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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1910-03-10, Page 3• 1••••• .....1••••••• NO. 7. • Says the Miller/ P4 Otte day coming home II looked through the bitch. en window end OW our grocers wife baking bit, suits. Sure enough, there woo a. bog of 'CRAM or TIM lAMST' Mgr, and • the biscuits were loo OP - ink hot -made ina, mouth water. You bet 1 knew then hew It WAS that grocer 0914 so much 4Crearri of the West' lour U.t-nows bow good it is by the fast? things hiswife melees with it, and he fgels sure in recommending it - 1' I; every nroger would try his goods before aelling them it *Nell be a good thing." • The Campbell Milling Co,,.Llmited Toronto •FOR SALE BY IiERR $IRD. W1NGHA.M. • A Point' of Good Morals. . •• The following observations on eeoret •' otiMmissiorte by Mr. Justice Magee, are fie the utmost importanoe to therbasinese Community: 4 -"If you sent your servant to market to but' Ix horse and, there be me* with a men who offer' bun a bores ne $150 and tier, 'If yon will buy this horse at $100 I will give yon $10 of it to youreelf ; and yon need not .have any compunction about it, becalm I would not let your master have it for lese than $150,1 And your servant gate it for $150 and pate the $10 in his pocket, pm oan recover that 10 from your gervent. It layout money, not his, because it was made out of the transaction which he was oareelloor on with some person else for you; now that is clear law. So, a olmimeroiel traveller sent out by a house • here in Canada to buy goods for that house in the States, and he may be off- ered a oomnitseionby a person in respect to the goods he buys when he 001110g book to Canada, if the tranaotion, ever ever becomee known, he is litsble to pay over that money to his employers. Be ha. no right to be paidat both ends, unless it ig known. This question of double oomnittnions bee for a long tinie past been -quite too common, and -has been permeatiog to r. large extent the Coramereial life • of the country. So much is that the case that last year the Dominion Government passed an act snaking it a oriminal offence) to take a double commission," • • A prude is 8013100120g a person who noses around 'for something to get shocked at. ' Into Worse Hands, m going itiSitrm the critics." y 1;1'1 IgtolIsnsgi s. 1001;t Little, Beta,- ' . • "Cal settlt;t danl /7:A! hteettilhaet call: counts. .A hit in hichee, it cuts some ice Although it is so arnait, Give Them a Change, • "He has a scheme to rob war of all its *errors." "HOW Is. he going to do It?" "Let (ally married ten eulist." Good In Both Trades. "Young Skidoo is 4 regular cut-up." "Is be?" "You het."" • • "Butcheror tailor?" .! ra • 1 • Some Speed. „.1 •• ' 'Bow did you come civerr • a , ••,tn my aeroplane," I , • , . "Yes, like thunder." "No, like lightning." • ow000woo-Oo.,oeoomow • Great Attraction. • These Yankee girls as you obserVe• 'ro dukes whose loads are tow Are simply irresistible . If pa has got the dough. ,. At ItIgain. -' "They buried. the hatchet yesterday." -Well, a resurrection has taken •At the Office. "That new young man is too Slew.° "Tben 1 see hie rapid tinish.". Make Each Animal Worth '25o Over Its Cost.. On Kof a Can't a Day Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, making liens lay irewinter. Increasing the yield of milli five pounds per cow a day, or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and Vigi* • When you feed • stock food' to your cow, horse;swine or poultry,, you are merely feeding them what you are•growing on your own farm. • •bodies get all the.gobd out of the feed you give them so they can get fat Your animals do need not%more feed, but seniething to help their, • and stay fat all Year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keen' " them Lipto the best possible condition. No "stock food'"can do all these Largest Winner of thine. ROYAL PUEPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and dots. It is Gny pacer on rand Circuit, '08 Not a "Stock Food" But al‘Conditioner" ROYAL PURPLE STOCK spacutic contains no grain. nor farm products. It increases yield of militfrom three to five pounds per cow per day before the'Specific has been used two weeks. It makes the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any other preparation , known. Young calves fed with ROYAL PURPLE are as large at sht weeks old as they would be when fed with ordinary Materials at ten weeks. • • ' ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run.clown animals and restores them to plumpnessost magically. Cures bots, Colic, worms, skin diseases and debilityperrnanentlY. Dan Mc an, the horseman, says: I have used ROYAL. PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC persistent!y in the feeding of The Eel,' 2.021, largest winner of any pacer on Grkihd Circuit in 1908. and 'Henry Winters,' 2.00, brother of 'Allen Winters,' winner of 00,000 in trotting stakes in 1905. These horses have never been off their feed since I commenced using Revel Purple Specific almost a year ago, and I will always have it in my stables." ai ur 1. STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS One 30c, Package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC Wittiest one animal seventy days, which is a little over twekthirds of a cent a day Most stock feeds in fifty cent packages last but fifty days and are given three times a day. AOYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC is divot/butane° a day, .and lasts half again as long, A 31.50 „pail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent peerage will last 280days. RoYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 25. It is an astonishingly quick fattener, stimulating the appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh. As* hog fattener it is a leader. It will save many tittles its cost in veterinary bilis. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECI- FIC is bur other Specific for poultry, not for stock. One 50 cent package will last twenty-five hens 70 days, or a pail costing 51.50 wittiest twenty-five hens 280 days, which is four times more material for Only three times the cost. it makes a 'laying machine" out of your hens sCmmcr and winter prevents fowls losing. flesh at moulting time, and cures poultry diseases. Every package of kOYAL PURPLES STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is guaranteed. Just use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animals and any other preparation andther animal, in the same condition: after comparing results you will sayROYAL PURPLE has • them all beat to death, Geese baciccornesyduranoney. FREE -Ask ' your merchant or write US for our valuable 3 -page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases, containing also cooking reeelpes and full Particulars about ROYAL PURPLE STOCK And POW.. TRY SPECIFICS. you cannot get Royal Purple Specifics from. merchants or adents,,We will supply you direct, express prepaid, on receipt of 51.50 a pail for eithet•PoultrY or Stock Specifict. Make Money acting as our agent In your &atria. Write for tering.. For sate by alt up.to,date merchants, W. A, linking mit, 0,, London, Cap, Royal Pottle -Stook "and Poultry setting's arid free booktetet are kept in stock by Walton lileRibboli arid T. 4. Mille. • • Have you ' renewed your • subscription to the ines? SiLkdowill..41widlik HE FEARED TO. EAT TOL 'nettle Digeatera" coped Indieteatioa • Like many another sufferer from In- digestion,Mr, E. Thody looked forward to mealtime with dread instead of pleasure. Writing from Iris hem° at 141 Yorkville Ave., Toronto, on June 12th last, he says; •• f For two years 1 suffered with In- digestiou and obtained no, relief from anything I took, including? several ..pre, seriptions from prominent physicians'. Every meal was followed with acute pain until I feared to eat, coneeeuently became run down for lack of nourish- Mont- " "Little Digesters" were reCOni- mended to me by a friend and I tried them with remarkable results, two boxes •Completely • curing me. It is Wee months since I took any and have not ' • suffered a pain no matter how heattily • I eat, I would certainly recommend them to anyone suffering with Itadi- *gestion," • • Why allow yourself to be handicapped and youi' life shortened by Indigestion or Dyspepsia,when you can eo easily avoid itt "Little Digesters" are guar. anteed to cure you or your money will be cheerfully refunded, 25e. at your druggist's or by mail from the Coleman • Medicine Co,, Toronto. • 32 ISIT MERELY CHANCE? WHIQH SAVES US FROM DEATH gvany PAY WE LIVE? V • Cateetrophe Threatens From Infancy • m Old Adel Put Usually Passes ley 0,4011n0 interesting and Rather Uri,' •cOrrinnon Esperiericese-Three Times • pay Is a Fair Average of Narrow Ssisapee For a Soy. .THENIISTAKE OF LIFE.' The mistakes of lite are 'raspy as the old song eays and only a daring Man would havil the heart to point out the nnmber of mistakes which his neighbor makes to say nothing of his manifold errors. Yet one audacious man who has undertaken the task of enumerating the mistakes of life is generate enough to limit them to fourteen. Andhere •they are: 1. Setting tip one's own standard of tight and wrong and expecting others to conform to it. 2. Trying to measure the enjoyment of others bronr own. 8. Expecting artiferraity4 of opinion. 4. Looking for judgment and eicieri mice in youth. 5. Endeavoring to mold all disposi- tions alike. 6. Refuting to yield ta unimportant trifles. • 7. Looking for perfection in our own actiontr. 8. Worrying ourselves and otters about what cannot he remedied. 9. Acit alleviating as ninth suffering wa can. it • 10. Not melting allowance for traits in Others which apparently unlit them 'for mimes* in life. it Oonsideeing anYthing impossible that we ourselves mutest perform. • 12. Refusing to believe anything •which: our minds oannot grasp. '18. • Living as if the moment would last forever. 14; Estimating met* and women by their nationality or by any outside mutt, • Why not slip this list as it Stands, paste it same place where it can be read ftenneritly and 0011Veniently, or. better • still, deny it in en biside pocket/ When .pOU have rectified one mistake, draw a pencil through it, All start in at Once, and see Who hate the fewest mile takes tO swear off ole, January 1, 1911, - EX. • • • His Friend' Said • "if ihey Don't Help or .0nro Von 1 Will Stand The Price." 4 -+++++41* -4.-+ Mr, J'. R. Thisk, L' 4- Orangeville, Ont., Complaint wrters: "I had Leen troubled with Bye - Cured, pensia and Liver Complaint and tried many different re. Medias but obtained little or no hetiefif. A friend advised me to dive your Lasa-LiN er Pills a trial, but I tail him I had tried so many "cure ells" that 1 wee tired I aying Out money for things geeing me no 1 end'. He said,' If they don't help, or cure yeti. I will stand the price.' So seeing his laith in the Pills, I bought twavials, and I a ee not deceived, for they were the best 1 Over !reed. They gave 'relief which has Fnd r more 'toting effect than any, medicine 1,haviiesiver used, and the beady about them is, they are small and easy' to tette. 1 believe them t� be the best meditire for Liver Trottlile there it to be found," Price 25'cinite for $1.00, rt all dealers, or will iiteent direct'by on receipt Of The T. Milburn C.., Limited, TOtonto, Ont. '. "Aaeidents will happen." -As won V the baby is able ter sit on the floor, writes Walter Leon Pawyer, he begins 40 look fair things to swallow or pm, rep nese i and 'when he realises that be has feet he uses"thenern most iteteve- ay rn the ingenieure pursuit a bumps. ...,Rom the age ef 8 to that of in, a leVe boy risks hie life three tuite 111 xitv, and his sister, though leendieep- ped by petticoats, is never airaid trU tiry a raee with Fate, "Adventures *re to the adventurous,""Onal some persona have a special knack at get- 04.tig into trouble; yet' who of us luta pissed the runaway beree and the Vertuened boe& the wrecked trains, 4ite burning building, the insects or elePtilea or animals that bite or sting `or kick, the ladder that broke be- neath us, ttlat loose brick that tripped us, the electric current that plunked us, or the cyclone that reit us. by the hair? Whether by these or other agen- cies of peril. We have .411 bad splen- did opportunities to be killed:- truly the Wonder is that so many of us are alive. • IISthe reverent moments, when we lay hold on the things of the spirit, we own the eerisou way we have w- eaned, and at. the thought, of protect- ing power jests die upon our lips. But generally to each Other, account- ing for eut fortune, we give the ob- vious explanation that circumstances may .suggest. "If" is always the first word, - "There is nmeh virtue in If." It accounts for accidents, it elucidates escapes,' Fiona the cradle to the grave, like- wise; does catastrophe threaten and pass us by. We never outgrow it. On a. winter evening a man of 75, some - What herd of hearing, was placidly ambling home to a certain town, over a road that seems to have a peculiar faecination for deaf persons, to wit, the rtrilway track. A passenger train came along, 'ond struck him, says the reporter, naively, "before • he was aware of its approaoh." Ho went up in theair, came down on the cow- catcher,. caught hold, and rode five milea,to the next station, escaping with no injury but a slight cut on one leg. 11 tire pace of the man and the speed • of the train had not synchronized, he would have fallen under the locomo- tive 08 been hurled to his death. Also, If he had kept off the tracle the loco- motive would never have touched him. • . - A man . still older, a Livermore, Maine, veteran of 92, went ap on his barn scaffolct by a ladder from the outside, to pitch some hay. He step- ped on:e loose board, fell through the scaffold; and hung by one foot. There was no ona at home .or in the nearest house, to yell for help was useless, and the only .reeourse was. to try to kickhinisell free and drop on his head on the learn floor. Finally he did so. When he recovered conscious- ness he found that the barn door was locked on the outside. He eseaped on- ly leiter many attempts, by climbing back to the scaffold through the open- ing over a feedbox, and then crawl- ing down his ladder. If the barn floor had been harder or the old gentleman's head softer -but let us not pursue a painful possibil- ity,•inerely, noting that, If he had done 'a little carpentering on the scaffold, he would not !hrere fallen through a hole. The man who tended the largest band saw in. a Hartford shop had just stepped in front oe the blade ad bent forward to move the adjuster, when the blade split not across, obeerve, but from end to eud-and, in less time .than it takes to tall it, the saw had coiled its 25 feet of length around the operator's body. Sparks and blood flew for a minute, foe the machinery had been running at high speed. But the operator "the coolest man in the shop," disentangled himself from the glittering band, stepped over and shut down his maehine, and then started patching himself with cotton. waste. The steamship Oarpathia was 200 miles off Gibraltar, one night, when a Hungarian sailor fell asleep as he lihned on the rail to starboard -and waked to find himself in the water, wearing an overcoat a.t that. He was missed and a boat, was lowered, but he and the rescuers failed to get to - gather, and he lied to face the ques- tion, whether quietly to give up and drawn or to stay afloat as long as he eould and hope for the best. Ile was 'the kind of man who "grasps the skirts of happy ehanee" end, when she runs away, bears bad luck brave- ly; and so he slipped out of his over- coat, unlaced and took off his shoes - which is not so simple a trick as it, SOunds-and put up the stiffest kind of upper lip. He had his reward, too, for by and by the steamship Rea- ehaw happened along and plaited him Up. He had spent, eight hours in mid- oeean, a fact as well attested as any incident in all 'the history of seafaring. And not only when we evork, but when we loaf and when we frond, de misadventures three:teu and earlier trea eidente recall than forgotten influ- once. Walking a Boston street on! a beautiful evening itt tlY'thieletplatreid upturned admiringly stars, a \Mesta was stricken dower by a pieplate which fell from the sill of a ilith.storey window. She went to hospital with a broken nose and laterated wounds of both lips. Again, a Harvard urniergradtutte, training for the football team, notated that head work caused ,severe paits fis his abdomen; The doetors diagnosed up- pendieitie, ancl, when they 'operated, found a 22.ealibre bullet in the appeee slit, it tock the. young man sones time to Mean that, IA years previous, while ho Wen +stealing a. rifle, emit a bullet liad **Untied AIM. THEIR LOT OETTERINO•1 Women Need Na,40nleer Hide Intel. feet Under Frivolous Air. Mine let has not been 411 alto- gether pleasent one in the matter a $44uc4twn. Until comparatrvelp re 'cent yeas they had to fight for Whatever formai menial training they got. Previous to that they anal to endure the charge that they were not intellectuel companions for eaniatei. men, and this eharge has persisted in teeny circles to this day hi a curi- ous way. At the same bine educated women of the recent period have been adjured by social monitors that men do not like "superior" *ripen, weaneil wile seem to know as raneli as them- selves. Aecerdieg to them, in the presenceof these critical and sensi- tive nale beings it was well for the intellectual girl to "sing small" and tobe as frivolous as her silliest sister if he aspired to be liked by the men bf her acquaintance. On her own part the educatec1. girl had ireeown private grievance, namely, that when she clid seek to carry on an intelligent conversation with the average male whom she met she often found him unresponsive and in reality a stupid bore. • Now, however, there are indica- tions that in future she will find bet- ter conditions and better recognition. The trouble seem is to have been that she has taken too much for granted and has not grasped the fact that there are mon and men and that some are capable of meeting her on • a common intellectual ground, while some are not. No less a person than Dr. Lyman Abbott tells of a conver- sation with college girls in which they brought to him the profoundest problems e in philosophy, history, ethics and theology. The Archbishop of Canterbury encourages the study of theology among women by eetab- lishing an examination conducted annually under his direction -this not to fit them for clerical labors, but because it is a branch of the higher education of which they were ignor- ant and on which they should be able, he thinks, to converse intern - gently. From another field comes Henry Arthur Jones, the English dramatist, with a tribute to the modern woman. He notes that her attitude toward men is changing through her becalm. ing more and more his intellectual companion. "This," he says, "is surely what those of us who are in the professions of drama and jour- nalism would most earnestly desire." From all of which it seems that the intellectually equipped woman need not hide her accomplishments by a pretense of triviality from a dear that she will lose favor, but that it will be wise for her to choose her society, since not all men can be companionable to her, whatever she may be to them. Artful Parisian Beggars. Parisian beggars have been known to go far beyond a sham fight with a dog in the gutter for a crust. Maxime du Camp has recorded how, on an August Sunday in 1887, at an hour when the quays were crowded, a shabby man uttered a cry of despair and threw himself into the Seine near the Pont de Minna Ile had sunk twice when a man in worlunen's clothes plunged in, swam atter him and effected an apparently difficult rescue. As the crowd surrounded the two on the bank the rescued one slowly came to, reproached the res- cuer for saving a 'hopeless, workless man, who had not oaten for three days, and tried to rush off again, ory- ing, "Let me die !" The rescuer pull- ed out half a franc, saying: "Take this. I shall only have to go with- out dinner to -day." And, of.course, the crowd liberally followed suit. But the skeptical police shadowed the two, saw them count up the spoils in a tavern and presently arrested the two ex -convicts, dead drunk. - London Chronicle. Ataric the Goth.' Alarie, the first of the barbarian kings who entered and sacked the Eternal City and the first enemy who had appeared before its walls since the time of Hannibal, is said to have ree,eivial as the prioo of his departure from the city (during the first siege, at A.D. 408) 5,000 pounds weight of gold, 3,000 pounds weight of silver, 3,000 silken robes, 3,000 pieces of scar- let cloth and 4,000 pounds of pepper. In ordor to furnish a portion of the ransom it became necessary to melt down some of the statues of the an- cient gods. The Early Methodist Preacher. In England the early Methodist preacher when away from home was expected to get his food from his con- gregation and when at home was al - towed 36 cents a day, with the stipu- lation that the acceptance of an In- vitation to dine led to a due deduc- tion. His wife was allowed 93 cents e week, with a further concession of eh a quarter for each child. At the Bristol conference of 1752, however, a definite salary was fixed. For the suture the preacher was able to call ad0 a year his very own. Pinched on the House. Saek-I just saw your wife, old men. She was simply stunning. the way, you're looking rather miser- able yourself. What's upF Tom -Don't get, enough nourish - tient ; that's all. You see, f arranged with my wife a month ago to give her a certain amount each week, cut of which she was to pay household expenses and buy her clothes. A Change at Least. A change of tenors had been made in the char& ehoir. Eight-year-old Seasie, retairnine from the morning setatiee, was anXioue to tell the news. "Oh, iliothet," she ad:timed, "we have a new terror in the choir l" -Wo. man's Home Companion. ' in the bumps. There was orate upon it time an Egyptian king, so it is said, who built a •pyramid and died f melantholy. His name Was Humans. The memory of his tragic history is perpetuated • every time we -say WO are "in the tluttos." 4411111611111laillihp, • 4 tide* wedding wait eelebrated on •Wednesday evealag, reb. 28rd, Itt the berm of lir. and No. Wm. Bird, fIttren Rood, fiederleh to., when Mr. Bird's Sitter, Miss L4zz$e w milted In Mar. ;lase to,Mr,,, Albert ARInetrAPK. of Leite rimit, Colborne, towettio, by Rev. Ortmilton, B, A. of Goderlob. At Dundelb, on BottirdeY• lolh Mrs. MeV B. Roth. one of th4 piontr,rs of East Wawenosh, peeved te the great beyond. Mr. and Mr', Bath took up load In East Wawanosit wbeu it was t‘ wildernese and lived ?there mini about twelve years Om when they moved to Grey county, A few years loser Mr. Rath died. Three sons and four (laugh - Sere *arrive; &Mies, at Llinehoose; We. $. Kerne, of Clinton; William, of Eaat Wawanosh; Mrs, John Hamilton and Mies Annie. of Nelson, S. 0 ; John, of Dundalk, and Mrs 14eSter Daylo, of Toronto, Boye badly reare# and without trait:l- ing for any ealliog, are thrown upon the streets to shift for theniselves. They drift into bad company and take to thieving tie naturally as duces to water, beoanee of the lack of moral restraiot, and being without references or recoils. mendations, tbey can find no other way for setting money to supply their wants. Unfortunately there are always older heads too ready to direct them on the downward path. We believe everybody should home a chance. The nation that neglects its boys throws away its most valuable asset and sows the seeds of future disasters to blossom in criminal Marts and prisons; or, worse still, in the underground world where sullen rebellion against all authority Is mined and anarchists are bred. CARTERS Sick lieadaelr erelrellevoan the troubles incl' dent to a t113001 mate of the eystem, such ita Dtczlnctc,Vausaa, Moraines's, Distress after amine, PaInta 00131,1ot Zic, While their mat rezaatitablo sacessa 114 keen ohms la centre SI Ileadaelte. yet Carter% :Little /aver Ville are equally valuable iwoccotipation.curingaisl par venting this annoying contrite: .2, they also cornet ultilisordersor th e stomach, ethrm.stethe Jiver mut ...maims the bowels. Menu teeyonly cared AD Achothey wriuldhealmoeterteeIreefa tem who auger from this diatresstas complain t; net Ione - Down, veer goodeceedoee notelet:tete-41141.1meg who once try thenswitiend thereat:1e pills vain, ablein so many wave thutiter rill not ling to do without them, Ilutafter le the bane of so many lives that bore le where we make our great boast. Our pills emelt while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. Onoor twopilistnalro a dose. They are strictly vegetable 4:1,1 do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please altwho nee them, 01MTZI IginC7.151 Cb % UV 7022. :mati111Small Dole. Small Pri Breweriee and tanneries and printing ink factories ocniftr tem:option from tubercado els, and n.plcy et s in torpor,s tine factories nevtr have thromatism, Copper mining occludes the possibility of typhoidtamong the workers, •••••••••••••••••••••••••• C110004100011416101110•0•4111080400111 • • • I CLUBBING FOR 1909 • • • a • • • 1".• • • • RATEs I • • • - 1 O. The Thin will receive subscriptions • • for any of the following • • • • • • •• • •• •, •, • • • •• • • • • • •: • • • • • 4. 4. 4,,4. 4. 4' Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times and Daily Globe and Daily Mail and Empire and Daily World and Toronto Daily News and Toronto Daily Star and Daily Advertiser and Toronto Saturday Night and Weekly Globe . ** • • and Weekly Mail and Empire"... ..... and Family Herald and Weekly Star and Canadian Farm (weekly) and Weekly Witness and London Free Press (weekly) and London Advertiser (weekly) Times and Toronto ,Weekly Sun Times and World Wide Times and Northern Messenger. Times and Farmers' Advocate at the ziei. publications : . • • • • • • • • Lelow: . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • g 4.50 4.60 3.10 . • 22.,3805 2,30 3.35 1.60 1.60 1 85 1,60 1.85 1.80 1.60 1,70 .... 220 1.35 285 We specially recommend our readers to subscribe. to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Manazine. • Times and Presbyterian •2.25 Times and Westminster 2.25 Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 3.25 Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) . . • • • 2.40 Times and Canadian Magazi(n raeo(nmthonlyth. Times and Sabbath Reading, Times and Outdoor Canada TTiimmee: aanndd wMicluzna EFaanirmeerec.m..p New.a.nY:onrk lyT)oronto); 1 85 .. 2.15 2,25 1,95 • • • 2.90 TnTiimmmenesas aaannnddd GBD0reealtleannne,as ct voarra.uk.. iig nt Times ind Country Gentl.Gemrsoacwnheoro.lm..agazine 1.95 2.95 2.60 1,55 Times and Good Housekeeping 2 80 Times and McCall's Magazine 1,70 Times and American Illustrated Magazine........ 2.80 Times and American Boy Magazine Times and What to Eat Times and Business Man's Magazine............. 2.15 Times and Cosmopolitan 2.1 Times and Ladies' Home Journal 211 ...5 9 005 z Tirnes and Saturday Evening Post TimesTimas andaud Hoard'saesBDairyman 2.40 Times and McClure's Magazine 2.40 Times and Munsey's Magazine.... • 2.75. ,6105 \ 2.50 .TImes and Vick's Magazine 1 Times and Home Herald. •2.60 Times and Travel Pliagazite 2.25 Times and Practical Farmer 2.10 Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1,60 Times and Designer • .. • • 1 75 Times and Everybody's ....... 2 80 Times and Western Dome Monthly, Winnipeg;.66g Times and Canadian Pietorial /0 * The beve prides inolttde postage on American publicailomi to any • address in Canada. If the nuns is to be sent to an American alideeee, mid 42 50 tette for portage, and where American priblieationir are to be aPnt to , tui American athlreseeg a rednetion will be irade in pike, We could extend this list. If the paper or Etageilee y•ott went le not in • the list, call at this °Mee, or drop a card and we will Ova yon ptiets en the paper yon want. We dab with all the leading newspapers and inegazinee, When premiums tire groan with any at oboe paper. sabstriners •Aetitire Snob premiums tvhen ordering through U8. same as ordstiro •f torn publishers. • These low rated Mem a considerable 'Wing to atibeeribeire, and or•ti STRICTLY CASH /It ADVANCE. Send remittances by postal onto, east o fade or express money order, addressing /IVIES 011102, • WING -AM, ONTARIO, 0401160111191111411011011110101114 110041.6.1144014.111.6140.00