HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-11-23, Page 66
TIIE WINGIIAM TIMES NOVEMBER 22, 1905
e--
t:�1
Wash
oilcloths
and 1:nc:eu .:s with
warra water and
Sunlight Soap, t-inse clean aid wipe
dry. The ::'ars will be preserved
ar.d the surface unharmed.
Common soaps fads, the color :3 enc:
ini'Jre the surface. Sunlight Soap clan::, fro:1:'ans and pose:vc;,
oilcloths end
d linoitums.
Sunlight Soap washes ci°.^Ti;2'a whit'without ut tnjur y to the. most
delicate fabrics, or to the hand,, for it c::^ta;n s r.othi t ; that can
,injure either clothes of hands.
Sunlight Soap i:, better
than other soaps, but it: beat
when used in the Sunlight
way (follow directions).
r,.,, Buy it and (heavy
%eel dim-citoaa - o
LEI/En BROTHERS LIMITED, Toreato
itri(
waren: erte
rte,', ; -. �:��••
.-.........:-.-_4---
'
frtil anini
Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges.
Thr'Ee 12 -year-old boys at Saartruoken
Prussia, have ben caught iu the act of
receiving; a harp from a (lot; which they
bad trained to steal.
rills T.A.DiEs• FAVODUTE .
Luxe -Liver Pills ar; the hulks' favorite
medicine. They cure, Coumtipation, Sick
Headache, Billiow gess, and Dyapep,la
without gripiug, punting or sickening.
' Herr ton Sehoerow, estate owner
Bernst•:•itt, Germany, was murdered by
twenty t hip owu men, wee, armed
with knives, attacked him iu a body.
Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps,
'but in best when used in the Sunlight way.
Bay Sunlight Soap and follow directions.
Mr. J. P. Mabee, Ii C., has been ap-
pointee's judge of the High Court of
Ontario in succession to lion. Justice
Meredith.
Many people say they are "all nerves,"
easily startled or upset, easily worried
and irritated. Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills are jest the remedy such
people require. They restore perfect
harwo_re of the nerve centres and give
new nerve force to shattered nervous!
systema.
Thievi•:s stole $1,900 from theresidence
of Mr. EL Georgie of Dorchester Town- I
ship, wt. 'telt was Ieft on a table in a room I
for only two or three minutes. 1
Boars th.) Tho Did Ym hate Aittiay.: Haile
Signet's �_ ♦ I
of
a3 e.te
Agrict:ltural exports are a feature of i
too tre�le returns for October. The total
exports were 6uO,O02.609, a gain of
10,55:.+,: ; over the same mouth of
1004.
t,Q r)DEN1Y ATTAClili).
Childress are often attacked suddenly
by paMvi and dangerous Colic, Cramps,
Diatncere : Dysesitery, Cholera Morbus,
Cholera Infant -ern, etc. Dr. Fowler's
Extract cf Willi Strawberry is a prompt
and sure eure which shculd always be
kept in the house.
Recede.- de.- he 'visited his sweetheart too
long anti too often, Walter Haven on
Thursseae found himself in the Brant-
ford police court. The girl's father ob-
jected to the young man coming so of-
ten lied t.zCi ing up so late. It was alleg-
ed that the amorons pair completely
monopoheed a whole parlor stove, be-
sides bung large quantities of oil and
wood. 'leo stepfather had nothing
againfit te.s young man's character. Af-
ter all tl: • details of the case had been
breught eat in court, all parties were ,
dlsmiE <?.
tM111isler of they Gospel {oSazaleilds
tete, welt r'tit stfi bP.ro bean la very peat 1
liaaltb,
TAN JAVA '. NA advised by itev. 3. S. Allen,
sf Marn.y ttirbio, 1'a:.I • toLay 'Oxygenator.'
Before tryie ; it I hadno fait:a in it, bat last Octo•
:
taw '.iM) a use and can truly rsy that ne.lore
along one;04I had wonieriulty improved in my
tneral iai.,,h. Since then I have used nevi r,:l
wts, as ar•ta•clthavo never spent ane't a healthy
inter of e'y'ing as I diel two year. 'Oxygenator'
far rhr”..,,'ra,,,uble, Catarrh, Purifying the, Blood,
and fed teeming up the System, I behove is not
iywalita t»> -iv by any other remedy.
eters m congregation h
ri 1 at e n ave ales need t'
Y E t
With b1,'i•1 results. 1 take groat interest 1n
"t)xygeasli: u: having given jntto of it away, and
Mine Nay Stir A we:enema. nateenv.
re repel in my eyes, ' Oxygenat,r' has dorso
Sham rater.+ gird than the Ocnliota or the treatment
tl, teeetere to fate Efoapital,
for ttaut. ea. I think it peerless. Ivor pains to
'life lege or side, indeod anY
wtore It
Yorke rJnb
"
Ite.e. A. b. )1teLltOb,
Mount Stewart, !'.E.I
veer Aute by--
` ec.OXYGENAT00,0Or
t�! Harbord $tE. a Toronto
Since the process of photographing up-
on shit aid linen has been brought to
each perfection iu France many persons
have their l.ortraits upon their linen in-
stead of their names or initials. The
portraits are not iuj urecd by washing.
The essential lung•healing principal of
the pine tree has finally been successfully
separated and refined into a perfect
cot Ii medicine: -Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup. Sole] by all dealers on a
guarantee of satisfaction. Price 25
cents.
Near Worthing station, England, there
is a small graveyard in the centre of the
road containing three graves. A mill
once stood there, and the owner depcsed
in his will that he should be buired
where the mill stood.
Cep Tom .
Fears the The Kind kJ Haw k awes„ aa•ra Baugh!
bigaatlro
of
Sixteen million dollars will be neces-
sary to complete the engineering work
of fortificaticns of the tea coasts of the
United States under the plans of the
Endicott Board.
Doan's Kidney Pills not on the kid•
neyt, bladder and urinary organs only.
They cure backaches, weak tack. rl:eum-
&tiem, diabetes, congestion, iutiamation,
gravel, Bright's disease and all other
diseases arising from wrong action of the
kidneys and bladder.
It is estimated that increasiug the size
of the battleships of the German navy
and the addition of six large cruisers to
the program, as the Government is about
to ask the reinstag to do, will add to the
naval budget during the next 11 years
�,.ri To prose to yo+t u,' t m..
ami 6 w !. ('h:i:.c:j Obttrlc.,ri�nrertais
Sa and absolute cure for each
bend every form of itching,
l.srling•i.'rll'votrudinttpiles, '
the manufactnrcr:.1 have guaranteed it. See tee•
timoni:tls in the daily pre• -s and ask your neigh-
bors what t!i^y think o•',t, Yea can u -e it and
get von: nioncv back if not cured. Me a box, at
all dealers or EnMAtzsote 3Ares &; Co.,Toronto.
Drw Chase's Ointment
The soil of Siberia at the close of the
summer is found still frozen for 50 in-
ches beneath the surface, and the dead
that have lain in their coffins for 150
years have been taken up unchanged in
the least.
When Yon have A Bail Cold
You want a remedy that will not only
give quick relief but effect a permanent
cure.
Yon want a remedy that 'will relieve
the lungs and keep expectoration easy.
Yon want a remedy that will counteract
any tendency toward pneumonia.
You want a remedy that is pleasant
and safe to take.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy meets
all of these requirements and for the
speedy and pernament cure of bad colds
stands without apeer. For sale by A. I.
McCall & Co.
fl3lt. 1;titisi) j,isstcttice i;avings bank
was instituted by Mr. GIadstone in 1861.
The amount of the deposits at the end of
the first year was $Seit0,0e0. It is now
$710,900,000.
The Lindsay Watchman•Warder re-
ports that experiments have been, made
with a stump burner at Norland and
Venelon Fails, The pine stub* is en•
cased in a tin or iron covering, the fire
started and in the nine ate tae
p ni a hours a
large pine stump has been completely
consumed. It is the invention of a Bri.
tish COlumbfair who has used it with
great advantage in the western country.
Attica, in Greece, was thickly covered
with forests 2,C00 years ago. Now they
are gone, and hardly any rain ever falls.
Owing to constantly living in canoes,
a race of dwarfs in British New Guinea
are losing the use of their legs, while
their chests and arms are abnormally de.
veloped.
]dile, T. W. H. Leavitt has been ap-
pointed successor to Dr. May as Provin-
eial Ineeector of Public Libraries
Hillhouse Brown. the defaulting man -
Eiger of the Bank of Hamilton at Hamil.
ton at the police court Thursday morn•
ing, pleaded guilty and was sentt uced
to seven years at Kingston.
belt lie tl 1►t1 1)1cIe 1t.
As a spring medieinc•e Burdock Blood
Bitters lies ►.o equal. It tones up the
system aid removes all impurities from
the blood, and takes away that tired,
weary teeliug eo prevalent in the spring.
Messrs. Stewart Bros , of Molesworth
have jute received freiu the Canadian
Government a Gold Mt dal Diploma for
a collective exhibit of maple syrup and
sugar exhibited by them at the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition in St. Louis last
year.
CASTOR
For Infants and Children.
The Ked You Have Always Dough(
Boars the Signature ofdz."--"9(14411
At Brucefield, on Friday, Nov. 10th,
one of tee oldest residents, Hugh Mo.
Intosh, passed away at the wonderful
age of 88 years. Deceased was well
known throughout tbo section, and pos-
sessed many sterliug qualities.
Was Cured or Asthma
"I first used Dr. Chase's Syrup of Lin-
seed and Turpentine with my daughter
who suffered from a severe form of as-
thma. The least exposure to cold would
lay her up and she would nearly suffo-
cate for want of breath. I must say I
found it to be a most satistactory treat-
ment and ir has entirely cured her." -
Mrs. A A. VanBuskirk,Robinson street,
Moncton, N. B.
In his young days King Oscar of Swe-
den was oue of the most accomplished
tenors in Europe. He was fond of sing-
ing tit private concerts in the houses of
friends, On coming to the throne he
was of course obliged to abandon music,
except in the private home circle.
Bears tai Tha Kind You Hate Alms Bought
Si nature
of
The keeper of the lighthouse near Ore -
sent City, Cal., reports a battle between
a sea lion and an octopus, the latter
wound its tentacles around the lion's
body, but the lion bit them oil oue after
the other and ate theta. Other lions
then helped to dispose of the octopus'
tartans.
For Ovwr Sixty Years.
An Old and Well -Tried Remedy -Mrs
Winslow's SoothingSyrnp has been used
for over sixty years bymiliionsof mothers
for their children while teething, with
perfect success. It soothes tho child.
softens the gums, allays all pain, cures
wind colic, and is the best remedy for
diarrhoea. Itis pleasant to the taste.
Sold by druggists in every part of the
world. Twenty-five cents a, bottle. Its
value is incalculable. Besure you ask
IIf the girls and women who aro si-
lently sullen tug with what they suppose
is "female trouble," would look to their
kidneys they would soon find the source
of their ill -beanie
The Inclutes tiro very closely allied
with the female organs and if the vital•
ity of the kidneys is in any way impair.
ed. great sniresieg is sure to occur.
No better medicine, is known for the
kidneys than Dr Hamilton's Pills of
Mandrake and Butternut; they etimu-
Lite toed strengthen the kidneys and
thereby assist rhe other organs to do
nature's wont. Iustant benefit and
oerteiu cure aro guaranteed in every
cave.
Sufferer, don't wait begin treatment
with Dr. Ilairdltoiee Pills tit once; they
will cure you as they did Mr. A. B.
Coburn, a well•koown resident of the
town tit Portland. Read his experience:
"For two years past I have been
sickly awl weak. My color was dull
rind sallow. aid I felt exhausted and
weary, as 11 all my l+treugth sees
herug eaten up with some hidden
trouble. 'I heard of Dr. Hamilton's
Pills and I decided to use thein,
The change in a few days was sur-
prising. They regulated my kidneys
and bowels and cured all my suffer-
ing; to -day I am perfectly well."
Every m onlan can take Dr Hamilton's
Pills with safety and beuetit. Their
occasional use keeps the system in
healthy, well regulated order. No med.
intim mare gentle or more prompt in re-
sults. Now is the time to get Dr. Ham-
ilton's Pelle. 25c per box or five for $1,
at alt dealers, or by mail from N. 0.
Pot on & Co , Hartford, Conn., U S.A.,
and Kingston, Ont.
DISEASES OF WOMEN
OFTEN DUE TO
DERANGED KIDNEYS
When the Kidneys are Weak a 1
Impossible for any Woman to
be Hiealthy or Happy.
A Sunday school superintendent in.
quired of his scholars, "Who led the
ohiklren of Israel into Canaan? Will
oue of the mall boys answer?" There
was no reply, and the superintendent
somewhat sternly continued, "Can no
one tell? Little boy on that seat next
to the aisle, «110 led the ohildren of
s Israel into Canaan?" The little boy
who appeared badly frightened, said,
"Is wasn't me. I -I just unwed here
last week from the couutry."
Owen Sound's temperance hotel, the
Se:don House, is on the fair way of prov-
ing a financial success for Mlle shareholcl-
ers as well as an object lesson in innate
cal temperance reform. At a meeting of
the Company recently Mr. W. A. Little.
manager, presented astateinent showing
a balance on the right side of the ledger
for the month of October. The directors
are well satisfied with the pretrees the
hotel is making.
i o Poison in Ciamberlain's Cough
Remedy.
From Napier, New Zealand. Herald:
Two years nen the Pharmacy Board of
New South Wales, Australia, had an an-
alysis made of all the cough medicines
that were sold in that market. Out of
the entire list they found only one that
they declared was entirely free from
till poisons. This exception was Cham-
berlain's Cough Remedy. made by the
Chamberlain Medicine Company, Des.
Moines, Iowa, U. S. A. The absenceo f
all narcotics makes this remedy the saf-
est and best that can be had ; and it is
with a feeling of security that any mot-
her can give it to her little ones. Cham-
berlain's Cough Remedy is especially re-
commended by its makers for coughs,
colds. croup and whooping cough. This
remedy is for sale by A. I. McCall & Co.
_t
Gossip is a humming bird with eagle
vings and a voice like a foghorn. It can
e heard from Dan to Beersheba and has
aueed more trouble than all the ticks,
fleas, nlnegnitnes, coyotes, grass -hoppers,
Bich Lutes, rattlesnakes, sharks, sore
oese cyclones, earthquakes, blizzards,
wallpex, yellow fever, gout and indi-
gestion that this great country has
nown or will know when the universe
b
for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and
take no other kind.
c
That the thread business is one which s
pays well is evident from the following
item clipped from an exchange: The k
annual accounts to June 30th last, show- s
ing a net profit of $$2,379,429, were laid
before the directors of J. and P. Coates,
Limited, Paisley, on the 20th ult., when
subject to a final audit, after providing
1'41,135 for depreciation and the divi-
dents paid for the year, they agreed to
recommend the following appropriations:
To the reserve, 1500,000; to the pension
fund, £30,000; to the marine and fire
underwriting, £50,000; and to the deben-
ture premium account, 10,000, carrying
forward 1479,508.. The directors recom-
mend a dividend of 20 per cent
huts up shop and begins the final
in-
-triceN
i
i
Deafness Cannot be Cured
By local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed con-
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus-
tachian Tube. When this tube is inflam-
ed you have a rumbling sound or imper-
fect hearing, and when it is entirely
closed. Deafness is the result, and unless
the inflammation can be taken out and
this tube restored to its normal condition,
hearing will be destrojjed forever; nine
1 ,.-. cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh,
r�0°�,,'' ' '^ which is nothing but an inflamed condi-
e tion of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundr' d Dollars for
any case of Deafness (cans. .1 by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by II'•II's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars it se.
P. J. Cjnn nY & Co„ Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75o.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa-
tion.
ac Ry ie'9
Silver -Plated
Ware
Baring. quality should
be the chief t:(tii;ide;ration
= in selecting sill e:r-plated
tableteare--anti then
wows beauty in design.
Plato from Diamond
Hall's own factory rear-
- tirally equals solid silver
in its eflcct, both as to
durability and artistic
merit.
• ♦ will 15
v t���tl send 4 J
prepaid one dozen tea-
spoons in a favored Old
English pattern.
112YL UE Bros.
l3irl•►i1)
134-138 YON013 ST.
Togotr 'O - 0111T..
'I
ofi
The United States grand jury, at Al-
buquerque, N. M„ is investigating re.
ports that the Indians of the Pueblo of
Zae, the most isolated of the Pueblo
tribes of New Mexico, feed a certain
number of new- born babies each year to
a mammoth snake, which is worshipp-
ed by the tribe. The Interior Depart-
ment will probably be asked to interfere.
The friends of Dr. John M. Sloan, son
Mr. Andrew Sloan, of Blyth, will be
veryleased to learn of his
BUC
pcess. He
is enjoying it very eictensive and luera-
tive practice in Nome, Alaska. Mr. W,
Bonthron, formerly of Hensall, Ont.,
but now on the stair of the Audit Com.
pany of Ne o
rk,
re
turned to Chicago
last week) from Alaska, where he had
been on bodiless for his company.
While in Nome he spent about ten days
with Dr. Sloan, who has some mining
interests, in addition to his practice.
These are being looked after by his
brother, Dr. Wm. Sloan, who is legated
at Tater, Alaska,
On Tuesday, Nor. lint, after being
confined to bed for some months owing
to the iufirmities of advancing years,
Margaret McIntyre, wife of Donald Mc-
Kiunou, passed away at tho residence of
her sou, John, at Gotlerich, where she
had been living of lite years. Mrs. Mo.
Mutton was a native of the Island of
Uist, Scotland, and was married on the
Islami of Elg to hor naw bereft partner.
Their eldest son, John, was born iu
the Old Country, and their other son,
Augus, is a native of Goderich. Mr.
and Mrs. Meleinuon have been residents
of Goderioh for some forty years or more.
Deceased was in her 85th year.
James Merry, a well•known Scottish
ironmaster and owuer of race horses,
once 'decided to run for Parliament. He
stood as °audit:ate for Glasgow. He
posed as an extreme Radical, and was
prepared to abolish everything in sight,
as a short way to reform. At one of his
Meetings where the heckling of candi-
dates was the feature, as in all Scottish
elections, he was asked, after he had dis-
posed summarily of the Crown, the
Clouse of Lords and most of the British
oonstitutiou, whether he would abolish
the Decalogue. "Certainly" cried the
valiant Merry. Then turning to his
nearest neighbor on the platform he ask-
ed in a whisper, "Jock, what in than.
der's the Decalogue?"
:Nervous Dyspepsia •
Mr. George Bolen, Spry, Bruce Co.,
writes; -"i was troubled with nervous
dyspepsia for some years, and after us-
ing nine boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve
Food, I felt better than I had for years.
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is certainly the
best Medicine I ever used, and I say so
because I want to give full credit where
15 is due."
The oeuorship is a very real thing in
China. There any one who writes an
objectionable book is punished with it
hundred blows of a heavy bamboo and
banished for life, Any one who reads it
is also punished.
•
BREATHE HEALING BAL-
SAMS.
Hyomel. the Medicated -Air Catarrh
Cure, Endorsed by Physlcans.
No one should confound Hyomel with
the patent medicines that are advertised
to cure catarrh. It is as superior to
them all as the diamond is more valuable
than cheep glace, Their composition is
secret, but Hyomei giv(s its formula t0
all reputable physicians.
Its base is the famous eucalyptus oil,
well known for its antiseptic qualities.
This is combined with aromatic and
healing guins and balsams, malting a
pure liquid which, when used iu the
Hyomei pocket inhaler fills the air you
breathe• with germ killing, disease de-
stroying and healing powers that restore
health to every part of the throat, nose
and lungs.
Hyomei is endorsed by physicians
generally. Many of them use it them-
selves to break up a cold and prevent
pneumonia. It is the ouly natural -and
rational way of curing catarrh.
Would it be a common sense treat.
ment to try and care a corn by stomach
dosing? Is it not just as foolish to try
and cure catarrh of the head and throat
by swallowing tablets or liquids? The
only natural way to cure this disease
and all diseases of the respiratory organs
is to breathe Hyomei.
If you cannot obtain Hyomei of your
dealer, 11 will bo forwarded by mail,
postage paid, on receipt of price. Write
to -day for consultation blank that will
entitle you to services of our medical
department without charge. The R. T.
Booth Company, Ithaca, N.Y.
Each year that they live under the
British flag the natives of India are drink-
ing more and more beer. Last year there
were 9,000,000 gallons of beer made in
India, but it is said that forty per cent.
of this was consumed by the British
army.
THREE TYd 'ng Times in
A WOMAi'S LIFE
WHET+'
MILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
are almost an absolute necessity towards her
future health.
The first when she is just budding from girl-
hood into the full bloom of womanhood.
The second period that Constitutes a special
drain on the system is during pregnancy.
'The third and the one most liable to leave
heart and nerve troubles i s during "change of life.'
In all three periods Milburn's Heart and
Nerve rills will prove of wonderful value to tide
ever the time. Mrs, James Icing, Cornwall,
Ont., writes: "I was troubled very much with
heart trouble --tire cause being to a great extent
due to" change of life. " I have been taking Your
'(cart and Nerve fills for some time, and mean
to continue doing so, as I eon truthfully say
they oro the best remedy I have ever used for
bnildhig up the system. ' 'ou are at liberty to
use this statement for the benefit of other
sufferers."
Price 80 cents per box or three boxes for $1.211,
all dealers ar The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Oat,
"'host r. .., o .. ...e
FOR GOOD HEALTH
fytt'
("I
1
To preserve or restore it, there is no better
prescription for men, women and children than
Ripans Tabules. They are easy to take. They
are made of a combination of medicines approved
and used by every physician, Ripans Tabules are
widely used by all sorts of people -but to the
plain, every -day folks they are a veritable friend
in need. Ripans Tabules have become their stan-
dard fanii ''remedy. They are a dependable, hon-
est r1m9dy 'vith a long and successful record, to
c rt; 'n:llgestIcin, dyspepsia, habitual and stubborn
_o .,e 1pation, t 1fensive breath, heartburn, dizziness,
• oi' .ttion of the heart, sleeplessness, muscular
iatism, sour stomach, bowel and liver com-
' .•.'ts. They stregthen weak stomachs, build up
t -:hwn systems, restore pure blood, good appe••
t , ^ .id sound, natural sleep. Everybody derives
moll tant benefit from a regular use of Ripans
'1'.ebrules. Your drl'ggist sells them. The five -
c. nt packet is en .gh for an ordinary occasion.
The Family Bottle 6o cents, contains a supply
for a year.
sliele ake a.Latou.6aietY4441 ,44W+VkliMittt,'ret+Nafts.11rfSr:Yt,v.:.ti.rstkiEf
1
were initis zein( 000trov eeeteemeens o46treceattlecOsreQlt eso¢ ammoo
4.
4.
4.
4.
•1'
•
•
1,
FOR 1905 @ 06.
The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below
for any or all of the following publications :
Times to _ January lst, 1907.. $1.00
Times and Daily Globe 4.50
Times and Daily Mail and Empire 4.60
Times and Daily World 3.10
Times and Toronto Daily News.. 1.90
Times and Toronto Daily Star 1.85
Times and Daily Advertiser 2.35
Times and Toronto Saturday Night 2.35
Times and Weekly Globe . 1.65
Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.70
Times and Family herald and Weekly Star 1.75
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star, and
book " Farmer's Manual and Veterinary Guide 1.90
Times and Weekly Witness 1.65
Times and Montreal Weekly Herald 1.50
Times and London Free Press (weekly) 1.80
Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1.60
Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1.80
Times and World Wide 1.85
Times and Northern Messenger, 1.30
Times and Farmer's' Advocate 2.35
We specially recommend our readers to subscribe
to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine
Times and Farming World 1.35
Times and Presbyterian 2,25
Times and Westminster 2.25
Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 3.25
Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) ... 1.90
Times and Youths' Companion 2.75
Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) 2.90
Times and Sabbath Reading, New York 1.45
Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto)1 85
Times and Michigan Farmer 1.65
Times and Woman's Home Companion 1.75
Times and Canadian Woman (monthly) London 1.15
Times and American Sheep Breeder 1.90
Times and Country Gentleman 2.10
Times and Delineator 1.95
Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.75
Times and Green's Fruit Grower 1.35
Times and Good Housekeeping 1.80
Times and Modern Women 1.45
Times and 14Call's Magazine 1.45
Times and Pearson's Magazine 1.70
Times and American Illustrated Magazine 1.90
Times and American Boy Magazine 1.65
Times and What to Eat 1.60
Times and Bookkeeper - 1.65
Times and Recreation 1.75
Times and Cosmopolitan 1.65
Times and Ladies' Home Journal .. 2.15
Times and Saturday Evening Post 2.45
Times and Success 1.80
Times and Housekeeper 1.50
Tunes and Pilgrim 1.60
Times and Poultry Keeper 1.10
Times and Hoard's Dairyman 1,90
Times and McClure's Magazine 1.90
Times and M n ev
s Magazine 2,00
Times and Rural New orker
.... .... 2.00
Times and Vick's Magazine 1.40
Times and American Gardening 2.25
Times and Health Culture 1.85
Times and Ram's Horn 2.45
Times and Four '.Crack News 1.90
Times and Breeders' Gazette 2.25
Times and Practical Farmer... 1,85
•1''
.1.
44
-4.'
44.
d•
4
at1
deaj�
When premiums are given with any of above papers, subscribers will
secure such premiums when ordering through ns, same as if ordered direct '•
from publishers.
These low rates
mean a considerable saving
to subscribers,
and
d are ;•
STRICTLY CASH IADVANCE Sendremittances by postal note, post
I
office or express money order, addressing
TIMES OFFICE, '"
WINGHAMr ONTARIO, w
r•
00•0000001101011111111001041111111100 *0.M!0..0111MAMS*0011.00