The Wingham Times, 1911-03-30, Page 3,41
TILE" W. JNGBA . TIMES,,. MARCH 30, 1011
EDITORIAL NOTES.. PROVING A BOOMERANG. RECENTAUT QROMANCESTHE STRAIGHT ROAD.
Eight million Oilers ie in round fig -
nue the etltimatod amount, to be expend.
ed on Current and oepitel eogeent,a000rd'
tag to the main estimates presented to
the Ontario Legislaeuro,
Unless eomethtng turns up that the
Cie:element is not fzpeoting, the third
session of the twelfth Legislature of
Ontario will ooeolude its work before
the end of the present week. A con$id-
erable amount of busiuess le still on the.
order paper, but Sir denies Whitney is
detormfned-to rush things through and
it is probable that the House will sit
every night until prorogation.
"If oapit, raises its haughty front
and says we are to ooneider its interests
before those of the .marmot, ,then, I ray,
let us make the capitalist uuderetand
what we mean. I would rather nee the
good old Libeal party go down in defeat
than see it orawling to capital. The
Taboret standard is swung out olear of
the corporations and trusts and stands
for the mass of the people. "-From Hon,
A. G. MecKey's speech in Toronto.
Sir John Macdonald passed the C. P.
E. contract and consulted the people
afterward, Sir Wilfrid Laurier panned
the nevel bill and has not yet consulted
the people. It it be conceded that a
mandate of the people is necessary to
pass reoiprooity, there oan be no doubt
that Sir Wilfrid Laurier had, an Sir
John Macdonald and Sir Charles Tupper
had, an ample and snffioient mandate
to secure such a free exohange of natural
products as that now in question. -The
r Weekly Sun,
The Montreal Witness Saye: -"It is
the anti• reoiprooity advooatee whp have
long been at work trying to manufacture
a public opinion hostile to reoiprooity,
by means of broadsides in poster type,
paid space in the newspaper, meetings,
letters to the papers, one•sided tele-
graphic despatches, magazine artioles
by 6peoial•pleading scribes, lectures,
and whatever money interest could con.
ooct, subsidize, or influence. It is now
just like that element to olaim that the
result of all this galvanizing ot, the pub-
lio into hysteria is a wave of spontane•
one anti•reoiprooity which is sweeping
the country; and . the opinion of the
farmers and others in favor of reoiproo-
ity is manufactured. The farmers,
though they say little, do not forget
such imputations, and their resentment
is going to show itself."
The attack of the Toronto capitalit$
and financiers on the reoipeooal trade
nto enexetion ii. provineni °0 the gaa boomerIt g lead HAVE BROUGHT' 13IG PRICES,
The people in general are most Indite'
°ant at the "Pont". On their loyalty Neubourg Grocer Gets. a Raphael. For
from men who are not only ming their
own money but the money .of the farm,
ere and workingmen Of OAnada to build
DP the fortunes of the institutions 'they
represent and their own by dealing in
United States stooks and engaging in
business enterprises, These eseitelists
proolaim themselvessnob enperior be-
ings that their business interoonrse with
the United States does not effect their
loyalty, but the selling of wheat, dairy
prodnots, cattle, sheep or hogs by Can-
adian farmers in the United States
would, they say, lead these farmers to
become traitors to their country, the In-
1erenoe being that the increased profits
would be eo great that they could not
resist the appeals of the Yankee annex-
ationists. Could anything be more in-
sulting? No wonder the means are in-
dignant. The trouble has been that
these capitalists Kaye been so long cod-
dled by the Governments of Canada that
they imagine they ,are the "whole piet;,:re dealer in the Rue St. Lazar,,
thing," no the saying is. It is well they ',Paris, o:I.ring for sale a large and.
RUBBISH HEAP PICTURES THAT
Spring is Corning.
The winter must leave ns, it's now on
the wing, so let's shoot the poet who
warbles of spring. For bards cannot
write of the less and the trees, without
ringing in both the breeze;. they're al-
ways referring to sweet woodland nooks
in order to work in gems rot about
brooks. They mangle their metre with
sickening thuds, to give us' some dope
about blossoms and buds, they bring in
the robin and bluebird and finch, the
gaudy. woodpecker - that's always a
oinch. Let's shoot up the poets as soon
as they sing, and thus do away with the
terrors of spring! Too long have they
bored ne with murmuring streams, with
stare and moons and their second rate
beams; too long have they chanted of
roeet and Janes to people who strag-1e
for baoou 'and prunes; too' long have
they warbled of bees and of ants for
men who have patches all over their
pants. If poets must sing let them out
ont the brooks, the zephyrs, the piotur-
eegne nooks and sing a few lines about
onions and peas, and cabbage and turn-
ips ane doodads like these; then brok.
en-baoked toilers\ in garden and yard
will list and not throw any brioks at
the bard -Walt Mason.
Twenty -Four Shillings and Sells It
For Four Thousand Pounds -A Flu•
bens and a Gainsborough Turned
Up. I n a Pawnshop and a Landseer
In a Kitchen,
The Itieubourg grocer whohas beeni
fortunate enough to pick up at an
auction sale for twenty-four shillings
a Raphael, the value of which is at
least 4;000 times the price he paid for
it, has had many recent predecessors
in similar lucky experiences, the stor-
ks of which quite outstrip romance,
,A short time ago a second-hand deal-
er purchased a deplorably dirty can-
vas from a poor widow for a few shill-
ings -a sum w.lich brought tears of
gratitude and joy to the woman's eyes,
After carefully cleaning the picture
the dealer was delighted, although not
altogether surprised, to discover that
he was the possessor of, an undoubted
Gainsborough, for which he found an
eager purchaser for £3,500.
A few weeks earlier a carpenter
presented himself at the shop of a
should be told where they stand. This' dirty canvas for the modest sum of
scold trade agreement Is for the 20 francs. "I don't suppose the pic-
roof
Pture is worth anything, he said, "but
benefit of the masses, whilst not being the frame ought to be 'worth the
antagonistic to the classes. The latter, money." The dealer, who was in want
in taking an antagonistic attitude have of a frame of similar size, paid the
shown a most selfish die osition-aa ing 20 francsand, removing, the canvas,
P y he east it aside in a corner of his '
in effect, ''although the measure does shop•
not hurt us, we oppose it because it is Some weeks later an artist -customer
for the profit of the masses, whose loyal- : chancel to notice the discarded can-
vas, and, alter examining, it, •exclaim-
ty ie questionable." This attitude of ed, "Hallos You've got a treasure
selfishness and indifference on the part here, It is a variant of one of Ra -
of the classes to the welfare of the gen• • phael's works, the Vatican `Adam and
erel public is leading to the overthrow Eve'." The news of the discovery
of the power of the Souse of Lords in spread, and within a few days the
dealer had • sold his 20 -franc picture
England, and has precipitated the war for 10,000 francs.
on the trusts and oapitaliets of the Una- Another Raphael, "La Belle Jardi-
ted State,, of whish this trade agree -
at
niea'e," was quite recently discovered
at a second-hand shop in Paris, and
meet is partly the outcome. Let the
purchased for 44 francs, probably less
classes take warning lest a similar eta- than a two -thousandth part of its real
tude may not be taken by the masses of value; a Rubens, valued at £7,000,
was picked up for a five -pound note
at an auction -sale at Carnarvonshire;
and 25 shillings was the price paid ,at
HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS. an old curiosity shop in Barmouth
for a sea piece, painted in oils on an
A dropsof ammonia in water will oak panel, which when cleaned, prov-
few
ed to be a genuine Turner, worth at
take the grease off of dishpans; a little
put into warm water for washing paint
Canada.
will make it look like new, •
A few drops of oxalic acid should be
added to water in whioh white stock-
ings are washed to remove the stains
caused by shoes.
Dry flannels quickly after washing,
and when nearly dry press with a mod-
erately warm iron, and they will ehrink
but little.
To clean pewter,wash the artioles with
hot water and flue silve3r sand; then dry
and polish them with a leather.
Bent whalebone oan be straightened
by soaking them in boiling water for a
few momenta and then ironing them
straight,
Add a pieoe of wax the size of a bean
and a teaspoonful of powdered borax to
your etarch-while it is boiling if it is de-
sired to brighten the polish,
Grease stains on leather may be re-
moved by carefully applyiog benzine or
perfectly pure tnrpentiue. Wash the
spots over afterwards with the well -
beaten white of an egg.
A mirror should never be hung where
the sun shines directly upon it. The
mercury spread on the glass to form a
looking -glass is soon ruined by exposure
to the rays of the son.
When the ribbon bows on a hit get
out of shape, try heating the bowl of a
large kitchen spoon and pressing the
bows with it from the inside.
(ADVERTISEMENT.)
Canadians Eat Eggs from Many
Countries.
We Bought over Nine Million
Last Year and Large
Canada imported 893,324 dozen eggs I
during the fiscal year ending March 31,
1910. From the United States alone l
757,316 dozen eggs came to Canada.'
China sent us 87,075 dozen, and" Hong
Kong 41,245 dozen, while small quanti-
ties came from Great Britain, F n
and Japan.
Our egg exports amotfnted to 1 ,835
dozen, but only 39,917 dozen went from
Canada to the United States, so' that
we bought from the Americans 717,399
dozen more eggs than we sold to thein.
Canada sold 33,465 dozen eggs to Great
Britain, 20,947 dozen to Newfoundland,
10,700 dozen to Berfhuda, 2,196 dozen
to the British West Indies, 44,100 dozen
to Cuba, 12,555 to St. Pierre and a few
dozen to British Guiana, Mexico and
China.
Deducting our total exports of eggs
from our total imports of eggs it will
be found that Canadians consented 728,-
480 dozen more eggs than the total pro-
duction of eggs in Canada.
The duty on eggs coming into Canada
is three cents per dozen. If the Reel-
procity Agreement goes into effect this
e
pa
duty will 1) removed and the importa-
tions
m ort -
tions of eggs will greatly increase.
A board of tariff experts, recently
appointed by the United States Govern-
ment to compare Canadian and Ameri-
can prices, has re orted on the price of
eggs at Buffalo, Toronto, Burlington,
'Vt., Montreal, Lancaster, N, `H. her:.
brooke, Quo., Ogdensburg;, N. Y., Pres-
cott, Ont.. Bangor, Eastport and Calais,
in. Maine, and St. Stephen, N. IL
least £700.
• More remarkable still was the good
fortune of a picture -lover who strolled
one day into a *hop on the Paris
boulevards, and noticing among a lot
of lumber a study in red chalk pur-
chased it for half 'a franc. On exam-
ining his purchase mora carefully he
found to his delight that he was the
possessor of Raphael's original design
for his famous picture, La Disputa
del Sacramento," now in the Vatican,
the value of which is little short of
11,000.
A romantic story was told a short
dime ago of a widow who took an old
racture to a second-hand dealer, beg-
ging him to buy it as she • wanted a
few shillings to pay the expenses of
isiting some. friends. The dealer ex -
Eained the proffered canvas, which
covered with generations of dirt,
reluctantly offered 30 shillings for
When the canvas was cleaned it
ved to be a very fine example of
nsboroug'h, worth at least £5,000.
A year or two ago an East Ham
thwnbroker advanced £15 on seven old
/duns to a needy client, lending
e money, as he said, "mainly on the
e value of the frames, one of which
Contained quite £3 worth of gold."
When the agreement expired the un-
redeemed canvases were consigned to
the lumber room and practically for-
gotten, until one day an antique deal-
er chanced to see them, and on his
advice they were submitted to experts,
who pronounced them valuable old
diasters (they included a Rubens and
a Gainsborough), worth several thou-
sand pounds.
Among other recent romances of tart
• discovery are the finding by Mr. Lang-
don Davis, of Downend, I3ristol, Eng.,
of a Landseer hanging, frameless, in
c+i> of a relative° the ur-
Waehiogton Star.)
Go ahead an' do pour best,
Workin' while yon kin.
Some day you will eern'yob rest,
An' P1easere w 1be begin,
Kindnesses will Pomo yoh way,
Sneers will gather thick
Some will cheer yon day by day,.
An' Rome is bound to kick I
Des be grateful fob yoh friends;
Po not dread yob foes;
Travel till yoh journey ends,
A-watohin' what yoh. goes.
Luck was never ell polite.
As yob tpil along
Some will say you is all right,
'While soma say you's a1l wrong,
THE SURVIVAL OF THE UNFIT.
'Tie the cracked and noselese pitcher
That survives the hardest knocks;
•'Tis the gown that least becomes as
That outwears our favorite frocks,
'Tie the broken -ribbed umbrella
That confronts no rainy days,
While our own pearl -handled treasure
In some other hall -rack stays,
'Tie the coarse and common fabric
Goes unscathed through sods and dust,
While our best and finest linen
Gets the coffee stains and rust.
'Tie the weed that's most obnoxious
That is left to spread and grow,
While the slips we dearly cherish
Fall a viotim to the hoe.
'Tis the battle'eoarred old rlhome,
Who spits and growls and bites,
Who stays with no from year to year,
And murders sleep o' nights,
While frolioksom young Tabby,.
With temper sweet and mild,
Becomes the prey of vandal boys,
Or is by thief beguiled. •
'Tis the friend our heart most longed for
Who oan just a minute stay,
While the family aversion
Comes prepared to spend the day.
Thus, numberless examples
Do not prove one little bit
The correctness of that saying -
"The survival of the fit."
-Frances E. Downing.
:: the kiteli ,
chase for 5s., in an oldcuriosity slop
in Wigan, of an unfinished portrait
of Godfrey Knel.ler; and the discovery
by two Oxford tourists of a fine Van•
dyek and two llobbenlas, dust -Covered
and neglected, in a haunted room in
, an obscure farmhouse.
A fine Vantyek was, not long ago,
picked up from a builder's rubbish
heap in Antwerp, and sold by its res•
• for five ShillinRS a canvas by
Eggs from the United States - n,?tnl>randt was found lying, on a heap
of battered hats in a Paris rag -and -
Quantities from China 1 bone shop; and one of Albert Durer's
inasti,•pieces was recently sold for a
Thes .atement of prices prepared is '
i'°1 °Nrcreigns.
for thp•'month of January, 1911, and the I
rest; of the enquiry is shown in the `
fo rowing table:
/ Wholesale
Place Price per doz.
Buffalo, N. Y $ .36
Toronto, Ont ... .40
Ogdensburg, N. Y .... , ..... .30
Prescott, Ont .32
Lancaster, N. H.-. ... . .27
Sherbrooke, Que... .32
Burlington, Vt .... .27
Montreal, e Qua .. . ..... 350
Bangor, M .3
Calais,' Me ....... .28
Eastport, Me.eB
.
p . 2fi
St. Stephen, N. . .•.. .33
It will be noted that the prices in
Canada were considerably higher than
in the United States.
Reciprocity will give Canadian far-
mers the privilege of selling their. eggs
in the United States at lower prices
than they can get for them in Canada,
and it will give farmers of Australia,
the United States and twelve other
ford•
n countries the right to send eggs
t 1
eminent ,experts also deals with the
prices of other farm products in the two
countries. The Canadian Century will
publish the figures• in future issues and
those Who read then, will be convinced
that Canadian farmers have nothing! to
gain by Reciprocity with the United
States, Canadae
into fro of duty.
The report of '1 Io U to et St,pte s Gov
C00IdNG NOTES.
Woman's Way.
It's always pleasant to hear a girl,
when she comes home from a imolai
whirl. She tells a tale of the gowns she
•caw, of the bats of •calkand the hats of
straw; and Mre. Jinks was a dream in
white, and Mrs. Wax was a perfect
fright. Would people listen if I should
tell of the rags men wore at a party
swell? Old Col. Wiggs, as you know,
was there, and he made a botch when
he dyed his hair. And old Bill Boggs
Was another guest; he had spilled some
egg on his canvas vest, and Ms trousers
bagged in a frightful way and he wore a
hat that was much too gay. And Ezra
Spink was among the crowd, with a
ohesp cravat that was far too loud, and
his pantaloons were a total loss, and his
whiskers looked like some Irish mope.
Old Aaron Dingkat, the giddy flirt, was
there wrapped up in a cheap blue shirt,
with a plate glass gem on his manly
breast, and three buttons missing from
off his vest. The host, who stood in
cheap cowhide boots, regaled his guests
vrlth some bum cheroots, and searched
our coats and our tronserloons, through
a baseborn fear that we swiped his
spoons. -Walt Mason.
A think elico of onion laid on top of a
roast, when f,at into the oven will im-
pant a fine flavor to the meat, Mao to the
gravy.
itioe to be a neeful article of food
should be stewed with' milk, butter or
stook, whioh will supply the want of
natural fat.
Salt will curdle milk. Hence, id pre-
paring milk porridge, gravies, etc , the
salt should not be added until the dish is
prepared.
To out A loaf of hot brown bread take
a piece of twine, plaoe It around the
loaf, erose the ends and ,pull There
will be a olean oat without crumbs,
When cooking vegetables, bles,
nch rig
li
onions, cabbage, oto., whio anii t d die•
agreeable odor, try boiling with them a
generous plate of stale bread,.
A delightful sweet may he made by
prattling el bit of not meat, candied lemon
or orange into the heart of toasted
nttarah•mallow and then toiling the
Whole in melted eheeotate
•
SETTLERS
.AIN Si
-TO-
MANITOBA, ALBERTA
SASKATCHEWAN
• The only thr••o' gh line]
LOW COLONIST RATES
For s qilers iraveliind S'tliers mod families
with tefivtosloccels shoih sod °vitlwululd llreusseloch
1 Spacial Trains Rcdular Trains
Will leave Toronto Leaving Toronto
Lech TUESDAY 10.10 P.M, Daily
MARCH and APRIL • Through Colonist
- 10.10 P.M. and Tourist Sleepers
Colonist Cars on all Trains
No charge for berths
Through Trains Toronto to
Winnipeg and West
Ask nay C.P.R. Adept for copy of "Settler? Guide"
y .I. H. i3EEME11, Agent, Wingham
THE CURSE OF
THE NATION IS
CONSTIPATION
"FnIFaNes"WM
Cures This Disease
A famous scientist States. that Consti-
petiole or non -action of the bowels,causes
more deaths than all other diseases.
combined. Constipation inflames the
Kidneys, ruins digestion, is the found,
ation of Rheumatism, poisons the blood,
causes }Ieedaches, Neuralgia, Nervous-
ness and Insomnia,
Constipation is caused by a weak or
sluggish liver. One, the only purgative
of the body, is secreted by the liver,
which in turn should pour out into the
intestines sufficient bile to move the
bowels. Unless the liver is active, there
cannot be enough bile to move the
bowels regularly, and Constipation is
the result.
"I?ruit-a-tives", the famous fruit me-
dicine, will always cure Constipation
because it acts directly on the liver -
relieves the congestion -increases the
quantity of bile -and strengthens the
bowel muscles.
5oc. a box, 6 for 52.5o, or trial size,
25c. At all dealers, or from Pruit-a-tives
Limited, Ottawa.
High -Prices in New Ontario,
Mr. John 0. Hutton, of Black Hawk
in New Ontario in renewing his sub-
scription to the TIMES says that times
have been very good in that eeotion the
past winter and that lumbermen have
been unable to secure the men they re-
quired although they were offering the
highest wages. Hay is $22 per ton; pota-
toes, $1.25 per bushel; butter 35o per lb;
eggs, 35e pet doz, Many of the settler,
had a great deal of land cleared by the
fires last year. Notwithstanding the
deep snow the fires still smouldered in'
the turf until about two weeks ago when
they were smothered by the thaw. •
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
SS°NOPSIib OP CANADIAN :NORTH,
WEST LAND IIEGULATIONS,
ANYperson who is the sole head of a family
or any male over 18 yearsold, may home-
stead a quarter section of available Uoininion
land in Manitoba, Saskatahowan or Alberta.
The applicant mut appear in person at the
Dominion Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for
the district, Entry by proxy may. be made at
any agency, on certain conditions, 'by father,
mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of
intending Homesteader.
Duties. -Six months' residence upon and
cultivation of the land in each of threo years.
A homesteader may live within nine miles of
His homestead on a feral of at least SO acres
solely owned and occupied by him or by his
father, mother, son, daughter, brother or
stater.
In certain districts a homostender in good
standing may pre-empt a quarter -section
alongside bis homestead. prim $3 00 per acre.
Duties. -must rotdc upon the homestead or
re•em
1
ttion six mouths in each of six years
n y
Protlt the data of hamesi,ead entry (including
the:tun(8 regutred to earn homestead patent)
and cultivate City acres extra.
A homesteader who has exhausted his holue-
stead right and cannot obtain a pre-oinption
may outer for a purchased homestead in certain
distrtots, peke $3.00 per aerie Duties. -Must
reside six months in earn of throe years, etilti-
vete fifty acres stud tract a house worth 1800,00.
W. W. CORY,
Deputy of the M't4ini:;ter of the Interior.
14.13. --Unauthorized publication of this ad-
'eertisement twill eat be paid for,
URE
Sick headache and relieve all the troubles Incl•
dent to a billeve i state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Naunaa, Drowsiness, Distress alter
eating, Pain in the Side & W
c. hile their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
1CKHeadache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills aro
equally vah,ablo In Constipation, curing and pre-
venting this annoying complaint. while they also
correct alt disorders of the stomach, otimu.atethe
liver and regulate the bowels. Yuen if they only
cared
Ache they would be almost priceless to those who
suffer from this distressii,gcomplaint; butfortu-
nately their goodness does nct cud ticre,and those
who once try them will ilnd them li ttlo pills valu-
able in s o ninny wave that they v. ill not be wil-
ling to do Without them, But after all sick. head
Ie the bane of so many lives that hero is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
-very easy to talc. One or two pills make a dose.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please all who
use them.
oeaz'Es nap= co.. Haw YOU.
ball Door 1E2 P&L
! t':\e;t!"..•A'1.f6• •rr tr"-,+9''' ' '-
3
ERs.KENNEDYI. KENNEDY
CURE DISEASES OF MEN
PATIENT* TREATED THROUGHOUT CANADA FQR 20 'YEARS
Da. $ESNEDY, lllxDrcAL DIRECTOr.
PF Das. IC. ,t R.
CONSULTATION FREE
Books Free, on Diseases cif Men. If unable
to call, write for a Question Blank for
HOME TREATMENT
Drs. K. & K, are favorably known antra gi.•
0Ut t%itnada Viel•e they have of ne 10,1mess for over years '1 ou+aucls of 1 atieets
have been treatedaucf cured .t•y thu.' is teat
shill sad through the virtue of tlitir Ncw
Method. Trautnent• Akita you treat etch
them you know you are dialing a nit regi on
albio physicians ae they 01,11 cud ,ic cu1,y
their own office building ht,I etit it, lalucd
at $100,04 When tuey c ce.c0 yet 1. tae is
curable, all your worry is r. u,c cd ter +ou
know tiler a ill not deceive l r u. 'They
guarantee to caro all curet 1' trues. /No
matter iiow many doctors lt:.ve failed to
benefit you; 40 matter how waled, mallei
you have spent in vain; ro matter how tt,s-
conraged you may Le, don't gitr l.0 to 40
-
pair until youet a free opinion fro in these
master specialists. if you ale at pi(sent
wawa the clutches of any secret ha1 i1N Lich
is sapping your life try drgrets; if you 010
suffering front the results cf rust indiscre-
tions; if your blood hats been lamb fi'uni
any private disease and you dare r of n erry;
if you are married and live in dread of symp*
toms breaking out and exposing your past;
if you are suffering as the result of a ills -
spent life -Drs. K. & K, are your Refuge.
Lay your case before them coni.; , nifally and
they will tell you honestly if you are curable.
'YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED
We Treat and Cure
VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY,
BLOOD and URINARY COMPLAINTS
KIDNEY and BLADDER Diseases
and all Diseases Peculiar to Men.
N D .
KEN1�
E
s
.K
ENN�Y
DR
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.
®T 1 yAll letters from Canada must be addressed
. 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, Ont.
Write for our private address.
+•t••Fib'b+344.3:F_'8W!L3»4t.++++++++ ++++4.341'040:fi3'iW++++ +++ .
I The Times
4•
Clubbing List
Times and Weekly Globe .
Times and Daily Globe
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star....
Times and Toronto Weekly Sun •
Times and Toronto Daily Star
Times and Toronto Daily News..
Empire.
Mail and Em
Times and Daily p
Times and Weekly Mail and Empire
Times and Farmers' Advocate
Times and Canadian Farm (weekly)
Times and Farm and Dairy
Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press,
Times and Daily Advertiser
Times and London Advertiser (weekly).
.,• Times and London Daily Free Press Morning
Edition
Evening Edition
Times and Montreal Daily Witness
Times and Montreal Weekly Witness
1,60
4.50
1.85
1.80
2.30
2.30
4.50
1.60
2.35
1,60
1.80
1.60
2.85
1.60
3.50
2 90
3.50
1,55
4• Times and World Wide 2.25
+ Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... 1.60
4. Times and Presbyterian 2.25 4.
44.
' Times and Westminster 2.25
+ Times, Presbyterian and Westminster 3,25
$ Times and Toronto Saturday Night 3 40
Times and Busy Man's Magazine 2.50
4- Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.75
+ Times and Youth's, Companion 2.90 +
4 Times and Northern Messenger 1.35 .l.
Times and Daily World...... 3.10 4'
Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) 2.90 +r
Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60 +
Times and Lippincott's Magazine 3.15 +
Times and Woman's Borne Companion . 2.60 +
Times and Delineator 2.40
Times and Cosmopolitan 2.30 +
Times and Strand
2,50 +
.,. Times and Success 2.45 .l.
ttis
Times and McClure's Magazine 2,60
i Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,55 +r
Times and Designer 1.85 •+,
+ Times and Everybody's 2.40 4. 1
+ • These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great
+ Britain.
4•
+ The above publications may be obtained by Times +
+ subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica
4•
+
+
4•
3
+
A000rding to a press despatch cent ont a
from 'Kansas City, the owner of a square , 'l1•
mile of orchard there, will put in 19 500 4+
coal oil clover to prevent damage to the
trees by frost. It is an apple orchard,
whioh should not be in any eeriocs dan-
ger of freezing down that way. More-
over fruit meu must be expecting big
thiugs in Missouri of reoiprooity when
in a square mile of orehai;ds, funds eau
be found for stoves and oil on a scale so
colossal. The story reads something
Iike that of a man who by a combina-
tion of darkened rooms and electric
light switches, made three or four days
in his henery out of every 24 houre, and
thus caused his hens to lay at an un-
precedented rate.
-as
When yon have rheumatism in your
foot or instep' apply Chamberlain's Lin-
iment and you will get quick relief. It
ooete but a quarter. Why Buffer? For
sale by all dealers.
A flowerpot over is made of either
gathered oink or orinkled paper drawn
around the oardboard shape in a deep
frill Rom at the top end bottom.
tion being the figure given above less $I.00 representing
+ the price of The Times. For instance : +
4+
4• The Times and Weekly. Globe $1.60 +
The F'armer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1,35 +
62,95 $
4•
• + making the price of the three papers $2,95.
The Times and the 'Weekly San .......... $1.80 +
+ The Toronto Daily Star (S2.30less $1.00) ... 1,,'.Itt 4-
1 t The Weelaf Globe (61.60 less °,11.00) 60 +
•
+
4•
4,t 711
+
the four papers for $3.70. 4.
If the : ublication you want is not in abovi list, let
4.p
,4 us know. 'We can supply almost any well-known (Ana-
--_..-„- + diad or American lt:blicatit,11. The c pri es arty stricti ••
4. 1 4•
BRICK AND TILE YARD h
+ Send subscriptions by host office or express order to $
p
cash in advance.
PROPERTY FOR SALE
sat his
rf n d bore for e
The
undo eit e it
two brick and tile yard propertion The
property'on the thieved() road contains
100 aures of hind with good buildings j +
4• ''+
The T
s 4•
1
Office
and a good brick and tile making plant, 4•
The property north of Wingham contains ' +
50 Acres' with good buildings and brick
and file marking plant; also 50 aeres of 4.-
ELI ELLIOTT,
P, 0. Box 95. Winghanl Ir. O.•,d:tttzlii+b.3+: ,..+214 +'i+3t1:.4*..t" ,1.. 'h +.3 +±'.1'i' ' 11:41:.*
land on the 13 Lino of Tnrnberry
Stone Block
WINGHAM ONTARIO
4,