ir €4 l f ’F ill Your Bas] basket Main St. Weston Phone 466 _ All the Popular Brands An ever tempting array here at j lowest prices. pacFE Boa# ~~ SERVICE We buy the best in foodstuffs at the best possible price, and pass the savings along to you through our courteous store staff who are at your immediate service to meet your every requiremert. It is truly a saving service that every economical housewife appreciates. f Our growth from a small beginning to Canada‘s largest retail grocers, in six years, can be directly attributed to one thingâ€"Personal Service to our customers. Nat Naso With Table Needs of Only Choicest. Quality ERESH FRUITS ‘ Vegetables in Season Caimed and Eoitic Coods LR V ICE 4 QUALITY ; VALUE Over 400 Stores in Ontario and Quebec WESTON 8 o BRANCH 39 Main Street PROVISIONS BUTTER & EGGS TEA, COFFEE AND COCOA, Etc. gp e y & yok k 443 AoS ; J 62 _#3 Selenrets 7 y eteri J { Where Quality Counts T his S5pace TELEPHONES 214 AND 377 . COLHOUN, Branch Manager Reservecg; By MAVEFIELD BRAESIDE RICHMELLO, Ete. Moody Bros. Phone 86 Main St. Weston "We are as near to you as your phone. Oil Cake, Gluten Meal, Bran, Hay, Straw, FPoultrty Eoods, Cereals, etc. Laying Mash Egg Mash CHOPPING AND ROLLâ€" ING MILL FLOUR AND FEED â€"â€"â€" sTORE Undertaker House Fursmisher 8 Main St. N. â€" WESTON R. L. Gibson ed this week for c epgmmag s " % & C ;§= o J A y t . & 8 8 is (imaf o 8 oo i8 5y 3 S _F & Â¥ & t3 H iC g ts © Ainart ©® StnadP 8 3. soft). Value $10.50. Offer Felt Mattress (so nice and Special offer in Simmons a?}’v‘-'i‘-fr;\\a"“\m ts finreierees | o cop ftarnnterremst ame BY DAVID BELASCO and HENRY C. DE MILLE ASK FOR CATALOGUE 31 MAIN ST. N. C.E. Grosskurth Dry Goods Ladies‘ Coats and Dresses Suitable for any room Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 24th, 25th, 26th of these new designs NEW DESIGNS IN CONGOLEUM RUGS as The Heme of Good Pictures and Music SHOW COMMENCES AT 7.15 AND 9 P.M. ADMISSIONâ€"Adults 28¢ (tax 2¢)â€"306 Children 18¢ (tax 2¢)=â€"20c "Redeeming Sin" shown at the Exhibition Phone 736 SPECIAL MATINEES on Wednesday and Saturday at 2.30 ADMISSIONâ€"Adults 18e (tax 2¢)â€"20c Children 10¢ (tax l1e)â€"11¢ J. A. MORRISON, Manager A Vitagraph Production A SGomedy and Scence with Hagch Subject "Lord Chumley" Come in and see them. All this week we will have a special display of the newest styles of Fall Coats and Dresses. + Next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday September 28th, 29th and 30th just arrived eston Theatre â€"â€"A Paramount Pictureâ€" $8.175 WESTON WESTON THE TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON your Furnace tuned up so that it will perform properly in the colder weather. A.M.Oldham MAIN ST. We are at your service NOW is the time to have Hardware FURNACE SUPPLIES Mea‘s Wear Everything in PHONE 30 PHONE 14 ness" and neatness tremely keen 32 Main St. the materials The life of your clothes by hayâ€" ing them thoroughly cleaned at regular intervals. Dust cuts . into PRESERVE (mad>â€"toâ€"measure) yINniCr Just â€" Receivedâ€"New Cleaning preserves theirâ€" "newâ€" Eesns p en n uP â€" ind [ .. ie 1499 lC onl Beal m.tb“kâ€"?‘ it MAIN ST. @;@'“““’. HI i y K 7 ‘}S" | §',$§ pfï¬ré .Etj;‘\"â€"m. ‘ ’-‘lf:m» ; | j 9 NE\\' Shades! New Styles! . New Fabrics! â€" You‘ll be delighted when you see them, especially when you note their prices and realize what exceptional values they are. Dress, street and sports models of soft pliable leathers, kid, satin, patent and combinations. RYAN‘S BOOT SHOP 8O Aut: PHONE 26W We would be glad of an opportunity to show you how this Service can be fitted to vour needs. i‘ 2. tw fln _ . Apd i‘a r“'“’â€â€œ@q t o P C Rw.8 ) c 00c mu.ss? iq. uen convincing way, we have placed at their command the entire resources of the Bonnetâ€"Brown Sales Service, an organization that produces the best in Advertising Copy and Illustrations. to the people of this community in an attractive and anxious for their trade and tell them so. businessâ€"especially when so many other firms are You cannot expect people to come and ask you your Direct the Spotlight of Publicity on your Store In other words "Tell the People what you are doing" To help our advertisers to present their merchandise THE TIMES & GUIDE (semi tailored) silbert $ rices exâ€" Phone 490 Fall and Suilings PHONE 732 SCHOOL SUPPLIES INKS FOUNTAIN PENS Everything in STATIONERY Books for all Purposes Whether you choose for one who prefers the Classics, or just Rhymes for the children, you are sure to find what you want among our.fine selection of Books. M. G. Creswick‘s Phone 649 rnone 649 WESTON Specializing in Office Supplies and Sporting Goods "Say it with Books" l Book and Stationery Store 54 Main St. North + . CA FLop _ N K ~ smm m m\& WESTON WESTON "It‘s the way of the world, my dear," said her husband. "Some men have all the luck., > x A Scotch Joke A "That‘s a sad case," said Mrs. Mcâ€" Tavish as she laid the paper on her knees and wiped her spectaclies. "A. bride struck dumb after leaving the Kiflc." y 0 1Z1EL0 gQOH. ico 3 The fellow on the train who didn‘t play bridge very well, but was willin§1 to help out and make a fourth. a The sunburn. : ag The ptomaine poisoning. s The sprained ankle. '_" The mosquitoes. ; f How glad you were to get nedE. The debts. 3 Vacation Reminiscences The roast beef hash on Monday. _ The one in the red bathing suit. What the women on the porch were saying. + The girl _ whoâ€" thought she could play tennis. . § Ditto golf. c What The Darkies Say ,‘, F It is said that comedy, at. its higlvest, teuches tragedy. _ This would appear to be true of a line appearing in & Negro comedy now being played in New York.. In one of the scenes one comedian orders another to do someâ€" thing. "I don‘t gotta do that at al," the other â€" retors. _ "I only gottaï¬Ã©& two things in his‘ lifeâ€"stay dark and die."â€""Algonaut." 3e "Did your husband appreciat scarf I knitted for him." "Oh, mum, it came in most user®@i! ‘E‘s gone and ‘anged ‘isself with it." " ‘Don‘t drown ‘im, mister,‘ I 'seé‘. "Give ‘im tg. me; I‘ll cure ‘im.. An I did cutre ‘im." J ie "How?" asked the listener. s "I sawed tlegs off t‘sofa," replied the farmer‘s boy. e No e en t o on enc i 2 "I ‘aven‘ ‘ad ‘im long," he contiNued. "I seed Farmer Bikes one day takin‘ ‘im to t‘pond, an‘ I ses to ‘im. ‘Wot be you aâ€"goin‘ to di wi that pup» Farmer Bikes? x " ‘I‘m aâ€"goin‘ to drown ‘im,‘ ‘e,ses, sorrowful.like. ‘An‘ why?. I ses. ‘é)h, ‘e ses, Ce‘s always chewin‘ the Wdint off Vless of tâ€"sofa. Ihe Cure $ 4 ‘E‘s a nice pup, isn‘t ‘e?" remarkâ€" ed the farm hand, as he gazed proudly at his pet terrier. 2« c The waiter, with a benign smile, plied, "It‘s neither, gentlemen; pineapple is an extra." * ve The Farmer‘s Report : Two Government men were out surâ€" veying the land, when they were checkâ€" ed by an old farmer for tramping over his flax, and told them to leave his farm at once. | They informed the farmer that it was their duty, as they were Government men, and showed him some Government papers. Just as they were going over a grazing field they were attacked by a cross bull. They then shouted for the farmer‘s help, when the farmer replied, "Shure, your .the Government,. men; show the bull the papers." â€" Restaurant proprietor (to orchestra conductor)â€"I wish you‘dâ€" display a little more tact in choosing the music. We‘ve got the Worshipful Company of Umbrellaâ€"makers dining here thisrgve: ning, and you‘ve just played "It aln‘t gonna rain no mo!" i j An entertainer was singing at a conâ€" cert in the East End, when a niivvy entered and took his seat in the front row..â€" ‘"You‘re rather late," said the entertainer facetiously. "I would have been a jolly sight later if I had known 1 you were on," came the quick re%(y"‘. f "Then you‘d better â€" go back. and tell your teacher she was wrong,l said the man. "A> collier is a ship. thatâ€" carries. coal from port to‘ffort; The men who go down the pit and. get the coal are miners; and I‘m one of them." Xs The other day a party of flappers, in a trainâ€"car, in an English midland town, were discussingâ€"according to. their lightsâ€"the position of the coal trade. With all the assuredness of youth and of secondâ€"hand information one averred that the "colliers" did thiï¬â€˜ and the "eolliers" did that. "Of course," was the reply. ‘"Colâ€" liers are the men who go down the pits and get the .coal. . We learned that at school." At last a sedate, elderly man sitting opposite could stand it no longer. "Ex= cuse me, Miss," he said, "but do you know what a collier is?" \ He strutted round the streets of In nighties made of satin; But what I can‘t forgive is, he Wrote "Gallie Wars" in Latin‘! I‘m glad my good friend Brutus stabb> ed \ Old Caesar with his sticker, is It‘s a great big shame it wasn‘t done Some thirtyâ€"five years quicker! A . Weston High School\ How Of all the guys that I don‘t like The worst is Julius Caesar; 5 I‘d gladly give all that I own For one whack at his beezer. Mr. Morrison, the popular managet of the Picture Theatre, was very pleasâ€" ed to see so many hundred people, (some came as far as from W“&‘o’d-»?j bridge, others from Toronto), to see what Drusilla done with her million. Everyone was satisfied, Mr. M‘ri» son says; come again. We wonder what some of the Wesâ€" ton folk would do if someone leï¬: "Them a million". x e "Snippets" WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23, What‘s In a Name (By T. W.) 23, 1925 reâ€" ts