The Wingham Times, 1913-07-31, Page 35
WINGHAM TIMES, JULY 31, 1913
A striking example of thestrengthof
modern trusts is brought out ina recent
report of the International Harvester
Company. This concern employe over
40,000 men. At the close of 1912 the
plant property and real estate held by
the company was worth $79,365,617.
The total combined assets at Decembt r
31, 1912, were $242,9.20,513. The total
sales of agricultural implements and
machines in 1012 amounted to $114,90i,-
712. The total surplus of the company
at the end of 1913, after paying wages
and dividends was $31,,586,544.
Fast Service Toronto to Winnipeg
Via Grand Trunk Railway, Northern
Navigation Company, and Grand
Trunk Pac fic Railway.
"Steamship Express" leaves Toronto
10.45 a.m. each Monday, Wednesday
and Saturday via Grand Trunk Railway,
stopping at Hamilton, Brantford, Paris,
Woodstock, Ingersoll, London and
Stratroy, arriving Sarnia Wharf 4.00
p.m., making direct connection with the
Northern Navigation. Company's palatial
steamers leaving Sarnia Wharf 4.15 p. m.
for Sault Ste, Marie, Ont., Port Arthur
and Fort William. Steamer leaving
Sarnia Wharf Mondays dces not call at
Port Arthur, On the arrival of Steam-
ers at Fort William, special trains of
the highest standard leave that point at
4.45 p.m via Greed Trunk Pacific Rail-
way, arriving Winnipeg 7 45 a.in. next
morning. The service afforded by this
route is the finest in every respect and
includes Parlor -Cafe, Parlor -Cars and
Coaches between 'Toronto and Sarnia
Wharf, excellent service on the steamers
of the Northern Navigation Company,
including the "Hamonic," the finest and
fastest steamship on the Great Lakes.
Standard Sleeping ears (Electric Lights
in Lower and Upper Berths), Colonist
Sleeping Cars (Berths Free) Dining cars
and coaches on the Grand Trunk Pacific
Railway between Fort William and
Winnipeg, also Standard Sleeping Cars
to Saskatoon and Edmonton:
Special trains run the reverse way -
from Sarnia Wharf to Toronto, each
Tuesday, Friday and Sunday.
Full particulars, reseravations on
steamers or trains at all Grand Trunk
Ticket Offices.
H. B. Elliott City Passenger and
Ticket Agent. Phone 4.
W. F. 73urgmanStation Ticket Agent.
Phone 50.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
C A S T O Y'R'bvi. I A
CUR
'Sick Headache and relieve all the troables Incl.
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side &c. While their most
remarkable emcees has 'been shown in curing
SICK
>Qeadache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are
equally valnablein Constipation, curing and pre-
venting this annoyingcomplaint whiletheyalso
correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulatethe
liver and regulate the bowels, Even it they only
cnrcd
HEAD
Ache they would be almo st priceless to thosewho
suffer from this distressing complaint; butfortu.
nately their goodness does notend here,and those
who once try them will Sndtheso little phis vales•
able insomany wayys that they will not be wit.
ling to do without them. Butaftcr all clots head
ACHE
is the bane of so many /bee that hero is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while
Others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small and
Very easy to take. One or two pillsmake a dose.
They are etricti vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle fiction please au who
ase-thema
onus uEtatna doss NSW YOBS.
kall lilt halm halos
WANTE
Good Local Agent
at onc:; to repent the
Rid and Reliable
Fonibill
A splendid
Nurtrie
COMMON SENSE IN DIET
HEALTHY APPETITE IS THE BEST
GUIDE FOR EATING
Three important Discoveries Recently
Made Have Exploded Many of the
Views of Food -Faddists, Says Dr.
C. W. Saleeby-Proteins Are Not
All the Same and Food Valdes
Must Be Reconsidered.
The food faddists notr.:thstanding,
diet is a subject worth talking. They
advocate a variety of views, each of
whieh is contradicted by the expert•
ence of the great majority of man-
kind; but, though they are doubtless
all wrong, thus judged -and the proof
of the pudding is notoriously in the
eating -yet they serve the useful pur-
pose of keeping interest in the sub-
ject alive, and stimulating men of
science to expose their errors, and so
advance our knowledge. Three recent
discoveries in dietetics are worthy of
record, very briefly before we try to
apply to our own ease the principles
which they illustrate, says Dr. 0. W.
Saleeby, in The Manchester Weekly
Times,
The long-standing puzzle offered by
the disease called beri-beri has been
solved. This familiar malady of tropi-
cal regions is not an infection, not a
nervous disease, but is due to a diet of
rice rains which have been "pole
fished" -deprived of the cortex or coat
of the grain.
The most surprising discovery
teaches us that the coat of rice grain
contains a substance so necessary for
health that the man who eats polished
rico' and does not obtain this special
substance from some other constitu-
ent at his foots must fall gravely and
even mortally ill. Feed him now upon
ut•pclished rice acid he will recover.
Peri-beri, then, after long disputation
and years of failure, takes its place
atr,nng the diseases, like scurvy, that
are due to minute errors in diet. The
difference between unpolished and pol-
ished rice is the difference between
life and death.
That disease may not interest us
much, but rickets touches us more
nearly. The medical inspection of
schoolchildren shows t
w that thisdis-
bate is one of the chief enemies of
pur ,child -life. It is probably of the
'utmost importance in leading on to
tuberculosis, upon which we are now
beeir.ning to spend millions per an-
num.
It is not verynearlycertain that
rickets are due to the absence from
the diet of some constituent hitherto
unknown, which is present in minute
quantities in, for instance, whole meal
firur, but not in the whitest, which is
the starchiest, form of flour still so
fashionable. Like the beri-beri of the
tropics, like scurvy which for many
decades barred mankind from attain-
ing to the Poles of his planet, rickets
is a disease due to a minute but mo-
mentous error in diet. We begin to
Ree that there must be substances in
a healthy diet which are vital for
health, but which we cannot name of
'which the text -books on diet have no
'word, and about which no chemistry
le^n as yet make any statement.
• Thirdly, we have lately learnt that
our former statements about "food
values," based upon the amount of
"protein" (formerly called proteid) in
foods must all be revised, because we
(supposed that any protein was, for
purposes of our nourishment, the same
as any other protein, but that is not
ao. Protein, like the abuinen of milk,
of white of egg, of wheat flour, are the
' tnost complicated chemical substances
in the world. They are peculiar to
each species of animal and plant, and
even to each tissue of each animal and
Plant.
A protein is made up of a number of
building stones of molecules, in cer-
tain proportions, and of certain kinds,
`which vary in each case. For our
lives we require proteins, The infant
which is nursed by its mother gets hu-
man proteins. So does the' oannibal.
The rest of mankind requires to feed
on non -human proteins, which have to
be digested or broken down in the
body, and then the separate pieces
have to be put together, according to
the human pattern, to make the only
kind of proteins which our blood will
tolerate.
Hence the student of diet can no
Ionger assume that an ounce of pro-
tein is worth so much to a lUaIA, ;l)o
matter what kind of protein it is. D.
ferent proteins are of very dot
values to us, according to what Only
contain; and as to which of them are
the most valuable (apart from the diet
of the infant and cannibal), we as yet
know scarcely nothing.
Such being the recent additions to
our knowledge, additions the import-
ance of which can scarcely be over-
stated, what conclusions should we
draw? Surely they are very obvious.
Our new knowledge of diet teaches
us that we know much less than we
thought.
But the lower animals, who feed so
!wisely in their natural homes, know
nothing at all. How do they succeed
so well, being so ignorant? Plainly,
because they have trustworthy appe-
tites, and follow them. Perhaps we
should do better if we, too, had trusts
'worthy a�ppeties and followed them.
Pew of us are in that happy state, for
we have acquired so many tastes that
s 'our appetities are no longer healthy
and trustworthy. But some of us, here
!slid there, haws natural appetites, as
d,ildren have until we spoil them by
list 01 fruitanti ± ignorant restrictions and injunc-
orriarn. Dial stock for Fall 'Bons; and this is what such natural
appetites teach.
Delivery in 'I913 arid They proclaim, with the utmost
Spriing 1_)il,very in r9t,r. 'force, the truth that "Man shall not
Start at ()nee :Ct)tl C3.. liv
UJ:eea by bread alone." The appetite
variety, and if there is any one
clse,ive 11•' ritory. \irt, • filet of a healthy diet which science
stictrrl.' h,ln.' ti0I tri t tint 'may now confidently assert it is that
'the healthy d th diet is
varied. The rea-
Y
tit ;t;' l t:•.v high :;t t:0 n -;'son becomes plain, when we remember
Missions. rickets. eases of beri-beri ,and scurvy and
rickets.
• Our health depends not merely upon
Write for fell 1a''ticflirlfg. ; a sufficient supply of the gross,
visna ingredients of diet, like fat
a �4 f , a r sugar, which we burn to keet
Of UII� 86 eiii warts. It Hiss depends, no drntbt, up-
°°°++++�we bon n constant supply of a•number of
Torontoial;ltia, x'i(f 1 11" Down substances.
A MESSAGE EROM A
IWOMAN TO VIOMEN
•
"Every Woman Should Take
"Fruit -a -tines"
1.4AIG1tr.wt, ONT., MAX 12th. 19UI
"Kindly publish this letter of mine
• 1 yon think it will benefit other women
el,o inig„t he afflicted with the diseases
have had in the past, but an, now,
,''inks to "bruit -a -Lives", completely
:(red of. It is thy firm belief that every
• -amen should take "rruit-a-tives" if
-!:e wants to keep herself in good health.
Before taking "Fruit -a -fives", I was
rmtstautly troubled with what is toms
:u]y known as "Nerves" or severe
c'rvonsness. This Nervousness
' ',eight on the most violent attacks of
.. k Headache, for which I was con-
•':t;tty taking doctors' medicine without
.:1 permanent relief. Constipation was
n a source of great trouble to me and
:"r which ch the Doctors said "I would have
take medicine all my life", but
'tad aa-tives" banished all these trou-
;1. and now I am a well woman"
MRs. PRRD. GADKE.
ger a box, 6 for peso -trial size, 25c.
• -alers or sent prepaid on receipt of
by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
BELGRAV.E.
(Intended for last week).
A goodly representation of the mem-
bers of the Wingham Branch of the
Women's Institute joined the Belgrave
Branch and their friends in a choice
picnic on the beautiful river park of
Charles Wilkinson, 4th line, Morris,
Thursday, July 10th. Weather appear-
ed dreary in the morning but at noon
clouds disappeared, the sun shone in all
its splendor, a refreshing cool breeze
cleared the atmosphere and this after
the extreme heat had an invigorating
effect on those present. This was
i
evident by the enthusiasm in which the
sports were entered into. A game of
baseball was played, the players being
chosen by James Taylor and Clayton
I1 Procter and were representative of both
i branches. These were assisted by two
iI or three of the members of the other
sex and resulted in a humorous and in-
teresting game. During the afternoon
i old acquaintances were renewed while
some of the more thoughtful revelled
'in the beauties of Nature along the
river bank. Hot tea was served,
`which was made on the ground and
!abundant refreshments were served to
the satisfaction of all present. The
afternoon's proceedings were brought
I to close by a brisk game of foot ball,
' which was played by the youths and
the married men and was entered into
by the latter with no small degree of
enthusiasm. All dispersed to their hordes
unanimous that the grounds were ideal
with the Maitland River on the East
and North, a range of hills on the West
i and South, a beautifnl level valley
beneath, the weather lovely, the crowd
good natured, the picnic the best that
has been held here under the auspices
of the Institute.
S'l. BET.ENS.
(Intended for last week)
Miss Myrtle Phillip visited over Sun-
day with her mother at Listowel,
Mr. and Mrs. John Clark, of Toronto
are visiting the former's parents here.
Miss Austin of Listowel is visiting
with Miss Mina Rutherford.
Rev. R. W. Crow, of Fergus will
preach in the Presbyterian church here
next Sabbath.
Mr. Will ldcCrostie visited over Sun-
day with his uncle Dr. Irwin, of Wing -
ham.
Miss Muriel Hall, of Toronto is visii-
ting at the home of Mrs. R. R. Miller.
Mr. John Miller, of Windsor is visiting
at his home here.
Miss Margaret Miller gave a party to
her young friends on Monday afternoon.
Miss Lillian Clark has been engaged
at St. Helens for a salary of $700.
Miss L. Shaw, of Bluevale is the new
teacher for Fordyce school,
The Ladies' Institute picnic ,.will be
held on July 31st at the Maitland river
10th concession.
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan McDonald
spent Sunday at Hugh McDonald's.
We are pleased to report that Mrs.
Donald Murray's health is much im-
proved.
A WISH.
(H. H. Barston.)
To face each day of life
Nor flinch from any task.
To front the moment's strife
And only courage ask.
To be a man unawed
By aught but heaven's command
Though men revile or plaud,
To take a stand -and stand.
To fill my life with toil
With God's free air and light;
To shun the things that spoil,
That hasten age and night;
To sweat beneath my hod,
Nor ask a better gift
From self or man or God
Than will and strength to lift.
To keep my spirit sweet
Though head and hand be tried;
Each brother man to greet,
Nor leave him uninspired;
To keep my spirit fed
On God unceasingly,
That none may lack his bread
Who walk this way with me.
In 1912 the commonwealth govern-
ment of Australia distributed $11,176.-
05 old age and invalid pensions.
WAS TROUBLED WITH
tl'�41 utxY 1 ESTI S
Fon "ri ; N YEARS.
i 2 wst Bes;,a;rs..i n,• Ever Gelling Well,
T:5_011 BITTERS
14211.
r•:;.3,1.Ar•c tACliAY,Hunter's hfoun-
1t. S,.:;., ,,1.1 "1 was troubled with
•e len tee Num! Omit ten years.
•1 t•tors' medicine, claim -
es; tee mew: `.• flue, but all withotit sue-
s, .•e ties es. rd of the many ctires
;,, , t,• , , el; Blood Ilittet s4 1
Accidt•] t • ;', a trial. After takao
two bottle ,, 1 •.u>; completely cured.
My appetite •.' ::, mm very poor, now
is .
;rood, and 1 .. t..t most everything
V.',thout any t., e,e.11'le feelings. I
cul :strongly re m:en ml 11.11.11. to any-
one s.uffermg fro.i, naliiestion.,,
Brrnocu Beam tltrrtee is the best
ktiown remelt, for all Stomach Troubles.
It 1•'- . ..n • t ills ',est' et for thirty-
,. • t nuly by.
AN IDEAL VACATION TRIP
VIA GREAT LAKES STEAMHIPS
At this season of the year when so
many are planning their vacation trip
the question "Where To Go" naturally
arises -What could be more delightful
than a Great Lakes trip, where the air
is pure, the sun shines and cool refresh-
ing breezes blow?
Few people realizes with what ease
and speed a trip from the East to Fort
William and Winnipeg, can be made via
the Canadian Pacific Great Lakes Ex-
press Steamships. You can leave Tor-
onto 12.45 noon Tuesday or Saturday
and arrive Winnipeg 9,40 p. m. Thurs-
day or Monday. Fifty-seven hours from
Toronto to Winnipeg; twelve hours fast -
ore service. For
those
than any other
who wish to leave on different days in
the week, and have a little more time
on the water, the trip can be made leav-
ing Toronto 12.45 noon Mondays, Wed-
nesdays and Thursdays, arriving in Win-
nipeg
r sY
ds
nipeg 11.40a. m. Thursdays, Sates
and Sundays.
If you are contemplating a trip, don't
let this slip your memory, Canadian Pa-
cific Steamships make the fastest time,
have the best of accomodation, and the
table is unexcelled. Full particulars
and reservations on trains from W. H.
Willis, Town Agent, J. H. Beemer, Sta-
tion Agent.
onauosS.
Council met at Town Hall, Teeswater,
July 21st, as per motion of last meeting.
The Minutes of the last meeting were
read and on motion of Armstrong and
Case were adopted.
Donaldson -Armstrong -That James
Thompson be appointed to have the hill
on 30th Sideroad Con. 9 put in repair as
it is in a very bad condition -Carried
Thompson --- Armstrong - That the
Clerk strike a rate and make a levy on
parties connected with the Colvin and
McKenzie drain to make up the balance
required over and above the Engineer's
estimate, and to notify all parties to
that effect and to have all accounts paid
on or before the first of August so
that the business of the drain can be
settled up. -Carried.
FINANCE REPORT.
F. S. Ballagh 120 yds gravel .. $ 9 60
Peter Murray putting in Culvert
30 sideroad 5 011
C. Acket concrete crossing Town
line Culross share.... ...... G 00
Mich Fischer putting in Culvert
1st sideroad Con. 10.... 4 00
Mich Fischer 67 yds. gravel and
road 6 36
S. D. A. Stobo 161 yds gravel 12 88
John Becking 60 yds gravel .. 4 80
Alex. Thompson one day's work
on road
Jno. Goodman one day's work on
road men and team
Pat Mauley one day's work two
and team5 00
Jno, McAllister 05 yds gravel 8 60
Wm. Manly 60 yds gravel 5 52
J. Scott bal. contract gravelling '' 52
Jno Scott 136 yds gravel and road ' . 88
J. Sillick inspecting contract lOth .1 06
Culvert pipe Co. Guelph Corru-
gated pipe 70 60
T.P McDonald lambkilled by dogs 4 00
Ed. Bell bal. due on drain contract 121) 00
Geo,#Kritzwieser building culvert
Con 6
Jos, Murray working grader and
repairs for same
Wm. Wall contract gravelling
Boundry Greenoch
Jos. Drautman 99 yds gravel and
road
Wm. Campbell 60 yds gravel ..
Jos Murray loading grader
Wm. Wall 105 yds gravelma
Wm. Wall inspecting contract
Peter Schumacher removing jam
in creek 5 0
Wm. Elliott 50 7 -in tile 2 2
W. McKenzie sheep killed by doge 10 (1
Jno. Aitkens inspecting sheep, 4 0
Jro, Kennedy
hauling g
stone el
t-
tingbrush
on boundry Culross
and 'l'urnberry Culross share 10 0
McKinnon Bros. contract on
boundry Culross and Turn -
berry, Culross share..... 18 2
A Stapleton inspecting contract
on boundry Culross end Turn -
berry, Culross share 5 1
1 50
5 110
Canadian
National
Exhibition
EXPANSION YEAR
New Livestock Department
Everything in Agriculture
Exhibits by the Provinces
Exhibits by Dominion Government
Exhibits by Foreign Countries
e
Acres of Manufactures
MAGNIFICENT ART EXIIIBIT
Paintings from Germany, Britain,
United States and Canada
Educational Exhibits
Cadet Review
Japanese Fireworks
Canada's Biggest Dog Show
.
America's Greatest Cat Show
AND NERC THE
BURNING OF ROME
The Musical Surprise
The Musical Ride
Auto -Polo Matches
Circus and Hippodrome
Roman Chariot Races
Athletic Sports
Great Water Carnival
IRISH GUARDS BAND
Score of other Famous Bands
Twelve Band Concerts Daily
Wreck of the Airship
Withington's Zouaves
New Giant Midway
Grand Double Bill of Fireworks
PATRICK CONWAY'S BhiND)
Aug.23 1913 Sept.8
TORONTO,
Jno. Falconer cutting brush and
stumps on sideroads........ 9 50
Andrew Weishar building bridge
lst sideroad Con. 2 75 00
A. Weishar pt payment contract
filling approach to bridge 1st
sideroad Con. 2 .. 37 00
Auth McDonald bal on contract
on Colvin and McKenzie drain 434 25
Wm. Elliott tile.,.. 150 90
W. Carlick 56 yds gravel and road 5 48
Donaldson -Case -That the finance
report as read be adopted and orders is-
sued on the Treasurer for payments of
the accounts. That this Council do now
adjourn to meets again on Monday Aug.
25 or at the call of the Reeve.
Ceras. BUTTON. Clerk.
47 00
ENJOY THE COOL ATLANTIC
• SEA BREEZES
Those contemplating a Sea -side trip
should bear in mind the excellent train
service offered by the Canadian Pacific.
Fast Express trains leave Montreal 9.15
p.m. daily and. 9.0o a.m, daily except
Sunday, for Portland and other Maine
Coast Resorts.
Connecting trains leave Toronto 9.00
a.m. and 10.311 p.m. daily. Day train
carries dining car and parlor car and
Night train standard sleepers to Mon-
treal.
Through standard sleepers for St. And-
rews, N. 13, leave Montreal 7.25 p.m.
daily. Connecting train leaves Toronto
0.00 a.m. daily.
The Canadian Pacific is the only line
operating through parlor and sleeping
ears between Montreal. Old Orchard
Beach, Biddeford Sac:;, Kennebunk and
Kennebunkport.
Full p.irticulars from anv Canadian
Pacific Agent or write M. (1. Murphy,
District Passenger Agent, Toronto, Ont.
Seven persons were killed in an ex-
plosion in the Canadian Explosives
(Company's factory at Beloeil, near
Montreal.
D1ARRH 'A)
DYSENTERY,
SUMMER COMPLAINT
AND ALL
BOWEL TROUBLES
ARE CURABLE BY THE
USE OF
Dr. Fowler's
Extract of
Wild Strawberry.
MR. Wax. R. GREEN, St. John, N.B.,
29 45 writes:-" As I have had the pleasure
of testing DR. FOWI,ER'S EXTRACT of
15 54 Ulan STRAW/JERRY, I might say it is the
only remedy I would recommend. Last
8 92 summer, I bad a very severe attack of
5 80 Diarrhoea and Vomiting. 1VIy doctor
8 00 treated me without result, and friends
9 40 advised me to try the above remedy.
2 62 After a few doses I vas completely cured,
and ever since I Neve never been with -
0
5
0
0
0
:,
YOU PAY WHEN CURED
Drs. K. 46 K. TAKE ALL RISKS
Cured by the N w Method Treatment
al- NO NAMES ORI'HOTOS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT ..
NERVOUS DEBILITY
Thousands of young and middle-aged men are annually swept to premature grave
through Early io ucretioa,, Excesses and Blood Diseases. If you have any o1 the fol.
lowing symptoms consult us before it is too tate. Ara you nervous and weak, despoil.
dent and gloomy, specks before the eyes, with dark elrcles under them, weak back,
kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and losses, sediment in urine,
pimples on the face oyes sunken, hollow cheeks careworn expression, poor memory,
lifeless,.dlstrustful lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, changeable
moods,, weak manhood, premature decay, bone paths, hair loose, sere throat, eto.
YOU WILL BE A WRECK
Our New Method Treatment can cure you and make a man of you. Under Its influ-
ence the brain becomes active, the blood purified, so that all pimples, blotches and ulcera
disappear, the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness, bashfulness and des-
pendenc vanish, the eye becomes bright the face full and clear, energyreturns to the
body and the moral, physical and sexual systema are invigorated: all drains cease-nO
more vital waste from the system. Won't let quacks and fakirs rob year of your bard
earned dollars, We will cure you or Ile pay,
EVERYTHING PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL
[LEADER: No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge.
Books Free -"The Golden Monitor" (Illustrated) oa Secret Diseases of Men.
QUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT SENT ON REQUEST
DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.
NOTICE
®T N C E All letters from Canada must be addressed
�I 1 G. to our Canadian Correspondence Depart-
ment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to
see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and
Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Oat.
Write for our private address,
4"1•444.444444.414.74444.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.-,”4 4.4.4.•b4.4.4.4.tk4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.444.4=W04.4.44+4.4.4.4.4.
4. 4.
4•
I. r4.4.
4.
4.Tie Times
4•
4•
Clubbing
4.
4• t #+
4' 4,
4' 4,
4 4,
3• 4,
4. 4•
4• +
+ Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60 +
4.4. Times and Baily (.lobe•4.b0
4. Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star I.bes 4
Times and Toronto ®Veekly bur, J,.. 1.7b 4
.. Times and Toronto Daily star 2.30 4.
Times and Toronto Daily News. ....,...., . L.s(, 4.
4• Times and Daily Mail and Empire. . .... . 4.504.
Times and Weekly Mail and Empire........... 1.60 4•
�1• Times and Farmers' Advocate ... , .... , 2,35 •�I•
+ Times and Canadian Farm (weekly). 1,60
es
'1' Times and Farm and Dairy 1.80
Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press, 1.60
Times and Daily Advertiser....... .. ... ... 2.55
se
`; Times and London Advertiser (An eekiy) 1:2;v6:04.1 4•
a Times and London Daily Free Press 141( rl;il g '�
4 Edition 50 +
4° Evening Edition i•
Times and Montreal Daily I'Witnes5 4•
4.
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness
4.
Limes and World Wile..... •4.
�
Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg1.'�
Times and Presbyterian... ...... •.. • ,
4. Times and Westminster ' .i
es Times, Presbyterian and Westminster 3, :5 +
4° Times and Toronto 5aturdaNight :140 4
Times and Busy Man's Magazine.. , ............ .2.r0
.+ Times and Home tonrnal, Toronto 1,7f
4.Times and Youth's Companion J.:'(i
.4. 4. Times and Northern Messenger......... 1.'ii 4.
Times and Daily World .... • - • • . 3,10 .
4. Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly). , 2.90
'eTimes and Canadian Pictorial .. • • .. 1, f 0 4.
4'Times and Lippincott's Magazine 3,15 4
1 Times and Woman's Hone Companion , ' .: G 4'
4• Times and Delineator 1'. iO
+ Times and Cosmopolitan ('•.110
a. Times and Strand
Times and Success . ' 40 '1'
Times and McClure "s Magazine..........,,..,, �'.ffrt' +.
4•
4.
-' Times and Mursey's Magazine 2,FF
1.85
out it in the house. I have Lased it with
the children, and find the same result.
I have recemmnende 1 it to several of my
friends who also join with me in saying
that Da. 1"owr.Eit's EXTRACT Olt WILD
STRAwnflunr is the greatest remedy oil
nt lain . '
summer co is
earth
for all sot It.
P
"Dia. l owr ER's" has been on the mar-
ket for over 05 years, and so popular has
it become that than., dealers try to sub-
stitute other and cheaper preparations.
Be sure anti get what you ask for,
Price: 35 cents.
Mattufarturod only by The T. Mile
51 burn Co., Limited, Toronto, C1ut.
.l. Times and Designer •t
Times and Everybody's 2.40
4•
4•
4•
4.
The Times and Weekly Globe el.60
The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1,00). . 1.35
These prices are for addresses in Canada or Gr( t
Britain.
4•
The above publications may be obtained by Tunes
subscribers in any combination, the price for any r'uiriictt-
tion being the figure given Above less $Ji.00 repress rtirg
the price of The Times. For instance :
4..
4'
4.
4•
4. 4•
4•
4-
4.
4.
4.
4.
A
N
s
•
4
4'
making the price of the three papers $2.95.
The Times and the Weekly Sun .. . el ,80
The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $$1.00).. 1,110
The Week13 Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) 00
4• - .
4 8 7t)
4. the four papers for $3.70.
e:.
.$`W,95
If the ptib,ica:: on you want is not in above list, Iet
us know. We •'1r supply almost any well-known Cana-
dian or American publication. These prices -Ire strictly
cash in advance
S 'nd subscriptions by post officc,or expretti odder to
Tite
Tiines Office
s 'D
O 4,
o•
Stone Block •
•
• WINGHAM ONTARIO •
i t et^l Ct 3��1'3.3t3ti�'11 3"3' 3: t_ ':h'Afi!t k�' c•t�i't+'. Pikttii 3 •F �