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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-04-05, Page 6S THE 'JNGAi TINES APRIL 5, 1906 UNLIGHT 5OAP isbetter than other Soaps Fait is best when used in the Sunlight way. Follow directions, SIMLEONT WAY OF wltS#aafld% PIRST.-Die the artt,:le to be w.isutd nt t to of Lukewarm water, dra v it utuunaw:v-d udam:rob the s ap Iihtly ova it. Be pr.c.0 u:0: not to )'ass suaptu, all a er.'ruing roll a in a t' ' r, f1, lay in the tub un+kr the water, ' and go en t:. ,.unr wily - until It tho .feces hare the • soap rc:Ll,ea ort, and arc rollel i Then go away for thirty trrnutes tU cue hoar and let the "S..0- • light" Soap do its work. NEST. ---Alter srddng the full time rub the clothes +a n: lightly out an a wash wh t ard, + and the dirt will drop out; tum the garment in. side out to gat at the seams, but don't use any more soap; dont scald er hot a s ogle piece, and don't , wash through two suds. If' the water gets too dirtyy, pour a little out and add • fresh. If a streak is hard i to wash, rub some r ore soap on it, and throw i the niece hactt into the suds for few minutes. LAS fLY COMES INE RINSING, which is to be done to lu::^w:um water, taking special tate to get i all the dirty suds away, • then wring out and hang up to dry. , For Woolens and Flan. ttels,'roceed as to0ows: • Shake the articles free from I thtar. Cut a tablet of SUNLIGHT SOAP into shaving-, pour into a gallon trbeiiin g water and uhc:k into a lather. When just ' lukewarm, work articles in the lather without rub- bing. S,Ittetrc out dirty +:a er without twisting and emir, th .rorghly in two relays of lukewarm wm:r. Squeeze rut water without twisting and hang in the Open air. The most delicate • calors may be safely washed in the Sun. tight" way. w7:4:Tr -4 ev $5,000 REWARD will he paid to any person who proves that Sunlight :gap con- tains any iniuriotH chemicals or any form of adulteration. �/y Buy it and Follow ,�p�a ACs directions. e Meeo LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED. TORONTO tar Sentence Sermons Struggle is the school of strength. Faith is food as well as medicine. He who fears to leave tradition cannot find truth, Personal righteousness will be the source of any permanent reform. The keys of life are not given to those who cannot keep the doors of the lips. The Iife that is writtenin 'blue ink does not turn to a permanent color. Reverence reveals the heart of every trntb ; superstition sees but the surface. It takes more than the Sunday dress parade to make the Christian warrior. When you have honey from the rock yon will not want glucose from flatter- ers. The people are losing mach of life where the prophets are afraid of losing life. When a man is drifting with the stream he is likely to think the stream hes ceased to flow, ' There's a lot of people so perfectly hood they cannot give the rest of us a chance even to be pretty good. Some people think that first class piety is simply a feeling of pity for the third class passengers on the glory train. Yon will get gage the real yeluetiou of it trait wlieu gat see him pet A penny en the offering while he sings, "Take ,ply life," One of the great deficiencies of inod- F)rnt worehip is that it presents only one opportunity to walk up the aisle with Ile new dry goods. The inau who wants to make a million in order to build a hospital often setts - Bea himself with donating his old clothes when he has rondo his pile, He cannot find wisdom who will not 'x'orship, The flowers of triumph are watered by t ears. Cash or- Cure If Shiloh's Consumption Cure fails to cure your Cold et Cough, you get back all you paid for it. You am euro of a Cure et the Gash. If it ware t a euro cure, the offer would sat Ile made, Can anything be fairer If you have a ('old, Cough, or any direate el the Throat, Lunge of Alt Pasu es, ity lei �XLeO1i 313 25 f Cottle, All dealers giz�.. tanttee h. Kernels from the Sanctiirn Mill Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges. A friend in the old country ltas pre. 'tented Knox Churclz, St. Mary's, with $1,500. John Gilbert, a well knowu McGilliv- ray fanner, was acc'identeliy'tilled while driving home from Ailsa Craig. tigers the el ha Kind you Hato Ante Bought Signature • j r� of + • The local option clauses of the new 11. cense law were tienonneed by the con- vention called by t'.te Dominion Alliauce. Mr. Wes. Young, of ILinlongh, who was injured by falliug from a scaffold in his hay mow one day recently died from his injuries on Friday, March 23rd. At the meeting of the Directors of the Kinloss Branch Agricultural Society Mr. John Murchison of Lucknow, was appointed Secretary in place of Mr, P. A. Mtticoimeon. 9 iLF, r.ADLES' JrAV'OZ.TE. Lasa -Liver Pills are the ladies' favorite medicine. They cure Constipation, Sick Eleadaobe, Billionsneas, and Dyspepsia without griping, purging or sickening. A cedar post was dug up in the Port Elgin cemetery recently, which had been there for 30 years and was found to be perfectly sound. Before being put in- to the ground a hole had been bored in the end and filled with salt. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Faille of Wal- lace were pleasantly sur ris d on Satur- day evening March 24th, by members of their family, a ho assembled at the parental home in honor of their fiftieth wedding anniversary. Many people say they are "all nerves," easily startled or upset, easily worried and irritated. Milburu's Heart and Nerve Pills are just the remedy such people require. They restore perfect harmony of the nerve centres and give new nerve force to shattered nervous systems. A. week or so ago Mrs. Adam McKee, of the 0th con. Howielc, near Fordwioh, came to town to wait on her sister -in. law, Mrs. Morrow, and in doing so con- tracted the latter's disease from which she was taken seriously ill and died at the home of Mrs. Morrow on Monday evening, March 26th. Cy.4e3.a^r 11:11 %3XE3. Beers the The Kind YououHave Always Bo i 8fg of ere !•f/i` The death of Richard McDonald, near Amberley last week at the advanced age of 8.4 years, removes one of the early residents of that section of Huron Tp. He had resided thorn for over fifty years and was a man always well thought of. He was married twico and his widow mourns his loss. CR, A. W, CHASE'S CATARRH CURE ... C. is sent direct to the diseased e. parts by the Improved Blower. •• '.'.---•:...--"‘ Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops droppings in the vasa; throat and permanently tures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower 7,1` . ‘4.,,,,,t..„free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. On Thursday, the 22nd of March, the death of Mrs. Charles McDougall oc- curred at the family residence, 10th con Kincardine Tp. The deceased was 51 years of age. Her maiden name was Mary McLean and her marriage to Chas McDougall has been blessed by a fami- ly of seven sons and seven daughters, all of whom are alive. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the ;Signature of Fes' The rapid increase in btzsineas trans- acted by the 0 P. R. is shown by the fact that in 1902 the total revenue at mounted to $87,500,(CO3 while returns SO far to hand for the currant year indicate that the gross revenue will reach the sum of $60,000,000. The company stock with a par value of 100 has now a mar- Itet price of about 170. Last week a movement WAS started to organize a Threshing Syndicate in the vicinity of Londesboro, and with clout six days' canvassing more than fifty stool: -holders were secured. The shares have been fixed at i;50, only oho being allowed for a hundred acres. Is is the intention to put an up-to-date outfit en the road, Mr. Jas. Moore, ot Greenock, the well known Lincoln ehecp man, iufarma the Walkerton Telescope that he has at the ' To i present « t nae t sheep.ro clip 07 sheep by the old time-hanorcdmethod is a slow and tiresome process, butMr. Moorodoes not do it this any. Ito has purchased a machine that will relieve the sheep of the fleece in a fifth of the time that it could be done by the shears, and with less 'ivoar and tear on troth the sheep and the man who does the clipping, Lives there a man who has not said, "To -morrow I 11 get nut of bed At 0 o'clock and ger things done Sefore the setting of the sun?" Lives there r► than who has not said At ii a iu., '•How gond this bed Dues feel," autl ,.nares tilt atter 8, Then wondered how he slept so late! !4'ur Ov*,r darty Rears. An Old and welt -Tried Remedy --Mrs Winslow's SoothfngSyrup has been used for over sixty years byniillionsof mothers for their children while teething, with perfect ancoese. It soothes the child. softens the gusts, allays all pain. cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. It is pleasaut to the taste. Sold by druggists iu every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. l3esure you ask for Mre, Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take nu other kind Jas. Coulter, assessor for the township of Brant, is a hustler. He started a ork on the 6th of February and although Brant is the largest township in the county, be made the last entry on Satan. day, the 24th inst. It Seams that he has made a general raise in the assessment, the total ainount being $2,510,000 as against $2,020,000 last year. SPRINO MEDICINE. As a spriug medicince Burdock Blood Bitters has no equal. It tones up the system and removes all impurities from the blood, and takes away that tired, weary feeling so prevalent in the spring. Mr. Fred Elford, well known as a farmer resident of Holmesville, has given up his position as Chief of the Poultry Department at Ottawa, and has aooepted a similar position under the Quebec Government at St. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec. Fred's services are evidently in demand, for he also bad an offer to take charge of a poultry division at Calgary. i'ns'ight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions.. Another old citizen of Clifford has passed to the Great Borderland. On Friday evening March 23rd, after only a few days illness, Mr. James Mathew- son breathed his last. The deceased was well known and highly esteemed. His qualities of sterling honesty and charas. teristic gonial personality socially, con- tributed largely to form a basis of the highest estimation among his fellowmen. He had reached the ripe age of Sl. De- ceased was born near Jedburgh, Scot- land, and emigrated to Canada in lb50, settling first in Galt. He had lived at Guelph and Elora and for the past 15 years was a resident of Clifford. Bears the �' Tin Kind Yoe Have Always Baugh' Signature � of " In the death of Thomas Baker in his 74th year, on Friday, March 2nd, at his home on the 8th concession, Kinloss loses one of its highly respected citizens. He was born in Yorkshire, England. At the age of Iii in company with his brothers, John and William, they emi- grated to Rochester, New York State, where he resided some time. After re. moving. to Blanchard he was united in marriage to Hcuora Waite of that place, formerly of 'Wiltshire, England. In I871 they again moved to their farm on the 8th concession of Kinloss, where he re- sided till death relieved him of his suf- ferings. The essential lung -healing principal of the pine tree has finally been successfully separated and refined into a perfect cough medicine --Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a guarantee of satisfaction. Price 25 cents. "For my part," said Mrs. Partington, "I can't deceive what on airth edioatiou is coming to. When I was young, if a gal only understood the rales of distrae• tion, provision, multiplying, replenish- ing and the common dominator, and knew all about the rivers and their Obituaries, the covenants and derni~ator- les, the provinces and the i:ntt,ires, they had edification enough. Hat now they have to study bottomy, aigier £by, and have to deli jnstrate sup1etsitions about sycyphants of menses, tangents, and cliagonies of parel!.el:ogrnms, to say nothing about the oxhides, :Teshead, cowv- sticks, and abstruce triangl we" .and the old lady because so tcnf„sc:1 with the techni-cal name that she was leirived to stop. Ifynn, your friends or re'.•ttives sufferwith Fits, Epilepsy, St. Vitus' Bance, or Falling Sickness, write for a trial bat Ile and valuable treatise O,T :itlt.lx (lig^ '' a.,ttit 0 Tale Emmet Co., #7g king Street, W., Toronto, Canada. AU drugfat,ts deli or can obtain fur you L i iG F1T U .tt PIN YOUR FAITH ON FERROZONE A Time lignered Cure for Spring Ailments that Bvery I?hysielaa Recommends. But every year has seen the popularity of Verrozone increase, and to -day it is used by the people of many nations for weakneea, debility and the character- istio ailments of spring. Let Ferrozone help you 1 It enriches the blood supply and there. by vitalizes and quickentt the whole body. Humors and impurities are driven off. Disease germs of every triad are de- stroyed. Nutritione material is supplied for re. storing the waste, and day by day the process of rebuilding goes on ti11 health that outlasts old age is established. Mr. W. A. Renwick, of 285 Hunter Sr, , Hamilton, Ont., writes: "A year ago I became run down and lost my health. My strength was greatly re- duced and on account of the weakneea of my heart I was afraid to take up work On going up stairs or walking fast my heart would beat like au engine. I would grasp for breath and get ex- hausted quickly. At night I would wake up iu an excited condition and find my heart going like mad. In ibis terrible state nothing helped me but Ferrozone. Such good it slid me I can hardly explain. It Inuit up my strength, put new life in my heart and made nze feel like a new man." Even in advanced cases of weakness Ferrozone is unfailing. Your druggist sells it, 50o per box or six boxesfor $2 50, at all dealers, or by mail from N. C. Polson 6s Co., Hartford, Conn., U.S.A. and Kingston, Ont. Ou the 24th of March, 1850, at a small place in the Old Country, near Canter- bury, a minister pronounced the words that made John Brickenden and Mies Priscilla Matchem man and wife. The young couple, full of hope and ambition determined to make their home in a new work, and they came to Canada, settling for a time at Toronto, but with the flood of immigration moving west- ward, it almost irresistably carried them with it to Huron, and they settled iu Tucker: math, afterwards moving to Hullett township. Here they remained until about 13 years ago, when they moved to Clinton and have ever since been residents of town. All the mem- bers of the family were present at the celebration of the golden wedding. SUDDENLY ATTACKED. Children are often attacked soddenly by painful and dangerous Colic, Cramps, Diarrhoea Dysentery, Cholera Morons, Cholera Infautem, etc. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt and sure cure which should always be kept in the house. W. B. McLean, of Hensall, has in vented and patented au adjustable heat convoying, heat regulating, dost and fire proof stovepipe thimble. It has been thoroughly tested and bas proved a cam- plete success. It is a most perfect con- trivance and can be used on any stove pipe. It is fire proof and saves cutting extra holes in walls, ceilings and carpets. Ho has also invented a machine that will clip, cut and press from 200 to 000 complete sets of registers a day. 1 SHE WOULD SLAY CRAZY. Chicago Woman Says It Would lee Best to Have Hopelessly In- sane Killed. Chicago. -"The Spartans and Modes and Persians, who put their deformed children to death as soon as born, were wiser than we," Mrs. Margaret Forwerg told the Social P7conr>mic club here the other day, in a general discussion of pen- ttontiaries, reformatories and insane asyI�tnts. "Br'ital as it may seem, such an atti- tude is necessary for the greatest good 10 the greatest number. "Society would profit if the insane and the hopelessly deformed were put to swift, painless and legal death. in that respect some old pagan civlllzations were in advance of our own. "Asylums for the seclusion of such per- son:, where they drag out a miserable existence, should be replaced by hos- pitals for those of criminal and degen- erate tendencies. Those wbo are hope- less should be 'lone away with under le- gal sanction." Couldn't See him. I. Ars ()MO elan tells of the sail case of t a young fellow, the son of &wealthy To - 1 led° o-1ledo manufacturer, 'who, against his father's wisher, iusieted upon going to Chicago to make his way, whereas the Parent iteeired that the son train himself t in the Toledo business house, 1 At first the lad did very well in the i large city, but it was het very long be. i fore be Was malting urgent appeals to ' bis father for financial assistance. To r these the old gentlomae, who had him - 1 self been trained in a hard aclzoo1, turn- ed a deaf ear, Finally, the desperate boy wired his 1 i father in these worth; "You won't goo ' me starve, will your" The old man's reply carne in the form of the following!' telegram: "No, not at this distance." Then the boy decided to return to To• ledo and go to work for the old men,- "I3arpet'sWeek1y," - HEALTH AND HEAL/TY. A, few drops of camphor it; a glass of water will often relieve a foie* headache. A glass of phot lemonade before ever- tnjj will often prevent a cold, Bathing the eyes several titles a day in gold water snakes thein, bright anti lzelps to keep theta strong, Rub the following ou the hands after bathing them; Glyoersuo and rune water equal parts. aiix well 4y ehalttum Don't use gold water wheu gtvtub Inc face a °osmetao ecrub. Warta water, followed by a dash of cold water, ,s mit- ten Hot milk, heated to as high a tew,peru,- tun, tan it eau he drtuik, is a mootreintoti• ing stzuzulaut in oases ot coin or oVar- fattgae, Pumice should never be used cu rue hattde. A bit of lemon Wall :meteor tis purpose, sitnoat making tae fingers rough and calloused. A Swedish mothod of producing sleep is to wring out a haudkerenzet in toy - cold water and lay it across the eyes, when it is said to act like memo. In studying the physioat oharaoters of well-to-do town residents one is often struck by the tact that the children sp. pear robust, but the men sallow and haggard. These differences are not due to age. They do not result from differ- ences of food or ot air. They are brought about partly by the harassing worry of business lite, as compared with care -free childhood, and partly by the health -destroying manner in which many men pass their houre of relaxation as compared with the simple, natural and temperate pleasures of childhood. Doan's Kidney Pills act on the kid- neys, bladder and urinary organs only. They cure backaches, weak back, rheum- atism, diabetes, congestion, inflamation, gravel, Bright's disease and all other diseases arising from wrong action of the kidneys and bladder Pay as You Go. Pay as you go is good business for the individual, the community and the nation It's so easy to rnu up a bill when you get the chance, but it is some- times hard enough to pay it. It's not so much how much does a person earn, as how much does he save, If a man earns only a dollar a day, his best policy is not to spend that dollar a day if he can help it. He should always endeavor to spend a little less than he earns. People with the biggest income are not always the beat off. Some of them are chroni. catty hard up; it is their polzoy of run- ning up bills and not paying as they go that keeps them in continual bot water over their financial affairs. When peo- ple make up their minds to buy only what they can afford and not buy it if they can't pay for it, and thus live with- in their income, they are it a fair way to lay by something for a rainy day. Tho department stores are teaching the people a lesson in this respect, and al. though it might be a misfortune were trust to die out entirely, a cash business is the best for both buyer and seller. When the housewife gets into the habit of going to the corner grocery or to the butcher and running up a bill as long as your arm she will be sure to buy things she would not have b u ht b d h h money to pay down at the time. Consistency is a jewel that it's diffi- cult to counterfeit. Of course, any workingman would ra- ther work than be worked. Never judge a painting by the size of the artist's signature. Too many men who run into debt don't ever attempt to crawl out. A WOMAN'S BACK IS THE MAINSPRING OF HER PHYSICAL SYSTEM. TchsNgcdc,t Liable to Cause 'rears of Terrible - Suffering. No woman can be strong and healthy unitise the the kidneys are well, and regular in their action. When the kidneys are ill, the whole body is ill, for the poisons which the kidneys ought to have filtered out of the blood are left in the system. The female constitution is naturally mors subject to kidney disease than & man's; and what is more, a women's work is never done-wher whole life is ono con- tinuous steam. How many women have you heard say: "My, how my back aches!" Do yea know that backache is ono of the first signo of kidney trouble? It is, and should be at- tended to immediately. Other symptoms are frequent thirst, scanty, thick, cloudy or highly colored urine, burning sensation when urinating, frequent urination, puff- ing uffing under the eyes, swelling of the fent and ankles, floating Specks Wars the eyes, ate. Thea symptoms if not taken in tiros and cured at oneo, will cause yearn of terrible kidney suffering. All. these symptoms, and in fact, these diseases may be cured by the use of DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS They e.et directly on the kidneys, and maks them strong and healthy. 11lt's. Mary Galley, Auburn, 1 .S., writes: "b'or over four mantles I was troubled with a lame back and was unable to turn in bed without help. I was induced by a friend to try boatt'a Kidney Pills. After ming two- thirds of a, bort rayback was as well as ever." Trico 50 cents Dor bot or three boxes for $1 o5tat ail dealers or petit direct on re. A I , sl ewe enesteleVentialKeeteetweeeetetweetetateetarate==antee FOR GOOD HEALTH' 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. Itipwr;s rabu,cs 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 .fam. remedy. They are a dependable, hon- est ' 1rr d} vith a long and successful record, to r -i' 'a tlges"tan, dyspepsia, habitual and stubborn .,o' opation, t ,rensive breath, heartburn, dizziness, ttion of the heart, sleeplessness, muscular Aatism, sour stomach, bowel and liver com- 'ts, They stregthen weak stomachs, build up t 1-'wn systems, restore pure blood, good' appe.. .ad sound, natural sleep. Everybody derives goo tent benefit from a regular use of Ripans 'f b',Iles. Your dri ggist sells them. The five- c-..'nt packet is el, Yh for an ordinary occasion. The Family Lott:, lo cents, contain; a supply for a year. 1 1 s l�. Tiri -ry. Yri-' dowilli,,J,140 ,Y1lY,;V111 Niko, lid. , it L,6'll N4564,1,0,4:ALL I :I1u9.11110aledidatelidlidlinlititaritai *0.0li 104100 GFIit►0$110/6104.004 414tf+l **10 aieleet09011lbeeflOCIArtll0.00.9411i♦8A11118011 • • • * 0 0 0 • 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 i • • 0 4 Times to January lst, 1907 4. Times and Daily Globe . Times and Daily Mail and Empire 4. Times and Daily World.... + Times and Toronto Daily News., 4. Times and Toronto Daily Star 4. Times a,nd Daily Advertiser 4 Times and Toronto Saturday Night + Times and Weekly Globe . + Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 4. .e Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star 4. Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star. and + book " Farmer's Manual and Veterinary Guide 4. 4. Times and Weekly Witness "i"' Times and Montreal Weekly Herald 4. Times and London Free Press (weekly) 4. Times and London Advertiser (weekly) + Times and Toronto Weekly Sun + Times and World Wide - + Times and Northern Messenger, 'f' Times and Farmers' Advocate 4.+ We specially recommend our readers tosubacribe to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine. + Times and Farming World + Times and Presbyterian -a Times and Westminster + Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 4. Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) + Times and Youths' Companion 4, Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) Times and Sabbath Reading, New York Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto) Times and Michigan Farmer Times and Woman's Home Companion Times and Canadian Woman (monthly) London + Times and .American Sheep Breeder Times and Country Gentleman Times and Delineator.. Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine Times and Green's Fruit Grower Times and Good Housekeeping Times and Modern Women Times and It1eCalI's Magazine + Times and Pearson's Magazine Times and American Illustrated Magazine. - . + Tines and American Boy Magazine + Times and What to Eat . Times and Bookkeeper + Times and Recreation es Times and Cosmopolitan + Times and Ladies' Home Journal 4. Times and Saturday Evening Post 4. Times and Success + Times and Housekeeper 4. Times and Pilgrim -4. Tines and Poultry Keeper 4- Times and Hoard's Dairyman 4. Times and McClure's Magazine 4 Times and Munsey's Magazine Times and Rural New Yorker 4 Times and Vick's Magazine 1' Times and American Gardening + Times and health Culture is Times and Ram's Horn e Times and Fotir Track News a: Times and Breeders' Gazette Times and Practical Farmer . A0 * • w CLUBBI • .4. • RATE• FOR 1905 - 06.•• iismatiessinstasSMA-hiti,a w'ww The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below St for any or alI of the following publications : $1.0o 4.50. " 4.50 3.10 1.90 1.85 2.35 2.35 1.65 1,70 1.75 0.* 1.90 1.65 1.50 1.80 1.60 1.80 1.85 1.30 2,35 1.35 2.25 2.25 3.25 1.90 2.75 2.90 1.45 1.85 1.65 1.75 1.15 1,90 2.10 1.95 1.75 1.35 1.80 1,45 1.45 1.70 1.90 1.65 1,60 1.65 1,75 1,65 2.15 2.45 1.80 1,50 1.60 1.40 1.00 1.90 2.00 2.00 1.40 2.25 1,85 2.45 1.90 2.25 1.85 4. 4•" A When premiums are given with any -of above papers, subscribers will: secure such premiums when ordering tbrough us, same as if ordered direct• from publishers. al These low rates mean a considerable saving to subscribers, and ares' STRICTLY CASH 1N ADVANCE. Send remittances by- postal note, post* office or express money TIMES OFFICE, /�'�' 1 �"�i" ,l.I.A,1.i.ES O„L' ICE3 tempt of price. The 'Detatz radaey i'iil Coa 1 IVINGILUt, ONTARIO. • _ M Cie ramie Uate ,.„ 0014 111111lh •...*)I$.Mi►#�,1�1 06110 ,S i,!. 0.'l., f