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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-07-17, Page 3"Sercylia IN/Larlica" lw
SECRETS OF HOME LIFE
Statements made by patients taking the New Method Treatment: They know it Cures
pr. No Names sr Testimonials
CONSTITUTIONAL BLOOD DISEASE.
Patient No. 16474. "The spots are all
gone from my logo and arms and I fee)
good now. I am very grateful to you
and shall never forgot the favor your
medicines have done for mo, You can
use my name in recommending It to
any sufferer. I am going to get mar-
ried soon. Thanking you once more,
eta"
SATS TWO MONTHS CUBED HIM.
Patient No. 16765. Age 21. Single.
Indulged In Immoral halts 4 years. De-
posit in urine and drains at night.
Varicose Veins on both sides, pains in
back, weak sexually. Ile writes: -"I
received your letter of recent date and
in reply 1 am pleased to say that after
taking two months' treatment I would
consider myself completely cured, as I
have seen no signs of them coming
back (ono year).
THE WORLD SEEMS DIFFERENT.
Patient No. 15023. "1 have not had
a regular Emission I don't know when
and am feeling fine. The world seems
altogether different to me and I thank
God for directing me to you. You have
been an honest doctor with me."
used without written consent
VARICOSE VEINS CURED.
Case No. 16886. Symptoms when he
started treatment: -Ago 11, single, In.
Bulged in immoral habits several years.
Varicose Veins on both sides-pimpler
on the face, eta After two months'
treatment he writes as follows: "Your
welcome letter to hand and am very
glad to say that I think myself cured.
My dis-
appeared for quite a while aVeins have nd d itsely ems
a cure. I work harder and feel less
tired. I have no desire for that habit
whatever and if I stay like this, which
I have every reason to believe I will.
Thanking you for your kind attention,'
etc.
GAINED 14 POUNDS IN ONE MONTH.
Patient No, 13522, This patient (aged
58) had a chronic case of Nervous De -
fifty and Sexual Weakness and was run
down in vigor and vitality. After one
month's treatment he reports as fol-
lows: -"I am feeling very well. I have
gained 14 pounds in one month, so that
I will have to congratulate you." Later
report: "I am beginning to feel more
like a man. I feel my condition is
getting better every week." Ills last re-
port: -"Dear Doctors -As I feel this is
the last month's treatment that I will
have to get, I thought at one time I
would never be cured but I put con-
fidence in you from the start and you
have cured mol'
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY
We treat and euro VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS 'DEBILITY. :BLOOD AND
URINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Diseases
peculiar
ee CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable to call write for a Question
Blank for Home Treatment.
test • NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Can-
�w(r�a_
NOTICE adian Correspondence Department as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY. WINDSOR, ONT.
DRS. KENN EDY& KEN N EDY
L Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. ai
TILE WINGIIAM TIMES, L'LY 17, 191;
PILES.
You will find relief in Zam-Buk 1`
It eases the burning, stinging
pain, stops bleeding and brings
ease. Perseverance,rwith Zam_
Buk, means cure: Why not prove
this? 4U Drawls,: , Storca.-
Wheat Bran as a Medicine.
If wheat bran were put up in fancy
packages and sold at about one hundred
times its actual market value, there is
no doubt but what it would be used as
a medicine more frequently. Such is
the peculiarity of human nature that
wrongfully associates cheapness with
poor quality in everything, says Dr. A.
Ernest Gallant, of New York. Some
physician assert there is no better laxa-
tive than wheat bran. Many physicians
go further and declare it has no equal
as a laxative. For ages farmers and
stockmen have known the valuable
properties of wheat and bran and have
fed it -not to their own superior bodies
-but to their cattle, horses and hogs.
Bran acts as a laxative because it is
made up for the most part of indigest-
ible cellulose, which is a white com-
pound having the properties of starch,
but in this case being non-aborbable.
For this reason the bran takes up a
large amount of water and swells,
which adds to the bulk in the stomach
and intestines and thus quickly and
easily removes all the deadly toxins
that gather in the intestines.
DR. A. W. CHASE'S
CATARRH POWDER
c1.
is sent direct to the diseased parts by the
Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers,
clears the air passages, stops drop-
pings in the throat andermanent-
ly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever.
25c. a box ; lower free. Accept no
substitutes. All dealers or Edmaneon,
Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto.
According to the census of 1910,
there are 6,361,500 farms in the United
States, and about five -eights of these
are operated by owners; the remaining
three-eigths by tenants. There is a
larger proportion of farm owners in
New England than in any other section
of the Union. In the Southern States
about half the farms are rented. The
average value of farms operated by
owners in the Unitsd States is 86,289,
and the average mortgage 51,715.
4,
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTO R I A
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
Nluet Bear Signature of
See Vac.SlmIle Wrapper Below.
Reay small and as earl
•tal-take us etagarr
FOR HEACACHt?.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FORJORPID LIVER.
FORCONSTIPATION
FOR SALLOW SKIN:
• FOR THE COMPLEXION
CARTERS
I9TLE
IVER
PILLS.
*Mil
m$tffNfl MUST MAV! MATUM C.
i1M Ms iI Poiret? vegetable..s. !w(�
�--asar �a�saaasa
CURE; SICK HEADACHE.
WANTED.
Good Local Agent
at once to represent the
Old Reliable
Foothill Nursuries
A splendid list of fruit and
ornamental stock for Fall
Delivery in 1913 and
Spring Dilivery in 194„
Start at once and secure ex.
clusive territory. We
supply handsome free out-
fit and pay highest con -
missions.
Write for full particulars.
Stone 86 Welliogtoo,
Toronto .. - Ontee.rio.
NEW GOLD LEAF PROCESS.
Interesting Method Introduced by
London Firm of Producers.
In a new process for the manufac-
ture of gold leaf introduced by a Lon-
don firm a highly polished aluminum
ring about five feet in diameter and
five and one-half inches wide is cov-
ered
owBred with an adhesive substance, such
as a solution of gum, and is allowed
to dry. The adhesive surface is dust-
ed with metallic powder so that it is
covered with a very thin layer of base
metal. This layer is polished and
the ring is rotated slowly with its
lower surface in contact with a solu-
tion of a nickel salt, the ring being
connected with one pole of a battery,
while the other pole is immersed in
the nickel solution.
An electro -deposit of nickel is thus
produced on the polished layer of
base metal. The nickel deposit is
washed and the ring is rotated with
its surface in contact with a solution
of gold, the electrical connections be-
ing as before, so that the latter metal
is electroplated on the nickel. There
are thus four layers on the periphery
of the ring, namely, gum, base metal,
nickel and gold, but each layer of
metal is so thin that the combination
is said to be even thinner than the
best gold leaf.
To remove the leaf from the alumi-
num ring a transverse cut is made in
the continuous film, and, starting
from this cut, the ring is rotated
slowly with its lower part immersed
in a liquid which dissolves the ad-
hesive substance, when the filin falls
from it and is received upon a band
of paper traveling at the same speed
as the periphery of the ring. The filen
and paper axe than cut up and made
into books.
Meyerbeer.
Meyerbeer was so nervous and
"fidgety" about his works that when
they were in course of preparation or
rehearsal or performance he never
gave himself or any one else concern-
ed a moment's peace of mind. He was
constantly making changes or altera-
tions in the score and would some-
times write a passage in three or four
different colored inks, in order to try
the different effects, and then could
not make up his mind which was the
best. He worried over his opera
"L'Africaine" so long, delaying, re-
touching and polishing, even while it
was in rehearsal, that the self-imposed
labor made him i11, and he died be-
fore the first public performance.
Constantinople.
Constantinople has been threatened
before by the Bulgarians, the most
memorable of the early attacks having
been made in 813, when the barbarian
Brum arrived before the city's walls.
The siege, it is related, was begun
with high ritual, but before more than
a demonstration had been made the
Byzantine emperor came to terms.
While the negotiations were going on
Krum was nearly killed, a peril which
so enraged the founder of the Bul-
garian empire that he laid waste the
suburbs and retired with a host of
captives. Fortunately for Constants.
nople, when the Bulgarian prince re-
turned to take a fuller revenge he was
seized with apoplexy and died.
How to Fluff the Hair.
Hair can be fluffed and made to
standout well from the head, even
without curling, by brushing it with
an outward twist of the wrist that
lifts the hair up from the scalp.
For this brushing, divide thehair
into strands and go over the head in
a circle, then begin further up and
continue until all the hair has been
lifted and lightened.
11 this style of brushing is kept up
daily, or even several times a week,
the straightest and stringiest of hair
soon becomes dry and easy to puff out
from the face.
Enjoy Their Quarrels.
"So you've been married twenty-five
years?"
"That's right."
"And never had a quarrel, I sup-
pose?"
Not so. We've had many a quar-
rel."
Not serious ones?"
"Yes, serious ones."
"And yet you've been happy?"
"Sure. It makes my wife happy to
get the best of me so often, and I'm
tickled to death if I win one argu-
ment out of ten."
A Curious Illness.
"Yes," said the good woman who
was describing the last illness of a
friend, "she was taken suddenly sick
with pantomime poisoning, and four
doctors came to the house and insulted
about her and diagramed her case very
closely. They decided that she had
eaten some fish or something that had
paragraphs in it, and so they gave
her a hypocritical injection of a ser-
ial that would destroy the basilica,
but she didn't seem to help any, and
she soon was in'a state of chromo."
Disinterested.
"What a splendid woman she is !"
"I am glad to think you have not
such a wife."
"Such a wife! Why, man, you have
no idea of her generosity. When I
was poor she refused to Marry me he.
cause, she was afraid of being a bur-
den upon me, but the moment I cane
into my fortune she consented at once.
•What do you think of that for kind-
ness?"
The Harp's Origin.
Mary -I've just found out w'1at was
the origin of the harp.
John (looking up from his news-
papeor)-Yes?
Mary -It was in the garden of Eden.
Eve ate the apple, and men have
been harping about it ever since.
Genius Required.
Any man can work for a living. It
takes genius to get other folks to earn
it for you.
Caution.
In every affair consider what pre.
cedes and what follows and then un•
dertakc it.--Epietetue,
3
TESTED HIS NERVE
A Blind Struggle For Life In the
•
Depths of the Earth.
LOST IN THE DARK IN A MINE.
Thrilling Experience of a Workman
Who Found Himself After an Explo-
sion Alone and Without a Light lis
the Suffocating Coal Hole.
To be lost In the woods or on the
plains Is a fearful experience, but there
the victim has the heavens above him
and can at least see bis way about.
The terrors of a similar adventure in
the utter blackness of a gas filled coal
mine are thus described by a corre-
spondent of the Youth's Companion:
1 was working alone in a "room" oss
the second south entry of the mine.
It was 5 o'clock, the time for firing the
afternoon blasts. The man who was
"driving" the entry lighted his fuse
and came back through the entry call-
ing out "Fire!" One after another the
other miners set off their blasts and
came along the entry until they reach-
ed my room. I lighted my fuse, watch-
ed it sputter for a moment and went
out into the entry to wait for the blast.
Several seconds passed, and there
was no explosion. My fellow miners
passed out of the entry and left me
alone. 1 went back into the room and
found that the blast opening was clog-
ged so that the fire could not reach the
powder. I had to remove the tamping
and recharge the drill hole. By this
time the mine was filled with dense,
gas laden powder smoke from the other
blasts.
In the stifling smoke I recharged the
bole. tamped it, inserted the fuse,
lighted it from my head lamp and bur.
ried to the moutb of the room. The
work was hastily done. When the
powder exploded the rush of air extin•
gulsbed my lamp.
The darkness was absolute, and there
is no darkness so dense as that of a
mine. To my consternation I found
the matches in my "jockey box" so
damp that they would not ignite.
Then I became really alarmed. I was
two miles under ground without a light
in an atmosphere so heavy with gas
that it would not sustain life for any
length of time.
1 dashed into the entry, ran against
a pillar and was knocked nearly sense-
less.
1 staggered to my feet and groped
down the tunnel. In a coal mine great
oaken valves or doors close the en-
trances to the various tunnels. The
air enters through the main entry and
is sucked out of the mine by great
fans at the opposite end of the mine
after it has been distributed through
the workings by means of these valves
and crosscuts situated near them.
I reached a door, pulled it open and
passed through. Beyond it two tun-
nels came together at a right. angle.
One led toward the open air, the other
into the depths of the mine. My
sense of direction was entirely gone,
and I could not tell which to take. It
was all chance. I went ahead and aft-
er a time reached another valve.
If I only had a light! One glimpse
of the number painted on the door
would tell me where I was. I tried to
feel the number with my fingers, but
in vain. I pushed through the door
and entered another tunnel, down
which I walked for hours, as it seem-
ed. My head was bursting with pain
from the gas.
Then I beard the sound of running
water. I knelt down, dipped in my
hand and found that I was going up
stream and consequently deeper and
deeper into the mine. So I turned
back, reached the valve and felt along
the pillar until I found the other tun-
nel opening. The gas had by this time
begun to affect my brain, and I reeled
and staggered as I walked. I left the
track and walked in the "sump" water
up to my knees, keeping one hand on
the wall to steady myself.
I passed through valve after valve
and tried to keep count, but my brain
refused to perform that simple task.
rAt last I pushed through a valve and
felt a blast of fresh, cold air. With
that breath of oxygen my reason re-
turned. With renewed courage I push-
ed forward. Many times in following
that life giving current of air I plunged
through narrow cross cuts, 'stumbled
over masses of slate, fell into water
holes and brnlsed myself by striking
against the sharp corners of the coal
vein, but I was steadily creeping near.
or to the surface.
Suddenly I stumbled against a loaded
eoal car. That meant that I was in the
main entry, but how far from the ea -
trance I could not tell. I worked my
way along the string of loaded cars
and began to ascend an incline. The
fresh air swept down the tunnel in a
gale. I kept peering ahead, in the hope
of seeing daylight, but none appeared.
I wondered why. I broke into a run,
and in another minute 1 bad emerged
from the' mine and stood gadfng at the
stars It was almost midnight, and I
had Left my rtwni shortljr after 5
0 eloek.
•
The Greedy One.
TraveHhe tlironi:b South MAPS, Mr.
))dle•v 1:104the anther of "The I's.
sendal harll)r" ulnar accused a entire
of being }lt„„ ail The native turned
yes ofTema. h n1,,.ta Ellin.
"Me greedy, lona," 'w sold. "lt tati:ws
two Kaffir* to s -tit a '.ha'ep in day, but
only one Ilettentot. Ilottentot greedy,
not Kaffir."
The questlnn every morning in not
bow to do the gainful thing. but hoW
to +10 the just thing. --John 13ualdn.
TO BENEHT
OTHER SUFFERERS
You May Publish My Letter
° About "Fruit -a -fives"
Mr. Jones is proud to acknowledge
the great debt of gratitude he owes
"Fruit-a-tive's". Ile is glad to have Itis
letter published in order that other
sufferers may be induced to try these
wonderful tablets made of fruit juices.
SARNIA, ONT., Fr•,n. 5th. 191I
"I have 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 no benefit whatever. Finally,
I read an advertisement for "Fruit -a-
1 ives" I decided to give "F ruit-a-tives"
a trial and they did exactly what was
claimed for them. I have now taken
tltent for some time and find they are
the only remedy that does me good. I
have reconttneitded "Fruit-a-tives" to a
great many of my friends, and I cannot
praise these fruit tablets too highly"
PAITI, J. JONI;S.
5oc a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.
At dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of
price by Fruit -a -fives Limited, Ottawa.
THANKS FOR ALL.
One shall give thanks for rain
That falls upon his field;
And one for cloudless suns
That ripe the vineyard's yield.
One shall give thanks for winds
That lift the drooping sail,
And one, for windless calm
Cot -sheltered in the vale.
One shall give thanks for 'Life
From danger plucked afresh;
And one, that Death draws near,
To cut Life's tangled mesh.
But since through loss, through gain,
There holds some purpose vast,
Let me give thanks for all -
For Life -for Death at last.
-Edith M. Thomas.
SOMEBODY'S MOTHER.
The woman was poor, and old and gray,
And bent with chill of the winter's day;
The street was wet with the recent snow,
And the women's feet were aged and slow
She stood at the crossing and waited long
Alone, uncared for, amid the throng.
Of human beings whopassed her by,
Nor heeded the glance of her anxious eye
Down the street with laughter and shout,
Glad in the freedom of "school let out"
Came the boys, like a flock of sheep,
Hailing the snow piled white and deep.
Past the woman so old and gray,
Hastened the children on their way,
Nor offered a helping hand to her,
So meek, so timid afraid to stir
Lest the carriage wheels or the horses
feet
Should knock her down on the slippery
street.
At last came one of the merry group -
The gayest laddie of all the group;
He paused beside her and whispered low
"I'll help you across if you wish to go."
Her aged hand on his strong young arm
She placed, and so, without hurt or harm
He guided the trembling feet along.
Proud that his own were firm and strong
Then back to his friends again he went
His young heart happy and well content
"She's somebody's mother, boy's you
know,
For all she's aged, and poor, and slow;
And I hope some fellow will lend a hand
To help my mother, if she should stand
"At .a crossing, weary, and old and gray
When her own dear boy is far away."
And "somebody's mother" bowed low
her head
In her home that night, and the prayer
she said
Was: "God be kind to the noble boy
Who is somebody's son, and pride and
joy." -Anon.
Next To Your Liver.
IT' YOU DON'T
Something Serious May Happen.
At times everyone is bilious, the Liver
ar: "ut's overworked, bad bile is accu-
inulated, and enters the blood, and causes
t
",'neral clogging up of the secretions.
tVhrn this happen.; no one can escape
Constipation, Jaundice, Headaches,
Heartburn, Indigestion, Liver Com-
plaint, and those tired weary feelings
which follow the wrong action of the
Liver.
Mxi,nrass'S LAxA-LIVER Pn.r.S stimu-
late the sluggish Liver, Mclean the coated
tongue, sweeten the breath, and clear
away all the waste and poisonous natter
from the system.
MRs. IL A. MCCT,ARAN, Rimbey, Alta.,
writes:-" I have used Mf1,HURN's LAxA-
LIvER Puzs, and am greatly pleased
With the remits. , I had Indig
int sett a'hitter taste in mwa
liter reads* that eras SO ►Im It
I coital not sleep well, timid also haat a►
deathly sickness sometimes altar bed
eaten,. Two vials of lAzivi-Livitt
bef,omai pm"i per vial At 5 v V11 for i�1°a0 C.
that you get theta when a.skesi
ilfactured only by TM T.
144.1G4. ocoatp,
MONEY IN POULTRY.
A young man named Lewis Clarke has
proven that the poultry business pays in
Durham County, Ont. He went toPort
Hope, situated along the lake front
owing to ill health, and sought some
work to occupy his time, finally deciding
to raise poultry. He had previously
been a civil engineer on a Pensilvania
railway and knew nothing about chick-
ens. That was four years ago Now,
according to A. G. Gilbert of the Cen-
tral Experimental Farm, Ottawa, he
operates the largest egg producing
plant in Canada, Last year he made
a net profit $1.75 per hen.
Mr, Clarke specializes in egg -produc-
tion. He never raises show stock nor
attempts to produce meat, except for
broilers. He has two breeds, bred -to -
lay Barred Rocks and single comb
White Leghorns, and though rather
preferring the latter, has been very
successful with both. By his system
of rearing and feeding, the young cock-
erels sold as broilers pay for all the
eggs set, the cost of fuel and running
expenses, and the cost of raising the
cockerels up to the time of killing, and
the pullets to maturity.
Hatching is never done by natural
means, the work is too extensive a
scale for that, but prefers hen -hatched
stock as the chicks appear to be rather
stronger. He favors artificial brooders,
however, and has brooders in his house,
heated with hot water by a self regulat-
ing furnace.
After the chicks hatch out they are
starved for sixty hours, and then
carried from the incubators to the
brooders in cotton Lined boxes to pre-
vent any risk of chilling. They are fed
five times daily for the first five days
from tin plates with a mixture of three
parts fine commercial chick grain to one
part of following: -six parts dry rolled
oats to one part hard boiled eggs, with
shells -put through a cropper, and
rubbed together till the egg disappears.
After the first five days this mixture is
subceded by another fed from ahopper,
which is made up of the following: 11.0
pounds bran, 100 pounds corn chop, 100
pounds feed flour. 100 pounds fine beef
scrap, 33 pounds fine bone meal. The
chicks are also given two feeds a day
of chick grain scattered in a litter
inch in depth of cut clover hay. Three
mash feeds a day are given moistened
with sour skim milk, so it will crumple.
This is also fed in tin plates. Onefeed
is given daily of green stuff. They have
before them always, fine oyster shell,
fine grit. and fine charcoal. After the
second week the moist mash is fe d
twice a day. When four weeks old the
chick grain is given, of equal part's by
weight of whole wheat and fine cracked
corn.
At six weeks of age the cockerels and
pullets are separated. The former are
fed a gnash as follows: -100 pounds corn
chop, I00 pounds feed flour and 20 lbs.
beef scrap mixed with sour skim milk to
a batter that will drop, butt not from a
wooden spoon. After the evening meal
they are fed all the cracked corn they
can eat, and are also given all the sweet
skim milk they will drink, with two
tablespoonfuls of brown sugar added to
every quart. Green food is very bene-
ficial, but is not essential, when the milk
is fed.
Mr. Clarke never crate fattens nor
crams. He finishes them in houses, 12
feet square, with runs 12 ft. by 24 ft.,
100 cockerals to each house. The Rock
chickens are ready for market about a
week ahead of the Leghorns. He sells
them at about two pounds in weight and
never keeps them above 2.1 pounds.
He disposes of them to local customers
in Port Hope, the York Club of Toronto
and M. P. Mallon, Toronto, exporter of
poultry, and received retail prices from
the majority of sales. Last year his
cockerels averaged a return of 56% cents
each. At present Mr. Clarke has in his
yard 2,60 fine,growing chicks and ex-
pects to clear $1,500 this year.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTO R IA
Preserving Eggs.
A method that will preserve the
orginal quality of the eggs for an in-
definite period has not yet been dis-
covered. By cold storage, eggs are
put up in large quantities during the
spring season when prices are low, but
where it is desired to preserve a small
quantity for home use the cold storage
method is not practicable. Eggs intends
ed for storage should be fresh and clean.
March or April eggs will keep better
than May or June eggs. The sooner
they are put into storage after being
laid the better they will keep. Dissolve
a pound of lime in five gallons of water.
Stir thoroughly, and let settle. Then
pour off the clear liquid into a wooden
or earthen jar or tub. Fill with eggs
to within an inch of the top of the li-
quid. This will allow for evaporation.
The liquid should not be allowed to get
lower than the top of the eggs. When
the vessel is filled with eggs, cover it
with coarse muslin or factory, over
which spread a paste of lime to exclude
the air. Water -glass (sodium silicate)
may be purchased et the drug stores.
Use the liquid form and the commercial
grade in the proportion of one part
water -glass to eight parts water. Use
earthen jars or wooden tubs or barrels
that are perfectly clean, and store in a
clean, cool place. 'he material used
will, Bost about a cent for each dozen
eggs stored.
4.444-1.4-1-1+11.141474.4.44+++++++4.4 +4.+++f+ f••f4»- 41144+++++++++4
1.
+
The Times
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+ Clubbing
+
+
+
+
..+
+
+
Times and Weekly Globe .
+
Times and Daiiy (*lobe
+ Times and Family Herald and W eei,,ly Star ....
4. Times and Toronto 'Weekly bun
+ Times and Teronto Daily Star ... ...
+ Times and Toronto Daily News . .... .
'l' Times and Daily Mail and Empire...... .....
4Times and Weekly Mail and Empire....
*Times and Harmers' Advocate •..... •....
q, Times and Canadian Farm (weekly)
't' Times and Farm and Dairy
. Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press.
*4. Times and Daily Advertiser
+
List
Times and London Advertiser (weekly) ... ..
Times and London Daily Free Prest Morning
Edition
Evening Edition
Times and Montreal Daily Witness
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness
Times and World Wide....................
Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg.
Times and Presbyterian ... ..... .......
Times and 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...
Times and Daily World.....
Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly)
Times and Canadian Pictorial
Times and Lippineott'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 Mnnsey's Magazine
Times and Designer
Times and Everybody's
These prices are for addresses
Britain.
1.60
4.50
1.85
1,75
2.80
2.30
4.50
1.60
2.85
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
3.40
2.50
1.75
2.90
1.35
3.10
2.90
1,60
3.15
2.6G
2.40
2.30
2.50
2.45
2.60
2.55
1.85
2.40
in Canada or Great
The above publications may be obtained by Times
* subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica-
tion being the figure given above less $1.00 representing
* the price of The Times. For instance :
The Times and Weekly GIobe $1.60
The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1.35
$2.95
making the price of the three papers $2.95.
The Times and the Weekly Sun .......... $1.80
The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00).. 1,30
The Weekly Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) 60
$3.70
* the four papers for $3.7o.
• 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 e
••cash in advance '••
S.nd subscriptions by post office or express order to e
•♦•
Ti OfficeiIThe
•• •
•
WINGI1AM . ° ONTARIO
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