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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-07-27, Page 3RAGING HEADACHE STOPPED AT ONCE .. When Pin Took "Fruit -a -ties" StteNev,Ox7'., Sept.. 23rd, Tomo, "You certainly have the Oreatest. discovered Headache Cure in the world.. Before 4'l; ruit-a-fives" cane before the public, I suffered tortures from Dead; aches caused by Stomach Disorders. "One of your travellers called on fie when I had one of toy raging head- aches and had my head almost raw from external applications. "I hated to see any person coming , it;to the store (mush less a commercial traveller) and I told Mita very curtly that T had a headache but he insisted on tiny trying ''Fruit-a-tiVes' e It -, 3 4,4 ...i, ,r., r., TRE 111 (GB.A TIMES r.1 UL1 27i 1911 PALACE SLAVES. Rich Women Who Don't Know How to Manage Their Servants, LUXURY IS NOT COMFORT. One May Find More Real Hospitality In, a Camp Than In a Castle, For,. After All, It's the Spirit That Counts In Entertaining. Dear E1sa-Have. you ever noticed that it isn't the people wlth the most money who get the most pleasure out of life? I had a striking example of this recently. You know I was invited to Narragansett Pier to visit the Brownlees this summer. The Brown - lees are those rich relations of Ethel's who asked her to spend a year with Mem. They are ambitious socially, and as they have no daughters of their own they thought that Ethel, with her beauty and cleverness, might pro- mote the family prestige by making a great match. The Brownlees live in one ot the finest places in Narragansett. They callthe house a villa, but it is a small palace and is surrounded by beauti- fully kept grounds which Ethel says are as large as the park in that little town in Montana where she was brought up. Mrs. Brownlee thinks nothing of losing a few hundred dol- lars of an evening at bridge. When she comes down for dinner your eyes ache to look at her. She has the fin- est collection of jewels at the Pier, and Pier people don't believe in hiding their gems in a safe deposit vault. When I arrived a maid was assigned to me. You should have seen the air of critical condescension with which she inspected my "'amble" raiment as she put the things away in the a - robe. I, suppose my best party may have cost about a quarter of what Mrs. Brownlee pays for her cheapest negligee. They say she spends 450,000 a year for her clothes. ,After storing away my garment; 'and inquiring at what time she should "I did so, with what I would call ;amazing results. They completely cured me and since then (nearly six years ago) it is only necessary for me to take one occasionally to preserve mein oly present good health. I was fig ya esterday and have been a general store keeper at the above address for twenty- five years'', WM. PITT As Mr. Pitt says "fruit-a-tives" is the greatest headache cure in the world. Dealers 'everywhere have "Fruit-a- tives" at soc. a box, 6 for $2.5o or trial size, ese. or sent on receipt of price by bruit-a-tives Limited., Ottawa. thing& . Tett Beet tiite 1StO'fen1.r 11, ratter nein The w ee tater Cameho m tram Oa Bravadoes' 1 went dolma 10 the PO* store to stay with the latuuMns. I wasn't in much of a humor for mak- ing another visit so soon. The tam Sons go camping every summer, and, Rs you know; camping to so popular, 1. thought 1, woyld like to try it, Well, 11 never spent a pleasanter and more satisfactory seers than 1 dill with the Lamsons, They haven't any servant, bili it 1 expresseda wish for anything every One from jolly little four-year-old, Jim- my to dear Mrs. Lamson insisted on getting' it for me personally. They Dad one tent for cooking and another larger tent divided into compartments tor sleeping. If the night was warm the tent could be opened. eo that we practically slept in the open air. We had net canopies over our cots, so that the mosquitoes couldn't touch us. Yon can't imagine bow good everything tasted after a day spent in the open dirt, The tents are on a wide platform. so that the tent house is high and dry. We • used camp chairs, and the table we ate oft was merely a plank or so laid across trestles, The spotless white cloth hid its outlines from view, and. there was always a vase filled with .towers in the center. t want to tell you if you haven't tried camping you must do so. if you can't find any better place In which to pitch your summer tent try a city lot. It is the living in the open air that counts. 1 beard of one family that pitcbed a t.eut on the roof of the apartment bouse where they lived and combined profit with pleasure by rent- ing out their fiat furnished to a fam- ily who wanted to take in New York during the summer. Girls' camps to the woods are de- servedly popular. The beat ones are under the care of trained women in- structors who understand the science or the outdo*? life. which. if we are to he strong and healthy, is a science we e•onld all be the better for knowing more about. This summer every one is taking to golf with new enthusiasm. Golf for women has for a long time been mere ly a fad for a limited number of so riety people. Itis becoming more and more a popular game. Englishwomen Wive been miles ahead of us Ameri cans in recegnlziag the benefits to be derived from a day on the links. Miss Dorothy Campbell of Berwick. Scot- land. the woman champion of Great Britain as well as America. must now look out, for her laurels. 1 was not at Scarsdale. where (harming Miss Lillian Flyde won the metropolitan champion ship, but I am told by golfing expert$ that bei sore of 81 on a dittieult course like t-nrsdale was a remark able achievement. one wbtch even the best wotnen players to England would. nave trouble in matching. Miss Dorothy Campbell has earned an enviable place in the world ot golf, For four rears she bas wan every championship tournament in whit•h ,he has taken part and today holds the distinction of havingacquired three titles. As cbitmpiun of the Unit- ed States. great Britain and Canada Miss Campbell's greatness, in a way. Is rause for wonder. She has well earned the admiration of all those he terested in the royal and nn leutg\me of golf. An Epitaph. Beneath this stone there lies at rest a man who always did his best. The gods •ordained that he should move a- long a lowly, humble groove. For him there was no wealth or fame, he bore no proud ancestral name, no palace doors for him swung wide, but in his hut he lived and died. ' His years were many and histoil brought riches' from the stubborn soil, but all that wealth to them was brought whoowned the land whereon he wrought He fashioned lumber and the boards made shelter for the languid lords He fed the cows and herded the swine that other men might nobly dine. From break of dawn till close of day he toiled along his weary way, and took his earnings in his, hand to fatten those who owned the land. Hisfeet' were seamed with bramble scars. This strip of ground is his reward; 'twas given by his over- lord; it's six feet long and two feet wide, and here they brought him when ,he died. To labor hard for fifty years, endure the burdens and the tears, to have no grateful hours of rest, to toil, and fiend, and do your best, to grind and moil and delve and save, and at the last to get a.grave! Poor souls that in the darkness grope, and weave and spin and have•no hope! -Walt Mason. 'EXCURSIONS TO WESTERN CANADA. VACATION ADVICE, Don't anticipate having a good time unless you can atatrd disappointment, Don't 'fail to look forward to your vacation, as that's all the Am you'll have out of it, anyway. Don't go away from will not be comfortable. Don't stay at„home, for .a change Don't save up your money to lose it at poker before you start. Don't fail to have a goodly wad, so that you will not have to deny yourself anything. Don't go to the city and be hot and crowded. home, or you, or you'll long Don't go to the country and be eaten by mosquitoes and choked with dust.. Don'tg o to the mountains and. be lonesome. Don't go to the seaside, where you'll have to mix with the vulgar herd. Don't go away with a chum 11 you expect to keep him as a friend. Don't mix with strangers, because you will have to be polite to them, and it will be difficult to find anything in common. Don't go to or with relatives, as the more they see of you the more they'll knock you. Don't pay any attention to these rules. Advice has spoiled many a va- cation. -Puck. • RETURNS PER CQW, Out of 240 cows tested last month in o testing Ontario for members of cow associations, 895 of them, or over one- third of the total slumber recorded, gave yields of over 1000 pounds of milk and 83 pounds of butter fat, Many cows gave over 40 pounds of fat, In sharp contrast are some low average yields, from all cows, included iu three or four associations, of less than 25 pounds of fat. With butter fat valued only at 20 cents per pound, this means that good cows are earning $3.00 per month more than poor cows. If this average is multiplied by a milking per- iod of ten months, it followsthat there is aetually a difference in the income from two such cows of as much as $30 in the season. These astonishing differences are only brought to light and to the appre- hension of owners when they begin to record weights of milk and to take samples for testing. If cows are view- ed from a right perspective (a full sea". son's satisfactory production and not a brief, near-sighted glimpse of a record for a day or a week) not one will be retained in the herd that does not re- turn a good profit; and such common differences as noted above will not be possible in the properly selected dairy herd, each cow selected on the basis of her individual demonstration of profit made. Every dairy farmer will find it advantageous to keep dairy records. , The Grand Trunk Railway System announce that on Tuesdays, June lath and 27th, July llth and 25th, August 8th and 22nd, September 5th and 19th, 1911, Homeseekers' Excursions will be run from all Stations in Ontario and Quebec to Western Canada, via Chicago and Duluth or via Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis, at reduced round trip fares. The well-known double track line of the Grand Trunk from the East to Chi- cago appeals to the traveller, and with the superior train service that is offer- ed by this line, including the famous "International Liinited" from Mont- real daily at* a. m., and which is the finest and fastest train in Canada, many passengers will be attracted this. way. The route via Chicago is a most interesting one, taking passengers through the principal cities and towns in Canada and in the States of Michi- gan and Indiana. In addition to this a choice of seven lines between Chicago and St. Pant end Minneapolis is offered. Owing tei the great number of Cana- dians who teside in Chicago, Minne- apolis, Duluth and other cities en route, there is no doubt that the Grand Trunk will find many patrons who will take advantage of the opportunity thus af- forded them for a brief visit at the stations with their friends. • Canadian tttizens are exempt from so-called Utnmigratlon Examination, and there is to detention at any point. � Ba a ge is carried through the'Unit- ed States it' bond without requiring any special attention oh the part of the passenger,. Inspection is not necessary at any of the points at the border. Anotherrieature that will appeal to the hometseeker is the comfoortab� transfer fit points like Chicago., t, ventilated hl into fres • athy Paul and Duluth lieu clean cars, avoiding g the necessityes sity of travelling a long distance in the same oar. In addition to the above routes, the gale ,of tickets is also authorized via Sar 'a, and the Northern Navigation C pang's magnificent Steamers across SOME QUESTIONS OMITTED. The schedule of questions, asked by the census taker is lengthy, but there are a few the bosses overlooked, such as: - Tory or Grit? Ever eat onions? Ever tell a lie? . When did you pay for your paper last? Ever beat your wife? Do you still believe in the People's Railway? Take any stock in the Farmers' Bank? Ever have small pox? Do you use strong drink? Ever been in jail? Married or otherwise? Do you eat with your knife? What's your opinion of reciprocity. Do you wear socks? Ever steal anything? Ever take tainted money? How much do you owe? What size hat do you wear? Is your wife's hat paid for? Do you believe in ghosts? Are you satisfied' with your ment? Did the police ever have to move you off the street corner? Did you ever bet that a man was his own brother? Do you read "THE TIMES"? MISS Donor= CAMPBELL. no mer to dremyas mm d unidinner I t the appoint- edmore of my ed hour. I happened to want a glass of water and rang for it, as I had beet told to do in case I wished for any- thing, and I assure you it was quite twenty minutes by the clock before I Could get a response. There are at least twenty servants attached to the establishment, but each has his or her clearly defined- duties and won't con- descend to do anything else. It can be. "wetted ned what happens in a house where twenty-five guests are being en- tertained hthem should desire•thesame service at the same time. I don't believe I had a good bath while I stayed at Shellbeach, as the Brownlees call their place. Each guest has a handsomely appointed in- dividual bath attached to his or her chamber, bill the water was never anything more than tepid. Also my maid quite declined to do up my hair In the style which I affect and think most becoming because she did not consider it modish. She thought it. might injure her reputation as a maid, I suppose, to be responsible for finch an unfashionable coiffure. The food was elegantly served and prepared by a master chef, buttaa o person of my dimple tastes it was trial. With every mouthful of those wonderful purees and entrees and desserts I was haunted by the andel- linden of one of my spells of acute In- digestion. I hoped to escape it until I got 'home. I didn't, and Ethel, who came into my room to minister that tote alae t ill P couldn't positively th Its retinue of gery ants unearth a elms file hot 'water bag or get piping hotn Water to fill a simple little p niteher. Ethel said it was always like that. Ser tousfn, Mrs, Brownlee, was afraid The Unhappy Husband. His eyes are full of unshed tears; he labors like a yoke of steers to drive the lean wolf from the door, and still he often hears his roar. He takes his money home and hands it to the woman who commands. He has no time for rest or play; he grinds his life away; he might enjoy existence yet, he might serenely strive and fret and when he toddled home at night, the folks would meet him with delight. There is no sunshine in his life, because he has a nagging wife. She has a tireless tongue that flops and wags away and never stops. He comes home weary, stiff and halt, to hear the hausfrau finding fault, and wailing over this and that, and throwing boot jacks at the :cat. Some day when driven to despair, he'll knock his brains out with a chair, and get the peace he long has sought, and mourned because he found it not. Oh, housewives of the bitter tongues, and brazen throats and leather lungs,ha- re- member that this nagging graft driven hosts of husbands daft. The man who labors hard all day, and tohis family brings his pay, and sacrifices all the joys indulged in by the other boys, deserves a home devoid of strife; de- serves a kind and smiling - wife. He labors in the heat and glare, and he should leave his troubles there, and going home at close of day, find peace and comfort holding sway, -Walt Mas- on. assess - INVALID'S LAPBOARD. Will Aid In Passing Many a Weary Hour. The invalid of active temperament longs for action at the first signal ut returning health. And here Is where a light and properly shaped lapboard will prove a boon. It Ahmed he made wide enough to lay aeross the arum or th«• invalid's chair. and the send:Arculnr fa dent should be quite deep to admit ot the free movement of the arms. The general lnphoard used for sew Ing and embroidering Is a trifle togs heavy. The lighter ones made or bass wood instead ot boxboard are name desirable for use in the ark room fhey are composed ot two teayes hinged together in the renter on the underside. With .their ald the milieu. .an while away many..weary bourn with light employment and amuse inents suc'b as sorting scraps or post cards. playing solitaire or writing let vers. ' I; Lake Superior, Agent of the Grand Tran y said anything leave S 13onaventure t b her with tenanting about the very' For liven and i e uperi to For further particulars apply any to complain to the' servants. ts. 11 she k Ratlwa they might Sygtem, . or write to Mr. J Quinlan, Station, y�Iontreal, ar Mr, A, lJ, Duff, yti<erent iia In ,r►hiCh sttClr and such � tut of �;eul` i1w►i1 �tlitn�l,T anti llidilrtle�r '�". Milburn Co., Limited) Toronto, �illt. lUli3lriot onto. ngetr Agent, Union Sta- brat 01,otN, �� telt ficntanta. 111111.1_14.1400.4114.--01:1007-#: .... r Agent, rate pit on a superior air ani! DistrictPassenger Ag r YOU PAY WIIENC��ED Drs. K. & K. Cured by the Naw Method Treatment Far' NO NAMES OR PHOTOS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT NERVOUS DEEnurrY Thousands of young and middle-aged amend Blare a d Diseases. sit you ho avpremature ay harfol lowi through s symptoms Eerie Indiscretions, scnub: •. lowing symptoms consult 4s befogs it is to late, Are You nervous and weak. deacon - dent and gloomy, specks before the eyes, with dark circles under them, w k urine. buck, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and tosses, Racialism memory, pimples on the face oyes sunken, hollow cheeks careworn expression, poor lifeless, distrustful lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless loose,lnidora ` tressge changeable moods, weak manhood, premature decay, bone pains, -bah• • YOU WILL BE A WRECK Our New Methods active, the bloodCOurifed, so that ke all pimp eman of x blotches andits ulcetrs disap ear, the nerves b active, P disappear, the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness, bashfuluosa and des- pondency vanish, the eye becomes bright, the face full .dud clear, energy returns to the body and the moral, phYsical and sexual system reninvigorated: d igo aters b you raine cease -no xi more vital waste from. the system. Don't lot quacks earned dollars, We will cure you or fie pay. EVERYTHING PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL READER: No matter who hes treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge. Books Free -"The Golden Monitor" (illustrated) on Secret Diseases of Men. QUESTION GST FOR HOME TREATMENT SENT ON REQUEST DRs.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed mar to Our Canadian Correspondence Depart- moolloollolmom anent itt 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 I4aboratory for Canadian business only, Address all letters as follows DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. rite for our private address. . 344' :. _ .I..tf4••b i•44 .t••A•F3 ++;14.444Fi '$3-444 4.3••i,. ++w + 3, The Times 1:‘ ClubbingList], End of a Long Romance. Rechab Tandy, of Toronto, a well- known tenor, about 55 years of age, is off on his honeymoon.His bride Amnia. wealthy lady of 70 years, e Wiley, formerly of Kingston, Ont. The unique marriage was celebrated a few days ago as the culmination of a childhood romance, only intimate rela- tives and friends being aware that such an unexpected event was taking place. The news of it will come as a great surprise to thousands of Canadian musi- cians who were familiar with Mr. Tan- dy through part at least of his 45 years of a musical career. The bride, while of an advanced age, is unusually active and comely, and through the death of a relative came into possession of a fortune variously estimated between $50,000 and $60,000. Although living a retired life, she was well known in Kingston, near which city the Wiley family had resided for many years. Mr. Tandy isonf thesameian by school birth, and played grounds with his present wife. It was not until about two weeks ago that he gave any intention of his 'future inten- tions' upon matrimony, rand then it was only to his married daughter. Mother's Advice. There are many quite young girls who bitterly resent their mothers' in t.erference in their • love affairs, chit, even when it is of the gentlest and Most tactful description, Set, quite apart from the right and wrong of the case, the girl who listens to and takes her mother's advice in the choice of n suitor will, nine times out of ten. be studying her own interests. It goes without saying 'that a moth er who is lever as well, as wise will guide rather than drive her girl, and Bo carefully arrange the selection of her friends that, although the Baugh• ter never suspects it to be the case. she bas seldom any chance of becom- ing en Intimate terms with any man whom her mother does not consider fitted to be her husband. Clean Your Telephone. Elven the neatest housekeepers are careless about cleaning their tele• min l MY n bra war e Seemingly they s. fi ho be p h bot leer Itte r and receiver .m thatt rang f t receive and re Ce Will assuredly transmit n dirt, gernis and odors. 'Unscrew the of both and sterilize them thor• TheTerrible Pains of INDIGESTION INDIGE URE Sieh Headache and relieve all the troubles incl. dent to a biliov7 state of the system, such as eatingePain in the' Side, &e. While Distress the r moat remarkable success has been shown in curing + + 1.60 + Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60 " + Times and Daily Globe a. 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..:.... 4.60 1.60 + Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 2.35 + Times and Farmers' Advocate Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) 11,60 0 + Times and Farm and Dairy ...................... T' and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press........... 1.60 Mr. Wm. II. MacEwen, Mount Tryon, sayat-" For more than a year I suffered with all the terrible pains of in- digestion, and my life was one of the great- est misery. It did not seem to make any Y difference whether I ate or not the pains wore always there,. accompanied byte severe bloatingand a belching of wind. 1 did not even gt relief at night, end • sometimes hardly got b bit of else p. In my misery I tried manyremedied Odd to curb indigestion, but they did me not ono particle o good, expected that Ilwould always and I fully p be afflicted in this way. At the etime my brother came home on a visit, and urged to try MILBURN S LAXA-LIVER maY the rail. .few • ea By got m and S a PILLS, . vier 1 began to im• n one g take time I had t prove and could 'eat with some relish. I wits greatly cheered, and continued taking *lis until all 'traces of the trouble had the SI Headache, yet Carter's :Little Liver Pills ate equally valuable in Constipation, curing andpre• venting this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders othe stomach, stimu.atethe liver and regulate the bowels. Eve if they only cured `- tops p ria hly. Worth Water with weak car disappeAred, and I oould once more eat all fi bone etid or the suds of Carbolic edict i' kinds of food without the slightest *noon•. soap is best venieuee. I am to firmly convinced of If ossible, use a waited paper shield their virtue as recommending family medicine em "have pierced) tittle holes titer the trots% no hesitation n p t Milhurn's Lexa•Liver Fide are 25e. per nlitter, fspeefiaily i� Motif telephone be vial, or five for $1,00, at, all dealers, or toed be many pPtiO Ir, Pandit • mailed direct on receipt of price by The + lanes _ 5 Times and pails . Advertiser 2.85 1.60 + Times and London Advertiser (weekly) imes and London Daily Free Press MornirgEditio3,50 Evening Edition 2 90 4. Times and. Montreal Daily Witness - 50 4. • 3.3.50 ,1+, Times and Montreal Weekly Witness • • ... • ' ane 1.25 + Times and World Wide + Ache tier from this distressingilmqd c complaint; buthose ho fortu- nately their goodness does notend here,and those who once try them will ;and tr-eco little pills vara• able in so many ways that they rill not bo wil• ling to do without therm Butafter all sick head HE Is the bane of so many lives that hero is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. Carters Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripo or purge, but by their gentle action please au who motile= Od8TL811=11111n CO.. NLW TOL e Si loch SID + Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... 1.60 2.60 ,tt' 2 25 + + + Times and Presbyterian Times and Westminster ........... 5 Times, Presbyterian and Westminster 3,23,25 Times and Toronto Saturday Night 3,40 Times and Busy Man's Magazine... • • • .•• 1.75 Times and Home Journal, Toronto • • ...... 2 750 .9 Times and Youth's Companion 2 Times and Northern Messenger 8,10 2.905 Times and Daily World...... Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) .90 Times and Canadian Pictorial 3.15 Times and Lippincott's Magazine Times and Woman's Home Companion ......... • 2.60 Times and Delineator 22.40 Times and Cosmopolitan 7 • • • . • .. • . • . ; . 2 50 Times and Strand • • • • • • ' Times and Success Times and McClure's Magazine Times and Munsey's Magazine Times and Designer Times and Everybody's These prices are for addresses in Canada or. Great 2.45 2.60 2,55 1.85 2.40 4 40 40 + Britain. ritalrl, The above publications may be obtained by Times * subscribers in anycombination, the price for any publica- n being the figure given above less $I.00 representing �. thep + rice of The Times. For instance : Th Times and Weekly Globe $1.60 SYNOPSIS Or OANAD1AN NOitTII- WEST LAND REGULATIONS. N it person who is the sole head of a family A or any male over 1S years old,may hotne- stead a quarter a, S skateh wano rAlberta. Tn he a licant b The applicant must appear fh person at the Dominion Lands Agency or ins Abe nieyide atr the district. Entrybyproxyy y any agency, on cetain conditions, atfather, mother, sou, daughter, brother intending homesteader. Duties.-Six of the laud iu each of thrupon ears.. A hon A homesteader may live within least 80 sores f his hbtnestend on a farm of at solely owned and Occupied by bin brother hos father, 'mother, son, daughte , sister. In certatma istprCe-emptoraae homesteader good n y e. etan di ser ,Wo Der Ire 3 sd, Pr t aah i5 horn e Sd0 or fie homestead eats alongside e hem upon n th tdet t rt p - us A.. A3 Dutie. pre•emptiob six months in each of six years from the date of homestead entry lineluding the,time required to earn homestead patient) and cultivate Pity sores 'extra. A homesteader and minuet obtained his pre-emption in gree right _ may enter for a put'e]taeed homestead in costa reeaatc"fe eiz moonthe8inn'00e h of thretl vtears, eulti 'vete any acres and arawctv5It COe worth 5000.00. Deputy of the Minister f the nbliisortid• N,1;,•..iTMtrtihdri P verbleeetont *iilbnt be Feld flit'i The lane * The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1.35 + $2.95 4. + making the price of the three papers $2.95. The Times and the Weekly Sun ................$1.80 $180 + The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00) , The Vecchia Globe ($1.60 less $1,00) , ...... . 60 $3.70 the four papers for $3.70. publication you want is not in above.list, let n the pub . . l almost any well-known Cana- .* us know. We can supply rices are strictly or American publication. These p + cash in advance. -end subscriptions by post office or express order to T Tinies • h Stone Bloch 4. 4. WIiV} GI-IAIVI . ONTARIO '" . �-1.talk }i4.d..�eist+.+.4i+l*d�'I" 4.44.4.4.4 ,4.4 t"h'I'tllltd'i4 is' ' 's Office i