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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-10-23, Page 5This Lady KUU s HOW to Keep W She always keeps bin Pills in the House Genaleeee, Meer. "I think GIN. PILLS are the finest things for the kidneys. When first I came to Canada, I suffered with dread- ful Pains in my Back, that made me quite ill. A friend gave nee six of your ir,INePILLS and after I had taken one dose, I felt less pain. I then got myself a box and before half of it was gone. I )tad lost all the backache. It did scent treat to be rid of the pain. If any one tells me, what a pain they have in their back, I say "You should try GIN PILLS." MRs. J. Pict:Rur.r., Take Mrs. Pickrell's advice and take GIN PILLS. They will cure you of every trace of Backache, Kidney Trouble or Rheumatism. 5oc. a box, 6•for $2.5c. -sent on receipt of price if your dealer does not handle then!. Money back if {;IN PILLS do not give prompt relief. Sample free if you mention this paper. National Drug and Chemical Co. of Cam da, Limited, Toronto. Manga-Tone Blood and Nerve Tablets correct Female Troubles and make pure, rich blood. sec. a box. 206 IT COULDN'T BE DONE. Somebody said that it couldn't be done, But he with a chuckle replied, That "maybe it couldn't," but he would be one • Who wouldn't say so till he tried. So he buckled right in, with the trace of a grin On his face. If he worried he hid it. He started to sing as he tackled the thing That couldn't be done -and he did it! Somebody scoffed, "Oh you'll never do that - At least no one ever has done it"; But he took off his coat, and he took off his hat, And the first thing we knew he'd be- gun it. With a lift of his chin and a bit of a grin, Without any doubting or quiddit, He started to sing as he tackled the thing That couldn't be done -and he did it! There are thousands to tell you it can- not be done, There are thousands to prophesy failure; There are thousands to point out to you, one by one, The danges that wait to assail you. But just buckle in with a bit of a grin, Then take of your hat and go to it, Just start in to sing as you tackle the thing That "cannot be done" -and you'll do it. -Edgar A. Guest, in Onward. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORiA WINGAM TIMES, OCTOBER 23 1913 USES OF MIRRORS iN THE HOME. Mirrors, of course, are fundamentally useful in showing those who look into then) whether their hats are on at the proper angle, whether their neckwear is neatly adjusted, and sundry other uses; but it may not be known are use- ful for increasing the apparent size and the real lightners of the rooms where they hang. One can work wonders by introducing on dark and cramped walls mirrors to catch and reflect and magni- fy such light as they receive. Always place a mirror in a dark hall. If it can be so placed that it reflects the opening into the living or drawing room, it will serve a triple purpose -it will be a convenience to guests and members of the family when they are starting out, it will increase the light and it will make the hall seem bigger. In a living room place several mir- rors if the room is dark. A long, nar- row' mirror can be hung lengthwise, perhaps in a corner beside a door. An- other mirror can be placed on a wall opposite a window, and so will reflect the garden or trees or sea or street, and give the room apparently another window. Another mirror can be placed at such an angle that it will not necessarily reflect the people sitting about the fire. The object of living room mirrors is not to give reflections of'the persons in that room as such reflections are sometimes annoying. In bedrooms and dressing rooms mir- rors can hardly be too many. A pier glass is convenient and especially desir- able because it can be placed across a corner of the room or in some other position which makes it of decorative value. But far more practical in a small• room -and cheaper, too -is the mirror fastened to the door. It should be held in place by the wooden panel- ling. Some Remarks. From the Detroit Journal. A new leaf is really the same old one with just another turn. Feed a women on flattery, and she won't miss your bread and cheese and kisses. • $100 REWARD, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure not known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con- stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do- ing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative -powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials, Address F.J.CHENEY & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, '75c. Take Hall's Fa mily Pills for constipation Prolonged Life, (Toronto Star.) A writer to the New York Herald res calls the frequent deaths of prominent men from hardening of the arteries, and says that if there is any known means of checking the disease, it ought to be made known. The Herald says that hardening of the arteries is one of the processes Of growing old, and it doubts whether anybody has the means of checking it. We doubt it also. Science has al- ready increased the average human life by checking the preventable diseases of infancy and maturity. It is quite conceivable that it may prolong human life, so that at the end of this century a man or woman a hundred years old may not be regarded as a prodigy. But at a hundred years of age a man may be just as unwilling to resign his pleasing anxious being as a man of eighty is today. Old age, with its pathos and its problems, will still be with us. Man will still grow slowly to maturity, and then begin to decline. The process may be somewhat longer, but that will not alter the essential nature of the problem. Youth will still be rash, and will continue to draw ex- travagant cheques on the Bank of Life. Old men who deed all their property to their children in exchange for prom- ised provision for life will live long enough to repent their folly. If this tragedy is witnessed after ninety in- stead of after seventy, its essential character will not be changed. Those who hope that physical science can put an end to the laws of growth and de- cline are surely too sanguine even in this age of scientific wonders. Many a man who says he studies to please expends most of his efforts on himself. A course in an agricultural school isn't absolutely necessary in sowing a crop of wild oats. Self-conceit is a good asset. A man can't hope to be popular with his friends unless he is popular with himself. Lay something by for a rainy day, and some fellow will come along and borrow it just as soon as the clouds begin to gather. Mica is produced commercially by eight States, North Carolina leading in the industry. WANTED. Good Local Agent at once to represent the Old and Reliable FoDthiII Nurseries A splendid list of fruit and ornamental stock for Fall Delivery in r913 and Spring Dilivery in 1914. Start at once and secure ex- clusive territory. We supply handsome free out, fit and pay highest com- missions. Write for full particulars. Slooe& Welilogion, Toronto » - Ontario APPRECIATED HX Tpl1Rt.STS.. iA't "ew Know the Origin of Handy .Little Red ",Baedeker." Almost every traveler i.l Europe has often had occasion to appreciate Baedeker, but few are those who know the origin of these extremely handy little red books. The Baedeker family have been de- voted to books and book -selling for nearly 300 years. It was the sight of Murray's handbooks that fired );Carl ilaedeee80, years ago with the am- 'etion ot providing a similar series for his countrymen. He had been an -- " getic travels: himself through western Europe, and he had already ,ublishe' and improved Klein's ;ulile to the Rhine. The next vol - :ilea in the aeries -Belgium and Hol- •.uttl, Germany, Austria and Swttzer- tnd-were issued from Coblentz, and t was not till later that the firm re for ed to their ,resent enormous madquarters at Lelpsic.. But they left or! Baedeker's reenaips behind, and .any a grateful traveler visiting Co- •lentz has taken his hat off at the it.tie grave. When Karl Baedekerdiedin 1859 :e left three sons to carry on the ork, and the series of guides had al - lost crowded out the rest of their :teltshiug. business. The youngest :if 'i.sa three 1 -others, Fritz Baedeker, t now head of the firm, and has Med another generation with a taw to their improving the efficiency C tee series. lies sons have set themselves to aster most of the European tongues •..l the polity of most of the chief •':ers• Hans has studied archae- ,•.;y in Rome and Alpine lore in zerland, while Ernst has joined , a to studying in London, Edin- -e', and other leading capitals, and ,i i have qualified in other important :..pects. for helping to bring the :.des to perfection. Avoid Sedative Cough Medicines, If you want to contribute directly to the occurence of capillary bronchitis and pneumonia use cough medicines that contain cedine, morphine heroin and other sedatives when you have a cough or cold. An expectorant like Chamber- lain's Cough Remedy is what is needed. That cleans out the culture beds or breeding places for the germs of pneu- monia and pther germ diseases. That is why pneumonia never results from a cold when Chamberlain's Cough Rem- edy is used. It has a world wide repu- tation for its cures. It contains no morphihe Or other sedative. For sale by all dealers. Anyone who sits down in a coffee shop in Bagdad first receives a cup of Turkish coffee arid then a narghile, a sort of native pipe in which Shirza tobacco is smoked. The charge for the coffee and the use of the earghile is about two cents. The Number Fourteen In France. So far as France . is concerned, it the number fourteen that has play- ! a conspicuous and generally por- :ntous part in her history. On May . 1554, the Rue de la Ferronnerie 'as enlarged by order of Henri II., •11 four times fourteen years later ,anri IV. was assassinated there by i.eaillac-namely, on May 14, 1610. ,,:ori had lived four times fourteen 'ars, fourteen weeks and four times ,urteen days-i.e., fifty-six years and ve months. Then Henri' son, Louis 111., died May 14, 1643, (the same ay and month as -his father). And ;43 added together equals fourteen, let as 1553 (the year of the birth of nri IV,) equals fourteen. Louis 1 V. ascended the throne 1643, which adad together equals fourteen and e ilarly the year of his death (1715) Luals. The Business of Life. This is the task appointed: To •0'.1 the vision of a final arrival at .i :ie fitting destination; to main - eta uudlminished a sense of person - .1 worthiness; to be defeated in each 'oolish dream of the younger life and :o to be disciplined into a large vis - on, made more sure by adversity; to ,e delayed for n.. st of a lifetime and •et to ,)e!ieve in the strength of the ,u:uau spirit to surmount pain, out- ive sin and i efeat malice and envy; o believe in the grad•ai but all con- sueting power of good will; to be sad- .ened, but not emnbittered; to be beat - :n, but not conquered. That is the e.:ta business set before us. Pickpockets ante Letter Boxes. When detectives are trying to find 'te meeting place of pickpockefs that re working in a neighborhood they ten ask the letter carriers to help min. The postman can tell them in hat mail boxes lie finds the most o qty pocketbooks. After a thief i,as picked a man's ockr.t lie viz s ,.1 t rid of the ,.::• purse± as soon u.a he can, and cc.uld be o..;i.. ,..,.0 to drop the ed wallet i', e . ] box? Then it 0i1'' h,., /etre, •. , and nobody he S•.:1 .. ,:,. OW it away. 1);4. ton the letter r,er- tin ' ie. _,: - c . ; . ,,0aketbooks th-.• tt: . 1:,.'';':; Tee; tris of Honor. It is .,o- ;;dn:. ».,, Lhowii that the c', or ler 01 the Lv•::ton of Honor a,'o iced at Haiti in 15.9. When .,si.•uque.became emperor under the ,,..u0 of 1"austin 1. Lu instituted an ;der in 'irritation of that which had ;.gin established by Napoleon in 1802. rio.•w.:. and ,,.:: ala were recisety itienticat, and since the jvereign of Bee Pi distributed itis hon- ,rs to all and sundry with lavish ,and the French Government was onsiderably eel barrassed. The death f eoalouque elided the difficulty. Dian t I how flim. A drill sergeant was drilling the ocruit squad in the use of the rifle. 'verythiug went smoothly until .lank cartridges were distributed. ,'he recruits were instructed to load Heir pieces and stand at the 'ready," and then the sergeant gave „e command:,,,,.. "Fire at will!" ;u,... • Private Lunn was puzzled. He lowered his gun. "Which one is Will?" he asked. KEEPINt A BEE FARM APICULTURE BECOMES MOILS ll'ILOFITABLE EVF.rKX DAX. Many Men Ii8117.130 ge N w Gone Into the Exclusive Production of Honey-- Workers Live Only a Few Months But the Queens Survive For a N umber of Years --Artificial Comb )las Revolutionized Industry, Apiculture, as the science and prac- tice of bee -keeping is called, has of late years become a very profitable occupation. it inay seen) strange to (elk of a "bee farm," yet there are many slzch farms in this country, de- voted almost exclusively to the rear- ing of bees. There are two ways of snaking a profit out of bees, either by the sale of the honey they produce, or by the rearing and sale ot the bees themselves. In order to run a bee farm suc- cessfully it is necessary, of course, to i.ecome acquainted with the ways and habits of the bees themselves, A hive consists of a queen, drones, and work- ers, Only one queen to a hive; she will brook no rival, her rule must be absolute. She takes her consort from i. mong the drones, and produces both drones and workers. At the end of the busy season the drones are either killed or turned out to perish as use- less encumberances. An average hive contains about 25,000, a large one as many as 50,000. Five thousand bees weigh about a pound when they are charged with honey. The weight of starved bees is hardly perceptible. It sometimes happens, In dispatching them by rail for a journey of several days, they will arrive at their destin- ation either dead or in a very poor condition. This is due to carelessness or inexperience. In buying bees by weight from any distance, allowance should always be made for deterior- ation in transit, as they consume their own honey. A farm may, of course, consist of any number of hives. A queen is ready for fertilization from three to five days after birth. The worker bees live only two or three months, but the queens will exist for several years. If a queen should die permaturely, or be lost on leaving the hive, whicb sometimes happens, the colony insist upon having another queen, and set about nourishing the brood left be- hind. If more than one queen pis` raised, then there is trouble among the royal heirs, and they fight among themselves till all but one are ex- terminated. At one time bees made their own combs;' now they are s 'ved that trou- ble, for the combs are made for them. The process is very interesting. Bees- wax is melted in a metal receptacle and kept bot. Immediately above this, suspended from the ceiling, is a con- trivance like a wooden comb, the teeth being strips of wooden board. The latter are plunged three or four times into the molton wax, whicL, when it sets, can be peeled off in sheets. Having become stiff, it is dipped in waren water to make it limp, and then passed between two metal rollers, which stamp it with the pattern which the bees work upon and draw out, thus forming the cells. larger and thicker sheets are requir- ed for the breeding frames than for the honey frames. The wax sheets are fitted in the hives for the bees to "-ork upon. It says much fo. their intelligence that they readily accept- ed this substitute for their own handi- ' 1 rk, If there should be more than one queen in a hive one of the queens will leave it with a following. They will "swarm" upon a neigkboring tree, and must be hived. This is sometimes a ticklish job. The straw arrange- ment called a "skep" must be taken up the tree and held beneath the branch upon which the bees are swarming and the latter shaken into it. They must then be thrown down in front of 'the hive, when they will crawl inside. Gloves and a veil mav be used while handling bees, although those engaged on a bee farm rarely use either. Either they are proof against stings, or the bees are used t, them and do not sting. A bee does not sting unless it is attacked or an= noyed. Bad or careless handling might be rewarded with a few stings. Swarming is principally for breed- ing, and should be prevented as much as possible in the interests of honey production. The prices of bees differ according to the time of the year. For instance, in May and June a Li- gurian queen would cost about $2; in July a trifle less; in August and Sep- tember less still, while in October and November she migh', be got for $1..30. Home-bred queens are cheap- er, and could be had for 75 cen A Ligurian . swarm, queen included, would cost close on $10. It is curious to note the differs -•t shades of wax, which is caused by different nationality of the bees. Ji - directly is the result of the differei.t kinds of flora. The blossom which r'nders most honey is white clover. Others are apple, pear, cherry, rasp- berry, whitehorn, sainfoin, lime and buckwheat. When the bees light upon a patch of favorite flowers they work steadfastly at it mail they have ex- hausted the sapply of honey. They make straight for it from their hives in a true bee -line. 'The neighborhood v'hich is best adapted for bees is where there are several kinds of honey -Producing plants or trees so that when one goes off another conies on. Some places have only one or two kinds. so that the supply of Loney is limited. The two disease which most afferi eves are dysentery and foul brood. of enemies they have many. The. wax :loth, who lays eggs in the hives and 1 rmolishes wax, pollen, and brood; wasps, who take advantage of their •iperiority of strength and activity; a ice, who eat wax and honey; spiders, bo catch bees in their webs; birds, ho eat bees, particularly the blue 'ir, who in winter settles upon the entrance board of the hive and taps -elth his beak; this bring the bee to • he entrance, and the bird promptly aeerie it ug. Rats will also eat stares, and toads in the windy weather will wait near the hives for returning bees, on the chance of their being blown to the ground, when Mr. Toad soon gobbles them up. Not a Contortionist. A man complained to his doctor re- cently that every time he bent for- ward slightly and held out his arms horizontally, waving them around in a small circle, he felt a sharp pain in his left shoulder blade. "Well," snorted the doctor, "why the dickens do a pu want to do such a contortion act?" "How else is a Man to put ills over- coat on, doctor?" Legal News. Archaeologists tell us that a bank- ruptcy law 4,000 years old forbade usury. This law may be cited to show the humanity of ancient laws makers or the hoary antiquity of hu- man depravity. The Mnrvel. Husband - When Gadzooks heard you sing at the party he said It was a marvel. Wife --Oh, John! A marvel! I,Iuabandu--Yes; a marvel that any one assked you to. 9 etr A MESSAGE FROM 1 WOMAN TO WOMEN "Every Woman Shoup Take "Fruit-a-tirBs" taK1ir.1V1, ONT., MAY 1201. 1911 "Kindly publish Thiry letter of Grine if you think it will benefit other women who might be afflicted with the diseases I have bad in the past, but am now, thanks to "Fruit -a -fives", completely cured of. It is nay firm belief that every woman should take "Fruit -s -lives" if she wants to keep herself in good health. Before taking "Fruit-a-tives", I was constantly troubled with what is cern- moldy known as "Nerves" or severe Nervousness. This Nervousness brought on the most violent attacks of Sick Headache, for which I was con- stantly taking doctors' medicine without any permanent relief. Constipation was also a source of great trouble to me and for which the Doctors said "I would have to take medicine all my life", but "Fruit-a-tives" banished all these trou- bles and now I am a well woman" MRS. FRED. GADILE. • 500 a box, 6 for $2,5o -trial size, a5c. At dealers or sent prepaid on receipt of price by Fruit-a.tives Limited, Ottawa. A Hint to Farmers. Here is something from an exchange that deserves to be passed along: "What would a farmer say if his wife left her sewing machine standing out in the back yard in a rainstorm over night. What he really would say is out of the question for printer's copy, and yet many farmers leave their binders, which cost three or four limes as much as a sewing machine, out in the sun, and rain with no better shelter than a fence corner. Nor is the binder the only piece of costly machinery that re- ceives such treatment. In such in- stances, Mr. Farmer, what should your wife do to you? A timely applica- tion of the rolling pin might do much toward prolonging the life and efficiency of your farm machinery. You can save a ten -dollar bill any day this week by acting on this suggestion." Moulting Hens. Just a word now about moulting, saye a writer in an article in Canadian Farm. It is not always convenient to go through the prescribed course of forcing the moult, especially where a lot of fowl are kept, but enough of it can be done through necessity "if done the right way to ensure enough early moulted hens to carry over for early winter laying. In nearly every flock of utility stock from May to August there is a tendency toward broodiness among the hens. I take advantage of this in my flock,.and instead of shutting them up and feeding as usual, I shut them up, and for the first two days give them no feed, but plenty of fresh water. The third day I give them a feed of mash made up of shorts, bran and provender; the fourth day they get two feeds of this mash and are let .at in the evening, if they appear to have got over their clucking. If not, I leave them another day with more mash feeding. I rarely have to keep them shut up longer than five days. Then if there are any particularly good lay- ers in the flock which do not show any inclination to "sit" before the middle of July I put them in with the "cluck- ers" for about a week, as their feathers seem to be more firmly fixed in their flesh than in the broody; hens. As a result of this treatment I have a well feathered flock ready to go into the laying pens early in the fall. Without this forcing the moulting season is apt to extend late into the fall or some- times it is early :winter before they recover properly from it, and in such cases no laying can be expected before March, whereas an early! moulted bird will very often [recommence laying in November, and I have had them go right through a summer moult without stopping the egg production. FOUR BOXES OF DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS PUT HER ON HER FEET. MRS. En. BOYuR, Nokomis, Sask., writes: -"I had been troubled with weak back and kidneys. I had terrible dizzy headaches, and could not sleep at night. In this I way suffered for ten years, until I read about DOAN'S KInNEY Ptlts. I purchased two boxes, and as they helped me, I sent for two more, and they put ire on my feet, and I have been able to work ever since." • ..y •K tirkrarift, STOVE `S kN''''''''.°71}/uLISFI FOR BRIGHTNESS Sp BI.ACK iiISH AND I,KNIGHTIGIi1'NESS.USE 1'0 -• V A PASTE (Nq DusT NOWAsrE 1 THE F1° DALLEY 0! LTD.HAMILTON.ONT.I No Rus'r Salt for Dairy Cattle. Dairy cows in milk require salt daily to do their best work. A lump of rock salt thrown somewhere in the yard may do for the young stock, but cows need a greater quantity than they can get by occasionally licking rock salt. Cows will take a tablespoonful of salt every day, and when they get this quantity they will drink more regularly and give more milk. Salt is required in the system and animals that are deprived of salt en- tirely lose their vitality, In "Henry's Feeds and Feeding," an experiment on the use of salt for dairy cows is describ- ed, as conducted at the Wisconsin Ex- periment Station, and the following facts are cited: "In every case the cows exhibited an abnormal appetite for salt after having been deprived of it for two or three weeks, but in no ease d d the health of the animal, as shown by the general appearance, the live weight, or the yield of milk appear to be affected till a much longer time had elapsed. There was finally reached For Backache, Lame Back, Weak Back, or any other Kidney Trouble, there is no remedy to equal Doee'S Klb»SY PILLS. They hags been on the market for 20 years aitd therefore must be a staple article. Price 511 cents per box, 3 boxes for $12.x. May be obtained at all dealers or !nailed direct on receipt of price, by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Tornto, Ont. ' .,-Then ordering direct specify "MAN'S." a condition of low vitality, in which a sudden, complete breakdown occurred. This stage was marked by a loss of ap- petite, a general haggard appearance, lusterless eyes, a rough coat and a very rapid decline in both live weight and milk. If salt was supplied at this period recovery was rapid." The time from which the salt was withheld unti bad results showed varied with differ ent animals, from a month to a year. Salt is a cheap medicine and is far more valuable than condition powders. Give the cows salt. It is not recom- mended to put salt in the feed, as in this way too much may be consumed. A Marvellous Escape, "My Little boy had a marvellous es- cape," writes P. F. Castiams of Prince Albert, Cape Hope. "It occurred in the middle of the night. He got a very severe, attack of croup. As luck would have it, I had large bottle of Chamber- lain's Cough Remedy in the house. After following the directions for an hour and twenty minutes he was through all danger." Sold by all dealers. +l'++++•t• ++++++44444 4111M+++++++++4 +++++++4 e Times Clubbing List x + Times and Weekly Globe Times and Daily Globe Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... Times and Toronto Weekly Sun .... Times and Toronto Daily Star , . , ..... .... Times and Toronto Daily News.. Times and Daily Mail and Empire. Times and Weekly Mail and Empire........... Advocate .... Times and Farmers' ... ...... Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) Times and Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press..... Times and Daily Advertiser ......... , Times and London Advertiser (weekly) ........ Times and London Daily Free Press 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, Presb3 terian and Westminster Times and Toronto Saturday Night Times and Busy Man's Magazine., . . Time 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 McClnre's Magazine Times and Munsey's Magazine Times and Designer Times and Everybody's VIM 1.60 4.50 1.85 1,75 2.30 2.30 4.00 1b0 2 35 1,60 1 80 1.60 2.85 1.60 3.F0 290 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 2.60 2.40 2.30 2.50 2.45 2.60 2.55 1.85 2,40 These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great Britain. The above publications may be obtained by Times subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica- tion being the figure given above less $I.00 representing the price of The Tirnes. For instance : The Times and Weekly Globe $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 .. $1,80 4' The Toronto Daily Star ($'2.80 less $1.00). 1,30 + The Weekl3 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 a us know. We •'n supply almost any well-known Cana- dian or American publication. These prices are strictly e $ cash in advance Send subscriptions by post office or express order to IThe Times Office a Stone Bock w 'WItNGHAtVI ONTARIO • .t; *3,$_ 4:°i'3s t ltd.4. 't+41