HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-09-14, Page 3•►...-,.w,......r.�. y
l.i ,t•Fi S.r UAM TIMES S II,J4 IE.1. • MR'' 14, 9H .
AT DEATH'S 000R FROM
KIDNEY DISEASE
SAVED ORLY BY
"FRIBT4.TIYE$"
C4+4/it?s4$SUUc, Otw,
oTwo years ago, the doctor made
Party four sails on me, and then said
he had done all lee conld for roe. l was
quffering with intense I idney q'reubie
and lnflartimation had set in, Two
other doctors were consulted and agreed;
tit t nothing could be done to help me,.
Unthe recommendation of a neighbor,
I took ',Fruit-a-tives'.' and they, cured
sue, To -day, I take "Fruit-a-tives'! as
my only medicine, I ant in excellent
health, and " Fruit -a -tines t" is the
Medicine that cured me after 1 liad 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 alive today
had I not used"Fruit-a-fives',.
MRS: P. H. 'WEBBER.
"Vntit-a-tivest" by its marvellous
action on the kidneys -»- completely
restores these vital organs to their
n"ormal strength and vigor -and cures:
ve y trace of Kidney Trouble. Fruit-
a -tines" is the only medicine in the
world made of fruit,
roe.'a box, 6 for $2.go, trial size, 25c.
At dealers,or from Fruit-a-tivesI,inuted,
Ottawa.
MORE THAN A FARMERS' FIGHT.
The Sun desires toemphasize the
fact that this more than a farmers'
fight. It is a fight for the towns and
villages as well. The present system
which tends to centralize wealth and
`business in the large centres, may suit
places like Toronto and •Montreal.
These cities can reach out and command
trade over wide areas., The prosperity
or adversity of farmers in their immed-
iate vicinity is a matter of comparative
indifference to them.
But how about the . smaller places -
places such as Staynor, Uxbridge,
Glencoe, Gl urea, Qrono and scores
and hundreds of others. These smaller
centres draw their very life blood
from the farms in their immediate
neighborhood. If neighboring farmers
are prosperous the country towns and
villages prosper; if farmers , suffer
from depression the' local urban centre
decays.
Freeaccess to the American market
with food products will undoubtedly
add to theosis '
pr p my of the Ontario
farmer: Increased prosperity for the
Ontario farmer means increased pros-
perity for the Ontario town.
LAUNDRY REFERENCES.
Use borax water to wash sateen.
This method will restore the gloss to
the goods.
Use warm water to sprinkle your
starched clothes.
Pine ginghams and percales dipped
in sweet milk instead of starch, gives
them that dainty, glossy dressing they
have when new.
For grass stains saturate the spot.
thoroughly with kerosene, then put in
the washtub:
For mildew soak in a Weak solution
of chloride of lime for several hours.
Rinse in cold water. •
Iron rust can be removed by soaking
the stain thoroughly with salt and
bleach for several hours in the sun.
For hot tea and coffee stains soak the
stained fabric in cold water, wring;
spread out and pour a few drops of
glycerine on each spot Let it stand
several hours; then wash with cold
water and soap.
Scorch stains can be removed by wet-
ting
etting the scorched place, rub with soap
and bleach int the sun.
' For fruit stains streteb the fabric
containing the stain over the mouthof
a basin and pour boiling water on the
stain. In cold weather fruit stains can
frequently be removed by hanging the
stained garmentout-of-doors over
night. If the stain has been fixed by
time soak the article in a weak solution
of oxalic acid or hold the spot over
the he fumes of
sulphur.
AT WORK IN 3 WEEKS
*4 Worth of Father Morrisey's "Ile. 7"
cared Her of inttamotately Rheumatism.
Mrs.A.gnes Edger,of Grand FFalls,N.B.,
bad°a terrible tithe with Inflan'ntatory
Rheitmatisth. Anyone who has had
this most painful diseasewill asiderstand
her ouffering-and her joy when she
found Father Morriecy'e "No. q" had
cured her. She says:
"I took Patine Morriscy'aPrescription
foir Inflammatory Rheumatism. 1 had
sith`ercd everything with it, but in three
Weeks after starting Father Morriscy's
Prescription I was ile to do my work,
mid after taking four dollars worth, of
ilteddlcine I was well. 1 highly recent-
tinend it mayauferer with /rheumatism."'
lithettmatistn comes front bad kidneys,
The poisonous Mid Acid which the
rltlould remove stays in the blood
lrcemmulates in joint* and muscles, and
causes *testy.Father Morrlscyrs
'"No. 1" parte the kidneys right. removes.
the 'Uric Acid from the blood end the
Whole system;andcurestheRlieiiniatisui.
see. a box et your dealer's, or front
Father Irforriscy Medicfno Co. Ltd.,
Montreal, Atte.
M
'The Saddest :1-ot,
"What are yen tthinking about
dear"" she asked,
"1 have just been trying to decide
bometbing,'".
'Can I help you?"
"No; I've arrived at a conclusion."
"What is it about?"
"1 have just decided that the sad,
(lest lot in the world is that of a tnan
who harries an heiress and then bas
to work for the purpose of earning
his awn spending money.".•-Gbicago
Record -Herald,
A Mean Trick,
We waited for the bride and groom
To start their trip.
There wast enough rice in the room.
To sink a ship.
Each fellgw held a rusty shoe
Behind his back,
And there were rlebons, pink and blue.
Upon the hack,
The bride and groom, they held *loot",
'lo our dismay,
Then took an airship trout the root
And got away, .
-1.ouievlue Courier-aournsl.
Geometric Finance.
"Do you call that merger you et.
fected for those monopolists a square
deal?"
"Certainly" replied Mr. Dustin Star,
with a chuckle. "It represented a
quartet of our greatest and moat far-
reaching, enterprises. Since the deal
has four corners in it it must be
square." -Washington Star,
Love of Football.
Breathes there a man with: soul po dead
Who never to his town has said,
"This is our own, our trusty teener'Whose heart has .not been stirred wit*
pride
By records mtide upon his side,
Who on the grand stand does not mean
To lose a bit of all that fun
When quarter makes a long end run?
--fudge.
•
One of These ---* Care.
"Where did you spend your twit
Weeks' vacation?"
"In an automobile,"
"Indeed? Long trip, eh?"
"We got nearly twenty-two ranee:*
*Here insert name of 'machine yell
hate most. -Cleveland Leader.
The Happy Soldier.
"A. aohdter or the Legion
Lay dying in Algiers,"
While a thousand weeping women
Watched him through a flood of tear
But he murmured as his lifeblood
Ebbed at each convulsive throb:
"Gest I'm glad 1 left the army
For this Moving picture job!"
-P. F. 13orniah in Puck.
No Idle Boast.
Then --Famous Painter (angrily? --B
bear, sir, that you're boasting that y0IN
studied under Mie?
Tbe Near Painter (calmly) -Ind SG I
did, sir, so. I did. Why, I occupied a1
room under your studio for nearly le
menthe -New Orleans Times -Democrat/
The Hustler's Epitaph.
Wives of married men remind us
We can make our wives sublime
And, departing, leave behind us
Wealthy widows In their prime.
-New 'York 7Ctasett
No Sate.
"1 see you are smiling at my jokes,']
said the wafting contributor Hopefully,,
"Yes," replied the editor; "that eou s'
tesy Is due when ' one meets cid
friends." --Philadelphia Ledger.
~
•
• Tragedy.
She stooped for something on the !tope.
Vergettf�.ul, of the garb she wore.
A ripp1ng sound, a shriek from Gert -
Alae, ehhe'd torn her bobble skirt!
(-Detroit k'reo Press.
Helping p g th e Poor.
"Have you no friends to help you
"I have, mum, but they sort of bon
their I get six'
giftsturkeys Cht�
rnas and nothing during the r rest of titin
year." --Pittsburg Post.
Discouraging.
'Tis very hard to get a bard
Inside a prison pile.
But if his time's cut Short by rhymes
It's surely not worth. while
-Cleveland Plain Dealer.
• A Preference.
"Ery husband reads me like an Opal
book."
"i'li bet he would prefer the pow*
to shut yon up." -Baltimore American.)
" An Aimless Thing.
Oh, shooting star -oh, shooting star'
1 really don't know what your are,
But I'II bet a big round dollar that
roti don't know what you're shooting Atli
-Chicago News. , •
the Law.
ilnicker•-Dark clothes protect yet.'
from the sun's rayls. •
Docker -hey won't if they aren't'
Sa fashion" --New York Sun.
Pay `chose '1'axal
And new the Man who owns his Douse
re putting up a roar.
The Cost 05 living 15 greater for hint
Than Ever itwa sr before.
b r,
+:Chicago 'Tribune.
It Would..
Ella -They say that sugar alone 140
sustain life for some tithe.
Stella -Life would be sweat, WO
Itt-New York Press.
Curious.
r•l�,
Lite is a curious' story,
No matter hoW orators tact» 7,
=din' a race hoes to glory
;When you can win in awalkt.
Atlanta iConrtitutlegi s
Enough.
t n
d when was your
net, PIec
e
P
led tor the last time? ' "
!the 'Stet time,"-WSpekano Spoke/14
trittrettetiOW.
Pelokly Business That.
pfwtNeedea drdpita niae d pinto!
t .
t1eCt 'Marriage la ended alimony' 'iieflogt
'.
BUYING ING A VASES
Wertheimer's! Glasser, Qoup,'by Which
t 1e Secured, the Prise.
'J<The• late. Charles Werthebrler waeS
asked on one occasion what he consid•
erect tai` be hie .01008444 bne1neae coup
thought for awhile and then told bows
once when tie wait wailing through a
Brighton !quare be espied through ap
open window what be knew to be a
prieelesta Chinese vasa. He went to
the nearest eostonice, examined a local
directory sad found the name et the
resident. Theft he galled and asked for
the gentleman and was shown into the
study hailer the ,Mame of "Hamilton,"
Re briefly explained that be was look
ing for a modest house in Brighton
and bad taken a tenet' to. this one
Would the gentleman entertain an et
ter for the place as it stood• -'"look.
stock and barred"'
The owner, a little ngnpiused, pest
rated.
"Ir your offer is reasonable," tater
rupted Hamilton, "1 will give you as
extra thousand."
"Call tomorrow at 1440, thea," re
Plied the owner.
Hamilton 41ti and found him pre
pared to accept MAO for the twenty
two years' unexpired term and tbe con
tents of the resideuce.
Although this was well over market
valve. Hamilton at once closed, eddine
the extra thousand, according to prom
ISN. As, bowever, be afterward solo.
rhe vase for f;i5,Otµl, • bis coupwas nn
mistake ble.-Lo ndon 'i'eiVernpd•
WHISTLER THE FIGHTER.
rhe Artist Always Took His Revenges
in a Refined Way.
In "Whistler as i Knew Him" Mor
•!mer 4ienpes, the author, has a good
leafto say Alam %Vbistler the tight
-r and his quiekuess in resenting an
arrow. Ile is careful to add that
',Vltistler was arrays refined to ttrr-
;nethuys:
while be was severe be was not no
rally brutal.. He never treated his
••nemles in a ro rrse way. Any roan
who had offended him Whistler would
rap sharply over rhe shoulders. with
his cone, and thin• by the time the
•offerer had re+'t,rpred the mater
would be In the next rootu explaining.
to every one how be had just felled
Ills enemy. •
Once 151. caught a man with whip
ne was for the moment enraged nasty,
in,: bis fare. Without is moment's
hesitation Whistler dashed the nnfnr
'nnate bend straight Into the basin of
,enters and while the foe was endear,
,rine to elm the soap from his eyes
•o sae the muse of this sudden tmuter
"inn Whistler was to the smnkius
,num setting the men there in a rem;
.vile the nc'msnt of bl4 adventures
When i first met Whistler• be was in
the act of searching for a man who
nod dared to erlticiee bis venetian
-whines, "If yon want to see, some
'un, Meows," he said. "come with
ane." Fortunately the mon had Mem
wa't•ned and 'was nowbere to be found
Slavery In Old Greece" •
The Greeks were slave *worm- with
s vengeance All manual work woe
lone by "barbarians:" ns the Greeks
oiled those who hrid been (raptured In
war. Tbe greatest of the ';reeks RAW
'so evil in the institution. Aristotle is
"tuite`'outsptikett in his justitir'ation of
'lavery, A rertnin amount of wenn
work bad to be done. he claimed, and
'mend natured then" were 'Wended to
lo it. he glares lip some of the (,reels
states outnumbered the freemen four
nr five to ones. .Marinol tabor came in
tireeee to be thought a defiradat)nn.
4uited only for beings who could not
.lo the bigher work. Even freemen
who worked for wages were by Arts
totie pinned outside the constitution
And what was true of the Greeks was
equally true or most of the other .an
•ienr nations.--Eit•ttnnge.
Shakespeare as'an Actor.
About the year 1190 erre ot rhe Intl
inn eompanles received on addition in
sbe person of It voting man wn"r was
totonlya skillful and useful actor, out
who also possessed the neeompllsb
.Ment of being able to adapt oilier mope
to the taste ot the tittles and even
tsroved to have the gift of writing tot
ernhiy good plays himself, though older
and jealous colleagues might hint at
their not being altogether origlnn4
l'his young man" whose i'apncitles be.
came of no slight' use to the company
and the theater. spas named Wililaa
Shakespeare. - lr'row "A B.istory of
Theatrical Art."
Very Compticafed,
Aunt Rate -What brings that young
Mr. Stevens to the house to often?
311ldred--Well, .his mother's stepfather,
tbarried a seeond cousip of my father's
great-aunt. We're trying to figure out
what relationthat makes einn to
and it can't be done In one evening
St Louis Thee!. ,
Keeping tab on Dad.
"What does your father do when y'ba
ask bin' any questionsit" malted en.
email boy.
"HO generaily says, 'I'ni btisy Plat
now; don't bother Me,'" replied, the
other. "Then then . 1 go dot or the
room he looks in the eheyelopedia.»-a
Washington Stat
Breaking the Record.
,a been
a r -µx freer t
The O Ile that o>y,vil
y
to It party, 'Mabel. Did you dance
Muds? Mabel (aged telght)-41 sbouid
tetyr I did. 1 danced two grladr'illions.
-Cleveland Plain .healers
albeit --tile expendltnre of Vital it'is
err hi tome toren-ts the Meted -re,
nriy. It lit the rnakur, Of 'faltilai.-4Bo1+
Suffered From tier
Heart, Could Not
Stand Lard Work
Mrs. Harry Smith, 31 Eagle Ave.,
Brantford, Oat., writes: -"I have tiff-
fered with my heart a great deal, sod
could not stand any hard work. 1 was
doctoring with the Doctor and he told
me I bed to Soo doing anything, hut,
however a. friend told me about your
Milburn�a Heart and Nerve Pills, so 1
got •a box and tried them. I had to take
several 'boxes before T felt any benefit,
but after doing so 1 found they were
beginning to help me so I continued.
their use and am now in a position to do
all my own work, which I felt I would
have to give up."
Milburn's Heart .and Nerve Pills are
a /pecitio for all weak run down women,
whether troubled with their heart or
nerves, and if you will only give theta a
trial we can asstite you that they win.
have the desired effect.
Price 50c. per box or 3 boxes for $1.25,
far aisle at all dealers or mailed direct
on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
WHY FARMER AND
CONSUMER BOTH BENEFIT.
A. question and its answer,
The question --How can it be that the
farmer will receive more for his prc-
ducts under reciprocity, while the con-
sumer wili, at the same time, pay less
for them?
The answer-� In the first place the
duties at present collected on products
imported, amounting to a very large
annual sum, will not be collectedand
will remain in the consumer's pocket
In the sewn( place, the commission
agents and middlemen, the meat pack-
ers, the canners and all the rest of
them will no longer be able by reason
of the American tariff to ` control and
and keep down the price at which the
fanner must sell to them,. At the
same time they will no longer be able
by reason of the Canadian tariff to
control and keep up the price at which
the consumer must buy from them.
Thus the food monopolists, who have
been able to play both ends for the
benefit of themselves, will have their
exhorbitant profits cut down, to the
advantage of both classes of their vic-
tims. -Toronto
ic-tiros.-Toronto Star.
The Burdens of Age.
The kidneys seem to be about the
first organs to wear out and fail to
properly perform their work, The re-
sult is weak, lame, aching back, rheu-
matic pains and failingeyesight. Many
psople of advanced years have recover-
ed health and comfort by using ,Dr.
Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, They en-
sure the healthful action of liver, kid-
neys and bowels.
SUGGESTIONS FOR �.
COOKING POTATOES.
Soak old potatoes in water.
Never allow potatoes to stand in the
sun,
Always pour off the water as soon as
done and remove the cover to allow the
steam to escape.
Potatoes cooked in their jackets
should be pierced to allow the steam to
escape.
Potatoes should be simmered (not
boiled). It is a, waste of fuel arid spoils
the potatoes, Toorapid boiling n makes
them a solid paste which is both unpal-
atable and indigestible.
Cook potatoes with the shins on as
often as possible They are more
nourishing and palatable. Mashed
potatoes are delicious cooked in their
jackets, peeled and mashed.
Potatoes may be kept warm a long
time without spoiling, if the skins are
broken and the kettle well ventilated,
Potatoes well ventilated while cook-
ing are more wholesome and of better
flavor.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITYI
a•rrre'
Centaine
Carter's
tittle Liver Pills
Must Behr Stgnittura bt
gets paio,3imlte Wrapper Bele*.
Vire Masai am as easy
itatalus aeitgara
rat RRADAOAE.
FOR btI`Z t(itt
t
rfl R11.nnitatit.
tolvaRPWW LWt ttlr
rinVON5 TlPATtO$
FM $ALLOW,$KIN
+. F'O11.THECOtM?LtalIOII
a aksv..,r9r►sowwiv. rtr,rs ,
jiito lig)li�oa iorittetr►bta.,,
Mint SICK HEADACiiitiS
CA
as
,RACHEL'S GUITAR.
It Wae Tuned to Ray a Costly Ale iter
Hanker Fouts).
Hacbel, the remota aetre$, did not
neglect any seam of lerttinit is mora
car lase bolero ;wetly, is ttiaL new life.
et fret' F'l'atlets tlribble sell* the tel
towine; story of u. guitar:
Rachel Orbit ow and ads r04 it in
an artist's stutilo, "!live it to Mr
sae said; "1 want to pretend thatit
is the guitar on whir.¢ 1 earned My ;.
living as e..atteet singer.'
The jest eeented a pleasant one. and
the Artist blinded over the instrument.
Rac•bel ewbelitslieq it with rittbope
and huuL it in. her Awn apartment;,
inhere it duty attracted the attention
of Achille Vould, tbe banker. Bear.
ing its story, he expressed the wish
to possess it, "Verywell" said
Rachel, "rou can pave, it ter a thea'
SU :osis,"
":Five bundred " said the banker,.
trying to bargain,.
"No, a thousand," said $acpel, ex-
pressing her disdain for those who
boggled. -
d.ud the, banker actuaily paid a time-
saud Mule fpr the worthless knick-
knack, It is said that be learned; tbe
truth when be tried to sell hie treas,
are at the Hotel Prouot .and that the
discovery of the hoax nearly sent iaip
into a at on the fico': •
MEASURING. THE EARTH.
Ereatosthenea Made the First Attempt
and Did Fairly Welt,
The earliest attempt to measurethe
circumference of the earth was made
by a Greek, Erastostbenee. who was
born 276 8. C. fie hound that at
Syene the gnomon, or upright pillar.
used by the (creeks to measure the
beight of the sun in the sky, showed
the 'sun to be exactly overhead at
midday at the time of the summer
solstice, while at Alexandria the gno-
mon cast a shadow upon the sante
date, showing that the tatter point
was one -fiftieth of the earth's circuw-
ferenee north of S*ene,
Erastosthenes reasoned correctly
that the. length of the sbadow at Alex-
andria bore the same relation to tbe
itint
t .,.
r Pere
n
cit of the small . i
ai c r cl
e de•
eerihed from the, top of the gnomon as '
✓ center that the distance between the
two o cities bore to the circumference ot
the globe. This latter was 5,000 stadia,
or about 625 miles. which when mul•
ripiied by fifty gives 31,250 miles as
the elrcutufereece of the earth. This
result 1s not quite correct, but as
m'urly so as could be expected from
the first rougb attempt to estimate tt..
-New York Mail.
Mexico's Way Wlth Women.
R'orntrn's place in Mexican life is the
inevitable mingling of the .Moorish
Mem of the S'rtirtsb conqueror's and
the -usvrlgi. ideas of 'the natives, the
ltilwactkee Sentinel says. 'MP Castil-
mit Bides his wife and daughters he
nerd stone wails and the picturesque
eittic'es int 'ensure, and he. is their
ord and. mnstar On the other hand.
•he .Indian tribes are. of eoursg, still
rs„nnd by the spirit ot the auctent snv•
sue "ns,nnrs Historians tell 01 one of
are baptismal ceremonies of the Mesh -
ie trio"'v, who fought their way to su
i'rema:'y inns before the Spnnish ar-
rived .,n the seene. To each boy baby
the priests chanted this command:
"Thy profession and fatuity is war,
thy obligation to give the sun to drink
Mood of the enemies and the earth
corpses of the foes:" To the girt ha by
they said with far less ceremonial:
"You are to stay within the house. as
the heart does within the body. Our
t'.ord enshrines you in that place, and
pour
office is to fetch and to grind
maize in the ftietate." Tµ -
MISREPRESENTING SIR GEORGE
ROSS.
Garbled reports of Sir George W.
Ross' utterances on reciprocity are
being circulated in the Opposition press.
What he said last year that was really
pertinent to the discussion of the Field-
ing-Paterson pact is carefully omitted
from these reports. Here are his
words: -
"Theirs (the -Americans') is the first
move on commercial them
chessboard.
We gave Great Britain a preference
without any treaty or even negotia-
tions: why should we treat the .Ameri-
cans with greater formality. At the
same time, let us receive their repre-
sentatives with the utmost courtesy.
They have proposals to make, vre want
to know what theyThey should
are. ey hou ]d
be made as openly as if they were sub-
mitted to Parliament 'ublie o toion
should be heard upon them, and there
the matter should rest until the United
States Congress had given its sanction
and apprpval to the actionof its repre-
sentativesaiit would then be the duty
of the Parliament to take similar action
if in the public interest so to do. Only
in this way can we prescrve perfect
freedom from the possible entangle-
anents of a treaty which, no matter
how carefully drafted, IS liable to be.
misunderstood and misinterpreted.
"An adjustment of the trade rela-
tions between the two countries by the
independent legislation of both rather
than bytreaty is the only safe course,
aa it aords publicity in the first
stance and admits of perfect freedom
of action thereafter." What Sir
George advised is just whit has been
done, Clearly he was against a treaty,
but in favor of joint legislation es tr.
ranged by the pact q he safe course
has been taken its he advised. Shia
the pttblitetion of the terms of the
4
WE REPAIR W..
K
ONE SECRET OF OUR succrss. Every case submitted to us recelvea the personal
attention of our Medical Staff, who consider the symptoms, complications and chronicity,,
sod then decide as to the disease and curability, Specific Specific remedies are then prescribed
for the case and are compounded by our own chemist in our cwt Laboratory. Such
appropriatetreatment canuotfail to euro, as :specific medicines are selected to cure the
symptms that trouble you, We have nocureall medicines like most specialists use who
send the same medicines to all patients alike end cure pone. We have ,treated patients
throughout Canada for over twenty years and can referto any bank es to our responsibility,
Ws Guarantee Cures or No Pay, We Treat alt Diseases of Men and Women.
CONSUI,TATION FREE .in
If Uasble to Cell, Write for a Question List for Homs Treatment.
DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY
Got. Michigan Ave, and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.
All letters front Canada must be addressed'
to our Canadian Correspondence Depart-
, saisaseeneemean
ment 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 & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont.
Write for our private address,
I
'he Times
Clubbing
List
•
•
t
fi
Times and Weekly Globe . . , . 1,60
Timms and Dealt Globe......,..,.........,,,, d.SU
Times and Family herald and Weekly Star.... (85
T;nies`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 isinpire.,.... 4,60
Times and Weekly Mail and Empire... 1,60
"Times and Farmers' Advocate ................. 2.35
'l'imes and Canadian Farm (weekly).............. 1,60
Times and Farm and Dairy......,........... 1 80
Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press....,..... 1 e
Times and Daily Advertiser , .... 2.85
Times and London. Advertiser (weekly). 1.60
Times and London Daily Free Press Mornia g
Edition3 50
•
Evening Edition.,,..2 90
Times and Montreal Daily Witness .. .. , 3.50
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness............. -41 85
Times and World Wide ... ................. ..- 225
Times and Western Horne Monthiy, Winnipeg..,... 1.60
Times. and Presbyterian 2.25
Ties.
m and Westminster .. 2.25
Times, Presbyterian and Westminster..,.,,,...,.,, 3.25
Times and Toronto Saturday Night .... 3 40
Times and Busy Man's Magazine.... .. , , P.f..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 . 8.15
Tithes and Woman's Home Companion ...... .. • 2.60
Times and Delineator.,,.........,.. 2.40
Times and Cosmopolitan ............4. 2.30
t, Times and Strand ...... .. 2.60
+ •` Times and Success 2.45
Times and McClure's Magazine 2.60
+ Times and Munsuy's Magazine .......... ...... 2,55
,+i, Times and Designer .»....................... 1.85
4' Times and Everybody's ............. 2.40
4.
These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great
Britain. 6
Theabove
publications may
be
obtained
oe
d byTimes t.
subscribers in any combination, the price for any ublica-
''' tion -being the figure given above less $toop
. representing +
the price of The 'flutes. For instance :
+
�.
+
The Times and Weekly Globe-. ....... » .......$1.ti0
The Farmer'rs Advocate ($2.35 leas $1,00).....,.. 1.3$
malting the price of the three papers $2.95.
The Times and the 'Weekly Stu- ......$1,80
y Star .301e s
The T n to Daily ($2 s $1:00),..... ,. Iy.R
O
The Week13 Globe 01.60 lees $1.00) . , ...... , 60
$2,95
it.'70
the four papers few $3,70.
• if the publication you want is not in above list, let
us know. We can supply alniost any well-known Cane
+ dian or American publication, Theserices erre strictly
cash in advance. P y `
Send subscriptions by post office or express order to
•
pert, he has said not a Word against it. 1 .pA
,e linies
Stone Block
VIN AM + N'#'
T."i-*T+.1.l it:+•i+++TT+0+ *T"I"T+++++++++.++7•"AI'T�t"7'T.lul
i'�uil. lis' .ikvor . ..:.liitiYYT� rMr . ,L.Mw�R�rwn+•Mr