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The Wingham Times, 1911-06-22, Page 3MENWE CAM CURE YOU FINEST MEDICAL INSTITUTE IN A ERIRA OWNED AND OCCUiPIED RIF D.RL K. •,o K. YOUNG OR MIPDI.E-AgED MEN who need theseervices'of expert specialist* why wrests your money in untrue wish doctors you know nothing or, 'ahY waste your money with tt'orrthlesa electi'te belie or drug store nostrums, when you Can get guaranteed. reliable, successful trertn:ent from these Master Spscialistx, Dts, K. do K, have treated patients throughout t,•ara'lti, tor over .0 years nail are retpensible Luau, daily, They accept, c•i1y curable caves and ahuula Tour case t re n incurable it recd not cost you a cent. if you are unable to call at our eClee 1c -a1' :son elexaminrtku tvowill sendaQuer: h.t 1st for you to1:11 up from winch we can eleenese yotr case am41 tet you whether you are curette or not. :Len we at .l pre.ctite apecitlo remei.ies for your individual ease which Y+.0 eau 131:eathome. Wo have uo cure-all acmedy Oat the reud to everybody alike as roost specialists. do, but we pr:8cribe the real. specialists required for each individual case to complete a cure. That's one of the accreta of our wonderful su--cess when (tlters: fall. Send for our Free 13oeidet on li sea►sr of Men (nlu•trated.) CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY we Guarantee to Cure Nervous Debility, Blood Dioceses, Valise.o Veins, Kidney, Diedder end Urinary Disease, CONSULTATION FREE If unable to call, write for e Question Blank for Home Treatment DRS.KENNEDY.iKENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. sr ' N OTI C EAll letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- issasamemomm rnent in Windsor, Ont, If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows; DRS. KENNEDY .Sc KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. r�Write for our private address. AT DEATH'S DOOR FROM KIDNEY DISEASE SAVER ONLY BY "FRUIT-ArTlVES" CreetineaSele, ONS:`, "Two years ago, the doctor trade forty-four calls oft me, and then said he had (lone all lie could for tie. I was suffering with intense Kidney. Trouble and Inflammation had set tn. Two*. other doctors were consulted and agreed that nothing could be done to help nig. On the reeoinmen dation of a neighbor, 11 sok "'Fruit -a -tines" .and they cured me. To-day,I• take ""Fruit-a-tives" as my only inedictne. I am in excellent health, and " Fruit -a -tinea " is the medicine that cured me after I had been at Death's Door for months. I am glad to be able to give you this testimonial, It may benefit some other woman suffering as I suffered, as I • believe that I would not be aliie to -day had I not used "Pruit-a-tines", MTs. P. F. WEBI1ER. "1*n it-a-tives" - by its marvellous action ou the kidneys •- completely restores these vital organs to their normal strength and vigor -and cures every trace of Kidney Trouble. "Pruit- a-tives" is the only medicine in the world made of fruit, eine. a box, 6 for $2,50, trial size, Asc. At dealers,or from Fruit-a-tives�inaited, Ottawa. BE PATIENT. They are such dear familiar feet that go Along the path with ours -feet fast or slow But trying to keep pace; if they mis- take Or tread upon some flower that we would take Upon our breast, or bruise some reed, Or crush, 'perhaps, until it bleed, We must be mute: Not turning quickly to impute Grave fault; for they and we Have such a little wayto go, can be Together such a little while upon the way - We must be patient while we may. ra So many little faults we find; We see them for not blind Is love. We see them, but if you and I Perhaps remember them some by and by They will not be " Faults then, grave faults, to you and me But just odd ways, mistakes, or even less • - Remembrance to bless. Days change so many things, yea hours; We see so differently in sun and showers! Mistaken words to -day • May be so cherished by to -morrow's light - We will be patient for we know There's such a little way to go. -George Kringle. Why Dogs Hate Cats. The Koreans tell an ,amusing story in explanation of the enmity which pre- vails between cats and dogs. There was once, they say,an old man in Korea who possessed a magic stone, which had been given to him by apass- ing wayfarer whom he had befriended. One sad day the stone disappeared, and the old man's cat and dog, who were as much. concerned as their mas- ter, set off on their own account to find it. After a long and weary search they discovered it, and started to re- turn. As they had to cross a river, the dog told the cat to take the gem in her mouth and climb` on his back, and he would swim with her. As the two 'were crossing, some children, seeing the strange sight, laughed loud and long. This annoyed the dog as he struggled along with his burdefi, but it greatly amused puss, who, sitting high and dry on his back, began to shake with laughter. The result was that the poor dog swallowed a lot of water in trying to keep his head up, at which the wicked cat burst into such a guffaw that she dropped the magic stone into the river. The story goes on to tell how the faithful dog eventually caught a fish, in the inside of which the gem was found, but ever afterwards he cherished against the cat a bitter ani- mosity, which was handed down to her descendants. Cobwebs in the Morning. Cobwebs in the head on rising in the morning is the result of a Lazy Liver, one or two mornings in aucCession and sick headache follows. Father Morriscy's Liver Pi11t willclear the Brain, These Pills area purely vegetable Com- pound prepared with great care, and are 'without doubt the very best pills for gen., eral use, on the market. The greatest Care has been given to selecting the in- gredients, and being entirely vegetable, they act upon the liver and bowels in such a manner as not to disturb the other func•• tions of the hefty manyPills do. As a Liver Invigorator, Blood Purifier and General System Renovator, they ate unequalled. Sick headache is invariably brought on by a sluggish liver, coitstipa- Bon or irregular bowels; these pills are a cure for sick headache in any form. Pimples, eruptions and yellow skin are often caused by a lazy liver; one pill three times a week, will soon clear the complex- ion. --Price est. per ilex, HUMAN SKULL PUZZLE, A Cavity That May Have peon the Seat of a Sixth Sense. Despite ;be progress, of physiology the study o1~ the buman body Is hili of mystery. Some of Its well; known Organs laevo never revealed either their uses or the reason of their crea- tion. The part played by the >apleen in human life was discovered Out re- gently, It is now regarded as one of the principal agents. In the eirculatjon of the blood. But there are in the marvelous human organists mys- terious parts which It is possible that ao savant. however profound iris :earning, may ever understand, For instance, in the skull, behind: the car- tilage of the nose, there is a little ;avity of unknown origin, Pbysiolo- ;ists believe that at one time -several :housand generations agog-itcoetalned a gland couslsting of two lobes joined ny their common base. This cavity -the delta turcica -is, itr :he opinion of certain savants, the vestige oi' a sixth sense which was of ;teat use to the antediluvian antes- :ors of ligan. It is believed that this ittle gland enabled them to see in the iarkness when tbey bad not yet learn - ad the secret of procuring light; that 't was the seat ot the omysterious sense of situation or locality, the pow - sr to orient their course, the sense so aighly developed to this day in sav- ages and certain animals. The theory s plausible, but it is doubtful wbetber Pian 'will ever acquire any real knowl- dge of the reason for the existence if the delta turcica.-Exebange. NESTS iN COLONIES. Homs* of the African Grosbeaks as Big • as a Native's Hut, The biggest bird's nest in the world, not excepting the d i rk's, is built by the African grosbeak. It Is really 000 aests or mare bounte togetbee,avith :losely interwoven sticks, vines and strands of coarse grass and is not built by a single pair of birds, but by a colony of them. It is of such enor- mous size that at a little distance it is often mistaken for one of the native huts built in the trees so frequently, found in wild tropical countries where man eating animals abound, and the only way to sleep in safety is to "roost high." The birds usually select a thorn tree, probably because of the protection af- forded by the sharp, long thorns against marauders. All around the nest the roof of sticks, thatched with dry grass, projects to let the rain run off, A deep fringe of grass hangs from this cornice like a certain to keep out any stray drops. '.9hese great nests are added to from year to year, each pair of mated hit''ds building on the main nest. Sometimes the nest be. comes too heavy, and the branch: breaks or the great mass of sticks falls to the ground, destroyed by its own weight- The grosbeak is no larger than an English sparrow and just as gregariou'1.-New York Press.. Honesty Extraordinary. 'A traveler writing ,in an Italian magazine says that the Swiss canton of Ticino is inhabited by tbe most hon- est folk it is possible to imagine. Xn most of the Ticinese villages, they writer says, the oldest inhabitants do not remember any ease of thieving, however petty, within a lifetime Lost objects when found must never be taken away; they must be led where they were dropped or placed in a con- spicuous position so that the rightful owner can find his property more easi- ly. The case is cited of an American ,woman'totfrist. who lost her purse on an excursion in the Val Caprfasca. The purse contained gold coin and a jeweled watch. Upon returning from her trip she found the purse with its contents intact on a little heap of leaves, so placed that it coup not fail to attract her 'attention. -New York Sun...t The Parsees of India. It was at a point near the ancient city of Surat that the Parsees first landed In India when driven out of Persia by their Mohammedan conquer- ors eleven centuries ago. Pew things are more remarkable that the manner in which this small community has re- tained int religion and racial charac- teristics unchanged during that long period. The peculiar style of head- dress worn by the Parsees is said to have been made compulsory by the $iridis king of India when the Parsees first obtained refugefu that country, and they have used it ever since. To- day the Parsees etre the leading com- merciaf natlon of India. Told Him In Pew Words. A man once wrbte to the Rev. O. H. Spurgeon, the famous preacher, saying that he had beard he smoked and could not believe it to be tree. Would Mr. Spurgeon write and tell him if it real. ly was so? The reply was; "Dear Sir -1 cultivate My flowers and burn my weeds. Yours truly, Q. a Spurgeon." Pu;Ezling. Millions -Do you think yott w111 learn to like yobs titled soil -In-law? Billions -I don't know. 1Can't tell where to place him in my expense ac- eonnt, He is neither a recreation nor an investment. A Child if Wonder. "What, 'wonderful memory your child has for names and faced" "Yes," replied the proud mother. "She net falls to recogfiite any Of her former stepfathers."••-iltidge True glory consists tri so hiving as 10 1118110 rhe florid happier and better for our Iiving.--I?l1ny. T..UE WINGJIAM IIM,1♦ a JUNE 22, 1911 DEEP $EA DIVERS1 Death Always Hovers Round Them While They Toil. PERILS THEY HAVE TO FACE, The Awful Pressure of Water and Mr That May $ury or Burst Thom--rThs Helmet Telephone a Wonderful Aid In Work end in Times of Danger. It 1s surprising to learn -how many rises there are Or divers, The navy, of comae, employs mauy to set sub- marine rninee and torpedoes and to at- tend to luvestigetions of the condition ot ships' bottoms, Bridge construction companies use them, as do those who bnu{t diems, waterworks and reser• votrs. Wuterwol'ks in large cities keep a diver on their staff eoustautly, \\'reciting companies need their sere ices. and the profession of underriver tuuneling makes many demands on the time and skill of the man in armor, Since Smeaton in 17711 designed a pump to supply air to the diving bell little real Improvement in the art titin been made. save 1n detail of helmet and clothes, until the invention of the telephone. The greatest advance ever made 1n the art, divers will tell yon, is the combination or the telephone with the diving suit. Ilefore its advent div- ers had to depend entit•ely upon putts 011 the life line for conimunlcatiou with the surface and upon signs to Part other .when under water if two wished to contnnntcnte. Today the modern diving helmet is equipped with a telephone, and the diver can not ouly bear what is said to him from the sur- fare, advise those in charge of his pump as to whether the air Is."com- iiig right" or not. but he can comtnuni- rnte to n brother diver' and hear the in-rrnetions sent to hint from the sin -- fere, all of which facilities are of great aanistat a ac in the work. At first thought it may not stem so dlttl alt a thing, thio going down''Itnder writer and nreathing air sent in'tfrom' ii' pump by a tube. Kitt the physicni drawbacks to the work are enormous. For every ten tee; a diver descends he sestalus an ndditional pressure of tour acid a half pounds over every square inch ot his body, \\'hat this means may he better understood when con• sirlerine the greatest depth ever made oc a direr --'21)4 tcet. His body at that (tenth sustained 11 pressure ot eighty eight and a halt pounds to the square inch civet and above ttie fifteen pounds :tlst•nys sustained when in the 1111. 'rivers rnust descend very slowly. swallowing res they go; otherwise they may bleed at the nose and ears and even lose r•unscinu, n( sy. anti they must ascend even more slowly than they descend, particularly when (•otn- ing from :;rent depths; otherwise they may literally burst from internal air pressure. At the least. too sudden a rise may es use an attack of that ter- rible disease known to tunnel workers called eaisson disease. or the bends, in which aur Lets Intothe tissues ander pressure atld causes the most estr'enle torture. The diver. getting ready to descend. clothes hlmeelt in very heavy under- wear of guernsey or flannel, the draw- ers Pr prevent !pipping. it wen _`scut 1 u t 1 . i ip g and adds ti+ pair of henry woolen socks. If the water he cold Iwo such snits may be wornif the depth to tre ne- gotiated is great eottutr soaked with e• 01) is put in the sir or a heavy woolen cup pulled down over them. 1houlder pads. if. worn to take the weight orf the helmet, are next tied on, atter weIrh the diver wriggles into r,is heavy suit of rubber and canvas Next come the Inner (-oilier and the breast- plate. which are secured- with clamps to the rubber dress. the utmost rare being taken in this operation not to tear or pinch the rubber. Finally the sheen are fitted ou and the rubber gloves clamped to rings in the sleeves, The helmet is the last to go.ott, and never before the valves and telephone bare been tested. The attendants start to pump as the helmet is clamped home. The helmet is attached to, the pump witb a rubber tube, which is' canvas and wire protected. No diver descends, 'after the helmet is put' on, until he has tested the outfit and found that his air supply Is sufficient and the pump working properly. He is supplied with a life cine, with which he can signal should his tele- phone get out of order and by whicb he may be drawn to the surface should he become helpless for any reason. 'Ile must take great care when walkibg about on the bottom not to foul bis life line or his air tube and for this reason trust always retrace„Itis Steps exactly to his starting point if be has gone Into a wreck or about any ob- structions. For the same reason two divers working together must be care- ful not to cross each other's path. Sometimes the life line may become so entangled in wreckage that it must be cut, and then there is danger` of the diver not finding hie way back to his boat or float, especially,if the bottom Is muddy and touts the "seeing." Bnt the greatest danger of all, of course, is that the tube be elft or the diver faint: in either case he is fn deziiierate Waite. I1 the man handling the lite line "feels" anything wrong he will Baal the diver tip wally nilly and re• gardiess of the severe bleeding at nose tied ears which will result froth too But if the surface. rapid a rise to the diver be inside a wreck dr if his life line gets tangled in wreckage ench bottling would do no gam, It is in sit• tuitions like these that the Blender coni sheeting link of telephone wire tnenne eo tnt>Icb to the teed Who risk their lives far beneath the surface of the wattlta4t1entitle Amens 1. BACK FROM THE UNITED STATES. "This is My Own, my Native Land,' , r quokka Jean Lavigne, as he led his family front the train that carried them back after ten years in L'Etats Tiflis, said the Vanncoevsr World re- cently. Jean's stout French-Canadian heart burned within him as he turned his footsteps from wandering on the foreign strand south of forty-nine. Beyond acquiring several grandsons, who may qualify for the Presidency of the United States, and a well developed Yankee nasal drawl in place of his. native: habitant, Mr. Lavigne has little to thank the American Republic for. The Lavigne family is the advance gaard of fifty French-Canadian families from near North Yakima. Wash., who will return to Canada to seek their for- tunes in the Skeena Valley. On board the Prince Rupert the La- vignes left for the north recently. The head of the 'house explained that the high cost of living had driven him out of the United States, and he would never return. He had lived, he said, in the province of Quebec -had beer} born there. He was induced to emi- grate to the Western States ten years ago. Fortune did ,not favor him with a very lavish hand. So the Lavinge homestead in North Washington has been disposed of, and with the cash receipts the family starts afresh in the Bulkley Valley. "Seven hundred people will come into Canada from our neighborhood during this year," said Mr. Lavigne. "We French-Canadians Iove our Canada, and we cannot stay away." PURE FOOD LABELS. rhey Were Used in Palestine as Early as the Year 850 B. C. Professor George A. Reisner of Har- vard university discovered among some speciments of earliest Hebrew writing in the excavations of the city of Samaria, in Palestine, a most inter- esting record of the first pure food laws. in history. He also found an- cient writings dealing with the first instance on record of the keeping of trines in a government warehouse un- der bond. Dating back to the period of King Ahab. 850 13. C., tbese inscriptions are considered to be one of tbe greatest tends of the Harvard Palestinian ex- peditions witdch delved into the city of Ahub and Omri for three years, They "ound labels on wine and oil jars. These mention the year in which the wine was laid down in the cellars of the palace storehouse, and they state the vineyard from which the wine came, important facts that are recog- nized equally well by vintners today. On the oil jays the label runs, "A jar of pure oil," with the mention of the district from which the oil came. The bits of pottery on which the descrip- tions were written were not parts of the jars, but were evidently intended to be attached to the necks of the re- ceptacles, just as are labels or seals at the present time. -New York World. Cause of the Delay. "Why is your friend staying so long in New York?" "1 don't know -haven't heard which of the two reasons is keeping him." "Which of the two?' "Yes. whether he is having too good a time to come away or has spent all his money and can't get away."-Buf- felo Express. Chronic. "One thing about Jinx, be never comes into one's office without knock- ing." "Another thing about Jinx is that he never goes anywhere without knock- ing." -Houston Post. Self. A perfect understanding of self is a perfect understanding of all things, for man is the condensed whole. From such a man no power is with, held. All things are obedient to him. -Freedom. Life, upon the whole, is far more pleasurable than painful; otherwise we would not feel pain so impatiently when it comes. -Leigh Shat. HAD HEART TROUBLE NERVES WERE AU. UNSTRUNG. Wherever there is any weakness of the heart or nerves, flagging energy or phy- sical breakdown, the use of 1fiiburn ti Heart and Nerve Pills will soon produce a healthy strong system. Miss 1 essie I{insiey, Arkona, Ont. Writes: -"It is with the greatest of pleasure 1 write you stating the benefit I have received by using your Milburn's Heart and Nerve fills, This spring I was all run down and could hardly do any work. I went to a doctor and he told me I had heart trouble and that my nerves were all unstrung. 1 tools his medicine, as he ordered me to do, but it did me no good. I was working in a printing office at the time, and my doctor said it was the type setting caused the erouble, but I thought nota My father advised me to buy a box of your pills as he had derived so much benefit from them. Before I had finished one box I noticed s) great difference, and could work from morning to night with out any smothering feeling or hot flushes, I can reeommend , them highly to all nervous and run dews people." Price 50 cents perbox or 3 for $1.25, at all dealers, or mailed direct On receipt of pries by The Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Wein the World. When, says the New York Sun, pri- meval man first rose above the brutes from which he was developed; when, by means of his superior intellect,, he has acquired speech and the use of fire, and more especially when his reason- ing and reflecting faculties caused, him to ask thane questions which every child now asks about the world around it -what is this? and what is that? - he would for the first time perceive and wonder at the great contrast between theliving and the non -living beings around him, He would first observe that the animals which he caught and killed for food, though so unlike him- self outwardly, were yet very like his fellow men in their internal structure, Above all he would soon notice how in- ferior they were to himself in intellect, and that, although they were much stronger than he, his superiority in the use of fire and the fabrication of tools, weapons and traps to capture them showed that he was really their superior and their master. Gradually he would extend these observations to all the lower forms of life, even when both externally and internally he could find no resemblance whatever to his awn body, It might require several generations of incipient philosophers to extend the great generalization of "life" to that omnipresent clothing of the earth's surface produced by the in- finitely varied forms of vegetation. It is in fact only in very recent times that the very close resemblance of plants and animals has been generally recog-. nixed. But notwithstanding their marked differences, both animals and plants are distinguished from all the other forms of matter that constitute the earth on which the live by the crowning fact that they are alive, that they grow from minute germs into highly organized structures, that the functions of their several organs are definite and highly varied and such as no dead matter can perform, that they are in a state of constant internal flux, assimilating new material and throw- ing off that which has been used or is hurtful so as to preserve an identity of form and structure amid constant change, PARALYZED Lin EIS, To -day it is sleeplessness, headaches, digestive trouble and irritability. Mr, Alex Honburger, 10 Moore Street, St. Catharines, Ont., wrier: "Nervous trouble developed into paralysis of the limbs and so that I became helplesss. Doctors failed me and after using 10 boxes of Dr. Chases Neve Food I res- umed work and now fe1 better than I did for 20 years. A bulletin of the census and statistics office states favourable for field crops in all parts of Canada and excellent re- ports have been received from all the provinces. The lowest percentage of condition is made for fall wheat which suffered from inadequate protection in the winter months and also to some ex- tent from spring frosts. ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Qenulne Carter's Little Liver Pills Must Bear Signature of See Fac-SImlIe Wrapper Below. Ocr7 simsn end as ehs7 1,0 take a ssngara FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR,,CONSTIPATION' FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TNECOMPLEXION flr^Gift.I>�r141s o+rorvi'rm NY.TMAV.,ji..NATu C eltota»]e.//���'((�w��''�_ CARTERS VER P_1 LLS. 0 CURE SICK HEADACHE. ainamememermom t SYNOI'91b O1' CANADIAN NORTH- WEST LAND BEt3ULATION8. AN' person who is the sole heed of a family or any male over 18 years old, may home- stead a quarter section of available Dominion land In Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta, The applicant must appear ih person at the Dominion Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for the district. Entryby proxy may be made at any agency, oil cetain conditions, 1„y father, Mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of intending hemestebder. DuCos.-8lx months' residence upon and cultivation of the land in each of three years. A homesteader may live within nine miles of kit homebtead on a farm of at least 80 acres solely owned and occupied by hp or by his father, mother, son, daughter, brother or slater. in certain distriets a hontrsteader in good stendtS may pre-empt a quarter -section alongside his homestead. Pr.ce 53 00 per acre. D tPe, -Must reside on the homestead or r •em tion six months in cavil of six years from the date of homestead entry (Meluding the time required to earn homestead patent) and cultivate illy Beres oxt+,a. A homesteader who has exhausted his home- stead right and +cannot obtain a preemption may miter fort pnrcltasedlismosteatl in certain districts. Price 18.00 per Der.. boubas -Must reside tlx months In each of three:sest a, euiti- Tate arty aures end erecta lions() worth $000.00. W, W. (t1RY, Deputy of the Mini& or of the Interior. 1V, B.Lunauthorized publication of this tut- vertfsenient Will not be paid for ++144-4414144744;04-4444+++++++ 4.++++4;444144-44744++314+++++++.. Th Times� �. Clubbing ListI • -14 4. 4. 4 Times and Weekly Globe . .. t1,60 • Times and Daily Globe 4.50 Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... 1.85 Times and Toronto Weekly Sun.. 1,80 Times and Toronto Daily Star.... , .. .... 2 30 Times and Toronto Daily News... .... . ... ...... 2.30 Times and Daily Mail and Empire. 4.50 Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.60 Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35 Times 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 3,50 Evening Edition ... • 2 90 Times and Montreal Daily Witness 3.50 Times and Montreat Weekly Witness 1.85 Times and World Wide a 2.25 Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... 1,60 Times and Presbyterian .... .. 2.25 Times and Westminster ^ . 2.25 Times, Presbyterian and Westminster 3,25 Times' and Toronto Saturday Night . 3 90 Times and Busy Man's Magazine p..0 '"Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.75 Times and Youth's Companion .... 2.90 Times and Northern Messenger.. ,..... 1.35 Times and Daily World , 3.10 Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly). 2.90 Times and Canadian Pictorial 1,60 Times and Lippincott's Magazine ............ .. . 3,15 Times and Woman's Home Companion 2.66 "rimes and Delineator 2.40 Times and Cosmopolitan 2.30 Times and Strand 2.50 Times and Success 2.45 Times and McClure's Magazine..., 2,60 Times and Munsey's Magazine ..., 2,55 Times and Designer 1,85 Times and Everybody's 2.40 These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great j Britain. - ▪ The above publications may be obtained by Times * s• ubscribers in any combination, the price for any publica- : tion being the figure given above less $I.00 representing * the price of The Times. For instance 4' + The Times and Weekly Globe . I. The Farmer's Advocate ($2,35 less $1,00) e• making the price of the three papers $2.95. The Times and the Weekly Sun.. ,........,., .-$1,80 The Tdron to Daily Star (52.30 less $1.00), , 1,30 The Weekly Globe ($1,60 less $1.00) 60 4: 4 4. 53,70 .a • the four papers for $3.70. 4. • If the publication you want is not in above list. let 1 e Can supply almost anywell-know Cana- 1 .r us know. � pp y n .r. 1 dian or American publication. These prices are strictly +1 cash in advance. .;. .z�:. Send subscriptions by post offic,or express order to The Tirnes ,1' Stone Block t"t1VTNGHANt ONTARIO th + ':l3.3.4. ':'�i! .+144..+4, I.. !" 4+.4**+++++++++4+++.44.+++i,++++++4