C2Z * _ Bs +omml E Remember, nothing please« like a good box of choice i _ Candies. We don‘t corry all the candies on i the market, but we carry the best _ # Eagle House Block, Tannsamunansen: Ellll"IllIIIlIIl“lIlIIllIlllllllllllllllllIllllllllIIllIllIlIllIllIlllIlllllllllllllllIIlllIlIIIlllIlllIlIllllllllllllllllIllll!llIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII !EIlllllllulllllulllllllluu|uululnuuuuuuuuu|luuuunn‘unuunllulllulllullunnluuuuuuuluuuuluuuluulununllll] en eleeniac kess .o es 2. CRA omplaces § Moore‘s Ice Cream and Lunch Parlor ElllllllllllllllllllIHIIHII“Illll!llIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllulIIIIlIlllIIllllllIllllllllllllllllll"lllllllllllllllllllllll WEDNESDAY,â€" FEBRUARY PHONE 513 WESTON W BeWEEwWHEAT, CORN, BRAN, SHORTS, MAIZE N EORN MEAL, LINSEED AND OILCAKE MEAL <* *. MERCER DAIRY FEED § POULTRY FEEDS.â€"BLATCHFORD‘S SCRATCH FEED e ANxND ECGG MASH, CGRIT, OYSTER SHELL aHa e ANBD SA LT HAXY. ALEFALEA, STRAW, WHEAT, BARLEY, OATS, YARDS AND OFFICE : CANADA LUMBER COMPANY in boomocccoocco ocoo00oo000c0i0o6000000000.000000000000 0000000000000 00 00000000000ce0000co000000,0000000000 0000000 00c ccooncerenrt Day Phone No. 69]J Scranton Coal NOTHING LIKE SOMETHING HOT AND TASTY ie AFTER SKATING _SELL YOUR FARM PRODUCE TO ADVANTAGE ï¬ï¬lp-j_lgl_l!lllm|lgullnl|4|||uuu||l|mmmluu_uumlmunnuuuuuumu;unmmuuuuumnmuuu-muum‘ TRY OUR HOT DRINKS OR â€"OysTER STEWS Mercer Bros. ie rnU d : e aadhict MVnvoe cetien o SEMETâ€"SOLVAY COKE THE FINEST COKE ON THE MARKET We Specialize in the Following Linec LUMBER ALND YOU CAN GET THAT FROM HIGHEST PRICE ISs PAID FOR CHOICE POULTRY, BUTTER, EGGS, FEATHERS This is CASH â€" No goods in return HILL THE COAL MAN WHEN IT IS COLD Orders Promptly Delivered They touch the right spot ! For All Building Purposes IS OPEN TO SUPPLY You Want the Best F. H. HINTON District Agent for : CHURCH ST., WESTON PHONE 175 * 1922 At Islington ISLINGTION Main St. GORDON AVE., WESTON Night Phone 23 ring 2 WESTON Two Irishmen wereâ€" comparing notes about politics, jobs, hard. times and the like, when Pat O‘Rourke, a third one, joined in the discussion. The brakeman looked . the tempesâ€" tuous stranger over. ‘"Go on, you litâ€" tle shrimp," he replied. ‘"You‘re small enough to crawl under." "Sure, and . I‘m satisfied _ with things," said Pat. "I‘ve a pache of a job." every hand? o meet your enemies with love for hate, good tor evil? To move steadily towards your goal with a serene mind when you know, that others ridicule and consider you 2, failure? To remain in obscurity to support a parent, or a helpless sister or ‘brothâ€" er, when you have the consciousness ol the ability to do big things? To bear the blame which belongs to another because ;{"ou doâ€"not want to bring pain to others? To forego extravagance so that. you may provide for the future welfare of those_dependent upon you? Not long ago we had cecasion to spend the night in an upper berth of a Pullman. Just across the aisle, two boysâ€"probably eight or ten years of ageâ€"â€"were having what must have been their usual bedâ€"time romp. They were as boisterous as only boys can be, and we began to fear that sleep was a remote possibility, until we heard one of them say: "Bill, you keep quiet nowâ€"I‘m going to say my prayâ€" ers and go to sleep." Bill kept quiet, they both evidently said their prayers and we soon fell asleep, but not withâ€" out a little prayer of our own that the good Father would bestow his blessing upon the boy who was not afraid or ashamed to offer up his devotions in a crowded Pullman car. is free from pollution of any kind is plainly shown by recent tests made at the branch laboratory of the Proâ€" vincial Board of Health at North Bav. When the evenin‘ shade is fallin‘ at the, endin‘ o‘ the day, An‘ a feller rests from labor smokin‘ at his pipe o‘ clay, There‘s nothin‘ does. him so. much good, be fortune up or down, As the little weekly paper from his ol‘ home town. "Ie that so2" * said the . others. "And what might ye be doin‘?" , "I‘m pulling, down the Episcopal church," replied Pat, "and I‘m gettin‘ paid for it.‘" Willie (to his father, who had reâ€" cently married a second time) â€" Shere‘s‘s. shop in the High Street just like you, dad." Fatherâ€""Shop like me? What do you mean ?" } w Willie (edging towards the door) â€" ‘‘Why, it‘s under entirely new manâ€" agement." N If it ain‘t a thing of beauty an‘ its print ain‘t always clean, Yet it straightens out his temper when a feller‘s feelin‘ mean; It takes the wrinkles off his face and drives away the frown, That little weekly paper from his ol‘ home town. Now I like to read the dailies an‘ the story papers, too, 3 An‘ at times the yaller novels an‘ ‘ some other trashâ€"don‘t you? But when I want some readin‘ that will drive away aq frown, I want that good ol‘ paper from my ol‘ home town. | "The idea!" she exclaimed. _ Why, he‘s a neighbor‘s child! I have nothâ€" ing to do with him." To speak the truth when a lie would help you out of a difficulty? f Now Tommy was\ the son of the man whose apartment adjoined theirs. So mother was both alarmed and /asâ€" tonished. "But I have,"â€"explained~Ethel, "We have become engaged, and I want to kiss him." ‘"Move that train on!" sputtered the superintendent of traffic. Get it off the crossing so people can pass. Move it on, I say!" Johnny paid his first visit to a farm on Christmas day. All his life he had lived in the heart of a great city, and when he suddenly came in sight ‘of a haystack, he stopped and gazed earnâ€" estly at what appeared to him as a new brand of architecture. "Say, Mr. Smith," he remarked to the farmer, pointing to the haystack, "why don‘t they have doors and winâ€" dows in it ?"â€" Two wives were holdijng forth about their husband‘s meannesses with monâ€" ey. . & "It is so humiliating," said one, "to have to go into his pockets and get money." _ ‘"Mother, I wish you‘d wash Tom my‘s face." * "To drink?" was th idiotic question. "OhB, no," was the s: "when I‘ve been speakh hour I do a high dive "I just turn hi§§tr‘ousers downside up and over the bed and help myself," said the other. Ethel, the twelveâ€"yearâ€"old daughter of & family that resides in an uptown apartment house, recently said to her mother: j : When the latter arrived he seemed in a crabby frame of mind. He beckâ€" oned the chairman. "I should like to have a glass of water on my table, if you please," he said. "I think that is underhanded," reâ€" plied the other. "I wouldn‘t go into any man‘s pockets, let alone my husâ€" band‘s." * “}-low do you do it, then?" asked the first. | ‘"Now, my brethren, we come to a very difficult passage, a very difficult passâ€" age. But let us not be deterred. Let us look the matter boldly in the faceâ€" andâ€"pass on." ‘"Doors and windows!" smiled farmer. . "That‘s not a house, Jo that‘s hay." ‘"Don‘t try to kid mae, Mr. Smith," was the scornful rejoiner. ‘"Don‘t you suppose I know that hay don‘t grow in humpsilike that?" A certain colored minister in exâ€" pounding the Sceriptures to his hearers was accustomed to handle a difficult passage in the following manner: Everything had been done to make the great meeting a success. A. large hall and a good speaker had been enâ€" gaged. That the Haileybury water supply HAVE YOU THE COURAGE? THE HOME TOWN PAPER meet failure and obstacles on windows." smiled the s not a house, Johnny, TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON from which hung twelve ribbons to each of which was attached a gold coin, the gifts of their twelve children, and two other grandâ€"children passed a golden ribbon around them, tieing it in a symbolic krot. John . Rettinger, a prominent farmer near Formosa, was fatally hurt in the gravel pit on his farm, when he was buried under a lump of frozen gravel weighing several tons. LetUs Do Your Job Printing Township of Etobicoke NOTICE is hereby given that a/Byâ€" law was passed by the Municipal Council of â€"the . Corporation of the Township of Etobicoke on the 9th day of January, 1922, providing for the issuing of debentures for the sum of $20,000 for the purpose of paying the Corporation‘s portion of the cost of construction of bridges and culverts constructed in the said township durâ€" EJn io000000000000000iomoo0mo o0 000 ommc rnomwnormuntrmumrufa) ing the year 1921, as mentioned withâ€" in the said byâ€"law, and that such byâ€" law was duly registered in the Regisâ€" try Office for the Registry Division of the East and West. Riding of the County of iYork on the 13th day of January, 1922. Any motion to quash or set aside the same or any part thereof must be made within three months after the first publication of this notice, and cannot be made thereâ€" after. NOTICE is hereby given that a byâ€" law was passed by\ the Municipal Council of the Corporation of the Township of Etobicoke, on the 9th day of January, 1922, providing for the amendment of Byâ€"law No. 1334, and that such amendment was regisâ€" tered in the Registry Office for the registry division of the east and west riding of the County of WÂ¥ork on the 13th day of January, 1922. Any moâ€" tion to quash or set aside the same must be made within three months after the first publication of this noâ€" tice and cannot be made thereafter. M ) oneeeocconnrenonemieneerncconni nnionce oc coocooncrcrncecoccconccon i Dated at Islington this 17th day of January, 1922. Dated at Islington this 17th day of January, 1922. io onineinoo0n00ee0000000,00000000000000000000000000000000000000.00,00000000000000000000000600000000/00000000000000c0000 00000000 00000000000000000000000 [ NOTICE OF REGISTRATION OF BYâ€"LAW NO. 1351 lllllllllIlllIIIIlIIlIlIlllllllllllllllllllIIlllll|IlllIIlIlllll-illllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIflllllIIllIlllIllIlIlllIIlll|l|lllllllllllllllllllllllin l1 NOTICE OF REGISTRATION OF BYâ€"LAW NO. 1347 W. K. BUCKLEY, LIMITED, 142 Mutual St. Toronte Repairing is our business and we are always doing it. See us for real work. . o o o s THE GARAGE MAN MAIN ST. NORTH, WESTON PHONES : 427 GARAGE, 361 HOUSE Are You Looking For a Real Truck ? MOUNT DENNIS LUMBER COMP ANY Manufacturers and Dealers in ROUGHED AND DRESSED LUMBER, SASH, MOULDâ€" ING, COLUMNS, AERO PAINTS, BEAVER â€" BOARD, READY ROOFING, AND BUILDING PAPER INCH DRUG CO. and T. E. RICHARDSON io natn i t SAbpmedl Aescsity e e stt GUARANTEED to give relief or money refuaded 40 Doses for T5¢ Sold by all druggists or by mail from. Sold in Weston by : You can get the best make, that you can depend updn to serve you every day. It will pay to look it over. It is the famous . _ : uoX l| l q # )1z : es o5® â€" TRAFFIC TRUCK HELD EVERY THURSDAY AT STUDIO OVER J. FINEGAN‘S STORE, MAIN AND CHURCH STREET Instruction given at your own residence if desired 8. BARRATT, Cletk of the said Township Phones: Residence 442, Office 40213 Factory, Yard and Office: Rutherford Ave. S. BARRATT, Clerk of the Township JAS. NASH, Manager AGEMTS FOR TRAFFIC TRUCK RUSSELL LA ROSE DANCING CLASS PHONE WESTON 432 J. E. SMART oeo00innoonce00cooinn00 mconeconconncon ooo Cooccoccocnccercoccc6coccccon PR FORD prices were reduced on January 16th, the reduction varying from $20.00 to $60.00, depending on the model. But to get the real meanâ€" ing of toâ€"day‘s prices you must compare them with the prices of a year ago. Spring is only a few short weeks awayâ€"these low prices are practically certain to cause a shortage of Fords. Place your order now while we are in a position to guarantee delivery of your car when you want it. Hasy terms if you wish. f soma E: le Compare Toâ€"day‘s Prices with those of a Year Ago _ COUPE ....... SEDAN ....... TOURING .. .. RUNABOUT .. CHASSIS ..... TRUCK CHASSIS Phone 292 Wheâ€"above prices ate F.O.B. Ford, Ontarto. Government Sales Tax extra. Starting and Electric Lighting on Chassis, Runabout, Touring and Truck Chassis $85.00 extra. (One year ago $100 lextra) j On closéd models starting and electric lighting are standard gquipment. j THE FORD GARAGE SERVICE STATION Main Street sE ) u/ on NEW FORD PRICES PRICE ONE OLD PRICE NEW PRICE REDUCTION YEAR AGO $890 565 515 470 615 Im. PHONE 317 Lagle Garage Livery USED CARS GASOLINE $840 930 535 495 575 FIRST CLASS MECHANICS ALL KINDS AND MAKES F. BENO, MANAGER Washing $50 60 30 20 25 40 OILS Repairs $1100 1200 675 610 550 750 TOTAL REDUCTION E] DURING O YEAR GREASES WESTON WESTON PAGE SEVEN $260 270 140 115 105 175 Sales h