Ontario Community Newspapers

Times & Guide (1909), 7 Oct 1925, p. 8

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$\ A Want Ad Will do it Main St. ERESH ERUITS _ Vegetables in Season Canned and Iéottle Goods All the Popular Brands An ever tempting array here at | lowest prices. 3 Smd m 5 * o a y A 2 L. af w ‘hv._;v ’-_ hb I T tio B by 8 M Po ) CS Ce w m o 3 f 'a 8 \a‘C p tg 4 y i 5 in *bo ilianf? B 26h, ty Bars ... _..... 0n CHOICE OREGON PRUNES Good size. 2 Ibs. ....: . â€" D. S. L. WRAPPED BREA D. WESTO a BRA?Ncg 38 Main %%reet TELEPHONES 214 AND 377 FELS NAPTHA SOAP SERVICE FANCY SELECTED EGGS iRirsts. BDozen .... ... EFAPIOCA OR SAGO, * Best Quality. Lb .. ... SPECIALLY PREPARED ¢ REEN‘S MUSTARDâ€" 3t Db.ATipn ... .~. PAGE FicHZ3 Just Place Your Order With Us. se | Here‘s a few specials for THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY ; QCTOBER 8th, 9th, 10th QUAKER OATS, Nat Naso W House Wiring, Motors Installed; Electric Stoves ~â€"All Kinds of Electrical Repairs $42 MAIN ST. N., WESTON T ith Table Needs of Only Choicest Quality 24 Oz. Loaf BUILDERS TAKE NOTICE . A. DICKIN tE‘ "ICK f QUALITY 3 VALUE Over 400 Stores in Ontario and Quebec arge Package B. in Quality Groceries at the lowest Possible Price W. N. COLHOUN, Branch Manager Weston Phone 466 PREPARED COCOA Estimates Free Moody B os. Phone 86 Main St. Weston "We are as near to you as your phone." Oil Cake, Gluten Meal, Bran, Hay, Staw, Poultry Foods, Cereals, etc. Laying Mash Egg Mash CHOPPING AND ROLLâ€" ING MILL FLOUR AND FEED STORE Electrician PHONE 404 46c A Bac $1.00 _ 25¢ 9¢ a Specialty 25¢ 45¢ 10c 23¢ Undertaker ' House Furnisher 8 Main St. N. â€" WESTON Phonc 736 R. L. Gibson Same as shown Felt Mattress (so nice and soft). Value $10.50. Offerâ€" ed this week for .. ... .$8.75 Special â€"offer in Simmons The Honourable Vincent Massey Major J. E. L. Streight, M.C., Reeve Sainsbury, of Weston Miss Grace Hunter N C 8E 3 Bd Fo t oa TY C M oE id Ho j S 10 3 / i}: 5 A : & % & 5 wl3 0 PS B 3 M & 2B t\ i & BaoP 0 § (HP D .R 8 id i\ : B d 6 T 8@ T0 â€"0~4 l t ai> 3 B 0 § § P BB EG, 9t § fi'x« § 3 3 m No & P wo Bb 8 1J oR 2 5 8 A § ob a P Db B 5 i R R 1 t § & _ 6 us & : 6 : 2 D $ v W oR f in dibend? Aien td Ad 4 | t3 ASK FOR CE Grosskurth 31 MAIN ST. N. Suitable for any room NEW DESIGNS IN CONGCLEUM RUGS of these new designs Alexander Macgregor (President West York Women‘s Liberal Association) George Verrall, Esq. (President West York Liberal Association) And the Candidate WESTON LIBERAL ASSOCIATION just arrived All Electors Are Cordially Invited to Attend a LADIES WELCOME CATALOGUE at the Exhibition LIBERAL CANDIDATE W. YORK , â€"at theâ€" At3 TOWN HALL G. Howard Gray, Esq., Chairman CGoOD sAvE ITHE KINGC WESTON 1e at 8 p.m. FRIDAY, $th OCTOBER SPEAKERS â€"on â€"behalf of=â€"â€" THE TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTONX WESTON Electri_c Heaters, Workmen‘s Tools, Paints; ete., in fact if it‘s A. M. Oldham MAIN ST. Hardware FEFURNACE SUPPLIES HARDWARE And at the Right Price You‘ll get it at â€"OLDHAM‘S Everything in PHONE 30 PHONE 14 perfect Health within your with us Y COUNG SAMSON is using milk bottles as field glasses â€" if you leave your order for milk and they will bring the Vision or 32 Main St. Dust cuts into the materials. Cleaning and pressing preâ€" serves their "Newness and Neatness." ,;: g © a £.fC o g s i 6 is\ D bet EGreq #C \ a‘«;\i? ts\ 6 EsE Ca E. @ § * CE ap Clothes by having them thorâ€" oughly cleaned and pressed at regular intervals. Preserve (the life of_ your Jewel Gas Range, almost new, used only one year, in perâ€" feect condition. . Warming closet, high oven and automatic lighter. Phone or write W. M. Chisholm, Russell Road, Wesâ€" ton, phone 160. 3 Suits Made to Measure Wednesday, October 14 WESTON BOWLING ALLEY THURSDAY, OCT. 8th, at 7.30 pm. at Weston Fair Grounds ouse of Sfone HB 4* E fir ib y Evmess o 5 ap tm & & "T d © wh krew T91 > oo hi 84 1 fl’ i eA *h Cp im ap c Bs Fu uesd _â€"ofti BB hed i theen Ging® ootak t Ad i tyos Ch rérly m %vhu:}‘gs_‘ ba CA h No ue uy No & o Pe CA k w Knds codPhsa stt n PP Juvenile Lacrosse Game irst Bow! will be rolled by Mayor Flynn. ORANGEVILLE vs. WESTON HORSE RACES BICYCLE RACES and other sports WESTON BOYS‘ BAND in attendance ___ Admission 35c Greatest day‘s sport ever held in Weston Manager, STAN. NORKUS FOR SALE FZIN AL Phone 490 OPENING OF reach BALL GAME \ _ *"I tried shutting my eyes to see what |kind of picture I could make in my \mind from the music, and although I | could not_see the play, I could: tell | when the three qualitiesâ€"sadness, gladâ€" {ness and angerâ€"came in. !â€"~"The acting was so natural that it ‘seemed as though it was being lived inâ€" ‘stead of played. "Although the singing was in some ,'foreign language, the different qualiâ€" ;ties of the voice, the acting and the | scenery made it seem a picture withâ€" |out words. "I would not have enjoyed it half as \have gotten the beautiful tlho;;}‘;i well if it had been inâ€"our language, beâ€"|I got out of this beautiful opera "By the scenery, which seemed so natural that it looked real.instead of being made up, I could tell exactly what place they were supposed to be. The orchestra music, instead of seemâ€" ing to be something to make the singâ€" ing prettier, seemed to me to be one of the biggest parts of the opera. If the orchestra had not played it would have seemed as though one of the leadâ€" ing actors were missing. "Where I was sitting there were a good many children, and by frequently hearing them talk about the opera it helped me to understand the story. "I have never read the story of ‘Il Trovatore‘ and had only heard our teacher tell part of it to our room. I started to read it before I went to the opera, but decided to wait and see how closely I guessed the story from the music. Being the Impressions of a High School Girl Who Has Just Reached Her Thirteenth Birthday and fun reigns supremeâ€" When Black Cats prow!lâ€" When the Hob gobblins Hoot. â€"That‘s Hallowe‘en. Make the Parties a success by the proper settings. Delightful _ and . appropriate Decorations and Noveltiecs are here m When Jack o‘ Lanterns grin M. G. Creswick Book and Stationery Store 54 Main St. Hallowe‘en â€"At Keen Pricesâ€" "IL TROVATORE" ora was singing to Manrico, his void@ seemed to come from _ high up ‘as though he were really in the tower. "I liked ‘Home to Our Mountains‘ best. One reason was because I had heard it so many times that it made it more beautiful in the opera. Tears gathered in my eyes because it was so sad and still so beautiful. "I am sure that I enjoyed this opera more than seeing two or three picture shows, which would have cost just as much, if not more, and I would not have gotten the beautiful thoughts that cause the words would not have soundâ€" ed so pretty, and I would have tried to catch the words rather than listen to the music. "In Act IV, first scene, when Leony As te witness left the court he turnâ€" ed to the policeman and said, "Goodâ€" bye, policeman!"‘ w ‘"None whatever," smiled the magis trate. . ness "Goodâ€"Bye, Policeman!‘ > The witness had been severely repriâ€" manded by the court for having inâ€" _ sulted a policeman by calling him a _ jfwkuss. "You say it is a crime toâ€"eall a po-“ liceman a jackass?" asked the wi+~ ness. NZzz "It certainly is," was the answer,\_ "Is it any harm to call a ,in(‘kass\m a policeman?" again queried the witâ€" _ Trampâ€"Hairpins, sir, I was bobbed out of business." Charitable â€"manâ€""What is â€" your line?" I Trampâ€""Ah, sir, I was once a sucâ€" cessful: manufacturer, but I failed "fi business Jast year." : Bobbed Out of Business Charitable Manâ€""Ah, my poor man, here‘s sixpence. You don‘t look like the average run of begears. Tell me, how did you meet misfortune?" ‘"Who‘s the stranger, mother, dear? Look, he knows usâ€"ain‘t he queer! "Hush, my own, don‘t talk so wild; He‘syour father, dearest child." "He‘s my father? No such thing! Father died away last spring." 5 "Fathe: didn‘t die, you dub! Father joined a golfink club. But they‘ve closed the club, so he Has no place to go, you seeâ€" No place left for him to roamâ€" That is why he‘s coming home. Kiss himâ€"he won‘t bite you child; ‘5// All them golfing guys look wild? Mrs. Gordon had just moved into the neighborhood. â€"One morning . neighbor called and said: "I thoué:: I would come and tell you that your Jimmy has been fighting my ~Teddy, and I should like to settle the matter if I can."‘" "For my part," said Mrs, Gordon, haughtily, "I have no time to waste over the children‘s quarrels. h consider myself above such trifli matters." "That‘s all right, then," was the reply. "I‘ll send your Jimmy over on a stretcher as soon as he can be moved." ‘‘No, I ain‘t, mother," said Sam, taking a ghastly little packet from his pocket. . "Here they are." t ‘‘Sam, you‘ve been fighting again!"‘ the boy‘s mother shrieked. _ "You‘ve lost_four teeth." "My, what a comedown!" sympathizâ€" ed the kindâ€"hearted woman. "And how long has it been since you rode iff your own carriage?" "Just fortyâ€"five years, â€"mum," plied the panhandler, as he pock the proffered dime. "I was a | then." "Yes, mum," â€" sniveled. the handler, "there was a time y rode in my own carriage." Mayâ€"She ought to have them. She‘s been looking for a husband for twenty years. ed?" Strangerâ€""Do you know a travelâ€" ing man working here with one leg named Smith ?" ® Ethelâ€"Hasn‘t Miss Hunt got searchâ€" ing eyes? think?2" De Brown â€" No; T attended _ a sleightâ€"ofâ€"hand performance. , Fitz Jonesâ€"Where? De Brownâ€"I went to call on Miss Le Smythe, and offered her my hand, but she slighted it. # "Unless you consent to be mine," he said, "I will leave this town, and never come back to it." j Fitz Jonesâ€"Did you get to the musie hall last evening, Percy? f T\ it CC C N 1 "Garn, yer lazy" worm; if ye_ were half a man ye‘d help me turn the mangle." "I may be a worm, but I ain‘t one wot turns, anyway." "I‘m worried about my complexion, acctor. Look at my face." ‘"You‘ll have to diet." "I never thought of that. What color would suit me best, do you "I‘ll think it over," she replied, "but remember, that‘s a promise." The new typist determined to make a good impression upon her chief. She turned up half an hour early and beâ€" gan tidying up the room. When that was done she examined her typewriter, discovered it in a shocking condition, found a bottle and gave it a thorou%h oiling. While about it, she examined all the other typewriters in the office and oiled them, too. c Her chief arrived. He looked around him with an air of satisfaction aÂ¥d crossed to the mantlepiece. Then his smile changed to a frown. ; There is nothing, she thought, fike making .herself indispensable. s King Old Ladyâ€"Poor man! And are you married? "Snippets Weary Trampâ€"No, lady. I wouldn‘t be relying on total strangers for sup< port if I ‘ad a wife, lady. "Miss Smith," he said, "have you seen my cough mixture?" 4 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER #, 1925 Clerkâ€""What‘s the other Ieé‘ namg PHJ (By T. W.) TS, . mum, _ reâ€" as heâ€" pocketed "I was a baby & _ the : panâ€" time whenâ€" I

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