The Wingham Times, 1911-06-01, Page 3THE WINGBAN TIMES UNE 1, 1911
RAGING HEADACHE
STOPPED AT ONCE
When He Took "Fruitea4iyes"
Steeeteg'fl",QNT., Sept. eerd, ewe),
"Pett certainly have the Greatest
discovered Headache Cure in the world,
esefore "p'ruit-a-tines" cline before the
public, I suffered tortures from Hehd-
eehes caused by Stomach Disorders,
"One of your travellers called on me
when I had one of iny raging head-
aches and Iia I my head alined raw from
external applications,
"I hated to see any person coming
int., the store (much less a commercial
traveller) and T told hint very curtly
that I had a lreaclaelte but he insisted on
my trying "Pruit-a-tives",
"I did so, with what I would call
aunaiing results. They completely cured
me and since then (nearly six years
ago) it is only necessary for meto take
one occasionally to preserve me in my
present good health. I was 65 years old
yesterday and have been a general store
beeper at the above address for twenty-
five years". WM. PITT
As Mr. Pitt says "Pruit-a-tives" is the
greatest headache cure in the world.
Dealers everywhere have "Prnit-ar
• tines" at Soo. a boa:, 6 for $2.50 or trial
size, esc.. or sent on receipt of price by
Fruit-a-ttves Limited, Ottawa.
Queer Explanations.
Queer, isn't it, what lengths party-
ism forces some newspapers to go in
"explaining." When there was a pos-
sibility of Sir Wilfrid Laurier being
absent from the Coronation on account
of the Opposition's threatened policy
on the reciprocity agreement Conser-
vative newspapers made a terrible
noise about Sir Wilfrid's disloyalty in
sacrificing his attendance at the Im-
perial Conference to, they said, help
the United States, Now that the Op-
position have abandoned their announc-
ed intention of refusing to vote supplies
and Sir Wilfrid has gone to attend the
Conference, the Conservatives announce'
that "Sir Wilfrid Laurier is going to
Englandto fight Imperial Federation."
Surely ir Wilfred Laurier's past re-
cord for patriotism and loyalty to his
beloved country, Canada, should relieve
him from such aspersions upon
his in-
tentions. But with a partizan press
wilfully blind, and narrow and bigoted
to the core, nothing counts but party.
Thank heaven, the intelligent voters
of the country are more and more
coming to use their own common-sense
and the number of those who can be
led by appeals- to party prejudice alone
is continually growing smaller.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Newspaper Circulation at Sea.
It seems extraordinary to read of the
circulation of a daily newspaper pub-
lished on shipboard reaching 2,500, but
such has been, we are told, the circula-
tion of the Cunard Daily Bulletion on
the Lusitania, though the average daily
circulation is nearer 2,000. It is a
twenty-three page journal, printed on
expensive glazed paper, and costing 5
cents a copy. It goes to press at 1 a.
in. and can be deliveredto passengers,
if they so desire, in their berths early
next morning. The editor gets bis
material, apparently, from the wireless
service, and he has a place reserved for
everything from general election re-
turns to stock exchange quotations.
Got Father Morrlsoy"s "Not 10"
List In 'limo To Sere His Lite.
;:r. Ayle ard's letter tells the story;
C.uupbellton, N.B., Feb. 5, rgog.
Muller Morriscy Med. Co.,
During the winter of teo7,' while
travelling on the Gaspd Coast, I
rotrtracted a severe Cold which settled
upon my aunts.
After I returned home I wrote to
xt.tlter Morriscy explaining my case.
I received a letter from him with a
prescription for his medicine, which
could not be filled at the time here,
After one week's delay tI received it,
Just in the nick of time to save my t
After one Inefrtli's use I felt like
. a mew man.
Yours trnly,
Aylward.
rno.
There is not much time to lose when
st cold settiee on the lungs. Ptteutxlonia
1ti11s within a week. With bather
Morriscy's "No, to" at hand, you dont
even have towait for a ;doctor. No. to
cures all throat and lung troubles. It is
a reals Lung Tonle, andfortifies rtgaiust
future attacks, serial bottle ese. li,egulat
size sot, at your dealer's, or from I.etlter
Morriscy Medicine Co. Ltd., Montreal,
�
Quo.
NE MORE BATTLE
That Was What GeneralI Lee
Wanted Before Yielding,
0..,,,,x,.,.110..
IDS TAR.K WITH L,ONGSTREET,
Major Reneon'aInter ting Account of
the Scene In the Confederate dem-
mender's Cheerio's Tent the Night
•Before the Surrender.
An interesting account of the tira-
naattc scene at General Lee'a headgear
tern the night before the surrender,
when the Confederate commander was
still determined to strike one more
plow for the cause for which he was
fighting. is given by Major A. R, a.
Ranson in Harper's Magazine, Major
Ranson writes;
"When I arrived at headquarters
general Lee was in a tent, sitting with
Gsrem' bundles
of ryeeneral ;strawLong, tthee t ground
sobeeing wet'
from the rain. at the upper side of the
tent, with one candle for a light, I
made sly •report, and the general told
vie to watt, as he wished to see use.
1e asked me if 1 bad had anything to
eat, and I told him no. lie 'said he
was sorry he bad nothing to offer me.
He gave me a bundle of straw and
told me to sit near the door.
"It had been raining all afternoon,
and 1 was quite wet. I was also very
tired, so. I put my foot through the
bridle rein .of my mare standing out-
side and, lying down on the bundle of
straw, was soon asleep.
"I was awakened by 'voices and,
looking up, saw 'the colonel I had left
in charge of the troops at the bridge
standing in the tent. He reported that
the rations had not arrived, and tbe
starving and discouraged troops had
all deserted in the darkness, leaving
their arms In the trenches.
"General Lee heard him to the esd
of his account, and then with a wave
of has hand dismissed him. Turning
to General Longstreet, he said: 'TIsirs
Its very bad. That man is whipped. It
Is the first time 1 have seen one of
my officers who had been whipped. It
is very bad.'
"The conversation between the gen-
erals was then resumed in low tonal.
and I again fell asleep. I must have
slept for some length of time when 1
(was awakened by General Lee's voice,
speaking In loud tones, louder than X
had ever heard from him. He ;was
saying, 'General Longstreet, I wilt
strike that man a blow in tbeaorn
Ing. General Lee sametlmeresspoke.
of General Grant as 'that man'• and
of the Federal army as 'those people.'
"General Longstreet replied in lo'w
tones. giving the strength and condi-
tion of hiscommand and the strength
and position of the enemy, and con+
eluded by saying, 'But you have only,
to give me the order and the attack
will be made in the morning.' .Again
Ate conversation was resumed In low,
tones, and I fell asleep.
"I must have slept for an hour at
least when again I was awakened b4.
the loud, almost fierce, tones of Gen-
eral Lee, saying, '1 tell you, General
Longstreet, I will strike that man a
blow in the morning.' General Lbng-
street again recounted the difficulties,
ending as before. 'General, you know,
you have only to give the order and
the attack will be made, but I must
tell you I think it will be a useless
i'taaste of brave lives.'
"Thinking I had been present long
enough st such an interview, I cough-
ed and got up from the straw , and,
drawing back the flaps of the tent,
looked out into the darkness. General.
,Lee said: 'Captain Ranson, I beg your
Mardon. I had forgotten you. Go now
and get •something to eat and some
rest. I will see you in the morning.'
"I found my poor mare lying fiat On
her side In the rain and fast asleep.
It was past midnight and very dark,
but I reached our camp, though nei-
ther
ettiler I nor my mare got anything to
eat that night.
"The morning came, and 1 listened
for the sound of our attack, but all
was still. There was no attack. Our
fighting dayss were over."
The Art of Embalming.
The modem embalmers have, not re-
covered the secret of the art as prat•
ticed by the old Egyptians and prob.
ably never will. Some of the bodies
known to us as "mummies" buried
3,000 or 4,000 years ago are still in a
State of perfect preservation. tack
of the ancient art lay a religious creed.
The ancient Egyptian believed that
after many thousands of years the
soul came back to find its body and
that if its was not found the soul wan-
dered forever in misery and wretched-
hess; hence It was absolutely neces-
tsary preserve_the body, and hence,
finally, the embalitt:et's art -New York
American.
it Fitted the Case.
The girl asked the polite ettlosman
If he had good cheese.
"We have some loveay cheese," was
the stalling answer.
"You should not say lovely cheese,"
she corrected.
"Why not/ Itis," he declared.
'Because" -"-with a boarding school
dignity .. "lovely should be used to
qualify" only something that Is alive."
Cir "weil;" he retorted, "I'll shell to
lovely,"
Knew It..
f.
1 l •I mar, 141'
r ten
le Mal tit a 5',
Litt c nG S
t3traightley, did, you tell 1V Ir. Walker 1
MU a liar?
Big I'Sarr (coolly) -14o, sir, 1 did not.
Xt'a my, opinion _Mr. Walker . doesn't
Want any telliag. 1,ondon. x"it•13Its.
,tifiet 0r055014 and losses ellen g"Ir0
h ambler and wiaer.e-h'ratiklin.
-GUARDING THE KiII
014 English Meth WhWr the M.
arch Wee Token Sink.
The law raisesPeclllgw sale
a
;dl
round the pereoa. of the English sov-
eroigtt In case of aleknese, They are
mere survivals le the present settled
order et government, but at one time
the opportunity which the plug's 111 -
capacity afforded aspirants to then
throne Or treason makers to shorten
bis days at a minimum of risk, of de.
tection made the precautions reason,
able.
"'If the king be taken sick," bays
Coke in hie "Institutes," "there ought.
to be a warrant issue from the privy
copnell, addressed to Certain physl-
clans and surgeons, authorising them
to administer to the royal patient po-
tiones, syrupus, laxitaves, lnedlelnas,
etc. none of these should be liv-
en except by consent and advice .of
the eouacil, and they ought to set
down is writing everything done nod
adzntntstered, and they should com-
pound all drugs themselves and not in-
trust their preparation to any apothe,
Cary."
Coke wrote thus of precedent in the
year 1610, and today the law is practi-
cally as he found it, although at the
present time in practice the privy coun-
clI simply bears reports of the progress
of the king's malady and leaves actual
treatment entirely to the physieians in
direct ebarge of the case.-Is',schange..
GIANT TREES OF JAMAICA.
They Shed Masses of Beautiful Silk
Cotton Every Year.
The silk cotton trees of Jamaica are
one of the most striking natural fele
tures of this beautiful island, and vis-
itors express much curiosity concern-
ing them.. The Aber of the cotton is
too short for textile uses. but its qual-
ity is delicate and Hue.
The trees are most interesting in
structure. They reach a height of 20IC
or 3(l0 feet. It is the largest tree on.
the island, and the branches often over-
hang more than an acre of ground.
Some of them are centuries old, dal.
lug back to tbe landing of the Span-
iards. They have withstood the trot).
Ical winds of the region through the
adaptation of their structure. The
leaves are very few, and there are
heavy masses of roots,
This giant tree Sowers once a year.
It bears u number of pods much the
size and shape of a cucumber. These
pods dry and burst, and out floats the
beautiful cream colored silk cotton.
covering the ground and sailing In the
air for some distance. Tile seeds, of
course. are borne on the silky fila•
menti. This cotton as used at present
only for pillows. Its use as guncotton
has been spoken of.
The trees are often feIled.by the tin.
Live Jamaicans and hewn into canoes,
which last for generations. -Christina
Science Mouitor,
Some Task.
The office manager turned to the
new boy:
"Here, George," he said, "go into
the next room and look up 'collab- •
orate.' I am not quite sure about the
�
sp ciliab .
"
The boy disappeared and didn't re-
turn. , The .manager put the letter
aside and teak up some other duties.
Presently he relnC8lbered the troy and
went out to look for him:' He found
the lad studying the big dictionary
with great intentness.
"What are you doing, George?" he
asked.
The boy Iooked around.
"I forgot the word you told me, sir,"
he replied, "an' I'm Makin' through
the book to And it."
The manager gasped.
"Now far have you got?"
"I'm just fiuishing the second page.
sir:"
"That'll do, George." - Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Fixing the Lesson.
Parson Saunders was a little per
turbed one Suuday morning over some
worldly matter and made a mistake
In the reading o4 the Scriptural les-
sons. 'He read the second lesson
wbere he should ?tate read the Hest.
As he neared :the end of his reading
the parson saw that he was in error.
Ile saw that illS congregation knew.
he was in error. How, then, to con-
clude? To conclude in the orthodox
tray -"here endear the second lesson",-
would
esson"-would hardly do, asit was not the sec-
oud lesson, but the ilrst. Nor, could
it, on the other band, be called the
first lesson since properly it was the
second? Parson Saunders, after s ince
meat's thought, wisely • and frankly
concludedt
"Here endeth the wrong lesson." -
New Bork Press.
Very Considerate.
"I suppose, Jennie, yen wouldn't
want to go to the concert Wednesday
in your old hate"
"You dear thing! I coitlde't poem•
ley think of showing myself in it." `
"That's what I thought, so
"What/"
"Bought only ane ticket to the eon.
cert,L_3ieggendorfer Matter.
the Aspect.
"Tho school board, the police board
and the jail board ate all in the lime-
light at once for trouble."
'"Yes, it certainly done seem as it our
city public affairs 'mere going by the
board." -New Fork Joint: i1,
The Harvest.
The
law of the harvest is to roan
mare than you sow, Sow an net and
you reap a habit; sow• u habit and yott
reals a eharaeter; sow a Character end
;Con reap'a destiny. -George 15. Board -
Man.
True friends have no bait r:7 Eby' Or
sorrow...•-Cllanllfrg,
THE SACRED HOL7R
"God bless mamma," she says atnigbt,
"And God bless papa," her childish
prayer,
er
, ..
And we stand by her bed In the fading
light,
And look .at the little one kneeling
there;
About her shouldere her tresses fall.
Like fine spun gold is each yellow
Burl,
Anda gentle silence steals over all
As we listen thele to our baby girl.
I reckon the evening hour must. be
A wonderful hour for God above'
For everywhere that He looks Heli see
Our little ones bending" to Him ;n.
love,
And the angel choirs must pause to
hear
The soft, sweet prayers that the
children say;
With the little voices so sweet and
clear
When "God bless mamma," they
nightly pray,
And God must smile as He looksbelow,
At the little ones in their robes of
White
Kneeling there in the evening glow,
Asking His care through the hours of
night,
For this must be his most sacred hour,
When the heavenly silence most per -
feet seems;
As the children ask for his gracious
power
Te eep .them safe in the land of
dreams.
PRESERVING PRU1T,
As the fruit season is near, this table
will be of interest. The exact propor-
tions of sugar and fruit used for pre,
serving or canning fruit cannot be
given, as the quality of the fruit as to
sweetness or sourness varies greatly,
An approximate amount is given for a
quart jar of fruit;
For straavberries, six to eight ounces;
raspberries, four ounces; blackberries,
five to six ounces; quinces, eight to ten
ounces; pears, four to six ounces;
grapes, six to eight ounces; peaches,
four ounces; pineapple, four to six
ounces; crabapples, six to eight ounces;
plums, four bunces.
In canning any soft fruits, no water
should be used to start the boiling. If'
the kettle is set on a rather cool part'.
of the stove or over a kettle of hot
water,enough juice to start with will
exude, and the boiling process should
be started slowly. Berries should only
be heated through, not cooked. If the
cans are wanted very full, two batches
should be cooked at once, and the
berries skimmed out, packed in the jars
carefully,'enough juice poured in to fill
all spaces, then sealed, The jar should
be overflowed, fin' a few seconds to be
sure all air is forced out.
For canning fruit or vegetables,
many 'most successful housewives re-
fuse to use sugar, saying the natural
flavor of the contents is impaired • by
its use. Sugar,/ causes the fruit to
swim on top of the liquid, and packs
the solids at the top of the jar. With-
out it, the fruit sinks to the bottom,
and is always covered. Jars should be
well filled, in order that no mould may
form on the top.
Tenders for the construction of the
first 1215 miles of the Hudson Bay Rail-
way will be called next month.
A bridle for the tongue is a fine piece
of harness. The whole man is harnessed
when the tongue is under command.
Mr. J. E. Rourk has been appointed
Controller of Currency for the Dominion.
The undersigned is prepared to take
care of lots in the Wingham cemetery
during the summer months and guar-
antees to give satisfaction. Price for
season is 51 per lot. Orders left with
John F. Groves, 'Sewn Clerk, will re-
ceive prompt attention.
ROBERT DEMI,.
• British Columbia'Shingles.
I have just received the' best car load
of British Columbia shingles ever
brought into Wingham. These were
purchased before the recent raise in
price and will be sold at reasonable
prices. Parties in need of shingles will
do well to get my prices before placing
order.
J. A. McLlrArr.
Alt Skin Diseases
Can be Directly
..Traced To
BAD FLOOD.
Therefore to get rid of theso skin dis-
eases it is• absolutely necessary that the
blood should be thoroughly cleansed of
the accumulated poisons, and for .this
pur ose there is nothing to equal Bee -
dock Blood Bitters.
This remedy has been on the. market
for over thirty-five years and when you
uso.it you are not experimenting with
some new and untried remedy.
Miss Stella Bichel, Maitland •Yorks
writes;:z-",I have.been bothered
ith Salt Rheum on
ti
Yln
ds for thee
years and it iteheti
awl didn't know what
to do. I tried everything but litithing
seethed to be tiny good. 1 heard o?
Burdock Blood ."litters and hoeght two
,bottles of it, end now I, am perfectly
cured and have no"Salt luteum on my
halide any more, " I Cannot apes toe
highly of Burdock Blood Biirtere."
Man,factured only by The T. Milburn
0e., Limited, Totitlatrry out,
T1IS CENSUS MAN'S A14+.
When the census man calla in June
you will be asked n great many quer.
tions.
Shedule No. 1 comprisea the tavola-
tion by name, personal description, ate,
and the following questions will appear
on the censes paper; Name of each
person in family, place of habitation,
sex, relationship of bead of family or
household, whether single, married,
widowed, divorcedor legally separated,
month cif birth. The following ques-
tions as to citizenship, nationality and
religion also appear; County or place
of birth, year of immigration to Canada
if an immigrant, year of naturalization
if formerly an alien, racial or tribal
origin, Five questions appear under
the heading of profession, occupation
or means of living, to wit: Chief occu-
pation or trade, if any, employer, em-
pioyee, or working en your own ac-
count.
You will be asked where you are em-
ployed, if you are wage earner, what
you work at, by the day or hour, what
you receive, your total earning. If
you are insured, the amount on your
life and against accidents and sickness,
and what it costs you. Your education
will be looked into, and your physical
conditions or disabilities' The census
man will not be satisfied until you give,
him all particulars, but .you can rest'
easy as be is sworn to secrecy and will
be se full of answers that he cannot 1
remember a single thing you tell him
after he has written it down.
CASTOR I A
Par Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
o of
The Need of Ideals.
Mankind always needs ideals which
loom so large in the sight cif men that
they cannot fail to see them clearly,
More than ever is this true of to -day,
for the turmoil and the hurry of mod-
ern life raise a great dust which often-
times hides the skies. Enthusiasm,
dreams,• hopes are to be encouraged
and belong to youth, which ever re-
news itself in warm hearts, although
reason is needed to cool and guide
theta. The fact that we believe that
our ideal is beautiful and holy is hot
ground for forcing it on our mates.
To win success a man must not be a
pure idealist, else in practical things
he will fail, but he most have ideals,
and he must obey them.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills,
Must Bear Signature Of
See Fac-Simllo Wrapper Below.
1
Very small and as easy
'to take es sugar,
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FO114,TORP1U LIVER.
FOR.CONSTIPATION
FOR -SALLOW SKIN.
FOR TH M
PLEXIO N
ECO O
25 8 $
J1NrTlNsa Must WI rATU.c,
v-41 ly'Vegetable.
a:11RI; SICK HEADACHE.
amhoioridim..........0.4001•00.0tiolaw40••••=0.0.01•.•00,0•10•0•01....
Eit310173 DEBILITY
f1�RIa MOW METHOD T EATMENT will euro you anal r�take. Aroma
you, Under its intiuene° the bra becornext active. the blood parolee so thee
i
Pi►nples,blotchos.and ulcer* heal up; the nerves become stropg �as steel• so
nerrrousnoea baslrfulmare anddeapondenev disappear: the eye* become bright, e
face fuIL and clear, every returns to the pray, and the moral, phyt,ical and mental.
!panne ore invlgoreteu; till drains cease -no more vital waste front the *WOO,YOU feet yourself a man and know marriage mallet be a failure. Don't let quack'
and Saltless rob you of your hard earned dollars.
lam" NO NAMES USED"WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT
THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS
, Peter K. Summers relates his experience:
"I was troubled with Nervous Debility
for many yeara, lilay it to tudiseretien
and excesses in youth. I became very
despondent and didn't care whother I
worked or not. i Imagined everybad .
who looked at me guessed iny seeret.
Imaginative dreams at .night weakened
me -my back ached, had mina in the
backog roY bead, bands and feet were
cold, tired in the mornpo
ing, or apucttte,
Augers were, shaky, eyes blurred, hair
loose, memory poor, oto. Numbness in
the lingers set In and the doctor told me
Ise feared paralysis. I took all kinds of
medicines and tried many ilrstclass
physicians, wore an electric belt for three
mouths, but received little benefit. I'
rtsoni4'rSEATM'rer was induced to consult Ars. Kennedy.; „t -TER IREATM>"Mr
Kennedy, though bad Jost all faith in
doctors. Like a drowning mail I commenced the Naw MET80D TR144Tir&Nr and it
saved toy life. The improvement was like waglo-I could feel the vigor going through
the nerves. Isms cured menteliy And, pliysically. I have sent them many patients
and continue to do so,
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY
We treat and cure VARICOSE VEiNS. NERVOUS DEBIIATY, BLOOD AND
URINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES anti all I�i�easea
peculiar to Men,
CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. if unable to cell write for a Question
Blank for Home Treatment.
DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave, and Orisw.old St., Detroit, Mich,
NOTICE .AU letters from Cattalo roust be addressed
to our Canadian Correspondence Depart-
mentin Windsor, Ont. If yea desire to
see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
no psitients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and
Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows;
DRS, KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont.
Write for our private address.
+++4+44.-14.1441;148414++++++++44 d•3+++4.4.44-44-4, '4% -4.4.' ++++++
Jhe Times
Clubbing List
SVNO1's1e CV CANADIAN 14Olt'r11-
W EST LAND I EGt:LATIOI. S.
RNV poem who is the sole head of a family
A or any male over le years old, snag home•
stead a quarter section of evailoble Dominion
land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta.
The applicnut must Ropear in person at the
Pontinton Lunde Agency ency or Sab•AReuey for
the district, Entry by proxy may he made at
any agency, on certain conditions, by father,
mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of
intending homesteader.
Daties.--•tiix months' residence upon and
eultivaticn of the land le each of three years.
A homesteader may live within nine miles of
his homestead, on a faun of at It SO acres
solely owned mad occupied by hi» or by his
father, mother, son, daughter, brother or
sister.
'certain districts a hosrtest oder in good
standing may pre-empt a everter section
alongside Itis homestead. Pete( : 00 her etre.
n
,t. Rdor
upon tin hem tP
i�ntlPH.-�-billfit reside 7ille
irre•enmption six ntoaths in emit of six years
frons the date of homestead PI••,•y tmrludsitrt
the tithe required to earn hon . -teed patenti
and cultivate Situ acres extra.
A homesteader who hes exitit wted his home-
stead right end Cannot obtain .t pre-emption
may enter fore purlltased Mons. Bread if teethe
districts. pries 50.00 per dere. duties.• --Meat
reside six months in each et three years, matt -
'vete fifty acres ahti orect 5lton-.•.north 5200.00.
w. w. tiny,
• Deputy et the Minister of the Interior.
it. f!,•-Untrutltotizod buhlirati.in of this ad•
vertiseMent will not be paid for.
4. Times and Weekly Globe . .. 1.60 ,I;
+ Times and Daily Globe . 4.50 ei
4. Times and Family. Herald and Weekly Star. 1.86 ,p
+ Times and Toronto Weekly Sun,.....,,..... 1.80
+ Times and Toronto Daily Star...: 2.30
4. Times and Toronto Daily News,. 2.30 46.
-r Tinned and Daily Mail and Empire, 4.50 ,I
+ Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.60
+ Times and Farmers' Advocate . .. 2 35
4. "limes and Canadian Farm '(weekly)...,... .. 1,60
Times and Farm and Dairy ... ..,.'. 1.80
Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press, 1.60
Times and Daily Advertiser........ , , . 2.85
Times and London Advertiser (weekly),.... 1.60
Times and London Daily Free. Press Morning
Edition 8.50
Evening Edition 2 90
Times and Montreal Daily Witness 3.50
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness 1.b5
Times and World Wide.......... ..+..
Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg...,.
Times and Presbyterian ..
Times and Westminster
Times, Presbyterian and Westminster
Times a,nd 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 Lippincott's Magazine ...............
Times and Woman's Rome Companion
Times and Delineator ..........................
Times and Cosmopolitan .
Times and Strand ....... - .. .
Times and Snceess ...... .... .......:
Times and McClure's Magazine... ...... ,
Times and Munsey's Magazine ..... ......,r.....
Times and Designer ......
Times and Everybody's ....
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
2.46
2,60
2,56
1.15
2,40
These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great
Britain. is
The above publications may be obtained by Tildes T.
combination, the rice for anyu Lica-
subscribers in any t:olnbi p p b .
tion being the figure given above less $x,00 representing
the price of The Times. For instance : . �•.
4Th.e Times and Weekly Globe ..,...........$1,60
If
The Farmer's Advoeate 02,35 less 61.00).... , , 1,35
'i` $2.95
+.
T. making the price of the three papers $2.95.
The Times and the Weekly Sun .. ...... $1 .80
+
441
4.
4.
The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 lass 61.00)........ 1,30
The Week1 Globe (61.60 less $1.00) 60
t 1870
the four papers for $3,7o,
If the publication you want is not in above List. let ;
us know. We can supply y almost anwell-known Cana-
dian or American publication. These prices are strictly
$ cash in advance.
Send subscriptions by post office or express order to
�F+
,I: The Times Office
4.
Orr
-444,444.44.4444,4"141:E+44,4+444,40,4. +++++++4 l*44 elet+
Stone Block
WINGHAM ONTARIO