HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-05-02, Page 3ACTORS USIN
PATENT MEDICINES
100 Honest Physician is Anxious
to Cure and Uses the Best
Available Remedies.
Tice proposed legislation through
the Dominion Parliament for the reg -
'elation of the manufacture and sale
et patent or proprietary medicines is
+zit the utmost importance, and it is
receiving a great deal of attention,
*tot only by the proprietary medicine
*nanufacturers, but also by the leading
xloetora and druggists, Every menu -
lecturer of reliable and high class
ar mmedies welcomes the bill as a step
an the right direction. The discussion
be. brought out the fact that the best
physicians in Canada and on the con-
tinent approve of and proscribe Psy-
echine in oases of the most difficult
character. In a recent instance of
arery serious throat and lung trouble
the patient had been using Paycbine.
Two leading United States specialists
were consulted, in addition to two
'eminent Canadian physicians. • Upon
Reaming what the patient was using,
:a sample of Psychine was taken and
eltnalyzed, b with the result that the
physicians advised its continuance.
They prescribed no other medicine but
Tsychine, with the result that the pa-
tient has fully recovered and is a
;splendid walking. and talking adver-
tisement for the wonderful curative
Grower of a remedy that will "stand
asp" before the keenest professional
.criticism and analysis. As a builder
up of the system and restorer of all
'wasted conditions, Psychine has no
,equal, and the best and most earnest
gahysioiirs recognize this fact.
At the age of25my lungs were in a terrible
:estate. I laid la grippe the year before; it settled
on my lungs and I kept steadily growing worse
kill I got down so low I was in bed for six weeks.
Iliad a consultation of doctors, and they said they
mould do nothing more for me. Then i sherted to
Viso Psychine. I took the medicine for more than
at year.It certainlydid wonders tor me. I am
now as strong as I was before my sickness." ,
MRS. 11. HOPE,
Morpotb, Ont.
Psychine, pronounced Si -keen, is the
greatest of tonics, building up the sys-
tem, emit purify.
tem, increasing the appetite, e, -
p y
ing the blood, aids digestion, and acts
siirectly upon tho throat and lungs,
giving tone and vigor to the entiro
system. At all druggists, (50c, and $1,
err Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, 179
ring Street Wast, Toronto.
WHO?
WINGUUAM TIMES,MAY 2 O()7
TO LIVE FOR 100 YEARS znde innnfniie hhrCbd
ed farther west, with the result that
- he landed in Florida and was killed
WHO ATTAIN CENTURY MARK by the Indians. Florida water, it is
well to remark, is not the beverage in
HAVE' VARIED EXPERIENCES. the search of which Ponce met hie
end. After the astrological and inedi-
•- • cinal experiments had failed animal
Do Not All Agree Upon the Reasons if prolonging Inc. Mesmer, a French-'
Which Conduce to Great Longevity man, was the discoverer of tills treat -
Tho Ancient Search For long ment, and from bins we get the znes-
tnerism of to -day.
Life -Consideration of the Ques- The Span of Life Increasing.
tion Through Mrs. Osler's Recent People are hardly so credulous now -
Attainment. allays, and as a rule they are much
more interested in living well than in
One of the most disappointing fes- ' living to an abnormal age. But me -
tures of extreule age is that those who dieal science is steadily increasing
attain it are unable to agree on the the span of life. One by one the dis-
reasons that conduce to it. There can eases that decimated our forefathers
be little doubt, for example, that the are run down and practically abolish -
kind of life led by Mrs. Featherstone ed. Sanitation and science are, in
Osler is quite different from the lives fact, prolonging life.
• led by many other centenarians, says
the Toronto Mail and Empire. The OLDEST MAN IN CANADA.
wife of a pioneer missionary in On-
tario, Mrs. Osler no doubt had her Interesting Career of Timothy Collins,
share of hardship in the earlier years. Born In 1785, Resident In Montreal.
One might therefore conclude that a
certain amount of roughing it was Probably the oldest man in the
favorable to extreme age, but modern world is a resident of Montreal. Tim -
science gives no authority for this be- othy Collins was born in 1785, and
lief. Some supposed experts go so far was, consequently, 20 years of age
as to say that the more caro one takes when Napoleon and Wellington met
to avoid exertion and hardship the at Waterloo. Collins arrived in Mont -
batter is one's chance of reaching the real in 1815, and after spending a
century mark. It is well known, for short time there, went to New York,
example, that Mr, Chamberlain, who where he remained about three years,
is a young man at 80, never takes a when he returned to Montreal and
step that lie can avoid. He shuns ex-
orcise, and yet his health and mental engaged in commercial business. Up to
vigor are remarkable. very recently, he talked interestingly
Beneficial Hardships. of the days when the business section
In favor of the theory that hard- of Montreal was entirely on St. Paul
ships have a most beneficial effect on and St. Francis Xavier streets, and
the buman constitution may be cited when St. Antoine street, now Craig,
the notorious longevity of soldiers, was a river of considerable proper -
especially of those who have been for- -tions, spanned at Bleary street by
tunate enough to draw pensions. It
a bridge. Much of his life was spent
is quite recently that the United in St. Coloba, about 40 miles from
States Government has ceased paying Montreal, where he followed agricul-
pensions to some soldiers who fought tural pursuits. While he was in, New
in the War of 1812. Hiram Cronk, of York he was married'to a Miss Brown,
Oneida County, N.Y., at the age of from Ireland.
103 applied for an increase in his pen- He refers with a gleam of humor
notactually He did
ion allowance.
sY
o th
t e issue of the first newspaper in
s
fight in the war, 'but he enrolled, and Canada, The Spectate= Canadiene.
so became entitled to a pension. " An Then he digs back into his memory
even more striking illustration of the to the day when the late Queen Vic -
healthfulness of exposure is furnish- toric was born, and tells with the
ed by Izai Rodofoski, a Russian, who greatest pleasure fmaginable of how
was recently reported alivepin War -
she
greatest
Empire saw at the age of 136. U to his'126th P e was stirred when
year Izai was in full possession of all she was made the Queen of England.
his faculties, but age came upon him Two years ago, when President Reese-
his
a single stroke, and when last velt was re-elected, Collins read the
heard of he belonged to the dead ra- news, and remarked: "But I was on
ther than the living, for he could earth when Washington was Presi-
neither see nor hear and had no sense dent."
of feeling. Collins has never taken over -much
Some Venerable Citizens. care of himself. He has never known
Next, in point of antiquity, comes to qac an umbrella, and in the cold -
an American, Noah Raby, who, at the est of winter days his overcoat, which
time the facts were gathered, lived in was far from being that worn by the
a poorhouse at Piscataway Township, average Canadian, He has been a
New Jersey, and was 129 years of age. constant smoker, and one of his great -
Like the long-lived Russian, Baby had est pleasures right up to the present
spent most of his life out of doors, has'been to enjoy a pipe before break -
working as a farm hand, and after- fast. In the household he was the
wards as the overseer of a plantation. heartiest eater.
He never slept more than six hours a A few months ago he was as much
day. Another of the world's centenari- grief-stricken as were the parents over
ans is -a Servian, Osman Turrenzi, the death of the 11 -year-old daughter
who Claims to have seen 126 winters. of Thomas Collins, who owns at least
His principal food has always been
One hundred houses in the east end of
grapes and nuts. Altogether 218 cases the cit
of persons ranging in age from 95 to y
136 have been reported upon. These
reports go to show that to be ab- Judge Clement of B. C.
stemious of diet, a hard worker, an Mr. W. H. P, Clement, who has
early riser, and to live in the open is recently been made Justice of the Su -
the way to acquire length of years. preme Court of British Columbia, has
In many cases of remarkable longev- won for himself a reputation as a
ity it has been found on enquiry that jurist and as a historian, Born at
the parents enjoyed a very long span Vienna, Ont., in 1853, and educated
of life. at Upper Canada College and Toronto
The Ancient Search For Longevity. - University, he obtained his LL.B. de -
It is on record, or, at all events, le- gree in 1881, and practiced for seven
gendary lore so relates, that the years as a member of the firm of Me -
Egyptians tried to extend their term earthy, Osler, Hoskin and Creelman,
on earth by liberal indulgence in sie- Then for a number of years he was
dorifics and emetics, Frequent per- hent of the firm of Clement & Spence,
spirations and emetics twice a month and was recognised as one of the most
were supposed to remove from the suce2,;:;ful members of the junior Barsystem the elements making for dig- in Toro to. In 1.3:14 Mr. Clanient. went
solution. The Pharoahs were certainly
wiser than their successors, for the went, and drifted to the Yukon, whore
Turkish bath is a good thing, while he engaged in mining. A short time
the stomach, unless carefully attend- at that occupation suffio.:d, and a fere
1 ed to, is known to be the seat of years later the young lawyer was
many complaints. It would have been down south again working up a fine
well for the men of the Middle Ages preelics in Nelson. This he retained
if they had had the comnfon sense of until elevated to the Bench.
the Egyptians. These people, how- While in Toronto Mr. Clement eon -
ever, resorted to astrology, and all tributcd'numerous articles on consti-
sorts of absurd nostrums, in the hope tiitional sule'ts to The Week, and
that they might escape the common else published his "Law of the Cana -
lot of all. The astrologers did a roar- ,)iail Constitution," a work which il•t':
'r'tr '•''p- enizr`.i at staaule.rd. Ia 1'rr
'tii-; " Fii;tory of C•nr:ula" won t'etz n'•ize
arie-•ed by the ertticrttienal tietivel ties
el the ve lions nrovincos for a ec.ilool
history of the Dominion. It has sieve
been arthorized for nee in the hi"rnr
grades by most of the Provincial I lu-
cation Dearth.
Who when our honeymoon was o'er.
.Arrived with packages galore,
And sai.i she'd stay a month or more?
(Think real hard.)
'Who made me weary of my life,
Who loved to stir connubial strife,
And always sided with my•wi e?
(Don't give it up )
Who confiscated my latchkey,
Sat up till the ma' hours for me;
"Who made me use a big, big D?
(Rhymes with "jaw", yea.)'
Who loved to catch me when I "fell,"
And such sweet stories used to tell,
Until my life became a -well
(The word isn't nice.)
Who dressed my wife in clothes so gay
And ran up bills for me to pay.
,And minded nothing I did say?
(Yes, that's ft.)
'Who sniffed my "batty" from afar,
:And could not bear a mild cigar.
Who said -"What wretches all men
are?"
(Heaven bless her!)
Mere Opinions,
(Sam Kiser)
A lame dog's teeth may be very sharp,
Never trust a man who takes it as a
compliment when the women refer to
him as "such a dear."
When yon hear women refer to an-
other woman as a oareless housekeeper
it is safe to assume that she is beautiful.
Napoleon would bavo had a vgry poor
opinion of himself if he could have seen
some of the people who claim to look
like him,
Children are often whipped for what
is called diplomacy when grown people
practice it.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
ce��sne
Carter's
Little Liver Pins.
Must Rettlr Signature of
See Vac -Simile Wrapper Belo*.
Test .ei al sud.ad easy
1&t*k l us snore
.e �• •ro Fuii SX11DACIl 1
MEM FOl'i DIWNES$.
E F01i,i1110USNESL
WER
FON
TOi1P1
D LIVER.
mu* ATION
FOR $Auaw;SKiN
K��1lf~ COMPLEXiDM
jawMURTWA.'k WX' Rk,
fl *�I�v���l
CURIE 5ICK HEADACHE*.
agnetisnt was tried for the purpose
in trade among the well-to-do, telling
them what stars ware adverse to.
?them and how to dodge these celes-
tial enemies.
Resort to the Talisman.
The amulet and the talisman were
consequences of the belief in astrol-
ogy. It was supposed that certain
metals could counteract the influence
of a man's evil star upon him. Thus,
persons traveled with necklaces of
iron or bracelets of copper to keep the
star at arm's length. The carrying of
a potato or of a horse chestnut to
ward off rheumatism roust be the mo-
dern adaptation of this fashion.
While the astrologers labored with the
stars, other equally potent operators
made search for the "Elixir of Life,"
doses of which, taken "three times a
day in a little water," were expect-
ed to restore youth and to postpone
death. One man -a count -professed
to have produced the decoction, but
when the liquid was closely examined
it was found to be a mixture of san-
dalwood, fennel, and senna. Another
count, Cagliostri by name, made a
great fortune in France b' the pro-
duction nad sale of an "Elixir of
Life," which was nothing more nor
Iess than a stimulant, producing un-
natural activity on the part of pa-
tients, and requiring to be''uaed con-
stantly and in increasing quantities.
It must have been the forerunner of
whiskey!
The Fountain of Youth.
In all probability it was the success
of this charlatan that induced Ponce
de Leon, one of the pioneer visito<s
to the Continent of America, to make
his journey hither. This man had
heard that somewhere on the Wes-
tern sea there was an island upon
which the fountain of perpetual youth
was forever pouring forth its valuable
waters. Persons partaking of the
stream Could not possibly get old, t rq
as they might, and death was out of
the question. A table 'water having
this virtue Would bring a splendid
trice per bottle, Pollee de Loon sailed
ai Emericttt ;i»enb yapnia , tIxe diacosr r
Are a True heart Tonic,
Nerve Peed and Brood Enricher. They bolls
up and renew all the Worn out lend wasted
tissues of the body. and restore perf ict health
and vior to heentire YYst
edi.4
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Nervous Pros.
triune. Bram Pos.. Lack 01 Vit.11ty. After
Effects of La (71.1PP t.. Ane.mih Week and
Dizzy S ells L s of Memory, P t
ita
tlnd o
t
e entccine of eoar y Seo teke aBreat, e. Ire by usiig
Mil;burn's Heusi tied Nerve Pips.
Prloe 50o. 41,0k or 3 fel' $t.45. All defilers or
Talc T. Mizi ni rt Co., Luttrit r, Toronto, Ont,
Plaster of Paris Bananas, ARE YQU GETTING ANYWHERE
ldunches of bauauas that are alms
lately unfit for food haus out in front
of the wholesale produce commission
houses. Some of them have remained
there putil they have grown rusty with
age,
"Couldn't get a finer looking; bunch +
than that," said one of the dealers
the other day, "even it it is plaster of
parts. We used to put out the real j
article for a sign, but the peddlers who
came down here had a way of pulling
one or two out of the bunch that hap-
pened to be hanging there ou the
shook. The swan boys, too, had a way
of making a grab for it banana or two.
By the time the bunch was an duty
under the awning, for an hour it was
no longer presentable to the aesthetic
sense. So we began to cultivate the
make believe article, which is not
quite so palatable, but just as good for
advertising. And even at that some
youngster in his haste will grab pias.
ter of paris fruit and get away with
It before he realizes that he has made
off with something bad for his diges-
tion."
A Meal of Locusts.
In the West Indies the negroes eat
freely of the big grub found in palm
trees, The fat, white morsel, which
they call "grugru," is not cooked or
salted. The aborigines of Australia
lire almost entirely on a butterfly
known as the bagong, The dies ap-
pear in batches on the rocks, and the
natives smother thorn with smoke from
tires built below. It is said that a Hot-
tentot. with au appetite made sharp
by the simple life, can devour 300 fat
locusts at a sitting and feel better sat-
isfied than if he had paid $3 for a ten
course dinner. The Arabs dry the lo-
custs and pulverize them into flour
for breadmaking purposes. The Moors
make a stew of them, and after boiling
in water for a few minutes they are
eaten with salt, pepper and vinegar.
The locusts found in Central Africa
thenative negroes
ereenormous andn
gi
cut them intwo and fry them is fat
and find them not only appetizing, but
nourishing. A flight or these big lo -
rusts is a matter of tribal thanksgiv-
ing.
Snakes With Two Heads.
I have lately beeu assured by more
than one of my friends that they have
seen itt northern India snakes with two
heads -1. e., without a tail, but with a
second and perfectly formed 'head In
the place where the tall ought to be.
They assure me that there are speci-
mens in northern India museums and
that these freaks of nature are fre-
quently found by the natives. The rid-
er is added that the natives declare
that each bend lives and performs ac-
tive service for six months in the year
in turn. The snakes are said to grow
to about three feet in length. I my-
self have killed a small snake with
two heads, but these were both at the
same end of the reptile, a very differ-
ent matter, which is, I believe, a well
known freak and in the same category
with two beaded calves.-PIoneer.
(8. R. i iser, in Chicago Record -Herald).
You are rushing, YOU are straining,with
a grim look on your face;
Yon are turning from all pleasures; in
your breast peaoe his no place; -
You have ceased to find contentment in
the nooks you used to know;
You have ceased to oare for others whom
you clung to long ago;
You err) straining, youare striving
thtougti the dark ways awl the fair,
Bat. oh mirthless, eager brother, are yon
ger dog anywhere?
In your haste yon have forgetter how to
huger or to [.wile
When a child looks up and greets you or
would claire your care awhile;
Though. the wild rose sheds its petals in
the lonely pasture still,
And glad breezes sway the blossoms in
the orchard on the hill,
You aro too much in a hurry, and too
occupied with caro,
But, with all your gruff eode(mom , are
you getting auywhere?
You have fled from sweet contentment;
trouble haunts you it your dreams;
It is long since you have loitered on the
banks of shaded streams
Chat go singing to the pebbles they have
shade so clean and white,
And have polished at their leisure and
their pleasure day and night;
You no longer know the solace that is
in the sweet old air,
But, with all your ceaseless moilipg, are
yon getting anywhere?
Yon have given up old fancies, you have
left old friends behind;
You are getting rich in pocket, but are
poor iu heart end mind;
You have lost your sense of beauty in
your haste to push ahead,
And along the way you travel bitterness
and grief are spreao;
Yon have ceased to care how others
bend beneath the woes they bear,
But, with all your cruel st••iving, are
you getting anywhere?
Man and His Dress.
The well dressed man wears clothes
that no one ever notices; at business,
except in the very warmest weather,
usually dark. No one ever notices
clean linen, while linen soiled ever so
slightly is .very conspicuous. No one
ever notices a hat unless it is of ultra
shape, dirty or shabby. No one ever
notices shoes unless they are loud or
need blacking or are rim down at the
heels or shabby. No one ever notices
needing*
1
clean finger nails, while those
attention are always conspicuous. The -
man should not be lost sight of by the
conspicuousness of his clothes, either
from being overdressed or shabbily
dressed.
The One and the Naught.
Oliver Wendell Holmes once sent two
poetical letters to the "postof ice" of an
Episcopal fair at Pittsfield, Mass. In
one of them the first stanza was:
Pair lady, whosoever thou art,
Turn this poor leaf with tenderest care
And hush, oh, hush, thy beating heart.
The one thou lovest will be there.
On turning the "poor leaf" there was
found a dollar bill, with some verses
beginning:
Pair lady, lift thine eyes and tell
If this is not a truthful totter.
This is the one (1) thou lovoth well.
And naught (0) can shake thee love it
better (10).
•
Occultism.
It is noteworthy that supernatural-
ism prevailed just as strongly at the
other side of the globe among the ab-
origines of the new World, The coming
of the Spaniards had been prophesied
to the Mexicans by their caciques, and
the prophecies were sung amid loud
lamentations at their festivals. -Lon-
don Onlooker.
The Hot Wird From the Desert.
"Iihamsiu" is the hot wind from the
desert which blows out of the Sahara
upon 1;gypt. The word means fifty,
from the idea that it lasts for fifty
days, The "kbllmsin" is terribly hot
arid dry, and sometimes brings pes-
tilence with it.
Her "No."
Tom -Bess said "No" to mo last
night, but I don't think she really could
tell why. she 010 It, Nell --Oh, yes, she
could. She told me. 'Tom -Did sbe?
Nell --Yes; she said she didn't think
you'd take "No" for an answer. -
About the Only Place.
A company of settlers in naming
their new town called it Dictionary,
because as they said,"that's the only
place where peace, prosperity and hap-
,.
loess ate always s found. y
The ilotIon of Clod Which makes him
a manufacturer of footstools, our enc.
Mica being the raw material, la still
Repaint in Rotas ;quarters. Purist
Out beyond you there is silence that no
man e
a maywake;
ver ,
In the distance there is d'trkness that no
morning's light may break;
At the journey's eud dishouor as for
those who day by day
Cheat Choir souls and dull their senses
as they rush upon the way!
Yon are passing many pleasures which
yon have the right to share,
As you rush to fill the hollow men will
dig for you somewhere.
DINKELSPIEL'S EPPYGRAMS.
'V, Hobart in New York American)
(GeoA e )
Clothes doan'd make der man, but
they help der man to make his bluff.
Der meaning of Vorry is to go throngh
a liot of troubles vich nefer happen.
01d age ehould alvays hat our respect
mit der eggeception of a sprink chicken.
Der man dot has so much money he
doan'd know vot to do mit itbhenerally
does it,
It deir servant giris did not leave dem
so often some vimmens vond lose der
pleasure of vorr; ing abouid it,
If ve all remitted vot ve disk ve desert
dare vonld be gadding left for der udder
fellow.
Der trouble mit der man mit too much
"go" in him is dot he nefer stops ven he
gets dare.
Ohenerally you vili find der man dot
vakes up to find himself a famousness
has been sleeping mit von eye open yet.
A man's ooul is not fed through h
mouth.
es
LEHIGH VALLEY COAL
Come with the crowd and leavr your order
for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from
dirt and clinkers. It has no equal.
MORMI•1111111111, ' , . 11 .1
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til
Il "l- HNCE-STAYS" MS.ttE DIL,LON
{ TWtGZ AS .ST;ZONG
Shortstirl, hard, steel wire staysmake a"htnge•liko"
joint at every lateral wire on the l)illiou fence.
1 hose , Flinge-stays" give our fence a greater degree of
elustteity-enable it to witbstaud greater strain. They ai.t
like, and teeny are, hinges -make our fence swing or spring
back into shape after receiving a heavy blow, ortheunusual
P: ebsul a canned by a furious b ell or other animal endeavoring to
i"ih Lis waythroutd' to freedom. Catalogue tolls more about
0418 "twice as stroeg"f3aoa,
The Owen Sound Wire fence Ca, Limited,
Owen Sound, Ont.
NICE-srAr
rENCE
W. .T GOTTLD - LOOAL AGENT.
eseseseeseeelleelseeelebeeese +karmeell•sese seesseerreeele f
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CLUBBINGj
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Times and Success ... 1.S0
Times atd Housekeeper 1.50
.Times and Pilgrim . 4 , . 1 90
�' Times and Poultry Keeper 1.40
4 Times and Hoard's Dairyman 1 DO
Times and McClure's Magazine 1.90
* Times and Munsey's Magazine 2 CO
4. Times and Rural New Yorker ,.. 2.CO
. Times and Vick's Magazine .. -1.40
+ Times and American Gardening 2 25
•l• Times and Health Culture .................... 1.8r,
• 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
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The man who never makes it neces-
sary for his friends to stand by him can
be teemed that he will always have
plenty of them.
The Merchant's Bank of Canada have
closed the Formosa branch. The bank
authorities considered that the Formosa
bank scarcely paid well enough t,, -war-
rant them in continuing it. All the de-
posits in the Formosa branch were trans-
ferred to Mildmay.
-•I•
4.
4.
4.
-t•
Dr: WOOD'S
flORWAY PINE
SYRUP
Cures COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHITIS,
110ARSENESS and all THROAT AND
L.IJNG TROUBLES. Miss Moresco E.
Mailman, New Gerinany, N.S.: writesr*
e.
t m with left o
I lead a cola which�
bad cough. I was afraid I Was going
try
was advised to
Into Consuniptfoh
DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP.
e I had
It i
n it,but bete[
' e faith Iittt f
I had
taken one b,ttle I began to feel better,
and After the second I felt as well as
°vet. My cough has completely disop
peered.
1VICE sg Cl+,liT S..•
:-..
•
•
i
4
4.
When premiums are given with any of abcve [stars. eu1 e iI ere will!
seenre such premiums when ordering through ns, some ab if ordrrad direct;
from peblishers.
't'hePe low rates mean a ronsidetable Baying to BnbFrril-rrr!, end Are
S ICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE. Send rstn3ttanCeb ty lotal i
rte, Pest
r
office or express money order, addresshtg
TIMES OFFICE,
1 GVI�7GF3��M, ONTARIO.
041011•414.61111111011011““11+1.1 1000111000111.4.44.000100.0010.114