d Aelel= Proms Detets uen Pm ORDERS DELIVERED DAILY. We Sell the Best 5 anud Purest Drosgs â€" AT THE LOWEST;PR’IC Millers and Dealers in Grain No. 8 Dundas St., NWest Inch, the optician repairs watches clocks and Jewellery. We â€"are please Beynor is able ta‘ in the Puble sc Rev. W. E. Davidson, of Bellast, Ireland, will deliver aâ€" lecture in the Methodist Churchfhere on Wednesday, Eebruary 23rd, of the "Lights and Shadows of Irish lfife." Silver collecâ€" tion. } Come to the Home of Weston Lodge A. 0. U. W. in the Oddfellows‘ Hall, on Wednesdgy, Feb. 23. A good time is suaranteed. A jolly â€" people of= time last Kingdon‘s. Come to the Ag Hom Lodge A. 0. U. W§in the Hall, on Wednesdag, Feb. ~Mr. and Mrs. : Devins, of Carâ€" stair, Alberta, sDp@t a few days with Mr. Devins‘ Aunt,§ Mrs, J. Kingdon. Hall, on WeUCHtCoZc, time is guaranteed â€" CGome to the Fancy Dress CaTHivée! to be held in the Weston Skating Rink on Monday, Februaty 28. DoWNSVIEW BEAUTYLENE FOR THE HAIR. Miss Leila Boakg is St. Catharines fnd THISTLETOWN Get_ your usill, Ha Manufacturers of "Three Lion Brand" Grakham Wholeâ€"wheat Flours. H OW E With our complete stock of TOILET ARTICLES and PERFUMES, our dog muzzles from Jas Easle Block, Weston:. WESTOoON MILLS sleigh _ Weston . Thursd wWw. Wadsworth ol to see Miss M. resume her duties ad of the young pent an enjoyable y evening at Mr. is visiting friends nd Buflalo. Home of Weston n the Oddfellows‘ Heb. 23. A good D R U 6 G (ESTEABLLISHED 1828.) Dress Carnival we challenge comparison There passed awlay. in this village one â€"of â€"its mosf highly respected young men in $he person of Mr. Thomas Watt. though he wasâ€"ailâ€" ing for some timg he was not thought serious, and his i death on Tuesday was a great shock to his many friends The funeral will$be held_ on Friday afternoon to We§gton Cemetery. The entire neighborh ‘d is ‘in s%rmpathy with the bereave®, ones. The Women‘so Rpst/cute met at the home of Mrs. W.#0. Duncan on Wedâ€" nesday a;ternoon$ In the absence of the president, Mrg Geo. Stewart preâ€" sided ‘over the meeting. _ The proâ€" gramme, was give by the Weston Inâ€" stitute:3o & vocal §olo by Miss Palmer. Reminiscinces of & trip to California by Miss Savage, Instrumental solo, byâ€" Miss Cottrill,@vocal solo, by Mrs. Lemaire accompa%ied by . Miss Bookâ€" liss. _ A paper n Nursing by Mrs. Taylor. Solo 'aid Chorus _ by the Weston Ladies. i hearty â€" vote of thanks was extendged to the ladies for their excellent prggrammeée. Refreshâ€" ments was served &t the close, Fortyâ€" live ladies were préesent.. Manser. ton. 2 Sr. HL.â€"GCG:. Manger, A. Love, P. Golhoun, CG. Johnston, G. Shaw. â€" Jr. IH.â€"M._ Far§ G. Kingdon, P. Barker, L. Barker, H. Manser, E. Colhoun, K. Kingdoa. Class 1. T. Fark, C. Woods, M Woods, S. FaIr, _W.r%u.rfis, H. Woods The following is the standing of puâ€" pils in their respective classes for last week. Names are. arranged in order ot merit=â€"â€"_ & Class IV.â€"M.BaldOfk, HB. Johnsâ€" THISTLETOWN PUBLIC SCHOOL REPORT. and Feeds of all Kinds WEST TORONTO $ heal nded to t pr@eramm d @t the « préesent._ F. DIXON, Telephone No. 1 and grtis, C Since Alabama ;?Went dry there has been an enormons increase in the Teacher. cutput of baker‘s bread. St. Philip‘s. Divine service next Sunday at o‘clock a.m. St. John‘s (Catholic) Church. On Sunday next. Mass will be celeâ€" brated at 10.30 a.m. Priest in charge Rev. Father Player, 0.8.B. St. John‘s (Anglican) Church. 11 a.m. Mattins and Sermon. 3 p.m. Sunday School. 7 p.m. Evensong and Sermon. Celebration of Holy Communion, first Sunday of the month at 11 a.m. third Sunday at 8 a.m. Presbyterian Church. On Sunday next, services beld at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m; School at 3 p.m. Public Worship at 11 a.m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Classes at 2.45 p.m. Rev. B. R. Strangways B.A., B.D., Baptist Church. Public Worship at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sundayâ€"School, 3 o‘clock p.me. J. L. Sloat, Pastor. Public service at 11 a.m and 7 p.m. Sunday School and _ Adult Bible Classes at 3 p.m. & Rev. S. D. Dinnick, Pastor, Buttonwood Ave., Mt. Dennis. ONLY ONE PAINLESS CORN CURE. Hundreds have t dhbut no ons succseded in making ag good a rem as Putnam‘s Painl jECdrn Extrac It‘s by far the begtâ€"teware of sut lutes for "Putnam s\ He Went to the Minister For Advice, and He Got It. > "Sir," he said as he stalked into the clergyman‘s study, "you are the man who tied the knot, I believe?" _ "Ob, that‘s a small matter."" ‘"Is 1t, sinr? Ts it? Just wait!. I told her that that was my affair, and then she taught the children to ery when I kissed them, so that she conld say that my rough chin hurt them." "Thatâ€" hardly showed a Chrisâ€" Han‘‘â€"â€" % "Wait a minute! Yesterday mornâ€" ing I found them playing with the cylinder of a broken music box. You know how that seems to the touch?" $ ‘Gertainly." "Well, she‘d taught them to call it ‘papa‘s chin.‘"‘ ' _ "Really, sir, I must admit""â€" "Wait till I‘ve finished. Toâ€"day one of them got up on my knee, passed his hand over my chin_ and called it ‘papa‘s music box.‘ Now, sir, I ask you as a Christian man and as the man who gied the knot, what shall I do?" & as@el ;fléved,†replied the clergy man softly as he returned to his work _ Bee Economics. j _ The organization of bee life is a fas cinating study. The workers in a bee: hive may be divided, says the Univer. sity Correspondent, into (1) harvesters, who bring in homey and pollien from flowers, wax from buds of pines and poplars, water to mix with pollen and honey to make the pasty food forâ€"the larvace; (2) sca\'eijagers, awho in early morning Carrty oft debfis including Cead, sick or inj'ifr]ed' wopgkers; (3) ven: tilators, who stand er%ct and keep their wings in continual .movement in order to ventilate the hive; (4) guards. who defend the hive from, wasps, robâ€" her bees and uther enemies: "Pint or guart?‘ . & This dialogue mgy be heard at the counter of a largesnumber of "dairy luneh" rooms in &the state of Alaâ€" Lama. The last question relating to ‘he bulk of the sandwich, refers to the size of the fiash of "rye" to be tound between the halves of bread Laa\}?Jes cut to look like oyster sandâ€" wich. E ‘"Then you know what Rev. T. An Alabama Sandwich. "Gimme a sandwich." "Rye or white?‘ § “Rye.†‘: + CHURCH SERVICES. ¢ Hughes-Jones, M.A., Rector Methodist Church. Rev. A. H. MacGillivray, Pastor. Beverly Smith, Rector. ed, but no ons has ag Bood a remedy s Cern Extractor. â€"#eware of suks‘iâ€" the rights wl WINNIPEG, Man.,, Feb. 15, 1910.â€" y at Mild weather throughout the West has made the winter sgeason far busier RectO"â€" ‘than usual in many Eines of work and business. Work on big buildings in process of construct%onv has gone on rch. practically without %nterruption, and be celeâ€" this line of work has been remarkably charge active throughout tk%e winter. Fall \ work carried well intg the winter, too, ‘before thoughts of shutting down were ‘entertained and the building trades urch,. _ |People have had good times that give |every promise of continuing. More a. \ building permiits were taken out in |\Winnipeg for January than for the u. \same month of 1909, ?jand as there alâ€" Ton jready are plans for mearly nine millâ€" muno? jjon dollars‘ worth of new buildings in‘ 11 a.m. \the hands of local arghitects, for this year, good building trade is assured.. Rector \Among the structures to be erected 2 ithis summer are the new Bank of |Montreal block, which will cost $1,000,â€" ‘000, and an apartment house that will ) |occupy an entire blocé( and will cost will be |$350,000. Bank building and apertâ€" Sunday ‘ments blocks are be¢oming leading features of Winnipeg;, constructions. There are over 200 apartment blocks livyray» |in the city, many of them splendidly Pastorâ€"| appointed structures. | Pastor. Pushing Work On City Power Plant. An important effeqt of the mild weather lies in the fact that work has gone on uninterruptedly on the city power plant at Point du Bois. Excelâ€" lent weather conditions have enabled the contractors to keep 450 men at work and great gains in time will be made by putting in a large amount of concrete construction during the winâ€" ter. The early completion of the city‘s power plant is looked to have vur Winnmnipeg Leitter, Winnipes has grown greatly during the year. The d\irectgory census gives the city and closeâ€"lying suburbs 172,â€" 000 people at the close of 1909, which places the population of the city proâ€" per at not far fro 150,000, and it will not be long before the suburbs ‘that are included 3111 the directory ‘count _will be a pagt of the city in‘ fact, as well as ffom a population point of view. City and country are filling up fast with\new people and. ‘the splendid winter weather has been ‘very favorable to this process. In (fact, local immigration officials have {nmoted an extraordinary influx of new ‘people and capital during the winter months, and J. Bruce Walker, Doâ€" minion Immigration Commissioner at Winnipeg, Ssaid the other day that it has never happened before that so manyâ€" people have come to Manitoba for settlement purposes during the winter months, and Commissioner Walker argues from this, with ‘murch Jfrom the open pBalfic, NAWS S J0L0 more than _ 400,000 pushels of wheat this year, and haye yet a latge tC jserve stock to senmd out. At a net price ol from â€" ef tyâ€"five to ninety ,cents a bushel, and a crop_ yield of | thirty. bushels to the acte, reason for |the rapid growth of such a section is ‘not far to seek an& the story is one Hs Ne cAz ie tha This winter influx of people is spreading all over the West, and poâ€" pulation and capital is entering by every line of railroad. Travel on the Soo Line is heavy and daily trains‘-, are crowded wifh â€"people who have! cast their lot im with Western Canâ€"| ada. Some of these are homesteaders with very little money, but many ate farmers who have made money in the States and who, come to Canada to get cheap landl\and to invest the money they have where their experiâ€" ence and that %i others has proven that suchâ€"an i%v’estment returns a ‘better profit than}; may be had by like processâ€" in any _ other part_ of the world‘.. Under uâ€" impetus of new population and n;;W capital, the proVâ€" inces of Saskat¢hewan and Alberta are filling up i:tst. too, and. such cities as Reginag Moose Jaw, Lethâ€" bridge, Saskatoc%l, Edmonton and Calgary, are receiving considerable accessions of people and moneyâ€" Many h es esc o ind P Calgary, are teteiving CONs wS _ accessions of peof{ï¬e and moneyâ€" Many smaller places age growing rapidly, too, and along such new lines as the Moose Jawâ€"Outlo@k pranch, the towns that are there are making phenomeral growth upon the working capital for rich land and enormolus CLOP returns. Shipping points on this new line that are but a little more. thin a yeat SLC_ So e coumâ€" ~murie. have shipped rich land and enormol Shipping points on this are but a little more from the: open pEairie history â€" 0 gress. Tc ooet s ooceni on reveaar 1 eason, a big population growth for he West in 1910. Whole West A Great City To s i Making Strides 0 @e acre, reason for h of such a section is f ané the story is one times repeated in the stern Canadian pFrOâ€" Growing PE es oc e e e Cc ca 2294 hnd tennhlee hnt Robust health is a great safeguard against attacks of throat and lung troubles, but constipation will destroy the best of health. Ask your doctor about Ayer‘s Pills. Yet you may cough tomorrow! Better be prepared for it when it comes. Ask your/doctor about keeping Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral in the house. /Then when the hard cold or cough first appears you Rave a doctor‘s medicine at hand. Your doctor‘s ap?b' al of its use will certain® set all doubt at rest. £D§ ay‘ he says. _ He knows. No alcohol in this cough meditine. _ J.C AyerCo., Lowell, Mass. Not Cousghi manently cured. I amjhow perfectly _ _ well, Zand for 3 years re=â€"===4 navoi fiad_ 10 _ THCL Cured mat at all. I know manmy Pfamilies where 3 no & ®ther â€" medicine Years but Nerviline is keptâ€" n nerrnmmmgen t ~ it to S@ nacihl in minor ailments like earache, toothache, neuralgia, coughs, col‘s, lumbago and sciatita. I call Nerâ€" viline my "Life Guard,"‘ and urge all to try its merit." Dec. 17th, 113 Palmerston Avenue, Toronto. Refuse anything else offered instead of Nerviline, 25¢. per_bottle, five for $1.00. All dealers, or The Catarrhâ€" ozone Co., Kingston, Ont. 4 "©A friend insisted f@n my using Nerviline, and to ézï¬f surprise a vigorous rubbing of this powerful liniment eased the psiiï¬s and reduced the stiffness in my joints. I conâ€" tinued to use Nervilige and was Perâ€" ‘I suffered torture from rheumatism and heart trouble, tried scores of soâ€" called remedies, consulted for weeks and months with Toronto‘s most eminent physicians, buf derived only slight benefit. f; Failed to Cure Rheumatism. Miss Flora Chapman Vividly Desâ€" cribes Her Sufferings and UItiâ€" mate Cure With "Nerviline.‘" i "©After being an enthusiastic user of Nerviline for years, I feel it my duty to tell you personally what your wonâ€" derful preparation has done for me. GUNNS‘, Limitedf} wish to advise farmers that they prefer deliveries of live hogs at thei® packing house, West Toronto, om Wednesdays and Fridays and in any cast, not earlier than Tuesday, or dater than Friday eachâ€" week. â€" High t prices paid for sclact hoos. . Wei@hts preferred, 160 to 220 pounds. &R Z4 42 4Z 2 4 4J 4J LJ 4Q 4 det kest ht best dest AQ KEEP POSTED ON FARM NEWS EMINENT TORONTO PHYSICIANS. THz CANADIAN FARM, published in Toronto, is the National Weekly Agricultural Paper of the Dominion. â€" The work and money spent on its production makes it incomparably superior to anything of the kind. Special writers for special departâ€" ments._ All original matter in every issue. Splendid and reliable crop and market reports. Everything upâ€"toâ€"date. Finely illustrated. Choice and instructive reading for the farmer and his family. No farmer can afford to be without it. _ Every farmer will make more money who reads it. Our Clubbing rate is $1.50 for the two papers. Subscribe at once and get the benefit of the full term. Sample Copies of The Canadlan Farm to be seen at this office. ‘ The Canadian Farm Times and Guide For $1.50 All subscribers get The Canadian Farm / from now to the Ist of Jan., 1911. and the While entirely su;gitable to all cla of Sunday sChools,"v' it offers one. G& very best aids to fï¬unday schqpa in new dictr‘cts vv'ihere an und 2 @â€"_ national paper, adapted to all age and edited from a Canadian stan point, is greatly ko be desired. _ three weeks‘ free trial and specia low rates are offered to any'aqr‘md school in Canada, and the publishet special offer to new schools is Wi worth a note of ifquiry. Annual sU scription rate fom individual substl bers is forty centg (40c.) a year. Your own subscription to the Ti & Guide and a NEW subscription the $ i & Son, ‘Witness‘l Office, Montreal, a.;] for over forty years a favorite w the Canadian ople, has since t New Year takeng on such an. alter4 appearance thatfit really looks“‘t'fiikg new publicationé C $3.00 ~ ‘NMorthern Messem for only $1.00. s Colored illustritions, mad@® possi| by the new pre@s recently ‘install add very greatly to the atractivene as also does theéfa.ct that it is n pasted and ‘cut, and the member pages increased Z"to sixteeg‘ or nary â€" issues, and twentyâ€"four special numbers. The matter cont ed in this populart little weekly is the same high ch@racter as ever, whether for the i%dividual subscri or Sabbath schgol distributio cannot fail to pleaf‘,se. $1.90 THE NEW/ ‘NORTHERN | | MESYENGER.) _ 1 Our good old riénd, the. ‘Narthe Messenger,‘ publighed by John Doug only $1.50 ‘Weekly Witnes§g,‘ worth Dafily ~â€"Witness,‘; oday ? worth $1.00 worth $3 worth 40‘ ef $1.00 f for Of for OP