing ".
rn part of his iia • of blrtiiridates"
play
in the Tuilleries gardens in Paris he
was surrounded by' a group of work-
men who tools him to be a maniac.
On his return home from these walks
he would write down scene after
scene in prose, and when. they were
ft sished he would. exclaim, "My trag-
edy is done !" considering the trans-
position of the lines into verse only
a trivial thing.
Accepted the Apology.
An Irishman was going along the
road when an angry bull rushed at
him and tossed hint over a fence,
The Irishman, recovering from his
fall, upon looking up saw the buil
pawing and tearing up the ground,
as is the custom of the animal when
irritated, whereupon he smiled at the
aeiinal and said.
"If. it was not for your boning and
scraping and your humble apoliene.,
you brute, faix I should think that
you'd thrown me over the fence on
purpose." -London Answers.
Swiss Chimney Sweeps.
There are some strange things to be
seen in Switzerland. states The World
Wide Magazine, but nothing stranger
than the ehimney sweeps, who, curi-
ously enough, are the only people in
the •country who wear top hats. The
silk hat, usually of respectable anti-
quity, is for some inexplicable reassn
the recognized headgear of the chim-
ney cleaner in Switzerland, and he
would probably feel as unprofessional
without it sas a policeman without
his helmet or a Muffin man without
his Sat cap.
Compascionablo Nature.
"I haven't much objection to you
personally," said Mr. Cumrox, "but
you know my daughter has been ac-
customed to every luxury.
"Well,"replied the confident suit-
or, "I won't ask her to give up any-
thing on my account. I think I could
go along and enjoy luxury as much as
anybody."
Tiny Liechtenstein.
Liechtenstein, the sinallest of Eu-
rope's sovereign states, has a mon-
arch, a parliament, but no taxes and
no army. Prince John II. provides its
finances and in eeturn nominates
three of its fifteen members of par-
liament.
Curiosity.
Curiosity is finding out something
about somebody else. that doesn't eon -
cern you and "which would make you
mighty mad if somebody bod
oL9efound
it out about you when it didn't t oon-
corn somebody else.
Time To Go Home.
"Well, dear, I guess the honeymoon
is over."
"Why do you say that?" pouted the
bride.
"I've been taking stock abd find
I'm, C14Vlyn ti0 6.J� W _d
WHEN 1S A F AN DRUNK?
Tests of the Police Doctors of the
4ondon Courts.
Mr. Plowden, the celebrated Lon-
don magistrate, is always listened to
with intcreat, and his latest opinion
is attracting more than usual atten-
tior.. .fn dismissing a taxi -cab driver
who was charged with being drunk,
he said he was net much influenced
by the tests made by doctors at police
stations.
Not long ago he was called upon to
try a pian charged with being drunk;
where the doctor's test had been to
make the man stand with his feet
together,clasp his hands behind his
head, and close his oyes. The doctor
pointed out that the man, being
drunk, reeled and had to be support-
ed, but the magistrate doubted even
his own power of maintaining his
equilibrium under such a complicated
test, and dismissed the ease.
A favorite test of sobriety with po-
lice doctors is to make the accused
person repeat some word or words.
their inability to do so correctly be-
ing considered proof of drunkenness;
but here, again, is a test which, if
taken as final, could be made to prove
the most sober person drunk, for
there are words which few people can
pronounce correctly with ease.
This, no doubt, was the view taken
by the magistrate in dismissing a
chauffeur who had come under the
eye of the police, and failed to pro-
nounce "asterisk" after six attempts.
Not so fortunate, however, was the
man who was tested with the lines:
"When Britain first at Heaven's com-
mand Arose from out the azure main,"
He failed at `=azure main," as well
he might; but that was only a part
of his ordeal -a preliminary trot, one
might say. What sealed his doom -
three shillings or five days -was the
difficulty he experienced in touching
his nose with his forefinger when he
was standing with his feet together
and eyes closed.
A far simpler and, it must be ad-
mitted, more conclusive proof of in-
sobriety is the inability to fasten one's
clothes. If a man cannot button his
coat, presuming, of course, that the
necessary buttons and buttonholes: are
there -why, then, he must be drunk.
So thought the Worcestershire magis-
trates who fined a man for drunken-
ness after he had unsuccessfully tried
to button up his waistcoat.
In some parts of Ireland they have
queer ideas as to whether a man is
drunk es not. Some time ago a po-
liceman was conveying a man whom
Ise considered quite helpless to the
police station, when an Irishwoman
stopped him and asked him what he
was doing. "I air. taking .this man
to the station;" said the constable;
"he is drunk." "Drunk?" exclaimed
the Irishwoman, in amazement.
"Why, you must be dreaming. I saw
one of his fingers move!"
Stood Up Apparently" Dead.
The porters at Abbeville station,
France, recently noticed the curious
attitude of a man who had been stand-
ing for a considerable time motionless
before the board on which the delays
of the train service are recorded. It
was observed that his eyes were tight-
ly closed. As he still remained with-
out movement„ an official touched
him on the shoulder. The man, it is
said, immediateltfell o s
int hi arms
his body absolutely rigid. A doctor
who was ealled diagnosed the case as
one of catalepsy. It seems that for
a considerable time the man had been
standing '
the middle die of the bus
d
Y
station n an unconscious condition.
Ancient Science.
It is generally supposed that those
who combated the opinion that the
earth was a sphere when Columbus
proposed his great voyage were only
giving expression to opinions that had
alsSays been entertained. But the
fact is that long before the Christian
era the Greek and Egyptian philo-
sophers entertained the idea that the
earth was round and knew vastly
mere about eclipses, the motions of
the moo i and other astronomical
matters than many do even to -day.
The idea of Columbus had been anti-
cipated by more than sixteen eon-
turies.
Couldn't Resist.
Willie and Tommy were each given
a bit of auntie's wedding eake, nicely
wrapped in white tissue paper, by
their romantic mother. The cake was
to be placed under each pillow for
the wee boys to "dream on."
After the prayers and the "good
nights" had been duly said the moth-
er retired to the sitting room.
Shortly afterward she heard the
announcement in a clear, boyish
treble:
"Mother, Willie's eaten his
dream !"-London Telegraph.
Very Much Settled.
An elderly woman, on being exam-
ined before the magistrate of Bungay,
as to her place of legal • ettlement,
was asked what reasons she had for
supposing that her deceased hus-
band's settlement was at St. Andrews.
The old lady looked earnestly at
the judge and said:
"He was born there, he was mar-
ried there. and they buried him there
and if that isn't settling hien there,
I'd like to know what is 1"
She Was So Timid.
A military man laughed at a timid
little 'woman because she was alarmed
at the noise of a, eannon when a sa-
lute was fired. He subsequently mar-
ried that timid little woman, and
six months afterward he took off Ills
boots in the hall when he cane in
late at night.
The Silent Father.
"I'll bet that num is the father of
six ,or seven oh>'ldtcen,"
"If ,; had less than three he'd be
bragging about then's."
,•
the Natural Part.
` She seems to be a natural flirt."
he said.
'+"*fi�t r wo a traptdiently
repined "There's nothing il�ttuti►1
about her but ,ger framework,"
0,;.
TOr
rpr!•+(q t, i, �m u . inn
i,
� CtICq QY��fi f
NM My ��aaLti YIci
- G'ai.3:YL I ttF I l -a- ves.lI
Mr. Jenea is proud to acknowledge
the great debt of gratitude he owls
"Fruit-r-tives" Ile is glad to have his
letter published in order that other
sufferers may be induced to try these
wonderful tablets mane of fruit juices.
SARNIA, Oxr., Feu. 5th, rete
"I leave been a sufferer for the past
25 years with Constipation, Indigestion
and Catarrh of the Stomach. I tried
many remedies and many doctors, but
derived uo benefit whatever. Finally,
I read an advertisement for "Fruit.a-
tives" I decided to give "Fruit -a -lives"
a trial and they did exactly what was
claimed for them. I have now taken
them for some time and find they are
the only remedy that does ore good. I
have recommended "Fruit-a-tives" to a
great many of my friends, and I cannot
praise these fruit tablets too highly"
PAUL J. JONES,
50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25e.
At dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of
price by Fruit-a-tives 1,iniited. Ottawa.
$OME COOKING HINTS
A. handful of dry beans pieced in a
pie shell will keep it in shape.
Try ad';in g a !eaf'of apinaeh to water
in which peas are cc.okvd; they will
keep a g: od color.
Rub brown sugar on aslice'l nasi pefore
'boiling it, 'Us h..ni mill Baric, .. ,1•'lic-
ions flavor.
When ice cream is buttery, the can
has been turned before the cream was
thuruuguiy e,l ;deet.
When frying [mush, it i:, prcvvs the
crispness if the mush is clipped in the
white of an egg before fryug.
I conomicecl housewifes sorneiimes
gri,id tea leaver, just as they do soiree.
They claim that only half as rnu•:h tea
is ;seeded.
Use a very little laid •.v th the -butter
when frying tomatoes; it. will Let be
detected and the tomatoes will bre less
likely to burn.
Try whipping the cream in the upper
part of tbe double boiler, with fine ice
or cold water placed in the lov.er part.
The cream will not spatter so much,
will be kept cool, and will wisp mush
more quiekely.
ARE YOU GOING WEST THIS
SPRING
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 i to
Vancouver, B.C., Victoria, R.C., Prince
Rupert, B. C., Seatle, Wash., Spokane,
Wash., Portland,Ore• San Francsiso,
Los Angle, Cal., San Diego, Cal.,
and other points in Arizona, British
Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington,
and are on sale daily until April 1uth,
inclusive.
The Settlers excursions apply from
stations in Ontario, Port Hope, Peter-
boro and West to points in Alberta abd
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 Company. The
1 Homeseekers' tickets are good returning
two months from date of issue.
Through coaches and Pullman Tourist
Sleeping ears are operated every Tues-
day in connection with Settlers and
Homeseekers excursions, leaving Tor-
onto 11.00 p.m. and running through to !
Winnipeg via Chicago and St.Pael
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-
ingcars,
h the newest, most pict-
uresque
•and most rapidly developing
section of Western Canada. Through
reservations made
tickets sold and s by
all Grand Trunk Agents. Costs no
more than by other routes.
Trains now in operation Winnipeg to
Saskatoon and Regina, Yorkton and
Canora, 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 Agerit, Union Stat-
ion, Toronto, Ontario.
H. B. Elliott Town Passenger and
Ticket Agent, Phone I.
W.F. Burgman, Station Ticket Agent,
Phone 50.
What, asks the New York Independ-?
ent, could be more inhuman and un -
Christian than the mortification to its
employees by a big banking concern in
this city that they must not marry on
less than $100 a month under peril of
dismissal and loss of a share in the
company's pension fund? But it is
matched by a story of a club of college
girls who agree not to marry for five
years after graduation, and then
only men with $5,000 income.
Had Pains i4 Hu Liar
DOOMS Only Heliffirea Icor
For A Time.
When the liver is inactive everything
seems to go wrong, and .1 lazy, .low or
torpid liver is a terrible affliction, as its
affluence permeates the whole system
and causes Biliousness, Heartburn, .tick
iteadache, Floating Specks before the
::::y , Jaundice, Brown Blotches. (.ouslr-
i,rtion, Catarrh of the Stomaalr, etc'.
!itilburn'c Lasa -Liver Pills stimulate
she slu.grish liver, clean away all waste
id poisonous matter from the system,
seeprevent as well as cure all sickness
• risieg irons a disordered condition of the
ivcr.
Mrs. Wesley Estabrooks, l iidgic Sta.-
:en, N.13., writes: ---"For several years
. nava been troubled with pains in the
'.ver. 1 have had medicine from several
'
l.ictors, but wasonly
relieved for a time
itr them. I then tried Milburn's Laxa-
!..iver fills, and 1 have had no trouble
with my liver since. I can honestly re-
•onunead them to every person who has
ivcr trouble."
Price, 25 Cents per vial or 5 vials for
15.00. For sale at all dealers or mailed
at on r^."eipt )t price by l'1:11. T. Mil-
eern Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
OPEN OUT YOUR 'HAND.
Then Note the Effort it Requires t•
Keep It From Closing.
Many thousands of years have elaps-
ed since the ancestors of man lived in
trees. tit is never to be forgotten that
though ape -like forms, they were not
apes.) Yet, in spite of these tens of
centuries that have Passed by, man has
not yet forgotten the instinct of self
preservation in the forest. As he ,was
a tailless creature he was compelled
to depend for his safety on the grasp-
ing power of his bands and feet. For
many ages, however, he had gradually
been going on the ground more and
more and in the trees less, and less so
that his feet became more adapted for
walking and his hands exclusively for
grasping, with the result that the grip
and muscular strength of his hands be.
came immense. This is still most pow-
erfully evidenced in a young baby,
which, without muscular development,
can within a few days of birth hang
by both bands to a stick for as much ad
five minutes at a time and by one hand
only tor two or three, a task beyond
the power of any adult except an ath-
tete and gymnast.
But a 'fact which is stilt more re-
markable is that to the' present day
there is not one of us that can hold hid
band open without discomfort and
absolutely uo one whose band will stay
opeu at all unless the will is exerted to
that end. Try it! Hold your hand
opeu for three minutes by the watch
and see how tired you will be! Lay
your hand on the table, the palm on
the wood, the fingers over the edge, and
see how. in spite of yourself, they will
curve round and grasp it. Look at the
hand of a sleeping person and think if
the fingers are ever shown to be out
straight.
e
band is
anatomy t
When thea y of the
taken up it will be found that on the
pains and on the under side of the
fingers are numbers of nerves sensi-
tive to touch which respond as read-
ily as the nerves of the eye do to color
or the nerves of the ear drum to
i
sound. These were the peens p ro-
pal
tdction of our tree living ancestors, for
an immediate clutch at a branch was,
necessary in rapid travel in the lower
branches of great forest trees. The
sensitiveness is being lost, but it is
being lost slowly. Yet even today we
can no more prevent responding to the
stimulation of the sense of touch in
our hands than to the sensation of
Tight in the eye or sound in the ear.
Disregarding the thumb, the human
hand is really nothing more than an
adjustable book. It is at rest only
when in the position of a book. When
any one loses a hand the best substi-
tute is a stout metal hook. -New York
American.
EGYPT'S GREEN SUN.
A Phenomenon That Was Commented
Upon by the Ancients.
The appearance of a green light at
sunset was noticed and commented
upon by the ancient Egyptians and
more .particularly so because in the
clear air of Egypt the tints of sunset
are peculiarly distinct.
As the sun there 'descends nearer
and nearer to the horizon and Is im-
mensely enlarged and flaming it sud-
denly becomes for an instant a bril-
liantly green color, and immediately a
series of green rays suffuses the sly in•
many directions, well night to the ze-
nith. The same phenomenon appears at
sunrise, but to a smaller extent. Some-
times, just as the last part of the sun's
disk vanishes, its color changes from
green to blue, and so also after it has
disappeared the sky near the horizon
often is green, while toward the zenith
it is blue.
This was alluded to in Egyptian
writings. Day was the emblem of life
and night that of death, and the noc-
turnal sun, being identified with Osiris,
thus rendered Osiris king of the dead.
The setting sun was green; therefore
Osiris, as the nocturnal deity of the
dead, was painted green. The splendid
coffins of the high priests of Amnion
frequently depict the green sun, and
the funeral deities are all colored
green.
There are innumerable instances in
the Egyptian relies of representations
relative to death being colored green.
The practice undoubtedly arose from
the green tintS or sunrise and sunset
The green stn disk is referred to 5,000
years ago in Egypt. rl'bis Is the earii-
cat known human record or an as-
trunoulleal lihenonti'noti.
NERVOUS DJBILITY
OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will cure you and make a man or
you. Under its influence the br.Sn bee:secs saliva, the More, purifial so that alt
pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up the a'rves boiaene strong as steel. so that
nervousness bashfulness and despondency di apoeai: the ewes become brined, the
face full and clear, energy returns to tl o hoe ', r•i 1 tee mot': 1, physical and' meatal
srstems are invleorateUall d: mins ec.a --uo reere vital waste from the system,
You feel yourself a rain and know rerr.a:.o cannot bo a failure. Don't let quaoka
and Jelin; robyou of your bard earned d.„ars,
Com' NO NAMES USED WI+IiOUT WRITTEN CONSENT
THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS
Toter 11. Summers relates bis experience:
"I was t.ou::led r:.h 2.o ver. r lin';Illty
for ninny years, I lay it to iudi. ereti n
and excesses in youth. I became vory
despondent and dL;n't caro whether X
worked or not. I imagined everyuody
who looked at me gueeaed my secret.
krcheadsseinoeme-Imaginativeycadhapainthe
back of
my head, hands and feet were
cold, tired in the morning, poor appetite,
fingers were shaky, eyes blurred, had-
loose,
asloose, memory poor, etc. Ni:mbness in
the fingers set bland the doct,r told mo
be feared paralysis. I took all kinds of
medicines and tried many first-class
physicians, wore an electric belt for three
months, but received li.tlo benefit. I
iiEF011C TREATMENT was induced to consult Drs. Kennedy& AFTER TnrsrecaT
Kennedy, though I had lost all faith in
doctors. Like a drowning man I commenced the l nw lllsenon Tartlets -se and it
saved my life. The improvement was 11!:o magic -1 could feel the vigor going through.
the nerves. I was cured mentally and physically. I have sent them many patients
and continue to do so.
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY
We treat and cure VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND
URINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and ell Diseases
peculiar to Men.
CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable,to cell write for a Ques ea
Blank for Homo Treatment.
Ds0KENNEDY& KENNEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.
NOTICEEtAolloluerttCsnfardmn CCanorradaespmoundbnecae dDreepsasrted-
anammascaszotroment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to
see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and
Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY;, Windsor, Ont.
Write for our private address.
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Times and Weekly Globe .
Times and Daily Globe
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star....
Times and Toronto 'Weekly bun
Times and Toronto Daily btar ...
Times and Toronto Daily News..
Times and Daily Mail and Empire. . ......
Times and 'Weekly Mail and Empire
Times and 'Fanners' Advocate .........
Times and Canadian Farm (weekly)
Times anis Farm and Dairy
Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press.
Times and Daily Advertit:er....... ...... .
Times and London Advertiser' (meekly), ... ....
Times and London Daily Free Press 5lcrnir•g
Edition
Evening Edition
Times and Montreal Daily Witness
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness
Times and Wo
Times and Westernr'ld Home Monthly, Winnipeg....
Times and Presbvterian....
Times and Westminster
Times, Presbyterian and Westminster
Times and Toronto Saturday Night
Times and Busy Man's Magazine
Times and Home Journal, Toronto
Times and Youth's Companion
Times and Northern Messenger ......... .....
t Times and Daily World....
Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly).
NTimes and Canadian Pictorial
1. Times and Lippincott's Magazine
4' Times and Woman's Home Companion ..., ..'.
+
+I' Times and Delineator
.t. Times and Cosmopolitan .
+ Times and Strand
+t Times and Success
'T. Times and McClure's Magazine
Times and Munsey's Magazine .......... • •
Times and Designer '
Times and Everybody's
+These prices are for addresses in
Britain.
1.60
4.01.,
1.1,5
1.13
2 5U
2.30
4.60
1.110
2.35
1,60
1.80
1.60
2.$5
1.60
3'.50
290
3..•0
1,r5
..,25
1.60
22 5
2.25
S.25
3 40
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1.15
:2.90
1.85
3,10
2.90
1.60
3.15
2.60
2 2.400
2.50
2.45
2.00
2,55
1.85
2.40
Canada or Great If
4. The above publications may be obtained by Tilr.ts T.
T subscribers in any combination, the price for any pub'rc•a-
4. tion being the figure given above less $I.co representirg
the price of The Times. For instance : 4
4.
+ The Times and Weekly Globe 41 00 If
+The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less 41.00). 1ss
35
..
1' 42.95 3,
+ making the price of the three papers $2.95. 44
4.
The Times and the Weekly Sun.... 4i.2±0 +
+ The Toronto Dail` Star (G2.301ess 41.00).. 1,110 a-
The Week13 Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) 110
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the four papers for $3.70.
If the pub icat on you want is not in above list let
.. us know. We - • n supply almost any well-known C a 1
na-
' dian or American publication. These prices Pre strictly $
4. cash in advance 4.
S -nd subscriptions by post office or express order to
4.
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4.WStone ONTARIO
44.. AM
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