HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-12-28, Page 3TRIED EVERYTHING
WITHOUT RELIEF
tlnilil took "Fruit a -:[res"
SP assn.0, F
%► , A1 , iiia, Sth, ><QIo,
"1 have been a sufferer for the past
a5 ears tvitb Constipation, Indigestion
anti catarrh of the. Stomach. tried
many remedies and many doctors but
derived no, benefit whatever.
Finally, 1 read +Fnn advertisement of
' Vr•uit-setivet r.. 1 decided to give
Fruit a.tivesa trial and foundthey
did exactly what was claimed for :beta.
1 have now taken +Fruit,a-tives' for
some months and And that they are the
only remedy that does me good.
1 have recommended Trait -it -Jives'
t+ great mar#y, of my friends and 1
cannot ,praise these fruit tablets too.
liiglil "fobs, j, JONAS
"1 rrniit:-$-tires" Is the only natural
epee for Constipation and Stomach
Trouble, because it is the only medicine
is the world that is made of fruit juices
and valuable tonics. Hundreds of
people have been cured, as if by a
miracle, by taking "Pruit•a-tives", the
'famous fruit medicine.
$oc, a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, sec.
M dealers, or sent on receipt of price by
Fruit.a-fives Limited, Ottawa.
•
MI She Asked.
"The late Justice Harlan," said a
Washington lawyer, "was an advocate
of temperance in eating, in drinking,
in the use of tobacco, in all things.
"Justice Harlan, praising temperance
at a lawyers' banquet, once told eatery
about a young wife who said to her
husband:
"'Jack, dear, 1 do wish you'd stop
drinking! Every time you go to one of
these banquets of yours, you get up
the next morning pale and tired, you
won't eat anything, you just gulp down
nine or ten glasses of water. Do stop
drinking, won't you dear? I know it's
bad for you.'
"'But all great men have been
drinking men,' Jack grumbled. 'Look
at Webster, look at Poe, look at
Charles Lamb, look at Grant, look-'
"'Well', ,nterrupted his wife, 'you
dust promise, dear, • that you'll quit
rinking till you're great and Pll be
satisfied,'"
IlMainve
CHRISTMAS APPEAL
FOR
The Hospital for Sick Children
•
Dear Mr. Editor, -
Thanks for your kindness in allowing
me the privilege of appealing at this
Christmas time on behalf of the
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto.
I make this direct appeal to the
people of Ontario, for the fathers and
mothers of Ontario, outside the City of
Toronto, have precisely the same claim
for their sick children as regards the
privileges of the Hospital, as parent;
who reside In this city.
In brief the sick children from any
place In Ontario whose parents cannot
afford to pay, Is, on certificate from a
municipal officer of any city, town,
village or township, treated free.
This is a privilege not granted by any
Hospital in the Dominion, or on this
Continent.
Let me, In a few words, state that in
the last 20 years, since 1891, thele baye
been 4,731 patients from 450 places
outside of this city treated free, as the
parents were unable to pay for treat-
ment. Last year 384 patients fronts 234
places outside Toronto were so treated.
The Hospital is not a city but a
Provincial institution. The Corporation
of Toronto grants $18,000, not only for
city children, but towards the mainten-
ance of e* cry rntiept, in the Hospital,
and the citizens of Toronto donate an
average. of $10,000 to the maintenance
fund of the Hospital..
It would take more space than you
can Spare to tell of the good work dose
for the sick and deformed children of
this Province.
Why, in the Orthopedic department
In 20 years, nearly 700 children, boys
end girls, have been treated for elub
feet,a
nd about 600 were corrected.
Two-thirds of these came from places
outsideof Toronto, sonic, from parents who
could not afford to pay.
Surely we have a fair elaim for help
from the people of this Province.
Every day is Christmas to the child
whose little life is saved, or whose
crippled limb is straightened 'with the
might of money-yourmone3 aid the
mercy of the Hospital.
Will you, the reader of this letter,
think of what your dollar will da? It
helps tp to restore health and strength,
and gives sound limbs and straight feet
to crippled boys, and girls.
Yougive wealth to the 1-fospltal, and
the iv- Hospital a
n gives health to the
Children.
'yes, your money can put golden
hinges oti the door of the hospital's
mercy.
Will you, kind reader, help us and
send a spare dollar to i)ouglaa David•
son, the saecretarydreasurer of the
Hospital, ar
TAB MOAN I'JMES 01E It 28
1911
ti
TH& FARM f•AWVI
The hew' Zork court* hold
that a eerttUcate of **pia tr.
not it I egntiable *drupes . '
Whereua
� t, u r01140411
destroyed by the payee ,fox dies
purpose of ceneeling It no etc.
tion. coli bo maintained On It Ile
a lost lnstruineut by the payee
or any other person Or him.
A railroad ticket for transpor-
tanon paid for at the ordinary
rate is not a contract within tt-
self, but a mere evidence of cons
tract which the law .creates end
which Ilea behind the ticket.
Qopacity to ot#dcrstartd the #t»
feet of wafting one's will and
not actually uuderatandiug fa.
the test Of mental capacity to
make et will,
ECONOMY QF SHEEP.
mpreve Fertility end. Take Nothing
From the"$ail.
When the small, farmer adopts a per.
Raanezt system of farthing he will
turn to sheep, He must have come
way to conserve his soli fertility, and.
of all farm animals thesheep standee
supreme in this particular, writes
George McHerrow In the Orange Budd.
Farmer. The part that they have
played in the development of other
farming districts, notably England,
should attest their value in intensive-
farming.
The type of sheep required for the
small farm and the profit which can:
be derived from them ben rightly
kept Is too little known. Itis bard to
realize that they can be made prq$t»
"able by feeding on grain and tame
hay, while heretofore they have roam-
ed over and lived through a Large part
of the year on the native grass. But
such is possible if we will only go at
it in the rigbt way.
In getting a flock the first thing to
consider is the breed. It must be
adapted to conditions. One essential
is to get a type that can produce tt
prime mutton carcass and a beavy
fleece at the same time. The dual
purpose sheep has become a reality,
The Cheviot sheep has a fleece
that is moderately long, straight and
free frome
hemp (or the short coarse
hairs that go by this name) and
covers well all parts of the body
down to the hocks. The ewes are
excellent milkers and good mothers,
losing few Iambs even when unat-
tended by the shepherd, They are
very docile and not given to stray-
ing • The fleece of the Cheviot
weighs five to seven pounds in the
ewes and a half more in the iambs.
Ewes weigh up to 170 pounds and
the rams a third. more.
and it is no longer necessary to sacri
Tice mutton conformation for wool pro
clueing qualities or the reverse.
Aside from their mutton and woo(
producing qualities, sheep have an
economic value to the farmer. I havi
seen them devour burdocks and rag
weed with relish, while they bad a
abundance of good tame grasses. I
a trip were taken through a rural cow
munity of any highly developed seal
tion it would be found that nearly all
the most progressive farmers keep
sheep. They know that sheep take
practically nothing from the soil. Thi
care of them Is important, but is a
exceedingly pleasant task and require
very tittle labor during the busy seal
son.
There is a pleasure in caring for
good sheep that cannot be equaled id.
any other branch of farming. Noth'
ing will Instill a love of farm life in
a' boy sooner than the care of such
animals. 1 know this by experience.
When kept In fenced pastures the3l
are not susceptible to disease, Stobie.
ach worms are the greatest menace,
but may easily be avoided by keepingi
the lambs off old sod in warm weather.
The northwest will not give up bei
supremacy in sheep raising, but "the
old order changeth, yielding place to
the newer
Coat Per the Hogs.
Soft coal or charcoal is to the hog as
ie to Give
p the boy. G e it to them fn
frequent doses. tf it big bunch of
pigs are allowed to sleep together in
cramped quarters, in bad weather, they
win pile up and the small wader pigs
differ. Easy to separate them into
tots of eight or ten each. A sow pig
farrowing at one year old will, if she
and her offspring produce the average
timber of animals, round up a herd
of P00 at the end of the fourth year,
provided there are aro slips, no deaths,
no mate.
Keep the Best Lembo.
b ,
It takes solve grit to say "NJ's when
the*ut
b cher gets his eye an the nicest
depb yon sieve• -the one yon wanted
to" save for yourself --but that very
lamb will by and by bring you a great
deal more than the meat man ,will
ql re you for it now 11 you keep it and
do Weil by it, flet yeargtimption up,
J fOSS ROi3Oi1.1',SGN, then, ttnd say: "1V'0, sir. rm going to
Chairman of the Trustees, 'Poroma. keep that lamb myself.° ""`
LIFE WAS A. MIIMQEN
FOR TWO YEARS.
lKrs. 10540 Tbroop, Upper 1'ofnt
44 sate, 4.11„ writes. a"I cannot speak
to well of Doau'a .Kidney lPills, Iran'
two vases 1 was sod tired' life was a burdese
aid 1 got up more :.red thaa when I teat
to, bed, and my tack area so laiae a,
could hardly straighten up, 1 took .111f,
fetent kinds of medicine,, but untie of
then& did me any good. until a ideal
advised me to try Doan's Kidney Fills,
1 414 so, And today 1 don't know what
it la to be tired, and my lame back is alt
gone, - 1 can recommend them to any
person Suffering with lame backkarld that
terrible tired feeling."
»oau's, Kidney Pills are a purely vege,
table medicine, realizing quick, perms,
peat relief, without any ill after effects,
Mates Kidney Pills are.,i;p cents pen
t,ox,. or 3 boxes 'for iL P, at all dealer
or mailed direct on receipt of price, by
The T. ¥ilburu Co., I,4ahsted, Toronto►
Ont, •
If ordering direct specify "Down's,"
Telling Stories.
Don't try to tell a story to any group
or throng, if it is stale and hoary, with
whiskers two feet Iong. For anecdotes
blue -mouldy give all good men a pain,
and show that you should . fold a wet
towel on yourbrain, Don't tell a story
cizzy, however good it seems, to fel-
!owe w zo-ore busy -with their own priv-
ate schemes. For men you bore when
toiling are likely to arise, their blood
with anger boiling, and soak you in the
eyes. Don't tell to gent or lady, to
anyone you know, an anecdote that's
shady -such stories go to show that he
who tells them's merely a donkey in
disguise, with ears so long they nearly
brush cobwebs from the skys. Don't
tell a tale that's longer than is the
moral law, or someone who is, stronger
may smite you on the jaw. 4 dozen
story tellers may charm us with their
tales, where forty thousand fellers pro-
duce but sighs and wails. You'll win
but little glory, perhaps make people
groan; don't try to tell a story unless
you are alone) -Walt Mason.
Nerves Are
,Exhausted
And nervous prostration or paralysis
is creeping steadily upon you.
You hear of people suddenly falling
victims of nervous prostration or
some form of paralysis, But when
you get all the facts of the case you
and that they have had months or
years of warning.
They
,haven't t slept well. There has
been frequent attacks of nervous
headache. Digestion has failed. They
have been irritable, easily worried
and excited and have ,found memory
and concentration failing.
Had they but known that these
symptoms tell of exhausted nerves
or had they realized their danger they
would have restored the feeble, wast-
ed nerves by use of such treatment
as Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.
This great restorative treatment
cures by forming new, ri:h blood and
by rebuilding the wasted nerve cells.
No medicine is more certain to prove
of lasting benefit to the system. 50
cents a box, 6 boxes for f'2.50; at all
dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co.,
Toronto.
The average annual depreciation of
farm machinery is usually estimated at
10 per cent. Still there are hundreds of
machines that are not efficient after six
to seven years active service. Although
machine sheds will extend the time usual-
ly 20 to 30 per cent., still it is • deplorable
that so much machinery is still found in
the open air. With the best of care and
attention machines wear out too soon
So often before a machine is discarded
it taxes the patience of most operators,
This is just the time when the machine
should do good work, because time is
valuable in saving crop.
CARTEL'S
ITTLE
WEN
PILLS.
CURE
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles loci -
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness Distress after
eating, Pain le the Side, .ke, 1ilhile their moat
remarkable success has beef ehomvn in curing,
sIc
'Seminole, yet Carter's Little Liver tine are
equally vatuabislnCanstlpatlon,curingandpre'
venting title annoylncomplaint while they ale*
correct alldisorders ofthe-lm:me s, stthinlatethe
liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they Only
cured
D
Ache they would he almestpriectoes to thosawtid
Suffer from thlsdistreesiagcomplalntt but term.
tiatety thoir gaodnoss does not end h ere,and tb obb
Who °bee try them will and these I I the piths Vain -
able tri so many wayys that they Will tette wit -
peg to do without them. But after all sitichead
ACHE
Ti the harmers* many lives that hero is where
tve make our great boast: Cur pills CgraitWhild
01110hf do not.
Carter's Litter, Liver rills are Very email and
Very easy to take. Otte or two 201116=mmadeet.
'racy are strictly vegetable and do not grins et*
purge, m t by their gelato netto>y plebes) all who
CUM 00..1 *'7 tilt
. :004 hi r
1N THE.
titi4TEP volgo M.
There i$ an impression among *me
classes in Europe that till 4merlcane
are 1~keix« Thie has been furthered to
a great extent by the frequent refer.
encs in British and Continental news»
papers to great fortunes in the United
States, .and the inference is suggested
that the possession of large fortunes is;
'very rare in' Europe.
Tide inference may be correct where
the .comparison is based, on Mit. Rooke,
filler's Accumulation of worldly goods,
hut ;fTOM tyle viewpoint of the distribu-
tion, of wealthamong indsvideele the
English at least hare no reason to feel
that they play second fiddle to Amami -
.ca, Every day the newspapers con-
tain notices of wills probated which
Om that comfortable fortunes are
y" r plentiful in England,
3!P g .
Take for example, a list of wills and
a statement of bequests•contained in a
single issue of one of the London news.
papers. Four wills were noticed and
the estates affected were valued at
$4,126,760, $2,968,180, $737,464 and
$390,580. These fertunes, according to
the shoring made in the daily news-
paper reports, are not exceptional.
When you have a cold get a bottle of
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It will
soon fix you up all right and will ward
off any tendency toward 'ammonia.
This remedy contains no opium or other
narcotic and may be given as confident-
ly 4o a baby air ,to an adult, Sold by
all dealers.
WEALTH OF THE ROTHCHILDS.
The wealth of the Rothchilds is a
fascinating theme for speculation, but
accuracy is difficult to arrive at. -.
The fortunes of the house, as is well
known, were founded by the Rothschild
who was the first in England to obtain
the news of the battle of Waterleo and
profit by it on the Stock Exchange.
The recent death in Paris of Baron
Gustave recalls the first occasion en
which some idea could be obtained as
to the wealth of the firkin.
The brothers are partners, and the
bank has branches in London, Berlin,
Paris, Frankfort and Vienna. The
French branch was founded by Baron
James, who had four sons. Of these
only one, Edmond, outlived him. When
his first son, Solomon, died in 1864 he
left a widow and a daughter, Helen,
When Helen married Baron van Zuylen
de Nyevelt, her share of her father's
fortune, which she brought with her as
dowry, was £14,000,880.
Baron Solomon's fortune was double
this amount and his three brothers and
his sister, who married Baron Nathan-
iel of London, had equal amounts.
Thus the• equal fortune of the five in
1864 was nearly £160,000,000. As the
four branches of the family are equally
rich its aggregate wealth at that time
must have been £640,000,000, and that
was more than forty-five years ago.
Do not suffer
another day with
Itching Bleed-
ing, or Protrud-
ing Piles. No
surgical oper.
ation required.
Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once
and as certainly pure you. tiOa a cox; all'
dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited,
Toronto. Sample box free if you mention this
paper and enclose 2c. stamp to pay postage.
Pulpwood in Canada.
Nearly six hundred thousand cords of
wood were ground into pulpwood by fifty
one pulp mills operation throughout Can-
ada during 1910. Statistics compiled
by the Forestry Branch of the Depart-
ment of the Interior show that the total
value of this wood was $3,585,000, and
that it was converted into fourhundred
and seventy-five thousand tons of wood
pulp. Quebec is the premier pulp wood
Proyince of Canada because of its ex-
tensive spruce and balsam forests suit-
able for pulpwood. rhe twenty-five
pulp mills in Quebec reported the co•.-
sumption of fifty-seven per cent, of t'es.
total for Canada,or twenty-three tho•; s-
and cords more than in 1909. Ontario
likewise increased the amount consum-
ed in its fifteen mills by over twenty
thousand cords, and used over one-third
of the total cosumption, forming with
Quebec, ninety-two per cent of the
total. The mills of Nova Scotia con-
sunned nearly thirty thousand cords.
New Brunswick used barely ane -fifth
as much as in 1909, contributing in that.
year fifteen per cent. of the total. In
1010 the amount used was Only two per
cent. of the total, due chiefly to the
closing of one large plant, The average
value of pulpwood in 1910 was $6 per
cord, and Quebec was the one Province
in which the price was less in 1910 than
in 1909. The price in this Province fell
onto $6.60 per cord. The highest
price paid was in Ontario, where it
averaged $7, while pnlpvood from Nova
Scotia at $4.60 per cord was the
cheapest,
Children Cry'
rOR FLETCHER S , ..
A 1 ORIA
PROP$: T E MATCH,
It hoe liesn sold, that anywhere,
The biggest fool Is be who afloat,
.
amskes ar ock'li i
#if cher
Of some one else'* boat;.
But equal with him in the race,
The egg* of woe to hatch,
Ia, in unknown or known .disgrace:
The fool that drops the match,
What loft to him, if, in hia baste
A fragrant weed to try,
The fora of woman's ride and taste
Hants dangerously n gh?
What if a precious life recede
With fiame•enhanced cies etch?
He did not do the ehamefui deed'
. ;
He and dropped y ropp d $ match,
What is't to him, if stores of wealth
In flame may disappear.
Or frionds that waisted in joy and
health,
May nevermore come near?
Whet if explosions upward spring
- A hundred lives to snatch?
He didn't da much of anything;
Ile only dropped a. match,
Incendiary+• guilty .Dile
as Yon'111earn the gt not i lesson, re you're done,.
That carelessness is crime,
But when your future home you view,
And lift its red-hot latch
No matter theta how often you
May drop the lighted match!
-Will Carleton in Harper's Weekly,
WHY MEAT IS DEAR.
Dr, Rutherford, veterinary director-
general and live stock commissioner in
his annual report sounds a note of
warning as tothe future of the live
stock industry, which throws light on
one of the causes of the cost of high
living. Dr. Rutherford says that pro-
duction of meat in this country is not
keeping up with the demand; that the
country's meat export trade is dimin-
ishing, and bids fair to disappear alto-
gether, and the imports of meat from
the United States, the Antipodes and
the Argentine are daily becoming a
bigger factor.
Until recently it had appeared as if
Canada would always have an abundant
supply of live stock of all kinds. Cir-
cummances, have, however, brought
about a great and serious change. Al-
though many of the newcomers in wes-
tern Canada are on the land, few of
them are devoting any attention to ani-
mal husbandry, and a considerable time
is Iikely to elapse before they are com-
pelled by a gradual exhaustion of the
soil to turn to mixed farming and sys-
tematic production of commercial live
stock. For some time, therefore, the
majority of these people will them-
selves by consumers instead of produc-
ers of meat.
The continued augmentation of our
city population, says the report,
"has also largely increased the
consuming public. Further, t he
habits and tastes of the people have
altered and the general prosperity has
brought about a higher standard of liv-
ing resulting in a greater per cent per
capital consumption of meat. It is cer-
tainly somewhat remarkable that in
view of these conditions the general
production of live stock through the
country as a whole, appears to Have
scarcely maintained a normal rate of
increase. "For a number of years
mutton from the Antipodes has been
competing with that from Washington
and Clregon in the British Columbia
market, an occasional carload, being
shipped as far east as Alberta. During
last winter, however, frozen mutton,
as well as frozen rabbits, from Aus-
tralia, have been landed at our Atlan-
tic seaports, and sold to Canadian con-
sumers in Toronto and Montreal.
The Richest Depositoy.
From theNew York American.
What is the world's greatest treasure
house? A good many people would tell
you it is the Bank of England, yet there
are on13 $180,000,000 in that depository.
The United States mint in Denver is
far and away the richest building in the
World. In its vaults at present are $445,-
000,000 in gold coin and gold bullion, or
more than the total gold production of
the world for 1908.
During that year, the latest one for
which figures are available, the gold
coinage of the nations amounted to
more than $327,000,000 and the consutnp-
tion of gold in the arts to more than
4113,000,000.
Tlhe United States plans to deposit
more than $600,000,000 in the Denver
mint, but even that staggering sum
seems small compared with the deposits
in the banks of that country at the first
of this month. They reached a total
of fourteen billions.
On the whole, it does seem as though
Uunele Sam would not have any diffi-
culty in buying Christmas presents.
Children Ory
FOR FLETCHER'S
C-iceS i OR$A
There are two qualities in human nat-
ure that used to be cultivated by every
he ail the industrial anti
one and when I
domestic conditions will right them-
selves. There qualities are unselfish.
NERVOU$ DZBIFYL
ssVIR if
Era
rt
:T'Dlpfere
#TYeti. underfmammas IOR mem aAK ta
tivi
+ b
OctDkrpi4#,botelesani taws hest
up; the serves beopras
meervouseers,bashtffpess as44 tl daagyq�disappear• the ay
Tot aare inviSeresr:yelitdrains a 40 nno i tr'� ' Mesa:
a ds feesyrprseifa msn�ad know marriage. coo* ba Were Doe'#
tea ah y e of your hiMd gareetli dollars.
111iM"' NO NAMER 1lsgit? wErno f? warns vON51111�
THIREATERRO WITH PARALYSIS
fetes lt:. Stuuanerti relates his Rzperieace:
"i eras tronblgd with- Nervous Pebllity
formes Yeaia. 1 Jay to indiscretion
iadid encase! in YoRta. I became very
despondent and didn't care whotber
wonted or not. 1 imegiued cverybodk
who looked at me guessed my secret,
briagiriative drestns at night weakened
ole: -m book 5olrod, heti portae to the
hacker nay heap,- :binds and feet were
e ld, Lindeetine morpt4gd oor, apt:tjte,
finger* wenn shaky, evert blurred, hair
xooee, memory poor, etc, Numbness in
the fing lie eat in atsd the factor toad ane
ale feared paralysis. 1 took alt ktnds of
inedicine* and pried many finieelaas.
physiolans, wore @n.electrio beltforthree
months, but received little benefit. x.
mesa 7a#ATOrtir w44 induced tO.Oansult Dra. Kennedy 8G erten 'referees,.
doctors. Lusea Kennedy, though I had lost all faith in.
ke drewaingmea I commenced the Naw blsxldcp'fna4Taktir and it
saved my life. Tee fmprovemsnt was like nta ie --I could feel the vigor going through
the nerves. I was curet: hneatanyand pbysteali'i , x have Seat theta wany patientii
and poptteue.t•o do so.
CURES GUARANTIED OR P40 PAY
We treat and cure VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBILITY,BJ.oOD AND
URINARY CQMPAJWITS. 1tuDNRY AND ED.ADDER DISEASES east all.hlseq.ee.
,.cult#**Man.
CONSULTA'foN FREE, ROOKS FREE. If unable moon writs far a Question
Blank forHome Treatment.
DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY
Cor, Michigan Ave. and Oriswold St,, Detroit, Mich.
j All letters franc Canada must be addressed
1 Cto our Canadian Correspondence laepart
useimearmaim meat ie Windsor, Ont. If you desire to
see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
0o patents in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence end
laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont.
`rite for our private address.
+4d•
IThe
t
3
•
4,
+44 ,b3.3re4'` d•'1%dfe' f 3el•g;
Times40
Clubbing. List
Roarommeagisimemmiuma
Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60
Times and Daily GIobe , . • , , 4.50
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star1,85
Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1,75
Times and Toronto Daily Star 2.30
Time 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' Adveeate ...... 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 8.50
Evening Edition ,... , 2 90
Times and Montreal Daily Witness 3.50
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness 1.85
Times and World Wide 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 3.40
Times and Busy Man's Magazine . , ............. 2,50
Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.75
Times and Youth's Companion .... .. , , . , , , 2.90
Times and Northern Messenger 1.35
Times and Daily World ........ , ....\ 8.10
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 2.6G
Times and Delineator 2.40
Times and Cosmopolitan ... ... , 2.80
Times and Strand 2.50
Times and Success 2.45
Times and McCIure's Magazine........ 2,60
Times and Munsey's Magazine . 2,55.
Times and Designer ... 1.85
Times and Everybody's 2.40
4.
40
•
414
4
- 4.
These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great
4, Britain.
The above publications may be obtained by Times
4' subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica-
4 tion being the figure given above less $'x.00 representing
• the price of The Tunes. For instance :
,�'II, The Times and Weekly GIobe ...... $1.604.
4. The Farmer's Advocate 02,35 less $1,00)...... , . 1,3540.
making the price of the three papers $2,95,
• The Times and the Weekly Sun ......... ....., $1,80
The Toronto Dally Star R2.30 leas X1.00), 1,80
The Weekly Globe 01,60 Iess $1.00) 60
52,95
$3.70
t • the four papers for $3.7o.
If the p'lb icat on you want is not in above list! let
us know, We -, ,1 supply almost any well-known Carla -
diad or Ameri,:an publication, These prices are strietty
1 cash in ad 'an::e
S nd subscriptions by post office or e press order to
t TA ie Tirrtes Office+,
nos and selffeontrol, Unselfishness
would end all monopoly, self-eontrol Stone Block
enable every individual to dhreet INC M
his mental and physical energies toward o<
the best uses of life for himself and for
44:4.144-1,44.++,14.44.0+4444,++
4.4+44f E'F, t' 4:' dt • 4 w
humanity.