HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-07-13, Page 3REASON N2 23
WHY YOU SHOULD USE
Red Rose
Te a
Because it is put up in sealed packages.
These packages protect the flavor of the tea and
protect you in weight and guarantee of quality.
No article of food is so easily tainted as tea—it
absorbs the flavor of everything it comes in contact with.
Place an orange beside some tea for an hour, and then
taste or smell the tea—orange too.
Very few tea bins are tight enough to prevent tea
from absorbing the odors of fruit, vegetables, cheese,
etc., etc., usually mixed together in a grocery—and the
ordinary tea chest is very little protection.
The Red Rose Tea sealed lead package preserves
all the original flavor and freshness of the Yea—open a
package and smell its fresh fragrant aroma.
Packages of Red Rose Tea are always full weight
and uniform in quality.
T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N. B.
BRANCHES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG.
Too Much for Sport.
My sister Sue don't HI,e our dog,
She ss)s he shculd be shot.
He starts a.hewlin' when she sings,
Oh my! it makes her hot,
She sal $ old Siort's a cut,zy thing,
To Ft e her n eel's in mtl,ee;
Ent father say the deg ne thitks,
Has got a lot uv sense.
One night a ycut'g mon came to call,
'Torus one :ue liked, y<u see;
He est her please to siIlg a sot'g,
Sbe started "Sweet Morie."
Well, me en' Sport was in the room,
'Twos more than Sport could stand;
He Fat hispelf down siege by Sue
An' howled to beat the band.
Site almost 1 ad a fit because
I tot k Sport ort b the ear,
An' ses, "They ain't no
aThlaw, old boy
To make you stay in here."
Sue says that scme fine day that dog
'11 meet RD swim End
Ent I know denied vt ell that he won't
Fer father is his friend.
Five times decorated on the battlefield
for conspicious bravery under fire, Frau
Augusta Graeber, who as an army nurse
w ent through the war between Prussia
and Denmark in 1864, the war with
Austria in 1800'and the Franco•German
war, has died, aged eighty-three at
pirshberg, Silesia.
The traction situation in Chicago is
controlled by two companies, the Union
Traction, and the Chicago City. By the
recent purchase of control of the latter
company for $26,000,000 J. Pierpont
Morgan, controls the entire traction
business, though associated with
him are Marshall Field and John J.
Mitchell. T—Y-• ---
MANAGER WANTED.
Trustworth 'lady or gentleman to manage
business in this county and adjoining territory
for well and favorably known house of solid
financial standing. $2000 straight cash .alary
and Expensees, paid each Monday by check
direct from headquarters. Expenses money
advanced. Position permanent. .Address.
Manager. 810 Como Block. Chicago Illinois
OIL OF PINES
iThe Most Wonderful Medical
Discovery of the Age
As a cure for Catarrh of the Read, Throat,
Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys and Female Organs,
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines stands unsurpassed by
any other known remedy.
Oil of Pines is the most speedy cure known to
medical science for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bron-
chitis, Grippe, and all Catarrhal Diseases.
BEWARE of that most dreaded disease heir to the
human system, CATARRH ! Allow your lungs to
become weak and diseased, your kidneys to become
diseased. and your back lame and sore, your liver
and bowels deranged. These conditions lead to the most
fatal of all diseases, CATARRH. The eyes begin to grow
dim, the pulse fails, the wholesome stream of our blood is
choked and troubled, the limbs begin to decay like sapless sea-
weed in a summer's sun ; our •better views of existence are
past and gone ; what remains is the dream of lost happiness or
the fear of inevitahle evil.
But remember, SUFFERER, that the wonderful and
never.failing curative powers of that sovereign remedy, OIL
OF PINES, has completely cured thousands of cases as above
described. Therefore, upon the first evident symptoms of this
dreaded disease, CATARRH, snake haste and procure a bottle
of the sovereign remedy called OIL OF PINES.
OIL OF PINES is not only a never -failing cure, :but also a sure preventive.
Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of cure. Do not delay or
trifle, where so much is at stake. It means your further health and happiness. '
PROF. DYKES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no
narcotics, no alcohol of any description.
OIL OF PINES i9 not taken by teaspoonfuls or tablespoonfuls. The dose is
by drops. A bottle of Oil of Pines contains three times the number of aoses
to that contained in any other dollar bottle of medicine offered for sale.
The reason the name " Oil of Pines'' was chosen for this sovereign remedy
is because the oil from four different species of the pine make up the main body of
the remedy. Compounded the Pile is the oils and juices taken from nine different
plants and roots which grow in foreign countries.
Some remarkable cures effected by the never•failing curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines :—
To Prof. C. M. Dykes, Hensel', Ont., manufaturer of Medicine called
Oil of Pines:
Dear Sir:—I feel it my duty to give you the following testimonial.
I have been a severe sufferer from asthma and bronchitis since my infancy,
and have tried anything and everything I could hear tell of, but of no avail.
1 purchased a treattnent of year remedy called Oil of Pines. I had not
taken the medicine over a week before the symptoms of my ailments were
speedily leaving me and I found myself in far better health. The Bron-
chitis has completely left me. My little girl who is now 9 years old has
suffered from bronohitrs since she was a baby in my arms, elle also took the
Oil and it bas given the desired results. I consider your Gil of 'Pines as the
best known remedy to -day for the ailments mentioned. I would urge any-
one suffering with bronchitis or asthma to go at once to the drug store and
purchase a treatment of Oil of Pines.
Yours gratefully, Dire. J. Moscript, •
Township of Blanshard, County Perth, Rannooh, Ont.
Price $1.00 per bottle, or 6 for $5.00.
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES.
N. B.—If your hfOfekteelier or druggist does not handle 011 address orders to
Prof. 0, M. Dykes, H'ennall, Ont., Proprietor slid Manufacturer: All orders
promptly filled and forwarded to all parte of V. S. and [Canada upon receipt of
pprice. Ask for Pttf, Dsket, "Oil 6f Pines," and take NO SUBSTITUTE. Prof.
Dykes' is the One tnigitial and genuine.
Retail Druggist's can be supplied direct from Prof. Dykes' Laboratory at
Menssll, Or from NVhuletale Druggists at London, Canada.
THE WINGM.A. TIMES,
A CANADIAN DANDY.
Sad Result of Comedian Arthur Rol •
arts' Tandoney to Joke.
The smariness and fashtoltablenees
or the :stage anti private dress of Mr
Arthur Roberts frequently brings the
Wearer of it such inquiries by post as
ow' can imagine the writer of a men's
fashion column 13 in the* habit of re-
ceiving. in one of, the musical pieces
et the Prince of wales' Theatre, the
pnoular comedian, playing the part of
a. man very much about town, appear-
ed in a frock suit tnako of a dark brown
material, thinly striped with white, af-
ter the style bf the summer lounge suit
which was so fashionable, or general,
a few years ago. This extraordinary
get-up strongly took the fancy of a
dressy Canadian "In front" one night,
and he wrote to Mr, Arthur Roberts,
asking him whether it represented the
latest London fashion. He received an
answer to the effect that it represented
only a mild form of the newest thing
in frock sults, the read article, such as
those worn by the "smart set" of the
West, having much broader stripes on
It, and sleeves turned over at the cuffs
with brown velvet!
A. few weeks after providing this use-
ful information Mr, Roberts was walk-
ing one afternoon along Bond street,
when his attention was drawn to a lit-
tle scene which induced him to make
a quick and complete alteration in hie
course. A tall and well-proportioned
man, with a very angry expression in
his eyes, was coming towards him at-
tired in a coat somewhat resembling
that of the zebra, and behind him walk-
ed a party of small but critical boys,
who were evidently engaged in making
comments of an uncomplimentary
character; while, to add to the poor
man's embarrassment, 'the promenaders
of the fashionable thoroughfare were
staring at hila in amused wonder as he
passed them. "This is no place for
me," said the comedian to himself, on
beholding the tragic result of his joke,
and he disappeared down a side turn-
ing with more than his usual alert-
ness of step. In the evening he re-
ceived a Message from the Canadian,
complaining that he had been down
Bond street, but had not seen the
smallest confirmation of the fashion he
had been induced to adopt, and asking
for an explanation, It being the last
night of the musical comedy in which
he was playing, and his intention be-
ing to leave London on the morrow for
a rambling holiday, Mr. Arthur Roberts
replied to the Canadian dandy's hotel
that he would be well countenanced by
striped frock stlits if he went into
Hyde Park in his on the following af-
ternoon, Mr. Roberts has not heard
what became of him there.—From
M. A. P.
Canada's Railway Development.
Tho statistics of Canadian railway
development, as compiled in last year's
annual report, show the importance of
the transportation problem in a coun-
try of such great distances. According
to this report, we have 18,988 miles of
railway to operation and 19,078 miles
of track laid. The mileage record by
Provinces gives Ontario 7,142, Quebec
3,492, New Brunswick, 1,445, Nova Sco-
tia 1,050, Prince Edward Island 200,
Northwest Territories and Yukon 2,094,
Manitoba 2,225 and British Columbia
1,421. In 1S67, the year of Confedera-
tion, the total mileage was only 2,087.
Canada has 167 steam railways. Twen-
ty-five of these have been amalgamated
and form the Grand Trunk Railway
System. Tho remaining 112 have been
more or less consolidated. Three of
these are bridge companies with 41-2
miles of rail. The mileage record is
led by the Canadian Pacific, with 7,437.
Then follow the Grand Trunk, with 3,-
154.48; In,te,rcolonial and Prince Ed-
ward Island, 1,519.26; other railways,
6,959,89; bridg- and tunnel, 6,96. Of
these roads, six, with an aggregate
mileage of 351.52, are narrow guage,
and one, the Carillon & Grenville, thir-
tec' miles long, h4 broad guage, the
measurement being five feet six inches.
This record strikingly shows the ra-
pidity of our development.
The record of public aid is more strik-
ing than satisfactory. The. Dominion
has contributed at the rate of $9,313
per ,mile constructed; the Provincial
dovernments at the rate of $1,720 per
total mileage constructed, and the
municipalities at the rate of $868 per
mile on total mileage. The amount of
capital invested in Canadian railways
June 30, 1903, war $1,146,550,769, The
actual amount contributed by the Do-
minion was $177,677,689, by Ontario
$8,418.578, Quebec $16,445,242, New
Brunswick $4,542,940, Nova Scotia $:2,-
090,091, Manitoba 81,275,378, and by
13ritish Columbia $37,500. Municipali-
ties had contributed, up to June 30,
1903, $16,551,044. The train mileage
made on Canadian roads in the year
dealt • with was 60,382,920. The earn-
ings per mile for the same period were
$5,059, and the expenses $3,554. The
net income of Canadian railways for
the year ending June 30, 1903, was $2S,-
583,004. In that year they carried 22,-
148,742
2;148,742 passengers and 47,373,417 tons
of freight. including 1,926,070 tons of
flour, 5,761,792 tons of grain, 1,345,203
tons of live stock, 6,041,976 tons of lum-
her• of all kinds, 2,083,297 tons of fire-
wood, 7,266,388 tons of manufactured
goods, and 22,958,691 tons of other
freight.
An Interesting Shipment.
The Dominion Express CO, recently
handled a wild animal shipment, with
'the following "specific" instructions for
the care and feed of the beasts: "Sill
alternately one pigeon and two pig'
eons daily. Pluck and take the corn
out of the pigeons' crops and then give
them to the leopard. The day when
two pigeons are killed give a little to
the bush cat and the civet cat, as these
two animals require a little meat oc-
casionally only. The bush cat, civet
and coati munda require bread and
milk daily, for wteich purpose One tin
daily is allowed. Occasionally also the
leogsiM can have a drink of milk. The
agottl lives on carrots and bread."
A Couple of Little Players.
"Please, Goff, bless my dear papa and
mamma, Aunt Annie, Gloomy Gus, and
Happy Hooligan. Amen."
This was the prayer of my 4 -year-
old boy last night. If that is nnsuit-
Atibte for the !look of Common Prayer,
1 think the following front a i -year-old
Is not:
"Bless everybody in every city and
every 'world; everybody I know and
everybody I don't know. Amen."
Can you produce any 19X1. who could
bo more comprehensive in so few
words7— G. A. H., in Toronto Star.
JUJ,Y 13, 1905
Kidney
Disorders
Are no
respecter
of
persons.
People in every walk of life are troubled.
Have you a Backache? If you have it
13 the first sign that the kidneys aro not
working properly.
A neglected Backache leads to serious
Kidney Trouble.
Check it in time by taking
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
"THE GREAT KIDNEY SPECIFIC."
They cure all kinds of Kidney Troubles
from Backache to Bright's Disease.
SOo. a box or 3 for $1.25
all dealers or
THE DOAN KIDNEY PILL CO.,
Toronto. Ont.
The marriage license of Sir Olver
Mowat has been presented to the provin-
cial archivist by C. R. W. Biggar. It is
dated March 18th, 1846. It anthorizes
the marriage of the then Mr. Mowat to
Miss Jane Ewart, of Kingston. On the
bottom of the license is the following
note: "I hereby certify that the above
n awed were married by me on this 111th
i.fay, 1846." It is signed by Rev. Dr.
Joel, Jennines, who officiated, and by
J Vankoughtuet and George S Mowat,
witnesses.
NOW IS THE TIME FOR HYOMEI
Far Easier to Cure Catarrh Now Than
at Any Other Season.
Now is the time to use Hyomei, when
the early summer days make it so easy
to cure catarrhal troubles, The Hyomei
treatment, breathed for a few minute's
three or four times a day in May dr June,
will do good twice as quickly as it did in
January, and nearly everyone knows
that used faithfully then, it completely
rids the system of catarrh.
Hyomei is a purely vegetable prepare•
ries whose active curative properties are
given off when it is breathed by the aid
of the pocket inhaler that Domes with
every outfit. Ir destroys all germ lite in
passages, purifies the blood by supplyic•g
additional (zone, and its healing, volatile,
antiseptic fragrance reaches every corner
of the respiratory tract as no medicine
taken through the stomach can possibly
do.
The complete Hyomei outfit costs but
one dollar, and consists of a neat inhaler
that can he carried in the purse or vest-
pocket and will last a lifetime, a medi-
eine dropper, and a bottle of Hyomei.
Extra bottles of Hyomei can be procured,
10 desired, for fifty cents.
At this season of the year when ca•
tarrhal troubles can be so quickly and
readily cured, the merits of the Hyomei
treatment should be carefully investi•
gated by everyone and a complete outfit
shnuld be in every house. Walton Mc.
• Kihhou gives his personal guarantee
with every Ilyomei outfit he sella to re -
tend the money if it does not give setts.
faction. There is no risk whatever to
' the purchaser of Hyomei.
A pretty wedding was solemnized in
Duugannon Methodist church on Thurs-
day, June 20th at 11.30 o'clock, when
Miss Minnie E. Robinson, eldest daugh-
ter of J. W. Robinson, was married to
Rev. J. E. Hunter, of Harmony circuit.
The chur;ll was beautifully decorated by
the congregation with flowers and ever
greens. The bride entered supported by
her father, to the strains of the wedding
march, reudered by Miss Elliott of
Brantford The groom was supported
by Rev. F. W. Lang•Ford, while Miss
Lulu Robinson waited on the bride. The
important ceremony was performed 1 y
the bride's father, assisted by Rev. W.
H. Stevens, of Northfield, Mich., uncle
of the bride; Rev. T. W. Oosens. of
Brussels, and Rev. Gso. Baker, of Blue -
vale.
The'
Revolutionizing
of the
Cracker
Mooney revolutionized the
cracker. He made folk
- admit that they never knew
how good crackers could be,
by making such delicious
crackers as they had nev _r
r tasted before. Then he set
folk to eating Mooney's
's
Y
crackers who'd never eaten
.,r crackers before. In a year
' he had all Canada eating
Mooney's
/ Perfection
Cream Sodas
You'll set why when you
;'; try them. Haven't you curl.
osity enough to buy a box at
) your grocer's?
JAPAN'S WAR ON DISEASE.
Whitt Progressive Medical Methods
AecOsulliahed Ia the Arany.
Typhoid, that dread scourge of sol-
diers,.bas been almost elimivated from
the Japanese army in the present war.
This Is only one of a cumber of
achievements In the prevention of dis-
ease and death which I observed while
supervisor of nurses at the great base
of the army at iiiroslltma, while on the
hospital ships and while at hospitals
ou the Yalu river, lit Manchuria. At
these nud at other places I had excep-
tional opportunities for noting the med-
teal, surgical and sanitary precautions
which have produced such remarkable
results.
In the three mouths following the
battle of the Yalu (May, June, July)
General Kurold's army had only eighty-
three cases of typhoid. There were on-
ly 193 cases reported in General Oku's
army from its landing in Manchuria,
May 6, to the end of the following Jan
uary. Of the many thousands of pa-
tients treated at the great base hospi-
tal of Hiroshima, Japan, prior to the
end of September there were only fifty
deaths of men who had typhoid, and a
large proportion of these deaths were
actually due to beriberi, wounds or
other complications. Contributory to
these results are undoubtedly the facts
of the great attention paid to sanita-
tion, of the daily consumption by every
soldier of several pills of germ destroy-
ing creosote and of the isolation of ev-
ery case of typhoid, which Is treated as
a contagious disease. Our own country
ahowed n sad contrast to these figures
at the time of the war with Spain. Ac-
cording to the board of experts who ex-
amined the sanitary condition of our
army, about one-fifth of the troops in
the camps of mobilization had suffered
from typhoid, wh:ch had caused four
tinges as many deaths as all other dis-
eases combined.
It is a well known fact, shown by
statistics of the last fifty years, that
Russian soldiers suffer more from dis-
ease than soldiers of almost any other
civilized army, and direct Information
which I received last summer con-
firmed the opinion that Gene:'al Kuro-
patkin had been seriously handicapped
by the great amount of disease in his
ranks.—Anita Newcomb McGee In Cen-
tury.
A Bulky Manuscript.
A slab from a royal palace In Nine-
veh, on which had been carved an in-
scription which covered about half of
it, and the rude picture of a king, re-
cently arrived in the port of New York.
The collector of customs assessed the
Slab as "a manufacture of limestone,"
subject to a duty of 50 per cent ad
valorem. The importer insisted that
it was a manuscript and not liable to
duty. The board of general appraisers
decided that the cam ing was a manu-
script. Another department of the
government would be sure to overrule
that decision promptly if the importer
carried the slab, 4 by 5 feet in size, to
the New York p0atotlicc and asked to
have it sent, say, to Babylon, N. Y.,
at manuscript rates. The postal offi-
cials would deny the request with
scornful celerity.—Youth's Companion.
Beekeeping on a Small Seale.
Almost any one who has a yard, an
empty attic or access to a roof is in a
.position to keep bees. Purchase your
bees from nn honest, reliable, practical
and up to date bee elan.
Buy your first colony in May in a
double walled or chaff hive. A. colony
consists of several thousand working
bees, a queen and a few hundred
drones, the latter living only during
the sunimer months. A beginner in
bee culture should invest about $15 to •
make a good start. •
Besides his hive of bees he should 9
have a good text book ou the subject
•
and should provide himself witit s ev- e
oral necessary accessories, such as a •
111
bee veil, a pair of gloves and :t bee •
smoker for protection in handling the •
bees.—Suburban life. •
.111•
Eyeglasses-.. For .Actors. ,••
Tire e'ttterprls ugo 1tieian^ins come to: •
the rescue- of stag; foils who. are of-' ` •111`
Just about the meanest
thing a furnace can have
is a dinky little door.
Ever have one? Ilit the edge
as often as the hole? One has
to be an expert stoker to shovel
coal into some furnaces, If
you're not an expert you'll get
as much on the floor as in the
furnace.
The Sunshine furnace is
equipped with a good, big door.
You can put your shovel in and drop the coat just where it is
wanted—no trouble, no taking aim, no missing, no scattering, or
annoyance.
Everything about the Sunshine furnace is on the same scale
of thoughtfulness,
Sold by all enterprising dealers. Write for booklet.
LONDON, TORONTO. MONTREAL, WINNIPEG, VANCOUVER, ST. JOHN. N. B.
SOLD IN WiNOHAM BY 1e YOUNO•
The number of lunatics in London
exeeds 20,000
The cow tree of Venezuela 'yields a
palatable grayish milk which hard-
ens into a toothsome gum.
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���ll,lIll
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(i fP
That drinking much water lessens
weight instead of increasing it; causing
one to grow thin instead of fat, is the
surprising result of recent experiments
of M. Maurel.
Has no equal as General •
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Purpose Farm Fence •
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It will turn Stock without •i
injury—beautify the Farm —
does not need constant patching •�
and with i tit reasonable usage will •
iA last a life -tinge. Booklet and �<
full particulars given on request. •5)
(• v. -- ...s n. �. i. ,...3,.,.Mti.ie ......—..s+ FOR SALE BY i5
J• W. MOWBRAY, White Church
Weal, Nervous, Diseased Men.
Thousands of Tonne and Middle Aged Mien are annually swept to a premature grave
- through early indiscretions and later excesses. Self abuse andConstitutional Blood
Diseases have ruined and wrecked the life of ntanya promising young mai,. Have
TM any ofthefollowing symptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Tired in Morning;
No Ambition; Memory Poor; Easily Fatigued; Excitable and Irritable; Eves Blur;
Pimples on the Face; Dreams and Drains at Night; Res•less; Haggard Looking;
Blotches; Sore Throat; Hair Loose; Pains in the Body; Sunken
Eyes; Lifeless; Distrustful and Lack of Energy and Strength.
Our New Method Treatment will build you rpmentally, physically
and sexually. Cures Guaranteed or no Pay.
25 YEARS IN DETROIT. BANK CECUR:TY.
JCn'No Names Used Without Written Consent.
A NE1 VOU51 WRECli.—t HAPPY LITE.
T. P. I:rntssov has a Narrow Escape.
"I live on a farm. .At school I learned an early habit, which
weakened me physically, sexually and mentally. Faintly Doctors
i -aidIwas going, into decline" (ConsnptioI. Finally, "The
!1 said
M.'nitor,"mnedited byDrs. Kennedy dr Kergan fell into my
hands. I learned the truth and cause. Self abuse had sapped my
vitality. I Mei( the New Method Treatment and was cured. My friends _hink I was
cured of Coos,'mp• ion. I ilay.: sent then many patients, all of whom were cured.
Their New Method Treatni.•ut supplies vigor, Vitality :AM manhood."
Consultation Free. So.nks True. Write for Question Stank far Some Treaty,.nt,
'v. r , 148 1;helby Street,
s'•?R+!ReiCp?'1 ) .`7T�y� t"� i;ra
iatj•iv:,.AAx,i...r..a ,i fa•f `.:.�✓11 .�'r1 S.8, u::tl'Clt, i,7i h.
1 'i!.21jv ci;i ' a' n:,,
a•••••••••••••••4n•••••••• •w•••ss•••••••••••••••••••
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Meted with near sightedness. (,lasse$
fitted with tiny Lenses are now made
for the' use of the actor so afflicted and
who in deference to the character he is
portraying may not wear the regula-
tion eyeglasses or spectacles. These
special glasses fit close to the eyeball
and are hardly distinguishable from
the front of the house save when the
footlights are at their highest pitch of
Illumination. The nose piece, or bridge,
connecting the lenses is covered with a
flesh colored material, which aids the
illusion.
Ltiminou■ Shrimps.
Luminous shrimps have been discov-
ered by the Prince of Monaco in the
course of his deep sea fishing in the,
Mediterranean. They live at a depth
of from 1,100 to 1,600 fathoms. They
are of the size of fine prawns and are
studded with small phosphorescent
spots. These light their way in the
gloom of the deep waters. Unfortu-
nately the lights go out when the
shrimps are brought to the surface and
are of no use for illuminating an aqua-
rium.—London Telegraph.
A flip; and flitter Done.
A Berlin physician has effected nn•
merous cures of rheumatism with lens.
On juice. The method consists in swat•
lowing the juice of one lemon on the
first day, two on the seeond day, alio
so on progressively up to twenty-flvt
genions. '%\lien this limit Is roadie('
the number of lemons should be dtnifn
ished in inverse ratio.
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THE TIMES
T le Times
Joy Deiartment
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
Our peela it les.
COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOK WORK
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
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•/Nos/NI.R. u.sIMINIM. .10110111.006•000400
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron, Subscription: $I.00 per
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in Canada or the United States.
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THE W1NGHA1V1 TIMT;6
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1NCIIAM, ONT.
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