No ’ ym IIt } {“’;:; | Rememhex' sns (@ MV $ nflwmm smx«:m DT yA NNZZC 4 J C _ s at o1 "F::‘,'L:';;_ 3 PAGE FOUR BODY REPAIRING Cor. Main and Coulter Sts. There‘s a lot of â€"dependable mileage in that car of yoursâ€" don‘t sell it! Let us repaint it in a bright, new color. We use a fastâ€"drying weatherâ€"resisting finish, drive in or call. e s _ Estimates of prices quoted. MEN‘S AND BOYS‘ WEAR 55 MAIN ST. NORTH SEE SPECIAL DISPLAYS AT OUR STORE THIS WEEKâ€" END OF 100 SPECIALS. ONLY A FEW MENTIONED HERE. !- Bm -‘. cessn eancten e vespery iprstotencreriak eaatenmagiaiae s o i oepion en h P o. tss e ce B 7 fl: C toah Lc \ ~.»;x"'?_u§). i aaparne o s Mersots * s | :_’ua("( 3 L1 CRve t C felaa y id C “n ()e. i oE Caeeve: G o 2. CC% \ 1 t T es O.. -f 9 ,//‘ iss‘ &\ JOHNST ON‘S Men‘s and Boys‘ Caps. Values to $1.75 ............._.._.91.00 Solid Leather Belts, With BUCKIC .....smmmammcem=~$1,00 65¢ Silk and Lisle SOCKS. 2 PRITS .......=mmamameie_..$1.00 Any Straw Hat in SEOFE :...........00.mimmmmimermiacmmmacacca h t.â€"00 SW hoopee" Felt Hat§ ................00ommmacresperummere $ 100 Summer Underwear ..........$1.00 per Suit or Combination Men‘s Work Socks, 3 and 4 pairs, fOF .........._._._.@_.$1.00 iX few Broadcloth ShITES ................ oooemuimmremctinnsances:9 100 $1.00 off any orders for Tailorâ€"made Suits at our usual low prices. : A CAR YOU‘RE PROUD TO DRIVE! t «& shoe" ;1 \ SPec'la‘s $ Eagle Block Kirby‘s Dry Goods Store FULLER BROS. 3 Days Onlyâ€"July 18th, 19th & 20th See Special Goods in Windows a2 for $1.00 W. H. KIRBY Block Weston Phone §};\\\\\\\\\\/\§\ IML /5////[//////2 * 2 M;\ V\’\E igé gyos T Next Door to A. & P. Store day Specials FENDERS STRAIGHTENED RAPID SERVICE WESTON s M SHOE STOBE Remembet the Address s cayp NY ’N‘Mfl, yoft °_ wmeve FOR REAL VALUE _ FOR YOUR $ * sHOP AT _ Met® the Men‘s & Boys‘ Wear Dollar Day guch Y gefor® got W 0“\6“ gwilar? At Phones: Weston 1263 Res. Junet. 3674 V a\ueS !“f Â¥XDY Phone 1222 IN and wegr0® WESTON I began to see the advantage of snowshoes and skis for winter travelâ€" ing. â€"It seemed hardly possible that the same erust which held us so easily with them on would prove so treachâ€" erous when we were deprived of our wide footgear. _ x "See if you can‘t give a lift of some sort." suggested Hemmingway. "Gladly," I answered, "but how ?" "Reach down with your hands and help while I seramble up and. get "I fell off my snowshoes," he exâ€" plained briefly. "I tripped,, and in trying to save myself I stepped out of the loops that fastened the fool things on my feet. I didn‘t realize how thin a crust it was here or how deep it was underneath it. It wouldn‘t hold me and I fell through; that‘s all. As far as my experience went it was an unprecedented situation. "Can‘t you climb out?" I asked. "No. ‘ Every step I take makes the hole larger." > f We passed through a gully that was pretty thickly grown up with hardâ€" wood timber. It was a narrow and deep dryâ€"wash and lots of snow had drifted into it. 1 had gotten across it safely and was proceeding without looking back, when a muffled ery of "Help!" caused me to turn around. Hemmingway was nowhere in sight! Slightly puzzled, I went back. He had certainly been close behind me. I found him in the gully up over his head in snow. His snowshoes lay on top, melancholy monuments of his whereabouts. I looked down at him in amazement. For the most part we travelled in silence. Once we had an argument as to whether or not we were proceeding in the correct direction, I thought we were right and he maintained that we were bearing too far to the left. "No," I argued. "Not at this time of year. In the winter the sun is quite a ways south. So, to go east, we ought to keep the sun a little to the right." Cho, I finally convinced him, or he got tired of arguing. Anyway, we went my way. I still maintain that we would have reached Fair Oaks in that direction had it not been for the acâ€" cident. . "What‘s happened ?" I asked. "How did you get down there?" _ "Of course! Otherwise why didn‘t you slow up or jump over me?" I mamtained a dignified ~silence. What possible answer could I return to a fool query.like that ? ~Why didn‘t I jump. over him? Why doesn‘t Taft hold the poleâ€"vyault record ? » _ § I cut myself a branch of a tree. It was a great help. I used it in climbing up the next incline and leanâ€" ed ‘heavily on it coming down on the other side. "To go due east," he insisted, "we ought to head directly toward the sun.‘ A pole was what I needed most. T thought I could manage the nonchalâ€" ant smile myself. _ When my skis were readjusted where I had strained the footstraps by tripping over him I proceeded the rest of the way down hill.. 8 "Use a long stick dragging in the snow to make them go slower," he offered contemptuously. "How do you know ?" I asked. "Pictures," he explained tersely. I recollected something like that myself, now that he had mentioned it. You remember the photographâ€"a graceful young man in a tassled cap and sweater poised in midâ€"air half way from one rise of ground to anâ€" other, in his hand a long pole, on his face a nonchalant smile ? Hemmingway joined me a little later, limping. .. _ : Hemmingway scrambled to his feet. To my amazement, he held one snowâ€" shoe in his hand and while I looked he brought it down over my head. $ I was could have been brought to a full stop in so short a distance. Hemâ€" mingway made a wonderful buffer. I was hardly, hurt a bit, and was very glad to cease moving for a few momâ€" ents with more parts of me resting on the ground than just my feet. "You dang murderer!" he shouted by way of emphasis to the blow. "What‘d, you try to kill me for ?" "Whâ€"what‘s that?" I ejaculated. "Do you think I did it on purpose ?" i The Soupâ€"Bowl. â€" My skis went under him and I went over him. It hardly seems possible that an object moving so rapidly as To get back home, Hemmingway must travel by foot, and Rilbeck ofâ€" fers,to go with him. In violent disâ€" agreement, they nevertheless start out together on snowshoes and skis and soon Bilbeck tumbles over Hemmingâ€" way, the going being difficult. Now Go On With the Story CHAPTER XI. The Sheriff‘s horse has broken loose. . Meanwhile Hemmingway susâ€" pects Bilbeck more and more, and Jim Cooper mixes in to tell Bilbeck he has arranged that the Hemmingways be divorced and that Bilbeck is to marry Mrs. Hemmingway. > § Hemmingway arrives just when Bilâ€" beck is assisting Mrs. Hemmingway, who has fainted, and of course thinks the worst. Meanwhile a disturbance is heard in the cellar, and all in the house rush down to it. The captured thief is tied to a chair at the Old Soldiers‘ Home. Unable to leave the home as the car refuses to. budge, the players must stay there, and Mr. Hemmingway, hearing this over the phone, says he is coming right to the homeâ€"as he is suspicious of his wife and Bilbeck. Meanwhile the Sheriff arrives. Riding away from the scene of the illâ€"fated play in their costumes and overcoats, the group of players is held up by two escaped convicts, one of whom is captured by Bilbeck after a struggle. What Happened Before The Sheridan Dramatic Club, of which ~Tom Bilbeck, the narrator, Maryella, the girl he cares for, and Jim Cooper, his rival, are members, start a performance of Pygmalion and Galatea at the Old Soldiers Home, but are interrupted by a fire. During the rehearsals Tom Bilbeck is accused by the husband of one of the actors, Mr. Hemmingway, of being in love with his wife. ELEVENTH INSTALLMENT d "Â¥ MIEMEVINECT oi inenirmanmeantenintinn s onvemnrimmnt necre onommarenmecnectnes ’/H ‘ â€"/fmdhl [ 4aWmILLUSTRATED BY FRANK B. DRUEN THE WESTON TIMES & GUIDE So we pushed on. _ We had been traveling in the woods, so we were a little doubtful about our directions. but as soon as we emerged we found the sun again and headed in that genâ€" eral direction, bearing a little to the left as before. I was getting hungry, but Hemâ€" mingway vetoed the idea of stopping at a farmhouse for a Iunch because, as he suggested, we could _ probably get a better meal in town. He thought we must be almost there, as we had been traveling quite a while before we A few minutes later Hemmingway worked the same trick. After we had put on our skis and snowshoes we started off once more. "We were there so long," I said, "that we have probably missed the train." "I suppose so," Hemmingway asâ€" sented gloomily. "But there will be another train some time, I guess, and if we hurry we may be there before I ran up the side of the bow!l as far as I could and then turned and ran straight down again and up on the other side. I repeated this proâ€" cess several times, the impetus carâ€" rying me higher each time, until at last by supreme effort I scrambled over the ledge into snow that was only moderately deep. 2 "Keep a little bit told Hemmingway, but docile, he obeyed _ I ran up the side As we sat there. panting I tried to rack my braing as to where I had been in a similiar situation, At last I remembered it., It was in a summer amusement park years ago. â€" There had been a depression in the floor of one of the concessions called the "Soup Bowl," out of which it was very difficult to extricate yourself after you had once got in. There was a trick about itâ€"the trick was the only way you could ever get out. & _ I racked my brains to remember that trick. At last I did. e 3 Honestly I didn‘t trip him on purâ€" pose, although he says I did. How foolish! I wanted to get out of there myself. _ e ie , "I hope this isn‘t broken," I said, examining it carefully. _ $ I got to my feet as soon as posible and moved the point of one of my skis from John Hemmingway‘s stomach. We tried the same trick again and again, and always with the same reâ€" sult. One or the other of us would slip and it would involve the entire party in disaster. "We will run" around in a circle down here." he explained, "each time going a little higher:on the sides. The centrifugal foree will keep us from slipping until finally we‘ll reach the top. You‘ve seen fellows do that trick on motorcycles > M 2x racing bowl, BRaver‘t you?""~ *>. . 3e I admitted that I had, but doubted whether we could go fast enough to raise us to the top, However it was worth tllying, and we started. I had to carry the skis in my hand and he had his snowshoes strapped over his shoulders, so that when we got out we would have with us our means of proceeding further. _ 2 3 He started out ahead, and in order to keep out of his way I had to follow. We were getting glong fine and were half way up the side of the bowl!, when‘ Hemmingway, who was travelâ€" ing faster than I, tried to pass me. Be that as it may, he did fall, and as he went he carried me with him. We landed in our usual position at the bottom of the bowl, hopelessly tangled up as to arms, legs, skis, and snowâ€" shoes. "So do I," groaned Hemmingway, "for I want to break it myself!" He rubbed the spot where the ski had rested. After we had done that for quite a while we desisted. . We didn‘t have any more wind left, anyway.. _ _ _ We found out that we were in a bowlâ€"shaped depression with steep sides and a rounded bottom. It looked as if it would beâ€"comparatively simâ€" ple matter to climb out under ordinary conditions, but with the snow over everything it proved as impossible as for an insect to get ‘out of the funnelâ€" shaped pit of an antâ€"lion. _ & Finally we envolved a scheme of tramping the snow under foot in each direction until we discovered what the confines of our prison were. It must have taken us an hour to do it, but it kept us warmer and gave us the feelâ€" ing that we were at least doing someâ€" thing. _ > /. . "I think I‘ve got it," Hemmingway suggested. "What‘s your scheme?" I asked, sceptically.. fat 0 © j "And freeze to death in the meanâ€" time, I suppose. This is a nice little ice box you chose for a home anyway. My fingers feel as if they are going to break off now!" "What you on my shoulders?" I asked. " Why do I get the star part in this acrobatic act? _ If you get out, what happens to me? I suppose I stay down here until it gets spring." . . "You co he offered "I didn‘t want to come in," I reâ€" turned angrily, "I was trying to help you. The next time you fall off your old snowshoes you can get back on them all by yourself. Now that we are here, how are we going to get out ?" "_ We might tunnel," he suggested. "All the way to town ?" I asked. "How would it be if I stood on your shoul,siers,†he suggested, "and climbed out ? "What are you doing down here?" he asked petulantly. . He spoke as if it was his hole and no one else had any right to be in it. I sincerely believe that the scheme would have workedif my skis hadn‘t begun to slip. As it was he was nearly half way out before my feet shot out from under me:and landed solidly at the bottom of the pit he had made. I acquiesced in his plan, as I could think of no other,. Reaching down I gave him my hands and began to pull ?p while he ecrambled wildly with his eet. How I managed to end up underâ€" neath Hemmingway I can‘t imagine; but I didswith a lot of snow and his snowshoes on top of both of us. back on my snowshoes. This seems to be sort of a hole in the ground I am in and I think the snow isn‘t so deep where you are." 1€ /m E. aDaMg7z C [v ; AD iA . NK-“ 3 ’y " _2 _ ~FRB Z7 could wait until I got help," E We C /; .\ (hoe ~~ l_.t: . "| â€"BYÂ¥ | «iifl"® _ _ _â€"G4#â€" to one side," I and wondering The doctor‘s little daughter was watching wideâ€"eyed as he tested the heart and lungs oX a patient. Suddenâ€" ly she spoke:: "Getting any new staâ€" tions, daddy ?"â€"London Calling. The centipede abroad in Eastern lands is a formidable, and often poisâ€" onous, insect, but its wisdom might well instruct human beings of every age and clime. Afraid of the tarantuâ€" la (a species of great spider) the cenâ€" tipede always takes care to build a cactus fence round itself ere it goes to sleep. It is most entertaining to watch the security of the centipedes as they lie at ease, while their archâ€"enemies cannot crawl over the cactus, which they will never tackle. Looking back over weather records makes one believe, says an English writer, that there really may be someâ€" thing in the sunâ€"spot theory of a ten to twelve year cycle of weather over Western Europe. There was a spell of hard winter in 1895, another in 19â€" 06, a third in 1916, and now here we are having a fourth in 1929. The summers, too, have followed more or less the same curve. But why should sunâ€"spots affect only Western Eurâ€" ope? _ Must not the influence of the Atlantic Ocean be taken into the acâ€" count. Lima Beans a la King To 2 cups cooked fresh limas add 2 heaping tablespoons chopped pimiento, a bit of minced parsley and a cup of white sauce. Add last two tablespoons grated cheese and blend well and serve hot insteud of meat. Nicest Soap Dish Especially, in the kitchen are those rough rubber soap dishes convenient. They not only rinse out as easily as a sponge, but can also be used to scour the sink in a jiffy. Formula for Destroying Flies Use 1 pint infusion of quassia, 4 oz. moist sugar, 1 oz. pepper. Mix and stand about in saucers. Frying Ham and Bacon Never cook ham or bacon over a hot fire. Place meat in a cold pan over moderate heat and cook slowly. Italian Vegetable Salad Sliced radishes, tomato, and cucumâ€" ber, cold cooked cauliflower, cold cookâ€" ed asparagus, a slice or two of Spanâ€" ish onion and hearts of lettuce and marinate well with French dressing made in proportions of 3 tablespobns olive oil to 1 tablespoon vinegar and serve very cold. A Fragrant Fruit Drink To each glass of ginger ale add 2 tablespoons of juice from a can of apricots. Pour over cracked ice and garnish with fresh mint. Cleans Rusty Knives § Instead of trying to scour them, work rusty knives and forks up and down in the ground several times and they will polish beautifully. Handling Refuse Save all paper bags to line the trash can which receives scraps of food, peelings and dry waste matter of all sorts. Thus refuse can be disposed of in a very cleanly and sanitary way. Early in the day plan your meal and prepare it, choosing only recipes and combinations‘that will work harmonâ€" iously in such a schemeâ€"one hot dish may be included; otherwise, let each course be something tantalizingly coldâ€"and how you‘ll enjoy it! Ice Box Menu Jellied Bouillon Cheese Chips Crabâ€"meat and Quartered Hardâ€"boiled Eggs on Lettuce â€" Mayonnaise Saratoga Potatoes Succotash (reâ€"heated) Iceâ€"box Pudding Beverage Have you allowed your iceâ€"box to help you in every possible way on hot daysâ€"given it a chance to serve deâ€" licious iceâ€"box meals instead of the regulation hot foods ? & These treats can be arranged so easilyâ€"and what a joy it isâ€"a scant half hour before mealtime to step leisâ€" urely indoors, open the refrigerator and pull out a magic menu all ready to put on the table, __ It was only when the sun set that we realized our blunder. While we had been in the soupâ€"bowl the sun had passed overhead; and when we had taking our bearings again after comâ€" ing out, we must have headed southâ€" west when we went towards the sun and a little left. It was absurdly simâ€" ple when we came to think about it, but I doubt if anyone not trained in woodcraft would have done differently than we. > We had been going ever since noon in exactly the opposite direction; and by this time were three or four hours‘ traveling from Fair Oaks! _ Still we were headed in the right direction, due east, towards the sun. found the soupâ€"bowl, and it was only about eight miles all told. So we pushed on. At the top of every hill we epecâ€" ted to get our first glimpse of Fair Oaks, but every time we were disâ€" appointed. It â€" seemed incredible that we had not come eight miles. We had been walking for hours and were all worn out. CLEVER AND DANGEROUS WwWEATHER CYCLES. ‘Continued Next Week Following the restoration of the kirpans (sacred daggers) to two Sikhs (Alliston Herald.) There is often an exclamation of indignation when bonding a lawyer is mentioned. Why not? Bonding does not detract from a lawyer‘s respect, Mr. J. R. Hipwell, town treasurer, is bonded, and no man in town enjoys a better reputation than he. But Mr. Hipwell is bonded because all muniâ€" cipal treasurers are bonded; the muniâ€" cipal act makes, it compulsory. It is not difficult to engage in conversaâ€" tion men and women of Alliston who are firmly convinced that lawyers and insurance and general agents, who adâ€" minister the affairs of widows, apart from executors who are bonded, should be required to make out insurance against losses to clients through misâ€" appropriation, incompetence, neglect or any other cause. The Property Committee of Weston Board of Education ask for tenders for Six Hundred and Fifty Tons (more or less) of Coal to be placed in bins at King St., Memorial, High and Vocational Schods. 400 tons to be delivered in August, the balance during the last week of December, 1929. § s Coal to be threeâ€"quarter run of mine. Analysis of coal to accomâ€" pany sealed tenders. All tenders to be in the hands of Secretary not later than July 22nd, 1929. Nee ts t ei n ai NAILERS E s /d T.‘ Ir.. ~Cp_ _ | \@ DAGGERS OR DEATH $ 8 95 5 5 5 5 § S 5 & 55 § § 2 Main St. N. BONDING LAWYERS. 6 Main St. N. Legs of the finest Spring Lambs, the pick of the Union Stock Yards. At Ib. ... PRIME RIB ROAST OUTSTANDING SPECIALS FOR THE WEEKâ€"END Lb Reduced Prices F. J. BRIDGMAN MIDâ€"SUMMER SAÂ¥ LE SUPERIOR STORE TENDERS FOR COAL Special prices on all sSPORT SHOES, WHITE CANVAS CLEARING ALL LINES BROKEN WHITE KID SHOES LIFEâ€"BUOY RUNNING SHOES Two Direct Phones: 344 & 377 OUR DOLLAR DAYS SPECIAL & “fl‘y 2 Cups and M Saucers 12 ? with “;#ï¬ 2 ib. of Tesa m (f or Coffee / L _ N s $1.00 DURING THIS SALE ONLY One Ib. Sausage, One Ib. Lard 5 Ib. pail Clover Leaf Honey We Deliver Valueâ€"Serviceâ€"Courtesy Quality Shoes F. HARDACRE, Prop. For the Whole Family We Do Repairing dfl]z All for $1.00 in sizes at greatly 30c per Ib. BUTCHER And "It is used to make people believe that we know a lot more than we rga]ly do," replied the bright youngâ€" ster. who, it is stated, had them forcibly removed at the Esplanade police station recently the Sikhs broke their fast, says a correspondent from Bomâ€" bay. The general order of the Bomâ€" bay Government, forbidding the carryâ€" ing of weapons, in view of the recent disturbances, has not yet been withâ€" drawn. â€" Reuter.â€"(An earlier Reuter message stated that the President of the Singh Sabha in Bombay had teleâ€" graphed to the Viceroy protesting against the ban on kirpans, which were ‘"a religious symbol carried by every sikh from baptism till death." The two men deprived of their kirâ€" pans under the arms order, had from that moment started to fast.) Cloak For Ignorance "Willie," said the teacher of the juvenile class, "what is the term ‘etce.‘ used for ?" WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1929 A. T. MATHER, Secretary FREE PHONE 674â€"J 43¢ Weston Phone 25 xâ€"36â€"141