HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-12-18, Page 3NEARLY iN
CONVULSIONS
With Acute Indigestion.
"Fruit-a-tives" Cured Mel
NnwnuRY, ONr., MAY 29th. 1913
not a strenuous user of medicines
or patent medicines, but I have taken
:•early everything recommended for
1-idigestion mid Constipation.
I have been so bad with Acute Indi-
gestion that I was nearly in convulsions
and had to be held. I have used "Fruit-
a-tives" and I have not had another
attack nor suffered at all withlndigestion
since taking them.
"Fruit-a-tives" is the only remedy I
ever.used that did me any good, and I
am grateful to "Fruit-a-tives" for
making me as•well as I ant today, and
everyone agrees that I look in firstclass
health.
Mylusband likes "Fruit -a -fives" very
enuch•and takes them whenever he has
occasion to use a remedy for Constipa-
tion" MRs. D. MCRAE
"Fruit-a-tives" are sold by all dealers
at sae a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size, 25c,
or will be sent to any address on receipt
of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited,
Ottawa.
FORESTRY FACTS.
There are more than one hundred free
species found in Canada, of which only
thirty are conifers. Yet these latter
constitute Canada's chief timber wealth,
Of these coniferous trees, or "ever-
greens," spruce easily takes first place,
constituting over one-third of the lum-
ber and three-quarters of the pulp -wood
cut in Canada in 1912. Four of the five
species of spruce are of commercial
importance, and at least two of these
five are found in every province of the
Dominion.
This summer an expert soil analyst
was engaged by the Forestry Branch of
the Dominion Government to substan-
tiate the findings of the forest surveyors
in cases where there was any doubt as
to the non-agricultural character of
forest areas to be reserved.
A novel use has been found for the
waste liquor from sulphite pulp mills,
as a binder for cinders and similar
materials used in the construction of
tennis courts.
That sawdust and other mill waste
can be profitably manufactured into
briquettes for fuel is evident from the
fact that a large lumber company in
British Columbia is erecting a $50,000
plant, which will have a daily output of
about thirty tons of such briquettes.
They will sell for about five dollars a
ton at the mill.
During September and October, 1912,
several hundred bushels of pine cones
were gathered by the Forest Rangers
on Dominion Forest Reserves. This
work is.often made easy by the squirrels,
which store large quantities of green
cones in holes for use in the winter
months. The Rangers spread out the
cones in some dry place, and, when the
scales open, the seeds are shaken out,
and the following spring the best of
them are planted in the forest nurseries.
Paper cannon are manulactnred by
the Krupp works, Germany, for infan-
try use in rough . country. They are so
light that a soldier can easily carry one
and yet the resistance is greater than
that of a metal field -piece of the same
calibre.
The lock -gates and sills of the Pan-
ama Canal are all made from "Green -
heart," a large tree found in the dense
jungles of nothern South America,
especially British Guiana. The wood
will bear, without crushing, a weight
of six tons to the square inch, and will
remain sound one hundred years tinder
REST AHD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.
11fxs. Wrxstow's SOOTHING SYRUP has been
used fol• over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
MOTIIERS for their CHILDRENWHILE
TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS
ALLAYS all PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, and
Is the best remedy for DIARRHOEA, It 1s ab.
soiutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs,
Winslow's. Soothing Syrup," and take no other
kind. TWeuty-five cents a bottle.
WANTED.
Good Local Agent
at once to represent the
Old and Reliable
FonthiII Nursuries
water, being immume to the attacks of
the salt -water teredo. A single log
Costs several hundred dollars.
A splendid list of fruit and
ornamental stock for Pal)
Delivery in 1913 and
Spring Dilivery iia 1914.
...Start at once and secure ex-
elusive te• rritory. We
supply hand$orne free out•
fit and pay highest com-
missions.
Mite for full particularie
"Some Cows from Glengarry "
Among the records collected by the
dairy division, Ottawa, this season are
some from Glengarry that show the
average yield of 155 cows to be 4,540
pounds of milk, 3 5 test, 159 pounds of
fat. Ipcluded in that is the y eld of one
herd of 9 cows including one three-year-
old that averaged 6,209 pounds of milk,
3.3 test, 205 pounds of fat.
It will be noticed that this herd pro-
duced 1,669 pounds of milk and 46
pounds of fat above the average of the
155 cows. Another herd averaged 220
pounds of fat, or 61 pounds per cow
above the average; with fat reckoned
at thirty cents per pound. this is equiva-
lent to over eighteen dollars per -cow,
indicative of the thousands of dollars
extra that might be coming into a dis-
trict if the cows were keyed up to a
higher producing level.
One noticeable feature of this section
is the large number of poor yields from
two and three year olds. But it is not
only the heifers that are responsible for
lowering the average yield. There are
cows from six to ten years old that
gave only 2,800 pounds of milk and 102
pounds of fat as compared with that,
average of 4,540 pounds of milk and 159
pounds of fat.
So that instead of a contrast of only
eighteen dollars, it is found that there
is an actual difference of over forty one
dollars in the cash received from mature
cows in the same period. This -is surely
a statement strong enough to cause
every dairyman to examine closely into
the performance of each cow he keeps.
Milk records are easily kept and a com-
posite sample from each tenth day's
;Wilk can be tested once a month Is
not this worth doing?
Stone& Wellington,
Toronto O>t'lte‘ti'io
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Some Gem Quotations.
A force like fire wine uses whtn
It enters into strongest men.
—Athenaeus.
Temperance, exercise, and repose,
Slam the door on the doctor's nose,
—Longfellow.
Ill habits gather by unseen degrees,
All brooks run to rivers, rivers run to
seas.
Shall I to please another's wine -sprung
mind
Lose all my own? —George Herbert.
It is most just to throw that on the
ground
Which would throw me there if I
keep it round. — George Herbert.
Far hence be Bacchus' gifts (the chief
rejoined).
Inflaming wine, pernicious to mankind,
Unnerves the limbs and dulls the -noble
mind.
Pope's "Iliad," Book VI.
Oh madnees! to think use of strongest
wines
And strongest drinks our chief support
of health,
When God, with these forbidden, made
choice to rear
His mighty champion, strong above
compare,
Whose drink was only from the limpid
brook.
—Milton in "Samson Agonistes."
If we had upon our statute books
laws that permitted men to self some-
thing that poisoned pigs, calves and
chickens' and interfered with their com-
plete development as perfect animals,
especially while prices are so high,
would there not be something doing?
How about the boys?—Teacher's Jour-
nal.
She Gained 3(1 bhs,
Mrs. George Bradshaw, Harlowe,
Ont., writes: "I was troubled with
weak, watery blood and dropsy. I had
nervous headaches, dizziness and sink-
ing spells, and was, in fact, a semi -in-
valid. Doctors told me my heart and
kidneys were diseased and gave me up.
By using 10 boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve
Food I have been cured of many of my
old complaints and gained 36 pounds in
weight."
TEE WINGlIAM TIMES, DECEMBE1c 18 1913
(*Ai C 31i171
Cy
The Use Of
MILB J N'S LAXA-LIVER
PALLS..
A free muitou of the bowels daily should
be tee ru,e of every one, for if the bowels
d , e 1. tee ve ouily constipation is sure to
i, eti sett .ring in its train many other
1.. .w1cs r,b:..i the bowels become clogged
ut , Yeti fret Headache, Jaundice, Piles,
He: rihurn, Floating ;;pecks before the
Eyes, Catarrh of the Stomach, and those
tired weary feelings which follow the
wrong action of the liver.
Mrs. Elijah A. Ayer, Fawcett Hill,
N.B., writes:—" I was troubled with con-
stipation for many years, and about three
years ago my husband wanted me to
try Milburn's I,axa-Liver Pills as they
had cured him, I got a vial, and took
them, and by the time I had taken three
vials I was cured. I always keep them
on hand, and when I need a mild laxative
I take one."
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c.
a vial, 5 vials for $1.00, at all dealers, or
mailed direct on receipt of price by The
T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Pointed Paragraphs
Smart men may be fools for a pur-
pose
Bread is the staff of life and flattery
is the butter.
Most children are dissatisfied with
the behaviour of their parents.
It is never too late to blame the other
fellow for your mistakes,
A woman will do a lot of cheeky
things to improve her complexion.
She'd a bieight girl who can s.ratch an
eligible man from a designing widow.
Nearly all men are too lazy even to.
think for themselves, Thinking is hard
work.
A woiiian always has faith in the
judgment ofany man
marry him.
But when the milleniurn starts in busi-
ness the man behind the muck rake
will be out of a job.
If a homely girl has plenty of money.
it's an easy Matter to meet a wise man
who will try to convince her she is a
prize beauty.
Even though he may fool our other
senses the chronie borrower may al-
ways be detected by the sense of touch.
The Ill -wind.
The cold wet rain kept sloshing down,
and flooded yard and street. My uncle
cried: "Don't sigh and frown! It's
splendid for the wheat!" 1 slipped and
fell upon the ice, and made my fore-
head bleed. "Ghee whiz!" cried uncle,
"this is nice! Just what the icemen
need!" A windstorm blew my whiskers
off while I was writing odes. My uncle
said: "Don't scowl and scoff—t'will dry
the muddy roads!" If fire my dwelling
should destroy, or waters wash it hence,
my uncle would exclaim with joy: "You
still have got yotirfence!" When Iwas
lying, sick to death, expecting every
day that I must draw my final breath,
I heard my uncle say: "Our undertaker
is a jo, and if away you fade, it ought
to cheer you up to know that you will
help his trade." And if `we study
uncle's graft, we find it good and fair;
how often, when we might have laugh-
ed, we wept and tore our hair! Such
logic from this blooming land should
drive away all woe; the thing that's
hard for you to stand is good for Rich-
ard Roe.
who asks her to.
WALT. MASON.
Urio Acid Suffering.
Uric acid is an accumulation of poison
which finds lodgement in the system
when the kidneys fail to remove it from
the blood. In the kidneys and bladder
it forms stones, in the joints and mus-
cles it causes rheumatism. In any case
the pain and suffering is almost beyond
human endurance. Uric Acid is prompt-
ly removed from the system when the
kidneys are kept healthy and active by
using Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills•
The theory that one good turn de-
serves another doesn't always keep
things moving.
A man often wishes he could change
his luck as easily as a woman can
change her mind.
Sir Archibald Geikie tells a story of a
Scotchman who, much against his own
will, was persuaded to take a holiday.
He went to Egypt and visited the Pyra-
mids. After gazing for some time at
the great Pyramids he muttered: "Elan,
whatta lot cf mason work not to be
bringin' any rent."
A newspaper and the thermometer are
apt to be abused for telling the truth.
Convict made goods sold or offered
sale in Texas must he labelled "cor.-
vi ade."
To keep an electric wire away from
a tree limb there has been invented a
glass insulator which can be applied
without cutting the wire and which per-
mits the limb to move without strain-
ing the wire.
Golden opportunities should be em-
braced and heiresses are always golden
opportunities.
Most fellows have been all broken up
over a girl but it takes longer to !-Teak
some fellows than others.
been
British have b
.manufacturers.
compelled to build low-priced cars to
compete with certain American cars
that.fire selling well in the islans.
The library of the Forestry Branch,
Ottawa, contains over 1,200 volumes
and more than 4,500 photographs of
forestry work in Canada and elsewhere.
The wealth of the United States is
estimated $130,000,000,000.
If there is no one to lead a man into
temptation, he willfind some other
means of transportation.
The proposed electric railway scheme
from Hespeler to Georgian Bay was en-
dorsed at a meeting in Guelph of rt -
presentatives of twenty- five municipal -
ties.
In the Crimean war 750,100 were
killed; Italian war of 1859,-'60, 800,000;
Danish war of I304, 3;0011;°Austro-Prus•
sian warof .1800, 45,00e; Franco-German
war, 215.000; Ressc-Japanese war, 200-
000. (J
•
DR. A. W. CHASE'S
CATARRH POWDER " an
I, sent direct to the diseased parts by the
Improved Slower. Heals theulters,
dears the tilt passages,. stops drop.
1' pings in the throat and permanent.
,' cures Catarrh and Hay ):ever.
2.6e, a hex; blower free. Accept no
snhstitates, Ali dealers or rdmanson,
BIttir d/ eo.,LIinIted, Toronto.
GREAT WALL CRUMBLING.
china's Man -Made Marvel Is Nearing
End of Long History.
China seems to be wasting away in
many directions, particularly finan-
iall •. Lee
c y L t us hope it is a case of
darkness before dawn. Even her
Great Wali, one of the wonders of the
ancient world, is gradually wasting
away. The process of decay, report::
Mr. Monroe Woolley„ who has observ-
ed it, is nevertheless very slow, a
testimonial to the thorough methods
of the builders and the lasting quali-
ties of the material. The wall was
built 249 B.C., during the reign of
the Tsin dynasty. Probably there
isn't a similar work of this magni-
tude, as old as the wall, in existence
to -day,
China's Great Wall, says Mr.
Woolley, is capable of rousing big
emotions, from when one stands on a
mountain summit and sees the wall
crawling here and there at irregular
angles like a huge serpent over moun-
tain ranges and penetrating into. diz-
zy valleys as far as the eye can reach,
the magnificent work seems wholly
beyond the power of human hands,
The wall seems to have no end. It
might girdle the earth. The fear the
builders had for their enemies must
have been intense to bring about all
the toil that is wrapped up in this
Grumbling barrier, which has stood
through centuries while nations have
come into being and passed away.
The engineers, who superintended
the hordes v;ho worked on the wall,
must have been remarkable men. In
those days they cared little for
straight lines; surveying instruments
were evolved many hundreds of years
later. There were no hungry steam
shovels to eat away mountain sides;
no hydraulic dredges to fill deep de-
pressions; no colossal machines for
automatically mixing mortar; no
giant traveling cranes for lifting mas-
sive boulders into place. The sup-
position is that all the work was done
with the naked hands, with plain
brute strength, and such crude de-
vices as the men of that age could
improvise.
The Great Wall extends from the
coast along the northern boundary
of what was ancient Cathay to the
westernmost province. Since the ac-
quisition of Mongolia, the stone bar-
rier stands as a grim relic in the cen-
tre of the empire. There are several
arms or branches to the wall. One
of these runs east and west just north
of Pekin, while the main arm to the
coast extends some distance still fur-
ther north from the capital. It ex-
tends for hundreds of miles into re-
gions where all sorts of conditions
are to be met. It wends its serpen-
tine way across barren deserts, moun-
tains, and lowlands—now and then
making a break for rivers crossing its
path. One of these is a twin, or dou-
ble river, for many miles, and it is
said that it has changed its course
nine times in two thousand five hun-
dred years.
China is notorious for her lack of
roadways. Even to this day the re-
mote regions can be reached only on
camels or by boats towed up stream,
for hundreds or thousands of miles,
by men running along the banks. It
is claimed by some that the top of
the wall was used as a thoroughfare
especially during the construction.
At places on the southern side of the
wall, graded inclines are built to thr
summit. These might have been used
for driving beasts of burden to the
top of the wall for trips up and down
the length of the structure, while the
work was under way.
The wall is not high. In places an
athlete might clear it with a vault-
ing pole were is not for its unusual
thickness. At regular intervals are
formidable stone towers. I-Iere no
doubt the commanders of the defend-
ing legions took their stations when
invaders came from the north.
Neighborly Amenities.
"No, we never stay at home Sun-
day. It's too disagreeable."
"Disagreeable?"
"Yes. Out next door neighbor goes
awry and leaves his dog locked up
in the house and the poor brute barks
and whines all day."
"It gets on your nerves, eh?"
"No, it isn't that. But the neigh-
bors expect us to interfere."
"Well, why don't you? Tell your
neighbor frankly about his howling
dog."
"How can I when we've just got a
new phonograph and my eldest
daughter is learning to sing?"
Horrible.
"Oh, Henry," she said when she
had thrown off her wraps and flung
herself into a cl :'r, "I'm so morti-
fied."
"What's the matter, dear?"
"1 met Mrs. niggles at the recep-
tion this afternoon and she seemed
so nice that I stood there before the
crowd for half an hour and talked to
her. When we were leaving h4,t•
chauffeur drove up in an old fr .•
cylinder car and after she had ta'
her seat in it she called out r'
before everybody that she would
pect me to call on her soon."
• What Surprised flim.
17r. Thirdly was a mild, gentle and
prosy eletgyman. But at one evening
service he grew a bit sarcastic.
"I see a great many of you sleep-
ing," said the good' doctor mildly,
"I do not wonder at this. for your
work is hard, and many of you have
come a long way. Therefore, I ant not
surprised to see many of you sleep-
ing soundly, but what does surprise
me a little is to see so many sleeping
Who had such a comfortable, s1eee at
both our morning and our afternoon
service,"
Horrible Suspicion.
Iter leather (to young man who
had asked for his daughter)—That's
a very serious proposition. Can you
supporta family?
Her Suitor — Great Scott! 'Y'on
haven't lost gout job, have you?
CHRISTMAS APPEAL
FOR
The Hospital for Sick Children
COLLSG1e RT., TORONTO
Dais Mr. Editor—
Thanks for your kindness in allow.
lug me the privilege of appealing at
this Christmas time on behalf of the
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto.
It would take more space than you
can spare to tell of the good work done
for the sick and deformed children of
this Province, Let me, however, in a
few words, tell you of the progress of
the work of the Hospital.
One nurse, six little white beds, a
few dollars, a few friends—this was
the beginning. The beds have grown
to 250, the dollars to thousands, the
friends to hundreds. 1875, the first
Year, 44 inpatients, 67 out-patients;
1913, last year, 1,648 in -patients, 25,507
out-patients; 1875, 1 nurse; 1913, 70
nurses.
Since 1875, thirty-eight years ago,
the Hospital has admitted within its
walls 21,018 children as in -patients,
and 159,231 as out-patients, a total of
180,249, or an average of 4,743 per
year. Of the 21,018 in -patients, 15,200
were from Toronto, and 5,818 from
other parts of the Province; 10;150 of
the total in -patients were cured, and
6,367 were improved. •
In the Orthopedic Department last
year, of the 1,648 in -patients, 278 were
treated for deformities, 25 hip disease,
37. Pott's disease, 2 knock-knees, 19
bow-legs, 62 club feet, 8 lateral curva-
ture of the spine, 44 infantile paralysis,
6 wry neck, and 75 tubercular disease
of knee, hip and ankle. In 1913, the
Surgical Apparatus Shop manufactured
427 appliances for in -patients and out-
patients, including ankle braces, spinal
braces, hip splints, bow-leg splints,•
club -feet splints, plaster jackets, etc.
In this Department in 38 years near-
ly 800 boys and girls have been treat-
ed for Club Feet and 650 corrected.
Half of these came from places out-
side of Toronto. Surely we have a
fair claim for help from the people of
this Province.
Will you, the reader of this letter,
help to give crippled children a fair
start in life?
Busy dollars are better than idle
tears. The sympathy that helps is
good, but the Hospital has to have the
sympathy that works.
While Christmas Bells are ringing
to the glory of Him "Who made the
lame to walk and the blind to see,-
give,
ee;'give, give, give, and help the Hos-
pital to help God's little ones, upon
whom the heavy hand of affliction has
been laid.
Will you please send a dollar, or
more, if you can spare it, to Douglas
Davidson, the Secretary -Treasurer of
the Hospital, or
J. ROSS ROBERTSON,
Chairman of the Trustees, Toronto.
Between 19C5 and 1911 the Sunday
School enrollment of North America in-
creased .0 pecten:; from twelve to fif-
teen mil"on. Thii Coes not inelude offi-
cers and totithes. The secret of the
increase is largely found in the Organ -
ed Adult Bible CI tss Movement.
In Fluid——410 1, England, the bor
ough , ouncil has decided to erect 357
houses f or the labouring classes. These
houses a i.l be erected in different local-
ities, easy of access, and ,in districts
where good light and air as well as good
sanitary conditions c b.! had.
James Mo vat, Canadian Customs
officer in ti:e Fere N1arquette yards at
Suspension L',idge, N. Y., was instant-
ly killed by a (3.'1'.R. engine.
Hon. Jas. Duff, Minister of Agricul-
culture, and the makers of the stallion
enrollment act came in fo vigorous
criticism from horse breed- rs at the On-
tario Winter Fair at (,u:_Iph.
Switzerland has 834,eo0 householders
of u horn e35,000 are members of co-
operative societies.
Oleon argarine imports into Germany
.during the first five months this year
totalled 22,800,000 pounds.
Regardless of the fact that the con-
gregation i#small, there are people who
devote all their religion to going to
church.
The Philippine Islands produced 160,-
000 tons of Manila hemp in 19I1.
Java came next with 400 tons.
Telling'1 Vas. 1
"Adele has seine telling ways."
Yes. and ohe of them is she eats.%
keep a secret,"
Ahtn
rinittttt \Vrtr'e.
Aluminium ware can be polished
with a mixture of borax,. ammonia
and water, applied wlth,a sbft (fibtla,
ABSt.
LUTE
SECURlTY
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Dear Signature of
,ems%
tee Paa.S!ai 10 Wrapper Delo*.
Vary nrtntr +end' as ece�
to tatty sw nugare,
�... .. EOR RAIIAC3il1,
CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS:
TTL FOR RILIOUSNE53a
Fbl't TORPID LINER'
pl y POO CONSTIPATION
FOR 4LLOW4KIN.
FOR VIE COMPLEXION
I
y ii;;y 1 NAYS. M71Y r
a .+wit"+
WOOD -USING INDUSTRIES.
Over 1,200 Ontario Firma Contribute
Statistics,
According to a bulletin now obtain-
ablefrom the a t e Forestry Branch, Ottawa,
807,456,000 feet, board measure, of wood
were used by thirty-eight different in-
dustries in the manufacture of all sorts.
of finished products, from spools to
ships. The value of the woos so used,
as purchased in the rough, represented
a total of $19,161,384, and the capital
engaged in these industries, (which do
not include saw -mills, etc.) together
with the labour engaged in the manu-
facture of these finished products, rep-
resents a very important economic asset
to the resources of the pruvince.
Thirty-fourdifferent kinds of wood
were used, chief of which was pine,
representing 21.7 per cent of the total
and costing, on the average, $25.60 per
thousand feet, board measure. Good,
clear, white pine, however, is becoming
comparatively scarce:and it is being in-
creasingly substituted by spruce, which
costs little more than half as much, be-
ing one of the cheapest woods on the
market. It is significant to note that
only six native species were purchased
entirely within the Province, consider-
ably over $5,000,000 being paid for im-
ported wood.
The bulletin contains forty-three
tables, containing summarized and de-
tailed information regarding the quan-
tity, value, kind and source of supply
of the woods used in each industry.
Short descriptions of each species with
a list of their uses are also included and
suggestions are made as to the utiliza-
tion of waste, while the appendix con-
tains a classified directory of all the
manufacturers.
OUNEZ 6101C HEADACl-
WINTER TOURS TO THE LAND
OF SUNSHINE AND SUMMER TIME.
At this season of the year a great
niany are planning winter tours. Con-
siderable numbers annually visit the
ever -popular
California Resorts,While
le
many efer the flowers and snshine
of Florida, together with the very even
climate.
Numerous people in comfortable cir-
cumstances, well able to afford a winter
tour, have the mistaken idea that atrip
of this nature is most expensive. This
is not so, Thanks to modern railway
facilities, extensive trip both interesting
and educational can be made with speed
and comfort at a comparatively small
cost. Why not investigate?
The Canadian Pacifte Railway offers
particularly good service to Detroit,
where direct connection ,s made for
Florida, via Cincinnati, Ohio andAtlan-
ta, Ga., Jacksonville, Florida, is reach-
ed second morning after leaving De-
troit. Excellentccnnections for Florida
can also be made via Buffalo.
The Canadian Pacific -Wabash route
will be found the ideal line to Chicago,
where direct connection is made for the
Southern States. New Orleans is reach-
ed second morning after leaving Tor-
onto.
Direct connection is also made at
Chicago for points in California, Texas,
Arizona, etc.
The Dining, Parlor and Sleeping Car
service between Toronto, Detroit and
Chicago is up-to-date in every particular.
Connecting lines also operate through
Steeping and Dining Cars.
Those contemplating a trip of any
nature will receive full information
from any C.P.R. Agent, or write M.
G. Murphy, District Passenger Agent,
Toronto.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
+++++4444414444+++++++++++++ +++*++++4h+4'f 4'++++++++4-
+ 4.
IThe Times4
4..
4.
.i.
Clubbing List!
4. sma® e r 4.
+4.
t TiaSaturday 1.90
•t• Times and Daily Globe 4.50
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... 1.85
4. Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1,70
4. Times and Toronto Daily Star .... 2.30 4
3° Timis and Toronto Daily News.. 2.b0 *
4 Times and Daily Mail and .Empire. 4.:,0 "
+ Times and Weekly Maii and Empire... ....... 1 E0
Times and Farmers' Advocate .........••.21,8605
'i
4 Times and Canadian Faim (weekly) 1,00 +
4 Times and Farm and Dairy 1 80 4
4 Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press..,,. 1 60
Times and Daily Advertises ....... .. ... 1.55 3•
$• Times and London Advertiser ('reek]).) ... 1,60 .'.
4 Times and London Daily .FreeEditionPress,...111ci,r.irg 4
+
3 Evening Edition 3,50
2 b0
3• Times and Montreal Daily Witness 3.50 4
+ Times and Montreal Weekly Witness -, i.s 5 •-,
.4 Times and World Wide..... ,..,2 25
�+ Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg.:, 1 6U
Times and Presbyterian... 2 25 +
+ Times and Westminster 2 25 +
4 Times, Presb) terian and Westminster 3;25 +
3' rimes and Toronto Saturday Night , ... , 3 90
3•
Times and Busy Mania Magazine ••2.50
Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.75 +
Times and Youth's Companion 2.5,0 s
4. Times and Northern Messenger...........,..,, 1.35 4
+- Timos and Daily World ........•..... 3.10
Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly). 2.90
3• Times and Canadian Pictorial I,EO +
i Times and Lippincott's Magazine 3,15 .+
Times and Woman's Home Companion 2 6G +
3• Times and Delineator , . 2.40 •
3• Times and Cosmopolitan 2.30 +
4 Times and Strand `3,50
'� Times and Success 2.45
+ Times and McClure's Magazine 2.60
Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,55
+ Times and Designer 1.85
4 Times and Everybody s 2.40
These _prices are for addresses in Canada or Great
$ Britain. +
3•
3•
3•
may beobtained $•
publications ob at ed by
�. The above y Times .1.$ subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica-
i, tion being the figure given above less $I.00 representing+
a the price of The Times. For instance :
*The Times and Saturday Globe $1.904.
o The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1,00).- 1.35 +
$3,25 +
a* the price of the three papers $3.25. 8,
+The Times and the Weekly San . t............. $1.70 3•
o The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00) 1,30
o The Saturday Globe ($1.90 less $1.00) ... ..... 90
o - -- 4r
a 53 90
s 4.
the four papers for $3.90. w
4. If the rib kat on you want is not in above list, let
+ us know. We . n supply almost any well-known Cana-
dian or American canpublication. T1- esti prices are strictly
cash in advance
+ S nd subscriptions by post office or express order to a
Times .,, Orfice,
Abe
Stone Block
' WING(1 AM ONTARIO
a