Ontario Community Newspapers

Times & Guide (1909), 4 Sep 1929, p. 3

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POSITION WANTED for a girl of sixteen, light housework preferred, capable of taking care of children, phone Weston 1140â€"W. oâ€"43â€"1t FOR SALEâ€"A private sale of houseâ€" hold furniture, must be sold. Apply 182 William St., phone 869M. ____ WANTEDâ€"Commerce Graduate deâ€" sires position as stenographer. Phone 347J. 0â€"48â€"1t FURNISHED BEDROOM for rent, "Ever been to Egypt?" asked Ferâ€" dinand. PEKIN DUCKS for sale, apply S. Kay, 77 Chiswick Ave., off Hardâ€" COMFORTABLE ROOM & BOARD 6 ROOM FRAME HOUSE for sale or rent, good condition, bath, electric, lot 832x120, good location, reasonâ€" able terms. , Apply 132 William St. 0â€"43â€"1t "Rather! Wonderful place!" agreed Felix. "Did you go up the Nile?" "Oh, yes, of course. What a glorâ€" ious view from the summit!" Town of Weston The Town Treasurer is authorized to accept prepayment on account of 1929 Taxes. LIGHT WAGON for sale. Apply Mr. Blamire, Irwin Road, Thistletown, phone Weston 227r4. xâ€"43â€"1t On amounts so received a discount (equivalent to interest at 5% per anâ€" num) will be allowed and a receipt will be issued. showing the exact amount to which the holder will be entitled on Xay-ment of taxes. HARRY G. MUSSON, WANTEDâ€"Reliable girl by the day to help with two small children and light housework, phone Weston 415. : xâ€"d42â€"2t Dated at Toronto this ist day of August, A.D. 1929. JAMES LEAN by ANDERSON & BOURDON, NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR DMMVORCE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that JAMES LEAN, of the city of Toronâ€" to, in the County of York, and Provâ€" ince of Ontario, Mechanic, will apply to the Parliament of Canada at the next session thereof for a Bill of Divorcement from his wife, HAZEL MAY LEAN of the Town of Barrie, in the County of Simeoe, in the Provâ€" ince of Ontario, on the ground of adultery and abandonment. TWO HOUSES for sateâ€"Coulter ave. Weston, :6 rooms, all conveniences, decorated, insulated against heat and cold, paved street, close to cars. Apply 32 Cross St, Weston. xâ€"35â€"1t FOR SALE OR EXCHANGEâ€"Sixâ€" , _ W. E. Watson, for some years past an official of the Departments of Colonization and Agriculture of the Canadian National Railways and one of the best known liveâ€" stock men in Western Canada has been ap})ointed manager of the Montreal Stock Yards at Point St. Charles, succeeding Mr. D. J. Tansey, who has resigned. _ every convenience, near street cars and trains, with or without board. Phone 659W. 0â€"43â€"1t for rent, for one or two men. 15 Dufferin Street, West, Weston. _ ing. s*~* ~WEDNESDAY, SEPT: 4, 1929 ° Mr. Watson is a native of Grey County, Ontario, but has spent many years in Western Canada where his most recent position was that of Superintendent of Farm Employment for the Canadian National Railways at Winnipeg. roomed cement block home, convenâ€" iences, good piece of land, would consider exchange. Apply Box 587 Times & Guide Office. n.c.â€"40â€"1t There will also be an added charge of 10 cents, where appliâ€" cation is madeâ€"care of this office. The rates for publication are one cent a word, with a miniâ€" mum charge of 25 cents. All payments should be made on or before Tuesday, of the week of issue. e â€" _ An additional charge of 10 cents will be made where entries are charged. _ ____ Ssd PREPAYMENT OF TAXES â€" It is essential that all copy should be on hand for the week of issue by Tuesday noon. The Publishers of The Times and Guide desire to notify the patrons of this column:=â€" . Stockyards Manager Town Treasurer. 0-43f1t 0â€"48â€"1t 0â€"43â€"1t She was alone in the wilderness, and the train was already a toy runâ€" ning through a gap between two lofty butes.. Both mocked the girl unenâ€" durably and she stood panting in a suffocation of fright, her hands plucking at each other‘s finger nails. For a tranceâ€"while Mem made a perféct allegory of helplessness on a monument. She heard a voice laughâ€" ing with a kind of querying exclamâ€" ation : ‘"Hello ?" The word was as unimportant as could be and it came from what she had just decreed the most useless thing on earth, a handsome movingâ€" picture actor. He went on: "Here we are, ch?" Tom Holby laughed at fate as in his pictures. es o. * â€" The train was moving, a new locomotive dragging it and its broken engine. She ran, fell, picked herself up, limped forward. _ j Then for the first time Mem underâ€" stood what the desert meant to those who had seen the last burro drop and found the canteen full of dry air. When she started back the cool of the butt‘s shadow made herâ€" rest awhile. The heat and the hypnosis of the shimmering sand sea put her asleep in spite of herself. She awoke with a start. halt, a disaster having been narrowâ€" ly avoided, a disaster having been narrowly avoided, and the passengers get out and walk about. Now Go On With The Story The other pasengers dawdled about, but Mem went farther and farther. She wanted to see what was on the other side of that bute as much as mankind has longed to see the other side of the moon. "I‘ve nearly died of thirst in the desert half a dozen times," he said; NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR DIVORCE Notice is hereby given that William Francis Addison, of the City of Toâ€" ronto, in the County of York, in the Province of Ontario, Canada, Accountâ€" ant, will apply to the Parliament of Canada, at the next session thereof, for a Bill of Divorce from his wife, Edna Rowena Addison, of the said City of Toronto, on the ground of adultery. . 3 : Dated at Toronto, in the Province of Ontario, this 23rd day of August, A.D., 1929. GEARY, SAUNDERS & DYKE, 330 Bay Street, Toronto 2, Ontario, iSolicitors for the Applicant. xâ€"43â€"5t Her mother agrees with the plan of the doctor. _ Mem leaves town. On the train Mem _ accidentally. meets Tom Holby, movie â€" star, travelling with Robina Teele, leading lady in the movies, who are the cynosure of all eyes. The train comes to an abrupt ‘ THIRD INSTALMENT ‘ What Happened Before Remember Steddon, a pretty, unâ€" sophisticated girl, is the daughter of a kindly but narowâ€"minded minister in a small midâ€"western town. Her ifather, Rev, Doctor Steddon, violentâ€" ly. opposed to what he considers "worldly" things, accepts motion picâ€" tures as the cause for much of the evil of the present day. Troubled with a cough, Remember goes to see Dr. Bretherick, an elderly physician, Iwho is astonished at the plight in \which he finds her. Pressed by the doctor, Remember admits her unforâ€" tunate affair with Elwood Farnaby, a poor boy, son of the town sot. As ‘Remember and Dr. Bretherick discuss the problem a telephone message that Elwood has been killed in an acâ€" cident. Dr. Bretherick accordingly‘ persuades Remember to go West, her cough serving as a plausible excuse; to write home of meeting and marryâ€" ing a pretended suitorâ€"‘Mr. Woodâ€" ville"â€"and later to write her parents announcing her "husband‘s" death beâ€" fore the birth of her expected child. Unable alone to bear her secret, Reâ€" member goes to her mother with it. NILENE will relieve periodic pain, hemdlaches, backaches, weakness, nausea, sleeplessness, irritability, and many other ailmentsfrom which few women areentirely free. A wonâ€" derful reconstructive Nerve Tonic. NILENE can be obtained in either liquid or tablet form at $1.00 per bottle or box. NILENE LABORATORIES, LIMITED 126 Wellington St. West TORONTO 2, ONT., CANADA Nixon‘s Drug Store, Mt. Dennis Cohen‘s Drug Store, Mt. Dennris Wilson‘s Drug Store, Mt. Dennis Richardson‘s Drug Store, Weston Inch‘s Drug Store, Weston Women Why Suffer Periodic Pain? g â€" d a 4A 3 i 55 e C i OSh | Lc ( hi @ M } 6 dBieh . Mor los ic i < P §o 1 5h ta Bs ES o paomeh e aclas he +, s 3 5 5 2 <) : % cdo®e o i B Pos ho ts ol a< Soeelm (Em o s i M l _ Erreep CH fesy â€" Ves BQ PoMincd Powrdih P ol C ho coltit feml hss °C (SD ho MA Z93 tA aslg» * " <Ch 41e stt C se in Tahoent (ou a s fl es & LErz CR T | (a s & Ts &" C C Nee Ts n tave eath C ues Saurets C hamesea ie En to be a pretty decent fellow, too, beâ€" fore I began to be a hero by trade. But nowâ€"gosh! how I love my faults! When there‘s no camera on me and I‘m a mighty mean man." "Really !" "Oh, I‘m a fiend. I‘m thinking of playing villians for a while, so that I can be respectable at my own exâ€" pense outside the factory. But I‘m so mussed up between my professionâ€" al emotions and my personal ones that it‘s hard to keep from acting, on and off. Now look at this situation. If the camera man were here I‘d know just what to do. I‘d be Sir Walter Raleigh in a Stetson and chaps. But since there‘s just us two here and I have you in my powerâ€" or you have me in your powerâ€"I don‘t know just how to act. It deâ€" pends on you. Are you a heroine or an adventuress?" "I don‘t understand you?" "«Are you an onjanoo or a vamp?" ‘I‘ don‘t speak French." "Then you must be an onjanoo," he said. "In that case I suppose I really ought to play the villian andâ€" But here comes the train. Dogâ€"gone it! just as we were working up a real little plot. I hope I haveâ€" n‘t compromised you. . If you‘re haven‘t compromised you. If you‘re afraid I have, I‘ll have to go back and hide till the next rain comes along. Or you can, for I imagine it‘s Robina that reversed the engine. She probably missed me and suspected that I was out here with a prettier girl than she isâ€"pardon me! Shall 1 go hide ?" . &s hes . That was a chapter in Mem‘s life. Holby had guessed right. Robina had missed him and when the helpless conductor protested against the a!â€" ready late, she pulled the rope sacrilâ€" ege of reversing the Limited, herself. "Miss Steddon ?" NYeS.” "I am Doctor Galbraith, pastor of the First Church here. Your father telegraphed me to meet you at the train and look after you." "Do you know papa ?" "No, but he found my name in the yearbook. I have found a nice boardâ€" ing house for you, and my wife and Iâ€"will look after you as best we can." go hide ?" "Oh, no! no! I couldn‘t think of it. Nobody knows me. It can‘t make any difference what they say about me." "Gosh! what an enviable position. Stick to your luck, Miss Steddon. May I help you down ?" ts oo in _She, knew the signals, having playâ€" ed in a railroad serial, and she soon had the train backing at full speed. She had half suspected that Tom Holby had a companion in the desâ€" ert, and when she looked out and saw him with the pretty chit whose magaâ€" zine he had picked up, she was tempâ€" ted to give the signal to go ahead again. 5 e 4 But she preferred to give poor Holâ€" by her opinion of him.: Mem crept back to her place, shivering with her first experience of stardom and its conspicuousness. | en The train made up so much of its lost time that it was only two hours late when it drew into Tucson. Tom made his adieux and left Mem in a whirl. But her faculties went around in the mad panic of a pinwheel when a strange, sombre person spoke to her: Mem was struck violently with, the thought, ‘"But what becomes of Mr. Woodville now ?" : In her desperation she caught sight again of Tom Holby, who had walked briskly to the head of the train and was striding back to his car. A frantic whim led Mem to say, very distinctly, as she passed him:~ _ "‘Remember, ch? Great!. Robina would have preferred that to the one she chose. Do you know Robina?" "I‘ve seen her." ‘On the sereen ?" "On the train." ~ "Oh, then you haven‘t ~séen: her. That isn‘t the real Robina that walks about. That‘s, just a poor, plain, frightened, anxious little thing, a Cinderella: who only begins to live when she puts on her. glass slippers. She hs been so infernally noble all day long that you can hardly blaim her for resting her overworked virâ€" tues when she‘s off the lot. I used ‘Yes, I know," she said, and told him her name. There was a long silence. Then he mused aloud: "Oh, I guess the train will come back or another one will come along and we can flag it in plenty of time. Sit down on this handsome red divan, won‘t you? l‘m Mr. Holby, by the way.” & "but there was always a camera or two a few yards off and a grub wagon just outside. And the heroine usually came along galloping to the rescue and picked me up in time for the final clinch. I see the heroine, but the grub wagon‘s late." "Whâ€"what are we going to do?" "Well, I‘m not going to act, anyâ€" way, as long as there‘s no camera on the job. Let‘s sit down and wait." ‘For what?" "Good night, Mr, Woodville," io o i Ca #©0 50 C S / :y B Jnt f y o i) Eie * baat " _3 J P 1 Ts t j e w UP E C ts yc _\ fiy & S * ftaus > s ILLUSTRATED By â€" 7?541&;7 6 ; DPONALD RILEY â€"â€" ATA â€" â€" A When she had found a seat in the dark hall she was so illiterate in the staples of fiction that she tingled with excitement over hackneyed situations that left many a sophisticated â€" child yawning and gave never a pause to the swaying jaws of the gumâ€"grindâ€" ing crowd. \ She was astounded at‘ the courage of Tom Holby. It wrung her heart to see him in this Alaskan picture plowing across white Saharas of snow, to see him challenge the barâ€" room bully and beat him down and stand, torn, bleeding and panting, over him. Being a woman, she was not quite, convinced of Robina‘s â€" superâ€" saintly innocences in the film, but she If the cinema store had been an opium den Mem could not have sneakâ€" ed more guiltily into it. But Mem was experiencing an agiâ€" tation such as she had not . known since her mother told her about Little Red Riding Hood and growled like a wolf, showing long white teeth. Doctor and Mrs. Galbraith took her back to her lodgings and left her. They had no objectnon to moving picâ€" tures and attended. them often, but Mem did not know this, and she felt like a thief when her worser self comâ€" pelled her better self to a dark disâ€" honesty. Both selves went to the movies. On the way to her boarding house she noted many of Tom Holby‘s porâ€" traits. He was not the star of the picâ€" ture. Robina Teele was the star. Mem felt a longing to see this heroic picâ€" ture, but Mrs. Galbraith would not leave her for a moment, and the night was prayerâ€"meeting night. Mem attended the evening devoâ€" tions. There was nothing strange to her in the drowsy, cozy atmosphere, the sparse company singing hymns and bowing in prayer and finding a mystical comfort in the thought of sins forgiven and in eternal home beâ€" yond the grave. $ Mrs. Galbraith turned out to be a joyous Western woman raised on a ranch and of a loud and hilarious corâ€" diality. She was distressed because she could not take Mem into her own little home, but it was spilling over with children. The reason it looked familiar was that lithographs of it were posted up all over Tuscon. Holby was to appear there in a picture. The Reverend Galbraith paused, but Mem urged him along, saying, "That‘s an old friend I met on the train." And now she felt that she had established the existence of her Mr. Woodville. She was already unconsciously "plantâ€" ing" characters. "His face looked familiar; but I guess it wasn‘t."" but he laughted to himself, "This is fame!" bowed and went on. THE WESTON TIMES & GUIDE Holby could hardly believe his ears, LESS TUBES $ â€" _ Time Payments if Desired SEE AND HEAR THE NEW AAJES TIC RADIO MODELS IMDROVED FUPERâ€" DYNAMIC SPEAKERG BEAUTIFUL AMERICAN WALNUT CABINETG (NOAÂ¥/cHUMâ€"NO OFCILLATION) The Highboy Jacobean period cabinet of Amâ€" erican walnut. _ Doorsâ€" of matched butt walnut with overlays on doors and interior panel of imported Ausâ€" tralian Lacewood. Escutcheon plate, knobs and door pulls finished in genuine silver, QUIET Model 92 She threw caution aside and forâ€" fore to regard the perils of incomsisâ€" tency. She wrote her father and mothâ€" er a hasty letter to which the lilt of She would probably have given up trying if a bit of luck had not beâ€" fallen her. Mrs. Galbraith rode over in haste and distress to explain that her husband and she had to leave Tueson for a few days to attend his father‘s funeral. She promised to hasten back, and begged Mem Steddon‘s . forgiveâ€" ness for deserting her. It was plainâ€" ly a time for quick and decisive action. One â€"thingâ€" was certainâ€"she must free herself from the Galbraiths; she must.get out of Tueson. She must beâ€" come Mrs. Woodville at once. had no doubt of Tom Holby as Gala had. In her room she remembered her parents.: She had not written to them for two days, and she had not carâ€" ried Mr. Woodville forward. $ No Interestâ€"12 Months to Pay. Gone is the "throttling" action of old style detection â€"â€"gone the difficulty of getting both range and volume at low or high wave lengths. Music and speech sweep gloriously through this radio and issue from its Imâ€" proved Superâ€"Dynamic Speaketr, undimmed and unâ€" distorted â€" complete, satisfying, true ! See, hear and learn for yourself what these amazing New "Humless" Models will do. Let us give you a free demonstration in your home tonight ! 28 Main St. N. Another triumph of research is the exclusive Majestic feature, Automatic Sensitivity Control, which assures equal sensitivity and range at all points on the dial, while adjusting only the tuning knob. â€"_ This new principle, developed to its highest form by Majestic engineers, enables Majestic to give you a most powerful and selective radio setâ€"without the slightest trace of Aâ€"C hum or oscillation at any wave length ! ‘ POWER DETECTIONâ€"is an advanced method T operating the detector tube by which greater current can be applied to it, and stronger speech and music handled without choking or distortion. _â€"_â€" _ QGELECTRIC PADMO Chapman‘s Radio Store Established 1817 & TOTAL ASSETS IN E X CE SS OBR $900,000,000 BANK OF MONTREAL TIHE Bank of Montreal encourages savers by providing a safe place for their money and by paying compound interest on deposits. ROGERS AND MAJESTIC DEALER With a few lines to explain that "Mr. Woodville" was not richâ€"yetâ€" She ended the letter. My darling Mamma and Papa: Well, you have lost your daughterâ€"not by fell disease, but by fell in love. ! ! ! You see, Mr. Woodvilleâ€"Johnâ€"was so attentive and kind and considerâ€" ate and respectfulâ€"almost reverent, you might sayâ€"and he‘s so big and handsome and fine and noble, and I was so small and lonely and so far away for so long thatâ€"oh, I‘ just couldn‘t resist. ! ! ! We leave at once for Yuma, so address all your letters to me as Mrs. John Woodville, Genâ€" eral Delivery, Yuma. Doesn‘t it sound grand, though ? § hope unconsciously contributed an atâ€" mosphere of bridal bliss. _ se She wrote the Galbraiths a similar letter and bought a ticket for Yuma. (Continued Next Week) WESTON BRANCH C. Inglis, Manager The Lowboy Imfraved Majestic Superâ€"Dynamic Speaker. Extra heavy, sturdy Majestic Powerâ€"Pack, with positive voltageâ€" ballast, insures long life and. safety. Early English design cabinet of Amâ€" erican walnut. Instrument panel overâ€" laid with imported Australian Laceâ€" wood. Escutcheon plate and knobs finished in genuine silver, LESS TUBES Time Payments if Desired Black and White Trouble in S. Following the defiance of the 1 ban (South Africa) authorities by Industrial and Commercial Worl Union, a native organization, in h ing a meeting despite a Magistr order prohibiting it, white populs is threatening to take the law int own hands and forcibly prevent n, gatherings. e 1 Mr. Thomas said that he had sulted: members of the Canadian . ernment and made definite prop but such matters should first be cussed in Parliament. The British Government is re to hold an economic conference the Dominion and to hold it in ( ada, Right Hon. J. H. Thomas, Privy: Seal and Minister in ch? of Unemployment, told the Cana Club at a luncheon in Montreal, ©‘197" Phones: Weston 182 Junet. 8553 Empire Economic Con.ferenceI Model 91 PAGE 3e C .;; 7 M i t | 2 . I

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