HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-03-08, Page 3SUFFERING WOMEN
who find life a burden, can have liepitit 'rad
Strength restored by the use of
M lburn's
Heart and Nerve
Melts,
The present generation of women and girls
have more than their share of misery. With
tome it is nervousness and palpitation, with
others weak, dizzy and fainting spells, while with
*there • there is a general collapse of the 9yatem.
Milburn's heart and Nerve Pilin tone up the
nerves, strengthen the heart and make it beat
strong and regular, create new red blood cor-
puscles, and impart that sense of buoyancy to
the apirita that is the result of renewed mental
and pbyeioal vigor.
Mre. D. O. Donoghue, Oriilia, Ont., writes:
" For over a year I wan troubled with nervous-.
?seas and heart trouble. I decided to give Mil.
burn's Heart and Nerve Pills a trial, and after
using five boxes I found I was completely cured,
I always recommend them to my friends."
Price 4e cents per box or three boxes for $1,25,
all dealers or The T. Milburn Co., Limited
Toronto, Out.
CENTRAL PRISON REPORT.
It seems tie ueneary to the proper ob•
aervance et law uud order that an institu•
tion be maintained where transgressors
of the 'awe and regulations of society
may be pieuished. Only iu extreme and
refractory cases duet' the punishment
meted out to eiiminateamount to the in-
fliction of paid. The principal pnnith-
ment OOn&ietd in Couliuement and come
polling the prisoners to work. The ob-
ject attained in coufiaing a orimited is
twofold; it puuiabee the prisoner and
rids society of a class that is dangerous
to its welfare. It is gratitytng to learn
from the thirty-eighth report of R. W.
Brune Smith, the Inspector of Prieons
and Reformatories for Ontario, that
there has been a decrease in the number
in the Central Prison last year as com-
pared with the previous year. The
number in the Central Prison et the be-
ginning of 1905 was 405; oummitted der•
ing the year, 689, making the total
number in custody during the year 1,-
094. The figures for 1004 were 378, 758
and 1,136, respectively.
From this it will be seen that the total
number incarcerated during the year
shows a decrease of 42 over the previous
year, while the total stay of prisoners
was 4,329 days greater, and the daily
average popnlatton of 387 in 1004 was in.
creased to 400 in 1905. The cause for
this increase is found in the fact that in
1904 the average sentence was 7.81
months, and in 1905 it was 8 23 months.
The report gives the principal offences
for which prisoners were committed to
the prison: Assault 53, house and shop
breaking and robbery 44, larceny and
theft 228, and vagrancy 212, making a
total of 537, or 78 per oent. of the total
number committed. The prisoners re-
ceived during the year who were report'
ed temperate represented 29 75 per cent.
of the total committed; in 1904 the per-
centage was 29.55. The percentage of
temperate to the total number committed
since the Opening of the institution is
20.50. The totally uneducated was 110
62 per cent, of the total commitments
for the year, while the percentage to the
total number committed since the open-
ing of the institution is 14,04. In 1905
there were 19 discharged by remission
of sentence and 32 were paroled; in 1004
the numbers were 23 and 32 respectively,
Social conditions seem to have some
effect as a deterrent to crime. Out of
the 689 commitments 151 were married,
while the balance of 538 committed were
single. Out of all those committed to
the Central Prison in 1905 there was on-
ly one abstainer, while there were 204
so- called temperate prisoners commits
ed.
Out of the 089 prisoners committed,
453 were Canadians, 72 English, 28 Irish,
18 Sootoh, 70 U. S. A., 5 Germans and
the balance from nearly every nation on
earth, ranging in numbers from 1 to 8.
The County of Waterloo sent 14 pri.
soner& to the institution in 1005. The
smallest number sent by any county
was 2. 'Three counties claim this dis-
tinction, viz: Halton, Huron and Lan-
ark. The largest number of commit-
ments front any one county in Ontario
was 139 from the County of York.
A Minister of the bospel Recommends
OXO -,, v Air
"Ter several testi X have beet In very post
health. Lai t ball I was advised by ger,.1. ft Allen,
et Harrhy harbor, P.1t 1 , to try 'Oxygenator.'
ltetors trying it 1 had no faith in it, but last Octo,
ler I began its nee nhd ran truly nay that before
taint one jug 1 had wonderfully improved in my
teneral health. Simco than I have used several
• legs as k result have never spent such k stealthy
tater or Spring as I did this year, Oxygenator'
ter Throat 1' rouble, Catarrh, Purifying the Blood,
sad for Building up the System, I believe to not
*stalled today by any other remedy.
iterersl of guy congregation have an* weed It
with blessed results. I take great interest in
' Oxygenator,' baring given jugs of it kwey, and
rut et say it ie.A gt'orienft ul. ititxanr,
In regard to my eyes, 'Oxygenator' hate done
ekes* mote good than the Oculiete or the treateseet
t.teceived in the Reepit t1,
Yet ltarkche, X think it peterlese. For Maine tel
verge b+ereoti4 0 a or stile, ledeed any*baro, 11
1tII'I. i.. D. MoLXofl,
Mount !Cowart, P.It.1
:year t►w&K
"1"� i I
...*XYCIEN d�iGiitie ►i e
I lhlurbiord *t a trat!'$01it
SOWING CLOVER WITH OATS,
Resolve to seed down every lore of
grain this year to ()lover or clover and
timothy, Even if past experience shows
a doubtful chance of getting a "catch,
with oats, it is worth trying anyway,
The harder it is to get a &tend of clover
on a partloular field, the worse the field
needs it, as a rule, and one chance in ala
is worth taking on enoh land, Sow the
grain thin --about 1 1.4 to ; 1.2 bushels
per sere -and the clover seat thick,
about 101be of good clean seed per acre,
and you wall double the chances of a
successful seeding over the neighbor
Who sows two bushels of oats and six
pounds of clover seed, and you will get
very nearly at; much grain, too. Some
bay, "If it all grows, six pounds of seed
is enough." True but it never dons all
grow, eepeoially on the poorer spots,
Sow plenty of seed, and all the plants
will do better, apparently ; there will be
a mat on the ground after harvest to
keep it shaded and moist, so the planta
will have a chance to thrive and stool
out, and grow tkemselvee a winter pro-
tection, On the other hand, by sparing
the seed, there will be a sickly stand,
weeds will come in, and choke out the
clover, and it will be so ntieerably thin
on some spots that the man will hesitate
to leave the field to meadow, and very
likely to say there is no use seeding
down with oats. It depends a good deal
on how one goes at it. Never begrudge
money invested in clover seed; it returns
the biggest interest of anything we
know. -Farmers Advocate.
SIJDDEN1Y ATTACHED,
Children are often attacked suddenly
by paigifnl and dangerous Colic, Cramps,
Diarrhoea Dysentery, Cholera Mertens,
Cholera Infantnm, etc. Dr. Fowler's
Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt
and sure cure which should always be
kept in the house.
The Trek to Canada.
(Los Angeles Times)
This drain from the best of the Ameri-
can race is specially regrettable because
at the same time hundreds of thousands
of aliens, many of them poor material
for American oitizenship, are pouring in
from across the Atlantic, so that the out-
go on the one hand and the incoming an
the other promise to effect a radical and
not encouraging change in the popula-
tion of the United States during the
Doming decade.
Not only American people, but also
American gold is pouring into Canada
in it steady stream. American capital is
being expended everywhere in Canada
in the promotion of industrial eater•,
prises, designed to meet the demands of
the people, and evade the tariff restrie.
tions enacted by the Dominion Parlia-
ment, in retaliation for the discrimina-
tion practiced by the United States, The
general and Provincial Governments are
giving bounties for the establishment of
certain kind of factories and mills, one
result of this beiug found at the Cana-
dian Soo, where steel rails, and other
similar products are being turned out in
large quantities. Raw materials no
longer find their way to American fac-
tories in the volume they once did, there
to be converted into the finished pro.
duct, and sold to Canadians at a hand-
some profit, while the money expended
for labor was distributed on this side of
the border.
Gained 2;, rounds
"I was much run down in health, could
not sleep, was very nervous, and so
weak that I could hardly get around.
Some months ago I began using Dr.
Chase's Nerve rood, and to -day I age
pleased to say that I am completely re-
stored to health. I have gained over 25
pounds in weight, sleep well and feel
strongand healthy, "-Mise Annie Evans,
„9 Gottingen St., Halifax, N.S.
Sir Wilfrid's Banquet Speech.
"Up to the present moment we have
sought markets chiefly in Europe, but
the time has come when we must seek
markets in the Orient."
"We have before us the experience of
all the past ages. It is within ourpower
to profit by the experience of the past
ages, to improve upon their virtues, to
avoid their mistakes."
"Let us see that in this country of
Canada there shall be work for all hands
and the best remuneration for all work."
"Canada has emerged during those
ten years from the obscure condition of
a simple colony to the rank and atation
of a proud nation,"
"This year, I have reason to believe,
our trade will reach the $500,000,000
mark."
"Let our civilization be snoh a civili-
zation as never existed before in the
world, based, and exclusively based, up -
peace and the arts of peace."
"It teems to be the polioy of a certain
part of the Conservative party, with re -
gad to their opponents, to praise the
dead in order the better to abuse the liv-
ing." •
"It has been said that we should have
a uniform taritf in the l ritish empire. I
do not think, for any part, it is possible
to have that."
"We t)ss,nt to be on good terms with
the Whole people of England, We cart•
rat admit, We do not want, that one
party differences iehotyld be made the
apple of discord to be theeWfi the peaplo
Of Greet Tli'iteiirt.”
nig WMNOR O TIMES, LUICR 8, 1906
He Has a Difficulty.
(Chicago News,)
I like the comfortable li fe---
4bove all things w take my eere;
But then, you see I have a wife,
Whom is Is tuy desire to please,
And pleastug her I grieve to say.
MY hope) of sweet content take wing.
I saorldoe them every day,
Because it isn't quite the thing.
I like to elvate my feet
Upon a table or a chair;
In times Of quite excessive heat
A ooat I always bate to wear,
Some pie•orust really neede a knife,
And to old habits still I cling.
That doesn't go with toy dear wife,
Because it Tenet quite the thing.
I may not breakfast till I drama,
My pipe indoors I may not smoke -
Te which, however, I confess,
She hasn't got rue wholly broke.
Whatever I may do, I find
Some rule of etiquette ehe'll spring,
And language can't relieve niy mind,
Because it isn't quiet the thing.
The City Man.
(Chicago Chronicle,)
The city man eaid he was struck
Upou the rural life;
No longer wiehed to run amuck
Ia noise and duet and strife.
Said het I'd like to husk the eggs,
And dig the new mown hay,
And monkey with the husking pegs,
And milk the cows tor whey.
"I'd like to pick the cream and cheese
And dig the apple crop,
And drive a team of pure white geese
And feed the chickens slop.
"It would be fun to groom the pigs
And curry off the cows
And hitch the roosters into rigs
And wotk the threshing plows,
"Twould be a treat to shell the oats,
And pick the buckwheat flour,
And gather whiskers from the goats
And sort them by the boor.
"I'd like to piok the little lambs,
And shear the gentle hens,
And gather in the fresh -smoked hams
And put the wasps in pens.
"In fact I think the country life
Would be the thing for me.
I do not care for work or strife,
I need the rest, you see."
People will Talk.
(Old Favorite(
Yon may go through the world, but
'twill be very slow
If you listen to all that is said asyou go;
You'll be worried and fretted, and kept
in a stew,
For meddlesome tongues meat nave
something to do --
And people will talk.
If quiet and modest, you'll have it pre-
sumed
That your humble position is only mi-
stimed,
You're a wolf in sheep's clothing, or else
you're a fool;
But don't get excited -keep perfectly
cool -
For people will talk.
And then if you show the least boldness
of heart,
Or a slight inclination to take your own
part,
They will call yon an upstart, conceited
and vain,
But keep straight ahead --don't stop to
explain -
For people will talk.
If threadbare your dress and old-fashion-
ed your hat -
Someone will surely take notice of that,
And hint rather strong that you can't
pay your way;
But don't get excited, whatever they
say -
For people will talk.
If your dress is in fashion, don't think
to escape,
For they criticise them in a different
shape -
You're ahead of your means, or your
tailor's unpaid;
But mind your own business, there's
naught to be made -
For people will talk.
Now the beat way to do is to do as you
please,
For your mind if you have one, will then
be at ease,
Of course you will xueet with all sorts of
abuse;
But don't think to stop them --it's not
any use -
For people will talk,
severe 'Kidney Trouble
Mrs. Geo. Lawson, Conaecon, Out.,
writes: -"Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver
Pills completely cared me of constipa-
tion, rheumatism, stomach trouble and
a very severe kidney trouble after years
of suffering. I am now sixty-eight years
of age and 'very grateful for what Dr,,
Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills have done
for ine,"
Not a Sinner That Time,
She was a thin, narrow, dark -visaged
woman with "epees" on and the carried
a package of tracts and leafleta whioh r..w..,.�
she scattered broadcast among the sin-
ners in the oar.
A man got on, carrying a big water-
melon. Ont of his pooket protruded :a
glass tusk with a rubber cork. The Wo
man with the tracts handed one immed-
iately to this lastpaesenger. "Thanks,"
he said, "condo almanac hey?"
"No sir," said the womati firmly in a
high, falsetto voice. It's to save your
immortal soul. Touch not, taste not,
radio not theins and i
ha Wine," he pa rated
with a crooked forefinger to the glace
flask protruding from his pocket.
"Ah, I see" said the roan, /smiling;
but this bottle ain't for ale, ma'am."
"Woe unto him 'who giveth his neigh-
bor brink,( t quoted the woman fiercely,
as she waved a warning hand high above
her head.
"Thi ain't eggsactly my neighbor either
Said the wan gently. "You see, it'a for
the new baby, and Wife cal'lates to bring
him tip by hand."
But the woman with the tracts liar•
rledly left the oar tit the nein corner,
fallevted by the owlet of the pReSengerti,
Every Hour Delayed
IN CURING A COLD
13 DANGEROUS,
You halve often heard people say: "Its oaf/
*cold, a trifling cough," but many a Ilia history
would read different if, oe the rings appearanos
of a cough, it paid been reredied with
DR. WOOD'S NOR-
WAY PINE SYRUP.
It is a pleasant, safe and effectual remedy,
that may be confidently relied upon oke a epeci$o
for Coughs and Colds of all kinds, Koareetess,
Bore Throat, Paine in Chest, Asthma, Bronchitis,
Croup, 'Whooping Cough,.quiney, and all afteo•
tions of the Throat and Lungs,
Mrs Stephen E. Strong, Berwick, N,8„
writes: "1 have used Dr, Wood's Norway Pins
Syrup for Asthma, sad have found it to be a
grand medicine, always giving quick relief. We
would tot be without a bottle of it in the
house,"
Dr. Woods Norway Pine Syrup is put up in a
yellow wrapper. Three Pine Trees is the trade
mark and the price 25 cents at all dealers.
Refuse substitutes, Demand Dr. Wood's and
get it,
Reflections of a Bachelor.
Front the New York Press,
When a girl is happy it ie a sign it has
something to do with clothes.
I! a man has too much courage to
commit suicide when he is in trouble he
can go to law.
The nine thing about Oohing is the
way the bait and the fish do all the
work for you till the fuu begins,
It's more useful net to know things
and make people think you do than to
know them and not have anybody be-
lieve it.
It takes a woman to figure out that it
is a good deed, which the recording
angel will remember, to forget to pay
her fare in a crowded street oar, and put
it in the collection elute next Sunday,
No Difference
No distinction is made as to the kind
of Piles that Dr. Leouhardt's Hem -Road
cures.
The names Internal, External, Bleed-
ing, Bliud, Itching, Suppurating, etc.,
are simply names of the different stages
through which every case will pass if it
continues long enough.
Piles are caused by congestion or stag-
nation of blood in the lower bowel, and
it takes an internal remedy to remove
the cause,
Dr. Leonhardt's Hem Roid is a tablet
taken internally.
It is a permanent cure and no case of
Piles ham ever been found, it failed to
cure. Money back if it does.
A guarantee with every package.
Price $1.00 at any druggist's, or the
W ilsou-Fyle Co. , Limited, Niagara Falls,
Out.
Ventilating a House.
The thought of opening every window
in the house, top and bottom, is very
shocking of course. It is intended that
it should be. Many people who think
that they are really very fond of fresh
air need a shock of some kind -a shook
that will make them realize what a well.
aired house really is.
"I always Bleep with my window
open," they will tell you. Yea, but how
wide do they open it? Perhaps only six
inches, and that only at the bottom, and
only one window, so that there is no
circulation through the roam at all.
If that is your way of "having lots of
fresh air in the house," then you need a
shock of some kind -one that is hard
enough to jar the windows wide open.
Of course, it is not possible to keep all
the windows open all the night and all
the day all the year round, but It is pos-
sible to always have a little circulation
across every room in the house at all
tinges. And it is possible to have all the
windows wide open during a good part
of the day and night,
Do not be Content witha house that is
not actually ill smelling. Have the air
in the house just as fresh as the air out
of doors.
This tapes constant thought, but the
results pay. -(Maxwell's Talisman.)
BSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Ccnulne
darter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Beat Signature of
to
%
See Fac.Slmlte gripper Below.
Tegry ..tan said�..
oke ester
to tale, as smoky
+s POR RABAU :K
1, A ERS POR DIMNESS.
rPOR biLIOU$NEeta
Ert FOR TOAP1d MEC
ALLLL1g FORCONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW AKIN.,
. FOR THECOMPLEMON
e?76re,if� MVKNMNt... took
COME t5IQK HICADAQHE,
HIN TS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE.
in To remove paint status from glass, rub
with hot vinegar until the stoking distil).
pear.
When boiling a pudding remember to
plaoe a stick iu the bottom of the sauce
pan, This will prevent it from burning.
Until the plumber can cosec aleak ean
be teuiparairly stopped with a 'mixture
of yel;gvr Soap, whiting and a very little
water,
Add a little washing soda to the boil -
lug water in which greasy dishes are
washed, and they never will have a
streaky appearance.
Straw wattings may be cleaned with
a eoarae cloth dipped in salt and water
and then wiped dry. The salt prevents
the matting from turuiug yellow.
In serving tea, if orange pekoe is used
a clove placed its the tea ball will give a
piquant flavor that will not be recogniz•
ed, but that will be most enjoyable.
A too hot oven may be quickly cooled
by plaeiug in it a basin of cold water.
Tim steam from the water will not in-
jure anything that may be cooking, ex-
cept pull' pastry.
Ia paring fruit for presererving nee
silver plated knives and drop each piece
as soon as pared into a bowl of cold
water, which has been made acid by the
addttiou of leinon juice; it prevents the
trait from turning dark.
To revive patent leather rub with a
linen rag soaked in olive -oil or mak, and
polish with a dry, soft duster, Or equal
parts of create and lineteed•oil, mixed
well together, form au excellent polish
for patent leather boots and shoes,
Sweet potatoes may be kept in good
condition all winter by packing them in
dry sand and placing in a warm cellar
near the farnaoe. Care must be taken
to keep sweet potatoes warm and dry,
otherwise they will spoil very quickly.
The saddest people in:this world are
those who are always fighting against
sorrow.
It's not the man with a patty back-
bone, who is most truly resigned to the
will of God.
FALL CATARRH
Disease Prevalent Now," But Cru Ite
quickly Cured with lyoeuei.
A great many people suffer more with
catarrh during the fail months than at
any other season of the year, the changes
iu weather seeming to have a bad effect
upon the disease.
Some of the oures trade by Hyomei
seem marvelous when one remembers
that the patients have suffered from
catarrh since childhood and that for
years they bad been unable to get a good
night's sleep, on account of the disagree-
able tickling and dropping at the back of
the throat paused by this offensive dis-
ease. A few days' treatment with
Hyomei brought quick relief, and its
continued use made a complete and last-
ing cure.
By breathing Hyomei through the ,
pocket inhaler that Domes with every
outfit, all the air passapea of the lungs
and throat are filled with air laden with
Netnre's owu remedies for the cure of
ceta.rh. All disease germs are killed, 1
ani the irritated mucous membrane is +
h ink d
The complete outfit costa but $1, extra
bottles 50 cents. Compare this small
expense with the fees charged by spec-
ialists.
3
aui�„-^•�•-•• 'You must look well litter the condi
don
,� i& your
there of yCtion of the bowele
our action
liver and bowels, 'litllet;s share
s, poisonous
products are absorbed, causing beg*
aches, biliousness, nausea, dyspepsias,
/,+ry^(/�1/f /�yI [�f /y■t)�N�1 .flyer's Pills are,�anuine liver pills.
�Mr�,(r �M11 t► e1 t Wok j a9i Ms BeCrstsl s sM111a4 t, e, mer lily.,
rasa a! al! our ■ediaiser. Lowoilm ares.
a r i. 1Re�4sM. i ,
KevK i litK K &I1 !4t'4K'
BLOOD DISEASE: CURED.
If you ever contracted arty Blood or Private Df;ease, you are neper sato until the
vtrup or poison hag been, eradicated front the system. Don't be satisfied with a
"Patch
up"P by some family doctor. Our Now Method 161 Guargt,st.cd to
Piny. tpe„1Vo Neaaaga E1scd without Writt.;; non' sat.
Cured When An Zit; F&* lad
•'C ()aid I live my early life aver, this testimouiai would not be
necessary, though I was no more sinful than thousands of outer
young men. Early indiscretions, later exce:. ',, expo,ure to
contagious diseases ail helped to break down ray ttysrem. Wizen
I commenced to realize my condition I was almost frantic. Doctor
after doctor treated rue but only gave me relief -net a sure, Sot
Springs helped mo, but did not cure me. The symptonia always
returned, Memory and Potash drove the poison into my system
instead of dr'Miug it oat. I bless the day your New Method
�fireatntent Ras recowtnended to me. I investigated who yea;were first, mut finding you had over 2,5 years' experience and re.
eponetbie financially. I gavo you ray case ender a guarantee.
You cured me permanently, and is six rears there has not been a
sore, pale, ulcer or aux other symptom of the blood disease,"
2g We trearo le tl�arnd' cure' Varicsc le, Blood Pollen. Nervous Debility CON
ttto's,
Impotency, Secret Drains, Kidney Old Bladder biaesess,
CsnsuitaUea Free. Qusstlsa eisWI: for floras 7restment sad Rocks Eras.
DRS. KENNEDY el, KERGANa
148 SHOLI8T STREET, DETROIT. ;1MICH,
"Lot the GOLD DUSTI i'' Co year work"
SIMPLY WONDERFUL
is the work which GOLD DUST accomplishes. All labors
look alike to the Gold Dust Twins, They clean floors and
doors, sinks and chinks -go from cellar to attic -and leave :
only brightness behind, Get acquainted with -
Gold Dust Washing Powder
OTHER GENERAL Scrubbing floors, washing clothes and dishes, cleaning woad•
USES FOR work, oil cloth, silverware and tinware, polishing brass work,
COLD DUST cleansing bath room, pipes, etc.. and making the finest soft soap.
Mads by THE N. K. FA1RBANK COMPANY, Montreal, P. Q, -Makers of FAIRY SOAP.
cow mar makes hard water soft
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,r O R 19 0 6.
a
MATT[1iE
s
•
If you cannot obtain Hyomei of your
dealer, it will be forwarded by mail, 1
postage paid, on receipt of price. Write a
to -day for consultation blank that will
entitle you to service of our medical de-
partment without charge. The R. T.
Booth Company, Hyomei Bui]ding,
Ithaca, N.Y.
it is a Great Mistake
To set up our own standard of right
and wrong and judge other folks by it.
To eousider everytbiog impossible that
we haven't got the ability to perform.
To expect uniformity of opinion in this
crazy old world.
To squat too much.
To say: "Oh, Hi -Huta! What's the
use?" then help ourselves to another
bon -bon and loll, instead of giving the
dust -cup a yank and trying anyway.
To potter half the niornfng away over
a little thing when a lot of big things are
standing around fairly yelling for im.
mediate attention.
To fuss.
To expect youth to have the judgment
of experience.
To make no allowance for the infirmi-
ties of others.
To think that because we don't like
sugar in our tea, nobody else does,
To forget that what is, and what is
not, and Worry ourselves and others
with what Cannot be remedied.
To believe only what our finite minds
Can grasp.
To expect to be able to understand
everything.
HE TIMES
will re -
C e ire
anbscrip-
▪ tions in clubs
• as given here-
• with, at prices
•
• quoted.
• Newspapers
• and magazines
Times
• sent to differ -
Weekly Globe
1 ant address if
•Family Herald S; Weekly Star..
• desired.• Farming World
• Whether a Tis 1.00 3 •
is TIMES s u b • Ladies' Home Journal 1.25 f a 60 •
• scriber or not, Saturday Evening Post 2.00
• leave your or.
•
der a t this Times ].QO •'
World's Work 3 00
•
•
•
•
aa
Reg. Price. Oily Priice S
Timesesb$1 00 (• $3a 25
Presbyterian 1.50 •'
Westminster 1,50 `
1.00 •
100 ` 2.25.'
Times 1.00
Weekly Sun 1.00 1 s� p
Weekly Globe•
1 00 1 �7. t70
Farmer's Advocate 1 b0
1.00
1.00 f
1.00 l 2.75 *.
.60
Times
Weekly Globe
Weekly Witness
• office and it • • • (•
Review of Reviews . 3.00
Times .. 1,00 )
t tun. rr a gtv n Review o1 Reviews 3.00 i
low rates on Cosmopolitan 1.00 ` 4.15
any paper or ; Woman's Home Companion..,1.00 1 .r
• magazine. SncCeae 11.00 l
•• Any $1,00 = Country Life in America. 3.00 j
• magazine will iven in(After Feb. let, 1900, $4,00)
plac2 he e of those World's Work 3.00 I
:named, if se Review of Reviews 3.00 1
desired. I f vainer,... ..,. 1.00
• you clo not American Boy 1,00
• 111te the grcdps Outing 3.00 p
A given here, Harper's Bazar 1.00
• in a k e selec- Times 1.00,
• tions to snit Harper's Magazine or Weekly, . , 4.00
• yourself, and p
• Review of Reviews 3.00
• Vee will give World's Work..,. 3,00
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Cosmopolitan or Success .1,00
finee,-.. ,.., 100
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Review of Reviews 3,00
Woman's Home Companion... , 1.00
•
sSee large
s,,.
list of dubbinR
• a.
entiree in an
other column.
•
To keep all the good things for the ar- -2 A 11 orders
rival of "company," I • receive prompt
To fail to mind our own business. •• attention,
To keep all our wake locked away in •
the garret with the dried apples and the ,etmeeeeetteeeses
rag-bag, w
To spank too much, whether with the : Can at, or address,
tongue or the back of a hair.brneh, +�
To spank too little.
To be irregular, even in Winding up
the ()look and putting out the cat When
bed=time come/s, liN1fl eNli ; .
t
TIMES
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•
�/�
6.60 I
s'
4.10•
7.75
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J
5.10
5.75
OFFICE,
WI NG H A M, O N'1'.
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