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The Wingham Times, 1911-04-06, Page 6THE WVINtxflA&1 TIMES, APEiL 6, 1911 . .. • ......., *OW... teal. 11.111114.10iWilltqln =1.11P i.k}fV a.,.1 i'i:: 4ir KERNELS FPCW. IIIE tItiUW MILL interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges]. It's as easy to be poor ns it is uneasy In proportion to the population, France to be dishonest. has more people employed in the pro - The weather man seems to be in lea- I duction of dress than any other of the e with The coal dealer. eight principal countries of the world. President Taft characterized the war rumors between the United States and Japan as unfounded. You Can See xt work. The beauty of Dr. Chase's Ointment as a healer of the skin in eczema, salt rheum, itching skin disease and old sores is that you can see from day to day exactly what it is doing. There is no guess work, no experimenting, It simply heals the skin and ma}t,nenasoft, smooth and natural. It heal:A-We if by magic. Prove this to your own satis- faction by trying it. James McKenzie was drowned while trying to cross at Bandeau in a small boat. If the cap fits, put it on, If it does not fit, return it to the store and de- mand your moneyback. PIL Dr, Chase's Oint mentis'a certain and guaranteed cuuoforeaehand every form of . itching. bleeding and protruding piles. Se' testimonials in the press and ask purr- uaborsaboutit. You can use it asd bet your money back: if notsatis&ed. 600, at all O ewers. ; T:nuAx.sox, Barns &Co., Toronto. DR. CHASE'S OINTMENT. A French monoplane carrying a lead of 1,262 pounds travelled at 62 miles an hour. The western division of the G. T. R. has been authorized to issue $30,000,000 mortgage bonds. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of United States Democrats are not agreed on their tariff program for the 'coming session. The Grand Trunk Pacific steel is now 50 miles west of Edson, and has reached the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. • Constipation brings many ailments in its train and is the primary cause of much sickness. Keep your bowels re- gular madam, and you will escape many of the ailments to which women are sub- ject. Constipation is a very simple thin but like many simple things, it may lea to serious consequences. Nature often needs a.little assistance and when Cham- berlain's Tablets are given at the first indication, much distress and suffering may be avoided. Sold by ali dealers. Two masked robbers entered the First National Bank at Blue Mound, Illinois, and locked Stanley Peck, a clerk at the bank in the vault, and then obtained $2,000 in currency and got away. - Floors and furniture are not scratch- ed by children playing with new building made of cork; in Germany-. SIATE OF OHIO, CITY' OF TOLEDO t LUCAS COUNTY. j ss. Frank J. Cheney make':; oath that he is senior partner of the Jinn of F. J. For him no minstrel rapture's swell. CHENEY & Co., doing bu lees in the High though his titles, proud his name, City of Toledo, County and State afore- Boundless his wealth as wish can claim, said, and that said firm eviil pay the Despite those titles, power and pelf sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS The wretch, concentered all in self, for each aed every case of Catarrh that Living, shall forfeit fair renown cannot be cured bv the nee of Hall's And, doubly dying, shall go down Catarrh ('lire. FRANK K .T. CHENEY. To the vile dust from whence he sprung Sworn to before me and subscribed Unwept, unhonored and unsung. in my presence, nee, this6th (ia' of Decent- — Sir Walter Scott. ber, A. D., 18d. ` ! 3i lt. A. W. CGLEA ION. .rer to Pe.I.I.I(', In eases of rheumatism relief from Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- pain make" ale ep and rest poesibk , This Severe Attach of T "tally. r nd .1c1:4 directly on th.r bica ii •nd Inas• he obtained lav applying Chatnber- rnueoit,'; t cies 'of the -v.,t-' n. :end iain's Liniment. For sale by all dealers. for t, st.a , :- free. 1t 1i §l £lis :I Y e&. 4 `.%)k•t}o, t,i t e ( The Peeeeratalse Von.*.' l., e .t ...1; l ,. .(, lar§tips- 'Tt... §ic i ;ill,(rr:; bar', azl ittiefent feed. Too much stress Daunt be laid on th* Thee, bi11 flied langaege vain and rude, fox that when a person catches cold it and threw i dead cat., aer(taw the fence. must be attended td immediate}, or united t. °r t;rt'r0it3.t i11(1 seemed to : idebtep cora man ti:,;•1a51'. • serious renults are liable to follow, 1.4leneteze stump One day they 1 I .,ed fromwords to I. bronchitis, Pneumonia. and Consume» blows; one nl,'ighber smote= the other's gennne4nne facterieereeemee e er.-{if tet Ann,. sees chuel.s a rock began toe tion are nil causal by ne;le°ting be care 1)1 the tt.al tete t,,.tioat int,:( whir, ma wl)()Il tri air tya s full of in. ! the simple cold. .r„dirt ):ttty be• k;i<-„.1, to "1'ht'n i wt(•Zt}'td'rl in with kindly =.,tnilte i lifttt, . totvman, rattullo, Ont;. tl, l ii it r,,ti,Ild lr lir, is§ .ii=. to and bads titt:iai 01i:4v this work of guile. ; writes' --'Three yearn a;;9 I °aught s- take. t .ratr lU^' l t fi1:YIy„ ;Bil; cold which ended ia a swore silica' i 1niir)l i tie: mob; , ' , ,ust # 1,,„„141;.:01011 ', it (:<.ti}atL anas” traise Ttl lel, - Pneumonia, Since that time atth3 • D,. .is even -tellies lin d„ te(;eii•,i t: ;'lit, i, t t•"itis}p' beginning of each winter I seem to catch mien, esh eeea sees( r`t'•*„ (=gag teal aatietnelee leen, but It Is, wrong fox'; Cold vast e'si}y. I have been so llnatae t Neo it end t ; , , " :a 'Ii• 1' "t• '0,, be ion galoete to seek the ,levo} o the, t 1 was unable to speak loud enough to be s 11...tetav, brutes— Tile•ti Loth 4he' fit"'::pete4 awn - heard aero the room. Last -wmtsri '1 i.t'r'(- Ia. itif; Yi() t•tii,•iri it 1 :2:.•.i it1 x434° lel en neer :anol scented me wlae•rt: nit, Fit -1 howe'ior, it friend advised lice to tr'y Dr. & z ; Fa 01.' }ao•- 'tire i lthadslid ii ;t 'yen a. }t IVoed's Norway Fine y" 9x1 to ix.. C" is .lt ; 'lis., t, niuiiei- j y l>) y £telii,iall;,e 11r.':Ya 'tl ihl' Grandtet:.'r . (l tney ):isle", wad bit ney nuat- anti ":attack-;: had :helped her. I bought a bottle and Ty. -o. heath., .I toes of il'33tSlll)ltif,it i ed it ixil; tl,l' kicked meioln roundly ill the t before zt was half used I wan °ompletetlr g ne't'I;. and when they eaty I wasa %meet, °cured, T also find it a good medicine fog shipped fir hiegens a tUU'I 11 Itl'weh altirlxi , ,. v . • , ' the children when the have colds."' '163x. zt'nt in C.1111 1.0 ltlr ' :Atha! 3i sit e3 •2; 1tSlllr lit.•t lit ill(' t ll Ilolty tti 11"z' a 4t sl.ro,iiarit,, (: ' 10tl(. tri rye'. I :•nidi:ttatal Beware of the many irritations of Dr. 4 7 /tiy,`Yt Iia.. ortt ,, : know that it.e a ; 'Wad's Norway I'ixlo Syrup. nee .e .t:. "ov at pc•, 4 lsei fit ltgfon t ♦ w. 'rhe I hite %Vitigea Ask for opt We/NW' and insist en nno r n of '1 of nttnal} t't':a : Dove, on It:n.l the r-eni.; tul that it's tate t- . thi I"ie,vitit'e'. (a fformerr..l•1ulte•1'. s itt ell II}t t.) lees. Hut after this when getting 'what you ask for.iii• r e.. (i` s . • neigh - him t .m -o .of the Log. bees; fight I";1 let then" flies around alt Itis put up it ., yellow' wrapper; three lltiili.i e'c' is*,(1 `)let• t4{" tI} ' , , „^• r 6 tree the trade mark; the li:'r±),5" ie:': r,_ IIe ell; rti.,l i? r" hilt", :t /).,C; 104P rir6. 13t ...'a?, ; ee , .' ; t, ' the .,.,c i Pollee, sty a idi''0 ei(i.rer.it ,, I t ''-5•tui r. 'x:'xis ?.i li to It 1011000, . ) 6'T'`- u e ei' by The tat te;,' le-'i`,':'l,e ity C0'Ct ilat•§a1'. l `t .o ALl .'i' 3'iilr ..,.s r. LioZr Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S A .!t°' ORiAi. Instead of nailing the outer cloth an the ironing board with common tacks, use thumb tacks. They are very con- venient in changing the covering, are perfectly smooth and look muchneater, The woman who is "wedded to the cause of suffrage" must find it rather nusatisfactory not to be able to run her fingers through its hair and weep on its coat lapel every now and then. • "Our baby cries for Chamberlain's CoughRemedy,"writes Mrs. T. B. Ken- drick, Rasaca, Ga, "Itis the best cough remedy on the market for coughs, colds and croup. For sale by all dealers, In Australia there are only 500,000 in- habitants. Yet the Astralians run 2,000,- 000 horses, graze 11,000,000 cattle, and and own 87,000,000 sheep—and no other country conies within 10,000,000 of this number. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOFZ1A An exhausted carrier pigeon alighted on the deck of the Ryndam when 100 miles out from New York. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO R lA, In voting to make primary education compulsory the Russian Duma has allot- ted 10,000,000 rubies to schools. Lighthouses and other aids. to naviga- tion are wanted to help take care of Alaska's $550,000,000 a year maritime commerce. Lame Shoulder is nearly always due to rheumatism of the muscles, and quick- ly yields to the free application of Cham- berlain's•Liniment. For sale by all deal- ers. Brooklyn bridge is fourteen and a half inches shorter in midwinter than it is in midsummer, and the bridge floor is con- sequently two and a half feet higher. `REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.` MRS.'WONSLOW'S SeeTIONG Srime has been usedfor over SIXTY YEARS by MItI,IONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES tiie CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHEA. It is ab- solutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's soothing Syrup,' and take do other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle. PATRIOTISM. Breathes there the man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, This is my own, my native land— Whose heart hath • ne'er within him burn'd As home his footsteps he hath turn'd Prom wandering on a foreign strand? If such there breathe, go, mark him well.( How To Swire Moiney. A ,Pollster to Hoizsekeepere I eck at the financial side of Zam- Buk's use. A exit sustained in the home, the store, or the workshop, a sore which is mitt: tided, results, say, in festering or blood -poisoning, You have to lay off for a day or two. What does that mean when pay day comes round? Zani-Bu1: insures you against that loss! A little Zam-Buk applied to such an injury prevents all danger of blood -poisoning, takes out the smarting and heals. HEADS OF FAMILIES lizloty how costly doctoring is. Be wise and act on the preventive line. A bee of Zane -Buis in the borne is so all-round useful. The baby's'' :.rhes, the older children's cuts and `bruist' i, the inevitable burn, cut or scald .tor all these, as well as for more serious ailments, such as piles, ulcers, eczema, ringworm, etc„ Zam-Buk is without a rival, DANGERS OF SHAVING.—You get a taut at the barber's shop. A little Zam- Buk smeared on the wound prevents all danger. If any__ailment has been con- tracted, Zam-Buk cures. Mr. George Hobden, 108 Manitoba Street, St. Thomas, Ontario, says; "I contracted barber's rash, and the whole of my left cheek broke out in one mass of red, watery pimples and sores. These spread to the other parts of my face, until face and neck were covered with running sores. How far the disease would have spread had it not been for Zam-Buk, I don'tknow. I applied this balm, and in a short time Zam-Buk effected a complete cure." ZArs-Buie SOAP is as good as the balm, but in a different way. Washed in Zam-Buk Soap the skin is disinfected and disease germs lying upon it are killed. Mothers will find it unequalled for baby's bath, Zam-Buk Balm an-Bukoat are sold by all druggists and stores 50e. for the balm and 25c. tablet for the soap. SCOTLAND. Oh, Scotland, bonnie Scotland, 'twas hard from thee to part, And love to thee has still a niche with- in my very heart; I knew not that I loved thee so till borne far out to sea, Nor dreamt I that this Western world had charms so few for me. Oh, Scotland, lovely Scotland, the land of moor and glen, The country of the Covenant and godly - hearted men, Forsaking thy immunities, to Western wilds I've come, Yet feel my heart, like magnet true, still points to thee as home. I'm weary of this wilderness, this land of stumps and trees, The endless uniformity that's marked on all one sees; There's nothing in the scenery here a poet's soul to charm, And no 'heroic memories to nerve a patriot's arm. There's cleaving to the dust enough, and grovelling for gain, And sordid love of earthly things our minds and hearts enchain; Wee' my heart less heavenly—less than it used to be— And wonder if the cause is in the cairn - try or me, Oh, brave, heroic Scotland, land of the true and good, • The battlefield of liberty, oft wet with martyrs' blood; Thou bast a sacred spell foi ma, beyond auands I:tr , Because thou hast been sectioned by Covenant with God. Oli, may the lot be mire once more my native Iand to view, And share the blest effusions of a cop- ious heaverly dew, When the spirit of the Covenant shall rise 'mons„ modern things, And teach bewildered nations that Mes- siah's King of Kings. In "Perthshire Courier" inane- years ago. If you want a thing done well, do it yourself, This dour not apply to •pa},el- ing the parlor. aught a Coo Which Ended in a Pneumonia. ARTFUL EVAS1ONS * NQ TROUBLE AT ALL "Have any serious trouble with your new automobile?" 5 "Not a bit. So far I haven't bit o or ALIENssit=r,iemanavithoutbaitigablet)get Aci be ieoro he got my tlumbor,"" i'icw "Undesirables'" Enter England Non-immigrant Steamern Dump Many There Whatever may be the legislative outcome of the amazing siege of Step. ney, says an English paper, them it no gainsaying that at present our Ira m}gratic:z laws are more ineffective limn those of any other country in the, tvol:t}, Any alien with the brains of a rabbit, however black his history or tin-'.tted his health, can easily en• t: r I: Iaud against the will of the ! authorities, and can, in fact, snap his a fingers fi,, ngt them. The latest method of evading the : Aliens Act is to come to this country i with tete return half of au excursion' ticket, which can always he purchased en the Cont"""ent or obtained by post from. London or from. a confederate 'who has used the other half. Not long ago a a eencliman well-known in Let eester Square, thinking it politic to lease his usual haunts for a short time, went to Paris by a day excursion, While there he gave the return half of his ticket to an old comrade in crime, wl:o with it catr.e to London, glying a falee name and address to the purser as he crossed the Channel. • Just Below the Limit But there are many other dodges for evading the Aliens Act. One which re- sults in hundreds of "undesirables" entering this country is cystbmatieally era^.tiled on some steamers, It is keeping the number on a ship ;ust be• low the limit allowed for exemption from inspection. Originally a steamer which carried fewer than twenty steerage passengers was not, for the purposes of the Act an immigrant ship, and was not, therefore, liable to inspection, Then the number of third• class passengers allowed for exemp- tion was reduced to twelve, and now it is again twenty. Mark how matters have been adjusted accordingly. Some captains used regularly to bring over seventeen or eighteen third-class pas. sengers, then nine or ten, and at pre. sent they. are back again to the old number, except when they cut things very fine and arrive in the Thames with nineteen! It is not uncommon for the aliens thus "scrared through" to include at least one who has been refused leave to land. He or she previously came to England in an immigrant ship, and was turned back owing to lack of means 'or :or some other reason, No fewer than four rejected aliens were about a year ago dumped in a batch at Hull from a (techncially) nenimmi grant steamer. Second -Class Passengers The same steamers bring over many "undesirables" as second-class passen- gers, assengers, and thus defeat the object of the Aliens Act in another way, No sooner were second-class passengers exempt- ed from inspection than such compan- ies lowered their second-class fares till they were only a little higher than the steerage rates, and ever since many immigrants unable to pass in- spection, as well as not a'tew of those refused permission to land, have tri- umphed over the authorities by com- ing to England in the intermediate class. Shipping agents in Continental ports also have many tricks whereby they dump "undesirables" on us. About eighteen months since, for instance, some of those at Bremen kept in stock letters of invitation written by people in this country. These they supplied— for a consideration—to aliens for showing to the inspectors when they reached England as conclusive proof that there was not the remotest chance of their becoming burdens on John 13u11. The Yellow peril A moderately wide awake immigrant, however, requires no assistance to en- able him to enter England without even a "By your leave." What is to prevent hila from shipping as a -cattle- man or sailor and landing at one of our ports as, such? Nothing. As a fact, this game is played on us thou: sands of times every year, Out of the total number of cattlemen who arrived in this country it 1900 no fewer than 2,200 did not return on the cattle slips. Siiine may have left as ordi- nary pasicngers, but the majority doubtless remained in England. Whe- ther they are likely to become good citizens may be gauged from the fact that thousands of cattlemen, who have landed in this country have straight- way sought. the hospitality of the cas- ual ward. The ranks of Chinese residents in tide country are steadily recruited in the maze way. Of late years many aalloee" from. the Celestial empire have married English girls and settled in our large ports, particularly Liver - teen, where laundries "run" by their compatriots absorb some of them. Six er seven years ago an attempt Was made to establish Chinese laundries In tendon, with tate result that the tiro• motel's got Such a fright from hostile ( rowde theft the enterprise faded away. But in Liverpool, Birkenhead, anti the aleallasey district there are ,•laity such Semidries) end a few have te(', ntly been opened in towns so far inland tie Stockport. 'We Wash Clothes .they compete StrennonG-ry, not only 1 against our native laundries, but against one another. An Alt wing at IAseard, tieeordiiig to local report, dea- cribed Itlnuiolf, with a fine eya to busi- ness:, as a "Christian Chinaman," whereupon lits rival, whose) piece of business is la the same., street, bt,le:ly announced, "Me no religion; flu rinse" 1 elotl.bt3 "1 ( - Still "nor 4 • tnel siiald(' intltt t i. t: C work ape (:nage to titin coulittc (41.: of the neon reeportsible for the t.,( -toy. five or tweety-six casualties at Tett 01• loam undoubtedly Carrie to Erie:heel e a fiter tau on a uteamer, and 1 zot.aibiy the 0111111 (0 (,i)r r'ado evaded the Alien:, Ata in tt pio'e1asly sitebilar r. re)tas, to ell feetnire, W4 t 5 il(). r..,..,:W 18110ei':t gleet they Waded. d. iwo..E THAN EGUAI- I etly:—•"I hope\ you feel equal to a n(+ecta:L.e's wore: now that I havo hired Servant:—"Shure, WPM, I'm equal to it, an' then agia, I'm znore'n equal to it. I'm above itl" I116 QUEST FINISHED Diogenes, lantern in hand, entered a village drug store, "Say, have you anything that will cure a coin?" he asked. "No, sir, 1 have not,"'answered the pill compounder. "Give me your hand, for I have at last found an honest man." CAN YOU IMAGINE HIS ANSWER? "Do you -want to draw or deposit?" asked the Post Office clerk. "No, I don't; 01 want to put in." The clerk signed and shoved a form across the counter. "Sign your name here," ho • said, -pointing to the exact spot. "Above the 1 Inc or below it?" asked the man. Just above." "The whole name?" queried the visi- tor, "Yes." "oi can't write." A TRAGEDY Little boy named Willie Wright, Found a stick of dynamite; Slammed it down upon a rock—' Funeral service, ten o'clock. BEAUTY'S INNOCENCE Algy invited pretty Kitty to go for a spin with him in the country on a tandem . Pretty Kitty willingly consented, and off they started for a thirty -mile ride. Now, pretty Kitty was not what is vulgarly termed a "heavy weight," but Algy found the work extraordi- narily difficult. Ho worked like a galley -slave. The perspiration simply rained off him. And all the while pretty Kitty kept as cool as a cucumber. At last they reached a farmhouse where tea, with cape and jam, could be obtained. As Algy leaned the mach- ine against the gate, pretty Kitty look- ed ooked pleasantly on, Then she touched one of the pedals delicately with her forefinger, and said: "By the way, what are these little twirlygigs for?" SY M PAT I -I ET I C. Tho Wife: ----"Two weeks ago you said my husband couldn't live, and now he's nearly well." The Doctor: ---"Madam, I can only express my regret." AMPLE PROOF' Lottie ---"IS your young minister so very, very fascinating?" Hattie:.--"la'aseinatingl Why, Tote of girls in• our church have married `men they hated just to get one Ides from the rector after tens ceremony." DANGER She:—"Do you believe there are microbes ill hisses?" Ile:—"I don''" know. Let me have a few to examine.' THE LAST RESORT Indignant What do you • mean by eola:le ; hone at this time of night, air?" Festive husband:---•"Bvcry other place was chut, my dear." t_ME1AI1RAS3ING QUESTION Little Nep'.'tew:—"Auntie, did you marry an ii.shat"?„ ,4unt.—'"t:l)y (1a you ask sue h s questions, Freddy?" Little Nephew: "Well, I saw some scalps on your dressing table." AFRAID O P HEAT ,A little boy, in turning over the leaves of .; scrap -book, canto aeroes the 'well-known picture of some chick- ens just out of thQfr shells, After en- amining the picture carefully, with a grave, sagaciute4 loses et ilii baby sister, lie nloevly remarked: '•'z'Iat+y eamto out We they were afraid of be - Ina. boiled." TNTY YEARS AGO ,firsotr y b oe ft h? eaneEasrtl)y •f 8lO ee s i. y (From the TIMES of April 3, 1891.) LOCAL NEWS, There is considerable sickness in town at present, a considerable number suf- fering from a mild form of la grippe. Marbles, new millinery, skipping ropes, house cleaning,: spring overcoats, slush &c., are now the order of the day, The horse fair held here on Thursday of last week brought out quite a num- ber of horses, and there were several buyers present. Mr. S. J. Reid removed his stock from town on Wednesday to Goderich. Messrs. Geo. Shaw and Wellington Martin have moved into the new build- ing next to the Brunswick hotel, which has been fitted up for them. Mr. C. N. Griffin is having the building vacated by them fitted up as a store for him. Mr. •Turnbull, the cashier of the Bank of Hamilton, and the architect of the new bank building, were in town on Friday last, making arrangements for the new building. The Potter farm, being lot 33, in the 12th concession of Turnberry, "was sold by auction, under the power of mort- gage, by Peter Deans, auctioneer, on Tuesday last, at the Brunswick hotel. The farm consists of 163 acres and was purchased by Mr. Geo. Thomson, of Zetland, for $1,530. Mr, Wm. Ridd, V. S., returned the latterpart of last week from a visits: to portions of the States of New York and Pennsylvania. Ile intends visiting' portions of Michigan" and other Western' States before he decides where he will. locate. , Mr. T,;.T: Watson and kiss Eine k', his eldest daughter, intend mending the, summer in the Northwest; the for- mer in Calgary and the latter in Regi-' na. A rather amusing story is told of a young boy who works in the Union Fac-' tory. On Monday morping last, when about to take a chew of tobacco, he observed What he thought to be a string in the:plug of tobacco, and on pulling - on it, to his surprise he found he had a mouse by the tail. It is hardly to be expected that the boy will still be a user of the weed, ; BORN. Walker—In East Wawanosh, on the 29thEu1t„ the wife of Mr. Elisha Walk... er; a eon. Jermyn—In eWinghani,, on the 2nd inst, the wife of Mr. W. Jermyn; a. daughter. Wallwiri—At the parsonage,. Bluevale,. on the 31st March'," the wife of Rev. I -- B. Wailwin;'a daughter. DIED. Fairfield—In Wingham,.' on Friday, March 27th, W. J. Fairfield, aged 30 years.' PRINTING AND STATIONERY We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple Stationery and can supply your wants in WRITING PADS ENVELOPES LEAD PENCILS . BUTTER PA PER PAPETERIES, WRITING PAPER BLANK BOOKS PENS AND INK . . TOILET PAPER PLAYING CARDS, etc We will keep the best stock in the respective lines and sell at reasonable prices. JOB PRINTING We are in a better position than ever before to attend to your wants in the Job Printing line and all orders will receive prompt attention. Leave your order with us when in need of LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS ENVELOPES CALLING CARDS CIRCULARS NOTEHEADSF 'STATEMENTS WEDDING INVITATIONS . POSTERS ' CATALOGUES Or anything you may require in the printing line. Subscriptions tit en for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The Times Office STONE BLOCK Win gha , '' - Ont.