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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-06-19, Page 3IRE WINGIIA.M TIMES JUNE 19 1913 Old -Time Wallpaper. (Hartford Courant). A sample of the first wallpaper used in America is in the possession of Frank Hall. It was imported from London, England in 1738, by Samnel Tallcott, to paper the rooms in a house in Glaston- bury, which was built for him by his father, Dee Benjamin Tallcott, in 1725- 1727. The paper was taken from the walls of the house in Glastonbury, and is in as good a condition as when it was placed there, a proof of the good ma- terial. Mr. Hall has been offered a Large sum by the big wallpaper firm of Alfred Peate & Co., of New York, for the paper, to use in a window display, but has refused the offer. He is going to send a sample piece to Admiral George Dewey, a descendant of the Tallcotts, with his compliments, in a few days, Mr. Hall is a descendant of the Tallcotts, as well as a former resi- dent of Glastonbury. "rake Plenty of Time to Hat, There is a saying that "rapid eating is slow suicide." If you have formed the habit of eating too rapidly you are most likely suffering from indigestion or constipation, which will result even- tually in serious illness unless corrected. Digestion begins in the mouth. Food should be thoroughly masticated and insalivated. Then when you have a fullness of the stomach or feel dull and stupid after eating, take one of Cham- berlains Tablets. Many servere cases of stomach trouble and constipation have been cured by the use of these tablets. They are easy to take and most agreeable in effect. Sold by all dealers. Mr. George White, head of the firm of Geo. White & Sons, manufacturers of threshing machinery, London, died sud- denly at his home, aged 80 years. If the sheep are to be washed before being shorn, do it early as possible,',so they may be clipped before the hottest weather sets in. And in washing do not dip them in cold water while they are warm from driving on a hot day. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S . CASTORIA ABSOLUTE SECURITY, 4,44•LVNI/4/1410 Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pilisa Must Sear Signature of See Pec.Slmile Wrapper Below. Teri small and as easy t4 taste as sugars • • + FOR FIEADACHE. CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS, ITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER: V �� I'OR CONSTIPATION PI FOR SALLOW SKIN: FOR THE ciatan r Mus. itotru�SC.. jb I Purely Vegctablo,.4:E.ve�bd CWRE' SiCK, HEADACHE.... WANTED ED A live representative for WINGHANI - and sur. ounding District to sell high-class stock for THE FONTHILL NURSERIES 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 bin profits in fruit -growing can be made. Pay weekly, permanent employ- ment, exclusive territory. Write for particulars. STONE & WELLINGTON Tot orrTo, What to Shun, The deadly finger bowl, oh, shunt It is the haunt of germs, And every time you drink from ono You're tilled with bugs and worms. Beware the common sugar bowl, For microbes in it thrive. They have no mercy on your soul They'll eat you up alive. The common fork and table knife Bacteria conceal. Indeed a man may lose his life By eating just ono meal. The deadly critters swarm. on plates And in the food we carve. it really seems as if the fates Decreed that we must starve. 'rho drinking cup, the towel, too, Are highly charged with death, And it is hardly safe icor you To even draw your breath. Beware the coaxing smiles and smirks Of yonder pretty miss, For dread disease always lurks 13ehlnd the simple kiss. And thus it is, the deadly germ Attends you from your birth And makes you duck and dodge and squirm Until you quit the earth. -Springfield (Mass.) Uniop Not in on It. A white rose. in his buttonhole and cotton gloves on his dirty hands, old Bill Leafer swaggered jauntily along the street. At the corner a friend stop- ped him, exclaiming incredulously: "Why, Bill, 01' man, what's happen- ed--biu left some money?" "So. no," said Bill. "It's me golden weddin'. I'm celebratin' me golden weddin"' "But why ain't your wife celebratin' it too Y' inquired his friend. "I see 'er gain' to work as usual this mornin'. Why ain't she got a white rose and noo gloves?" 'air!" muttered Bill as he grunted reflectively. "She ain't got puffin' to do wiv it! She's we fourth!" --Answers. Exasperating. My shirt stud may slip from my Angers And under the bureau may roll, . But 1 don't fret and fume As 1 grope with a broom, For my temper is under control, And 1 aim to be patient whenever My collar hangs on to my tie, But my speech is not neat When a grapefruit 1 eat And the juice of it squirts in my eye. -Detroit Free Press, I may slip on the skin of an orange And alight in a puddle of mud, But 1 do not complain Of the ache or the pain That is caused by the sickening thud. I can cling to my patience while hearing A joke that has moss on it sprung, But I utter a whoop ( That is wild when the soup Is so hot that it scorches my tongue. -Chicago Record -herald. The Reason. "I've been wondering about you," said one lawyer to another. meeting him on the street, "What were you wondering about me 7" "Well, I've heard you address a jury, and 1 have thought that you were the most eloquent man in Cleveland. Then I've heard you make an after dinner speech at a banquet auti you were - pardon me -pretty rotten. Now, bow is that?" "I'TI tell you. When I'm talking to a jury my dinner depends on my speech. When I'm talking to a buuch of diners I've already had my dinner." -Cleveland Plain Dealer. Childhood. When he was just a little kid, He'll frankly now confess, Ile would reluctantly obey IIIs learned governess. And when, a little later, he Was sent away to "school He went rejoicing to be free Forever from her rule. But now he fears his childish woes Are coming back once more And that a most unhappy fate Is yet for him in store, So "Down with suffragettes!" he cries. "Let them no more progress! FIanged if I will again be ruled By any governess!" -New York Times. Tough Luck, "What's doing?" asked the tall plumber. "You're all (lolled up." ' "Had a date with my best girl," ex- plained the short bricklayer. "But aren't you going to keep it?" "I showed np, all right, but she wasn't there." "That was pretty tough." "I wouldn't ('are," said the short bricklayer, "only 1 went and bad my shoes shined all for nothing." -Youngs- town (0.) Telegram. Monopoly. Pore of John FI. Cr'oesns he Certainly must envy me - Me with health and strength and youth, Wife and chillun, love and truth. No, I ain't what you'd call rich, And I'm sorry fnr all sick. Makes a feller money lustful, Cdld and cruel and distrustful, For of Croesus illy heart melts. Fig's got millions, nothin' else. I'd like for to share with him, .. But the chance is mighty slim. I can't give my joy, and health, And he won't divide his wealth. -New York Globe. Why He Was Glad, The man with the long beard stood pensively at the curbing gazing at the passing traffic in the street "I hall with delight the advent of the automobile," he muttered aloud, "for no longer need 1 fear crossing the, street lest some aungry horse mistake me for a walking bale of buy." -Gun. If Love Is Blind. If Love is blind, As people say, Hoev does ho find The Shortest way And then so often turn about. When every. cent He had 1s spent. And find the same way going nut? -Detroit Gree Press. Net Needed Anyway. "When 1 go 00 a trip 1 never know what 1 ought to take with nie,",; "Oh, I do; it's write 'dnpi" 1 to he all my dresses and les ve '••• lid my h*mbandl"--La Vie Parisitao..e. YOUR BOY. (By Elbert Hubbard.) Be patient with the boys. You are dealing with soul -stuff. Destiny awaits just around the cor- ner. Boys envolve into men, and some- times men charge the boundary line of provinces; they crown kings, and they put them to flight, They being contention or they make peace. They may build or they may destroy. But a boy misused, abused, betrayed, never forgets and seldom forgives. It is a terrible thing to. plant the germ of suspicion and hate in the mind of a child. Tyranny visited on a boy may im- plant in his heart dragons teeth that string up and grow into armed men. The breath of hate consumes and its voice affrighths. Gluttony and greed sometimes leaves the boy out of the equation. Gluttony and greed fattens and forsakes. It in- vites and it alienates. It welcomes and then it repels. Grasping greed sometimes forgets. It is the thing that brings mental and moral disease and disorder of the state that cannot be cured. Boys cannot be deceived. Naturally, they are truthful. They are elemental. They do not know how they judge or why. The word of your lip counts for little. They know the thing that is hidden in your heart. To arrest boys and fasten upon them the strong hand of the law is a tragic thing. A slight, a boy will forgive; but in- justice, never, Boys can be led; they can't be driven. They respond to love, but tyranny may set their hearts aflame. My heart goes out to the boys. I know one newsboy who supports a mother and several brothers and sisters younger than he. I know two newsboys, brothers, whose scanty savings are sending an elder sister to the State Normal School, that she may be fitted to become a teacher. Thomas A. Edison was a newsboy. He sold papers on the streets of De- troit, and on the Grand Trunk trains. While selling papers on the railroad platform at Mount Clements, he saw a child toddle out on the track, in the face of an approaching train. At the risk' of his life, Thomas Edison, the newsboy, grabbed the youngster, sprang upon the footboard of the engine and saved his life. For this deed the station agent re- warded Edison by teaching him the, ke telegraph . y We know the rest. Paganini was a street musician when a boy, playing his violin and holding up his hat for pennies. Martin Luther was an outcast and a street singer when a boy. Occasionally the proud and the strong would push him out of the way into the gutter. Such treatment made scars on his soul that time did not efface. It is a terrible thing to still anima- tion and joy and enthusiasm in the heart of a child. Boys should be encouraged, and not ground down to a starvation point in all of their worthy and useful little industries. Give the boy a chance to grow, to enjoy, to work, to save his pennies and become a man. I used to know a newsboy who carried his wares up and down in front of the hotel where I stopped. The years went by, as the years do. Twenty-five years passed, and I stood in a court of appeal to present a motion which was a vital importance to me. The judge who sat on the bench look- ed to me strangely familiar. All at once it came over me with a flash that this judge was once the newsboy from whom I had bought newspapers in front of the hotel. He now held for me the ability to wither or to bless, to destroy or to protect. Fortunately, for me, his heart and brain w -re right. Be patient with the boys. Bad boys are good boys who misdirect their energies. The hope of the rade lies with the boys. •In a year or two we will be going to hear then preach from pul- pits; we may go to them to borrow money; they may operate onus for ap- pendicitis -aye, they may preach our funeral sermons. Nobody can prophesy the success to which a boy will attain. Difficulty, trial, hardship, work - these are the things that evolve boys into men. Boys can be led. They can- not be driven. Be patient with the boy, You are dealing with soul -stuff. Destiny awaits around the corner. -- 'Health Culture.' While attempting to ignite the head- light of a Grand Trunk freight engine in the Mimic() yards, Tilos. J. Woods of Cooksville, a fireman, slippedand losing his balance fell about three feet. Ire was picked up unconscious and died in three hours. PRACTICA�V GIVEN Li? TO "Frui -a-fives" Curvdl Rims anal Rlad1lcr WILLIAMSTOWN, ONT,, JtraY 27t11. 19lo "I have much plea,ure in testifying to the almost i.e....T.:lo i i lam Et I have derived from tak ng "Fruit -a -Lives". I was a lifelong shfferer from Chronic Constipation, and tl:e only medicine I ever scoured to do Me any rez1 god was "bruit-a-tives". This medicine cured me when everything else failed. Also, last sprig;, I 1.ad a severe attack of Bladdt r Trouble coupled with Kidney Trouble, and "Fruit-a-tives" cured these complaints for me, when the physicians attending the had practically given me up.. I am new over eighty years of age and I can strongly recommend. "Fruit -a - tires" for C!:ronic Constipation and Bladder and Kidney Troubles" JAMES DINGWALL. "Fruit -a -Lives" is the only medicine in the wend. made of fruit juices --and is tee greate,t L lney, bladder and liver medicine ever pat on the market. 500 a iron, 6 for w2.go trial size, 250. At dealers or sent postpaid on'receiptof price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. FOR MARRIED FOLK. Generally one finds when a marriage is not ideal that the couple are suffering from too much of each other's society. In the days when most people lived in houses surrounded by gardens the har- assed hero or heroine could flee in the arbor and indulge in the luxury of soli- tude. But there is no such as solitude in the modern flat. Any every human being feels the need of being alone and absolutely quiet at times, says a well- known woman writer. "The girl who has been in business before her marriages realizes that her husband is fagged out when he comes home from his day's work, and, if she remembers her own experience, she knows that he can recuperate and get rested sooner if she will refrain from pouring out the trials and tribulations of the day in his ears or adding to his nervous state by a weepy sympathy. Many people are like animals when they are i11 or very tired. They want to be !eft absolutely alone. "Every person is entitled to a room or den where they can retire and com- mune with their own souls when they need to do so, without fear of hurting the feelings of the rest of the family. The small apartments where all privacy is impossible have had their share in adding to modern `Nerves.' "As modern living conditions make it impossible to get the privacy that went with larger houses, and more space, that sense of privacy must be recogniz- ed and respected And fostered and the odious familiarity thatinevitably breeds contempt must be guarded against. One can do it if one is forwarned and I think that problem lies in the hands of the wife. "Love should not be a bar to polite- ness, and the fact that one is married is no good excuse for forgetting those small phrases that go with a request such as `Do you mind?' or 'Will you be kind enough?' whichone would never omit to a stranger and which smooth the rough places wonderfully." Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar- rhoea Remedy. Every family without exception should keep this preparation at hand during thehotweatherof the summer months. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diar- rhoea Remedy is worth many times its cost when needed before the summer is over. It has no superior for the pur- poses for which it is intended, Buy it now. For sal by all dealers. A coal field that has been burning under ground for many years has been found in Germany. Shafts sunk to 18 feet opened veins of blazing coal. An optimist says that all things are for the best. If this be true those of us who are next best haven't a shoe: 41v fj 't©t 's p ,�. �,'�" cryo �! pry_}} �". tpsi�crt t pp++;;.` -:la iS igls�i S i0 ul S' FE HEART, J. Caant r., 'Mount vi(•t,, Ont., elderly c;,.1170 now, lnrl ali,Aut two ye::r:: s:;n I b'catue faint, .ata Subject to he1 :cine', palpitation f the Ilk art end shortness of breath. wept to a do -t, nr but seemed to remain .lie some, until one of my ne :ghbo:':; re- •.1:nl2tended ",tug n rr.'s II1;.tn'e AND PILLS. I : i .2'.ly followed the i1"1C.`, ltl:d L.11 to flay" :1 5trntlg, robust :otu:ln, and I thank :i1tLacttN'S IL .tlt1 1ND NTHWE PILLS for my prei etit state :1f health, and hove re,ontulende(i tlietn suflerillg from heart trou! ile," I'rke : J cents per box or 3 boxes for, :.25* at all de.tle:., et lcd direct on • Oe'eipt of '`, :tic, 1 y'1'I:t 'l.:.' 1•llfll Co., ..Ote1.1LO, ') ) Rules for Cooking Vegetables All green vegetables, root, and tubers should be crisp and firm and thoroughly clean when put on to cook. Soak wilted vegetables in cold water to freshen them, 1 Put salt in cooking vegetables when half done. A dash of soda helps green vegetables to keep their colour. Peas and spinach are a much better color if cooked uncovered. Cook delicately flavoured vegetables in a small amount of water. Cook vegetables which have a strong odor or taste in a large amount of water. Cook young carrots and beets whole, then skin and slice. Clean vegetables with a brush. Salt tends to darken cabbage, cauli- flower or brussels sprouts. Tie cauliflower and cabbage in a piece of cheesecloth, It is easy to handle and keep its shape. Always wash a dozen pea pods to cook with the peas. This gives them a better flavour. Peas are delicious when cooked in the pod. The pods burst open and rise to the top, the peas settle at the bottom. Vegetables thoroughly ventilated while cooking are thought to be more wholesome add of better flavor. Vegetables should not be cooked in an iron kettle. ' Careful trimming and thorough wash- ing are essential. Cook vegetables es soon after gather- ing as possible. Cook uncovered Spinach, green peas, cauliflower, cabbage and brussels sprouts. Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonol restores every nerve in the body to its proper tension ; restores vine and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at Ince. Phoephonol will make you a new man. Price S3 a box. or two for t5. Mailed to any address. The Scobell Drug t o., St. causalities. ont. Rev. W. E. Wilson of Little Current was chosen by the temperance conven- tion for Manitoulin and Mindemoya as temper.nce candidate for the Legis- lature. Wtfdj.c�'r. °aoVll�i1�+pail+°;.i iGf it Popular Stallions The Imported Civ desdale Stalloo, Mascot, No 4518, Vc•1 14, , (anr.da, will snake the following ruute duNdil,t the season :-Mon. day -Leave Geo. 1. b obSrtsoln's :-ale stable and proceed to Wesley Leggett's near White- churnll Inc noon; therce to Leask McGee's, con. 10, East Wawnuosh, for night Tuesday - To Robt. orates, con. 10, East Wawanosh for noon; thence to his own stable Wingham, for night. We.,nesday-To Jos. Smith's, eon. 8, Tnreberry, for neon; thence to Janes T. Wylie's, con. 0, Turnberry, for night. Thurs- day -To Tl os IOcM4chrel's, y, roxeter gravel, for noon ; thence to Kiug lidward Hotel stable, W'roxeter. for night. ht. Frida -To John Me- Naughton's, eon. 2, Turnbc rp,for noon ;thence to J. W. King'r, Bluevale, for nislit. Saturday -To E. B. Jenkins's, liluevale road, for noon; thence to his own stable, W ingli m, where he will remain unlit), the following Monday horn- ing. Mascot Enrolment No 1328. The imported O.yc'sdale Stallion, Goldlink. No. 9000, U.N.A., Canada. ('ntario Enrolement No 1330and will make the following mute during the season:- MONDAY. -Le ve his owner's stable, r(tu' vale, lo Thos. Abraham's, con. 1. Morris, for noon; then , o G. orge War- wick's, con. 2, for night. '1 UFSDAY.-To Jos. Sheddon's, con. 4, for noon; then to Geo, Mc- Farlane's, con. 7, Grey, for night WEUNES- DAY.-Afternoin to Walter F,i'rest's con. 2, Morris, for night. THUR-iDAY,- To Chris Moffatt's, con. A, Turnberry, for noon ; then to King Edward Hotel stable, Wrnxeter, for night. FRIDAY -To .Tas. Moffatt's, con 1, Turnberry, for noon; then to his owner's stable, Rluevnle, and remain until the follow- ing Monday Morning. The imported ('lydoadale Stallion, Drum- burle Chief, No 5318, Vol. 14, C H.A., ( ant. da. Ontario itnrolunent No 1329, will make the following route during thcr season: --MONDAY -Leave his owner's stable, Bluevale, to Ber- nise Payne's, conGrey, for noon; then to T. H. Sollars's, con. 3, Morris, for night, TUES- DAY -To American Hotel, for nor.n ; then to Jas. Spier's, con.1, Morris. for night. WED- NESDAY. -To Jas. Nichols, eon. 0, Morris, for noon; then to Norman Walsh's, Belarave gravel, for night. TRUIISDAY.-To John Mc- Lean's, con. 8, East Wawanosh, for noon ; then to .fos. Miller's, con. 3, Morris. for night. FRI- DAY. -To Geo. T. Robertson's stable, Wing ham, for noon ; then to his owner's stable, by way of B. Line, and remain until the fol- lowing Monday morning. J. W. KING, Proprietor. NEWSPA P ER BARGAIN S 60 cents will pay for the TIMES to January ist,1914. $2.50 will pay for the 'PINE~, and Toronto Daily Globe to January lst, 1914, $1 will ply for TIMES and Toronto Weekly Globe to January lot,1914. $2 will pay for Toronto Daily Globe to January lst, 1914. Leave your order at once. It will receive prompt at- tention. The. Times Office r NERV03JS DEBILITY, OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will you and make amap of you. UndgritsinAuem=o the brain becomes active, the blood puttied ao that all pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up; the nerves become strong as steel, w, that nervousness, bashfulne:.s and despondency d,sappear;; the ey"s become, bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body', a'ui the mor :1, physical and mental You feel are urself Aman ands knowslmcarr'age cannot vital failure. from the let quuacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned. duilar5, Qom" NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS Peter E. Summers relates hie experience; "Ives troubled wi: h Nervones Debility for manyyears, Il.:yit to indiscretisa and excesses in youth. I became very despondent and df.:n't care whether 1 worked or not. I imagined everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreams at night weakened me -my back ached, bad pains in the back of my head, bands and feet were cold, tired in the morning, poor appetite, fingers were shaky, eyes blurred, hair loose, memory poor, etc. Numbnessin the fingers set in and the doctor told mo he feared paralysis. I took all kinds of medicines and tried many first-class physicians, wore an electric beltforthree months, but received little benefit. I BEFORE TREATMCNT was induced to consult Drs. Kennedy Arrca TREATMENT Kennedy, though I lad lost all faith in doctors. /Ake a drowning man I commenced the Nrw Mernon TREATMENT and it saved my life. The improvement was like magic -I could feel the vigor going through the nerves. I was cured mentally and physically. I have sent them many patient* and continue to do so. CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY We treat anti cure VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND URINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Diseases peculiar to Men. CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. if unable to call write fora Question Blank for Home Treatment. DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. NOTICNOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed E to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- newasemanams ment 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, •1'3 ++++++04.444+++++++4.4.4.4.4.+ 3r •1' '1' H. tea,. 'l- 'i e Times Clubbing List Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Baily tilobe Time's and Family Herald and W eeKly Star.... Times and 'Z Or'Onts eekiy Sun .... Tinges and Toronto Daily Star Times and Toronto Daily News. Times and Daily Mail and Empire. Times and Weekly Mail and Empire •. • • . Times and l"arnlers' Advocate • ... -. • • • . - '1'imes and Canadian Farm (weekly) Times and Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly 1' tee Pr(ss. Times and DaiIN Advertiser....... .. ... Times and London Advertiser (weekly) ... Times and London Daily Free Press Meinilg Edition .. Evening Fditicn Times and Montreal Daily Witness s and Montreal Weekly Witness Times Tirnes and World W toe Times and Western Borne Itiontbly, Tithes and Pr.^.sby terian ... ..... ............. Times and Westminster Times, Presk'Fterian and Wtsiroinster Pimps and Toronto Saturday Night Times and Busy Man's Magazine Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Youth's Companion .... Times and Northern Messer ger Togas and Daily World .... ..... Times and Canadiar, Magazine (monthly) Times and Canadian Pictorial Times and Lippincott's Magazine Times and Woman's Home Companion ......... Times and Delineator Times and Cosmopolitan Times and Strand Times and Success Times and McClure's Magazine Times and Munsey's Magazine Times and Designer Times and Everybody's ••••-. 1,60 9..5E 1.b5 1,75 2tO 3.30 4.50 1.60 2.35 1,60 1.80 1.60 2.85 1.60 3.50 2 90 3.50 1.b5 2.25 1.60 2.25 2.25 3.25 8.40 4. 1) .50° 1.75 2.90 1.85 •i 3.10 -. 2.90 a" 1,604'x. 8.15 .i. 2.66 2.40 n 2 2.50 a 3,45 2.eo '8 2.55 1.85 a$ 2.40 4. a,. .I. •s° .1" + These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great $ Britain. f : The above publications may be obtained by Tim M subscribers in any combination, the price for any publira- + tion being the figure given above less $ I.00 representir g the price of The Times. For instance : The Times and Weekly Globe $1.60 9 The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 Iess $1.00). 1.35 .I. -'- 4' $2.95 4. making the price of the three papers $2.95. The Times and the Weekly Sun....,..... $1.80 The Toronto Daily Star (82.30 less 81.00).. 1,30 The Weekly Globe (81.60 less $1.00) 60 •I•-.___-. 4 + $3.704. the four papers for $3.70. g. 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 4. cash in advance 4. Stand subscriptions by post office or express order t{) •i• 4. 4. 4. '•.l• The Times Office4. Stone Block W)iNGHAIVI ONTARII 4.+ Wingham, Ont. ; ,0•1' ' "rr>:++">•3A"l 'a'+r•+' ++'k'z•+