Tl TWO GREAT constructioral projects now : under way at Maltonâ€"a great modern airport and an airplane factoryâ€"have brought employâ€" ment to a great many Canadian workmen. When the building period is over a small army of workers, engineers, pilots, groundsmen, mechanics, machinâ€" ists, weatherâ€"men, radioâ€"men, to mention only a few, together with their families, will be permanently situated at Malton. _ And this gives rise to a thought. These skilled workers and technical experts represent great earnâ€" ing power since they are engaged in activities payâ€" ing big wages and high salaries. And high earning power means high spending power. These people will require large quantities of goods and equipâ€" ment, running the whole gamut of the necessities and luxuries of modern living. The community caterâ€" ing to their needs is bound to reflect a wholesome measure of prosperity from the business turned over, And herein lies a golden opportunity for Weston‘s business folk to enlarge their source of revenue and increase the scope of their business ._ A permanent daily bus service between Weston and Malton appears to be the one link needed to induce this new flow of businessâ€"bringing Malton workers direct to Weston‘s stores and shops. The mext thought is, can such a service be arranged? ‘Our local Council should give some serious thought to the matter. Bland disregard of the idea in all probability means that Weston‘s stores and shops stand to lose a fairâ€"sized volume of business which they might have otherwise enjoyed. The Bank of Nova Scotia has seen fit to estabâ€" lish a branch at Maiton under the direct supervision of the Weston office. This all fits in with our belief that Weston is the logical shopping centre for the mnew industries now being established at Malton. Does the idea contained in this editorial interest you? Do you think it important that Weston should take active steps to secure at least a portion of the business available at Malton? Whether you are engaged in business or not, your views on the matâ€" ter will be welcomed by the Times and Guide. We will do our best to publish all letters received. Sign your own nameâ€"we have a personal aversion to penâ€"names, Canada is 71 years old and paying more in taxes than at any former period in its history. _ ‘The third session of the present parliament conâ€" eludes this week unless some of the Western members throw another monkey wrench into the machinery. ty liite 4 ‘vigee raie). Dapley advertiiiog retes on nowarp Â¥. CHAMBERLAIN, Manager. BUS SERVICE TO MALTON? =â€" extra space at the same rate)." . Legt) m t T rmï¬l;'.llm,.flmnlg;h-g:' THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1938 “uvflï¬-‘â€"fld‘;ï¬ cont 1 word, 10e ainis feash with ordat}, farm stock and unpit The Bank of Montreal makes loans to all kinds | wf Canadian business for such constructive purposes. * BORROWING FOR PROFIT “flrmï¬@wmaw BANK OF MONTREAL 2.50; extrs insertion, $2. "â€"Note (All w Aictenine oritem bared ate of 60e i-ud-, and 40¢ per »\-__:h- (:r'w EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVICE . . . wthe Outrome of 130 Yaer? Succersful Operation E'x('hï¬'&r:ï¬.'ï¬ ), 50e per inch. Professional ESTABLISHED 1817 "q hank where small accounts are welcome" J W, WALLACE, Manager Weston Branch: 45 Mair Street North . §81 , for instance...... To Carry On Farmets are not the only business men who need to borrow to make next season‘s "crop" possible. Manufacturers have to purchase raw materials for a "crop" of future finished products. Wholesalers must stock up in advance and warehouse their goods, if they wish a seasonal harvest of business. Te _ Retailers, buying for the new season‘s demands, may need money to take advanâ€" tage of discounts. Many lines of business need to dorrow, in order to carry on. Vacation gives us a chance to see new faces, new places, to forget business worries, and gain a new perspective. Our minds are swept clean of petty annoyances, as bright fresh scenes and experiences unfold before us. And we come back at the end of our vacation time verily "made over" in mind and body. We believe Edgar A. Guest has captured the true meaning of vacation in his beautiful poem "The Outâ€"Door Man," as he says: May this paper, which serves its readers to the best of its ability all through the year, wish them the best and happiest holiday season they have ever had. Local merchants are well stocked with all necesâ€" sities for the summer traveller and vacationist. Whether you are going to spend your holidays beside the water, in a summer camp, or leisurély motoring along the open highway, you can get your vacation supplies at your local stores, Wearing apparel, for men, women and children, camping equipment, serâ€" vice for your carâ€"all these and more can be found at your very door, to start you off for a long holiâ€" day in the happiest possible frame of mind. Wxflm’uiflwad-fluhhu.fl flower and stream, and unsurpassed holiday weather, the thoughts of all of us are turning to vacation time, and, if we are fortunate enough to possess a car, the lure of the open road. If no car is available to take us on our holiday journey, there are always the bus companies, the railroads, etc., to provide transportation to exciting summer ruzn-mmkzm Pennsylvania publishers and radio stations have voluntarily sacrificed $500,000 in revenue by rejectâ€" ing liquor advertising in Sunday editions and broadâ€" casts. There is a law against liquor advertising in Ontario, but a few newspapers do not hesitate to publish advertising paid for by the brewers‘, who are endeavoring to educate citizens to the use of beer. Kitchener, in its advocating of taxing unmarried women the same poll tax as that batchelors are called up to pay, has an ally in the town of Lindsay. The contention was made that since working women are protected by minimum wage laws, regulating hours and pay, that they should be just as willing to pay the tax as men. The man who loves all living things Enough to go where Nature flings Her glories everywhere about, And dwell with them awhile, Must be, when he comes back once more A little better than before, A little surer of his faith. He never can be wholly bad Who seeks the sunshine and is glad To hear a songbird‘s melody Or wade a laughing stream; Nor worse than when he went away Will he return at close of day Who‘s chummed with happy birds and trees And taken time to dream. He must come back a better man, Beneath the summer bronze and tan, Who turns his back on city strife, To neighbour with the trees; He must be stronger for the fight And see with clearer eye the right Who fares beneath the open sky And welcomes every breeze. And readier to smile, NOTE AND COMMENT VYACATION TIME Dnri.n‘{the month of June, 1928, Public Health Nurse, Elizabeth Jones makes 194 visits to homes, including 28 to infants, 46 to Ere- school children and 84 to school children; also, visits to schools, 28; pupils inspected 775, and classâ€" room talks, 19. > % EXTRACTS FROM OUR FILES i _ 10 AND 20 YEARS AGO C.G.LT. clubs of Westminster and Central Churches, numbering 100 girls, leave for camp at Lake Scugoï¬ound.r lecdeuhils of Miss Lois mmn. Miss E, McCort and Mrs. (Rev.) Forbes. Mrs. Wm. Dawson, 80 years old, one of York County‘s oldest resiâ€" dents, is laid to rest in Riverside Cemetery, She was born in Islingâ€" ten, lived 56 years at Richview after her mlrria%e and was a memâ€" ber of Richview United Church. l= piece of art of the Gailicoâ€" Orangemen of West York, includâ€" ing LO.L. 191 and 216 of Weston, and L.O.L. 28 of Woodbridge, will celebrate "The Glorious Twelfth" at Sutton. Benjamin John Case passes away st his home at Humber Heights, in his 56th year. He is survived by his wife andâ€"11 children. Miss Margaret Banks, George Street, is ix:fured when struck by car driven by J. Barnes, Mt. Denâ€" mnis, and is treated by Dr. Charlâ€" ton. Lawrence win prizes for theit roses ;lxhflil.ud at the King Edward otel HAS MODERN POULTRY FARM Blind Veteran Raises 40,000 Chickâ€" ens For Market Every Year "Old soldiers never die" runs an old proverb, and Cecil Purkis, helpâ€" lm& blinded by flying shrapnel at the Battle of Vimy Ridge, has built up during the 20 years since the close of the Great War, a pou!â€" try business on the outskirts of Preston, Ont., known to poultry breeders the continent over. Faced with the problem of what| ""/>_"" "*_‘‘ . to do with the long years ahead of Such criticism might do a great him, and being a young and active ) deal to embitter rélations when we man, Mr. Purkis looked about him | on our side are trying to improve for a suitable trade. â€" Several| them. months at St. Dunstan‘s in Lonâ€"| German Nazis have been partiâ€" don in the cluing years of the war|cularly annoyed by criticism in the taught him the Braille system and Bri&u{ press, and especially by the typewriter. While there he|cartoons. The bitter cartoons of tried his hand at a number of|Low of the Evening Standard have trades, and picked on poultry as been a frequent source of comâ€" ::nr("mo he liked be:t. He took a | plaint. ort course in poultry raising @t| "In late years," Chamberlain the Ontario Agricultural COll!l!oinid, "there gu been a tendency and then set to work ‘"in a small \by foreign governments to become way," to build up his business. _ |axeeedinglv sensitive to press critiâ€" All the buildings on the Purkis chicken ranch were designed and much of the construction work was | done b{ the old soldier. Everyâ€" thing, from the collecting of the qr to the cleaning of the roosts and 8, is so constructed that Mr. Purris. although blind, can do all the work himself. In the few yeare his son Roy hes helped Over 40,000 birds is the yearly turnover durin%the past five years at the Overall Hatcheries, which it a lot of chicken dinners in anyâ€" bodrs town. Roughly, a haif a million birds have been hatched under Mr. Purkis‘s care in the past 20 years. At present there are sevâ€" eral thousand birds on the ranch ranging from fullâ€"grown hens and reosters to little fuzzy chicks a day old. And zeveral hundred eggs are in the big elcctricâ€"driven inâ€" cubstor waiting to be hatched. Drop In River Rhone Leve! Re vealed Bust Of Venus treasure. The water at Vienne, nesr Lyons, dropped to such a low level m.mm cted ndation of an old Roâ€" weather and an I _hnal_wd of the l‘-'i?:“l::’o served bust of Venus. Classical exâ€" perts expressed belief it was # Dr. Fred Cruickshank and W. J. "Anuther nice thing about this little dplac:e is that it has a garageâ€"in case you should decide to buy a car." SIDE A NEW ART TREASURE 10 Years 20 Years Ago Weston Volunteer Fire Brigade gives report to Council, for six months ending June 30, 1918. Ofâ€" ficers for year are: Captain, George Fisher; Lieutenants, 1, R. Greer; 2, H. Coulter; 3, A. E. Scythes; 4, S. J. Totten; sec.â€"treas., Wm, Faichnie; finance committee, A. J. Burgess, W. Shiells and 8. J. Totten; trustees, E. Ella and P. J. Mackay. During the six months \the brigade was called to 11 fires. \Premier Asks Newspapers to Reâ€" J frain From Critical Comment | of Foreign Personalities Miss Edith Ho'llinslwnrth wins bicycle donated by Canada Cycle and Motor Company Ltd., for the recent West York entrance examâ€" inations. Other winners are: 2, Aileen Healy; 3, Jessie Saunders, and, 4, Minnie Martin, Mr. W. Campbell, town constable, resigns due to ill health, and Wesâ€" ton Council, at special meeting. apâ€" points Mr. J. Hearn to succeed him. A report from the provincial board of health shows the town water to be in an absolutely pure condition, free from baccilli of any kind. and citizens need have no fear regarding use of the town water. Cruickshanks Wagon Works have recently completed and delivered an upâ€"toâ€"date motor bus, which will be used in connection with the auto service recently inaugurated for the conveyance of Leaside munition and other firms east of the Don situated beyond the trolley lines. Workmen are busy repairing Weston Road, all the holes being filled with crushed stone and a coating of tar put on to bind them. "In late geu-n." Chamberlain said, "there has been a tendency by f'orcign governments to become exceedingly sensitive to pres« critiâ€" cisms in this country. With that has gone a tende% to search for such criticism. en you write, I ask you to have this in mind: What you write may possibly come under the eye of the man you are criticising. _ Above all, abstain from personalities." Prime Minister Neville Chamberâ€" lain appealed to provincial newsâ€" papers to refrain from indulging in over critical comment concernâ€" ing foreign personalities. Addressing the Newspaper Soâ€" ciety in London at its annual dinâ€" ner, he said: "Such criticism might do a great deal to embitter rélations when we :;ll our side are trying to improve em." Sixty questions aimed to gut the right man in the right job have been prépared by the National Inâ€" #titute of Industrial Psychology. . Question" Aimed To Put Right Man In The Right Job It has sent out a questionnaire from which it hopes to derive useâ€" ful data for vocational guidance purposes. 1t wants to find out how persons doing the same jobs reâ€" semble one another and how they fl&' from people doing different m-::mnml-,l! Seroe think A falee to say that & M{m thrush _n.;-ny Hers are some of the questions rTirh( a ‘yes" or "no" answer: re you certain that the sum goes round the earth *" A woman‘s place is in the honte * Sincers prayers are always anâ€" _ on o miwe Yin is science * â€"Read the Ads @aze uen iewet mt deeu 5t "ogs by George Clark THE SOFT PEDAL USEFUL DATA life Form I to Form II Gladys Batulis, Jean Bianchini, Margaret Black, Joan Boot, Wilâ€" liam Bunn, Jessie Cameron, Jack Daley, Howard Dixon, Bet;y Dugâ€" an, Joan Edrv.;st, Audrey Foulkes, lquie Frost, Norman Gunn, Beatâ€" rice Hilton, Marion Judge, Jean Laâ€" Rose, Fred Lawrence, William Livâ€" ings, lise Lubbers, Miriam Mousâ€" ley, Betty Palla, Alex Parsons, Rose Pazuik, Mary Petroski, Mary Rowntree, Ella iuuhworth. Betty Sackett, ihrjoria Scoffield, Frank Sonosky, Dorothy Taylor, Robert | Walker, Harry Worthington. Home Economics Department Form 111â€"Graduation Dorothea Adams, Phyllis Jones, Gladys Lees, Ella Luckanuck, Arâ€" thena Mercer, Mary _ Perneroski, Velma Wall, Peggy Warnes, Marâ€" garet Watkins, Marjorie Wood, Thelma Wood. larger retail shops in the Glasgow area. Arrangements are "&‘m, made through the Trade and Comâ€" merce Department for the stores to make special shop displays of the Canadian .ï¬udm Particulars will be available at the. booth in the Canalian g:illon in the exhiâ€" ‘bi,dm} where eggs may be obâ€" The three carloads 'u'fi&'mi’""io one buyer, llcnrx Noble and Son, of Glasgow, for distribution to the Continued from page 1â€" sommba:ï¬ygey Fuu;lin, ll)ior:tt;? al arvey, Mary Horton, ARo nopione How on m rt ene Luckett, Jean Mu:la;? Mnry O‘Sullivan, Marie Penny, Myra Tiffin, Marâ€" jorie Whitlock, Evelyn Wood. Form !I to Form III Winnifred Allen, Doris Bean, William Beare, Clifford Cook, Jo Franklin, Dorothy Harman, hiu- f:ret Haxton, Marjorie Hildebrand, ennie Holmes, Marjorie Insle{. Leone Jones, Loretta Kuvuuuf § John Kloepfer, Vera Mason, Helen Mianowany, Kathleen Murphy, Elsie Polwarth, Helen Redmond, Winnifred Reed, Donald Stevens, Alva Wheeler, Dick Worgan. flvn"nz s:‘qu _stations in eastâ€" erm On/ . Negotiations now are underway for further shipments. Three carloads of fresh, grade A Canadian ? will be on the British market in this month. Each car will contain 500 cases of 30 dozen each. The consignment folâ€" lows shipments of winterâ€"produced fresh eggs earlier in the year. High and Vocational Promotions Announced pmmh?d wmm Vwfll be sent lrfl:“ï¬::nml. X;fim from the .same source will be shipped along with one from the coâ€"operaâ€" | Form 1 to Form II 1940, "may not be the limit of what | _ William . Ablewhite, Lawrence we must one day reach," Sir 1Adcock, Jack Allan, George _Alâ€" Thomas said. mond, David Andrews, John Banâ€"| He declared Lord Swinton and non, Gordon Beal, Bruce Belford, Lord Weir had doubled Britain‘s | Bruce Betts, Richard Billson, Kenâ€" xtrvl\mia the air in a short time \neth Blackburn, Charles Blay, Wm.| and completely â€" transformed ?B::zey. Robert gadferd, William | the air industry. Bradiey, Norman Brown, William| "Some of the best things toâ€"day lC-irm. William Cam, Bruce Cane. cannot yet be disclosed and that, \Ben Cannell, Jack Carter, Sydney|incidentally, may well be rememâ€" Clough, _ Douglas Conway, John bered when Nae‘ spots sometimes Cowel!, Robert Crias'l.ellk Crockâ€" |seem to cover most of the picture." er, John Duxbury rald English, ;z_vmilmr Etmel, Hvillru.m Fieclder, h__“‘“â€"_â€" ‘yril Ford, Ivor ies, Fred |Payne, Thomas Williim Frwt.:ilbefl Ghlvnmn:.'â€bhnm Earl & Earl Fred Hardy. Join Hestn. Walte | Robeon, Andrete Rom Stantey ky Hill, Alan l’lold‘r.Arfl'r Hurst, croft, Ar Scale, Alexander Perey hï¬-’.;.'ro- Kesteven, Ian Shaw, Harold Snider, William Kirkland, nomnm Stephens, William , Albert l;'r, Ralph Lioyd, Lucaâ€" | Thomas, _ Douglas Tom Douglas Ludlow, Victor Macâ€"| Walker, Gordon Ward Warâ€" Iadk:or-n Melntyre, Gordon | ren, William â€" Washburn, George Mainland, James Mallandine, Waiâ€"| Watson, Benjamin Wegg, Georg» Moo ve M J.MM Donald wmu.""»m Winder, ll:.tfl inor, % Munro, Do'L Odam, William|Wright, Chester Zaborowski. Form II to Form III |_ Dorothy Deabill, Gwen Giles, Thelma Gotschalk, Stella Holowka, Jean Hicks, Dorothy Ki“' Elsic Overton, Betty Penny, lrï¬lnt Stubbins, Marjorie Thorne, Helen Tomlin, Mary Watson, Elsie Watts, Kathleen Wilkes. Form 1 to Form II Elizabeth Bell, Edythe Compston. Jean Conway, Clara Crabtree, June Crang, Bernice Evans, Annie Holeâ€" kewh, Marie Holekewh, Annie Humeniuk, Reta Jemmett, Edith Jordan, Thelma Leach, Sophie Maiâ€" aniuk, Constance Nash, Norma Park, Betty Pilkir;agt.on. Katey Roâ€" sen, Janet Ross, Barbara Shuttleâ€" worth, Olga Skomgl Mt:‘n;,iorie St;ed, Peggy Sutton, Elsie Woodâ€" end. Industrial Department Form 111â€"Graduation Robert _ Barnett, Kenneth Bell, Ernest _ Bowers, John Callender, James Coblick, Jack Cook, Geor‘e Debling, James Drage, Fred Eakâ€" ins, Thos. Foxcroft, Edward Giles, James Gow, James Harris, Jim Hawkins, Robert Jemmett, Charles Kilsby, Peter Kryskow, John Longâ€" ley, Hubert Luckett, Albert Millis, William Milroy, Alan Norris, George Penstone, David Perry, James Rowntree, Vernon Shaw, Earl Stanfield, Harry Taylor, Jack Webber, Tom Whittaker. Form II to Form III Oliver Barefoot, James Bayley, William _ Beddow, Bernard Birch, James Bradford, Ross Brown, Douglas Crocker, Thomas Downey, Norman Ellis, Donald Farnden, Allan Feather, Earl Fry, Harold Gould, Wilson Greenwood, Bill Gribben, Donald Griggs, Edward Hsmi, Albert Jackman, Eric Jackâ€" som, Ronald Killick, John Kurchak, Ernest Marnock, Thomas McLean, David Miller, Geo. Moulton, Clifâ€" ford Newbigging. Jack â€" Passfield, Eric Penny, John Reeve, John Roâ€" maniuk, Ernest Shepherd, George Shibley, James _ Sturges, Stanley Taber, Peter Tanascow, Elwood Tomlinson, R% Wainwright, John Ward, Tom. Weir, Wesley Whitâ€" taker, William Wise, Harry Wood, Ted Young. May Not All Be True But They Make Good Reading York Times, l:r there is going the rounds in London & story that at the Bereht:'-‘iudm talks between Hitler and mhnhal..l:ghr told the then Austrian ancellor he would have to yield to German deâ€" mands because Austria did not have a friend. Thcrmpon the Ausâ€" trian mentioned Italy, recalling that at the time of Dolifuss‘ assasâ€" sination. Mussolini had sent a strong force to the Brenner Pass. lauuâ€". > ~ un ib d »4.... .13 mlm'â€"l‘ "Don‘t count on that," Hitler is said to have replied, "and if it inâ€" terests you I will tell you that I intend to take care of II Duce myâ€" self in a couple of years." it would check pretty well with what Hitler is said to have done after dinner one night when the conversations turned on the %mm- tation of a sword to Mussolini by the Mohammedans of Libya on the occasion of Mussolini‘s boxw hailed as a great Moslem leader. Hitler is said to have told with some gusâ€" to that of the 250,000 lire to have been subscribed by the Mosiem chiefs for the :won{, made in Florâ€" ence, Mussolini found . himself obliged to make up a deficit of :15)0,0_00 lite. This one comes from aris." The story continues that this reâ€" port gas telephoned to Mussolini who called up Schuschnigg to ask if it were true. Hewas, it is said, told it was true. This tale m{mor may not be true, of course, but if it were true A request has been made by the Alberta Government to have the Federal authorities take possession -{-in of forest areas ulonï¬ the whole east slope of the Rocky Mountains, Some years ago all national forest lands in Alberta were transferred to the ownerâ€" ship of the province along with the transfer of the natural resources. It is understood that the provincial government has found the financial upkeep too heavy, especially the maintenance of patrols against forâ€" est fires and expenditures in fightâ€" ing fires. The eastern mountain tloau are the source ofâ€"all streams flowing eastward to the prairies. As such, they are keystones in irrigation and water conservation projects. With the provincial government financially unable to ‘ntml and protect them from fires, their destruction might cause inseparâ€" able loss in prairi¢ water conservaâ€" tion. Defending _ Viscount Swinton‘s "utu:mdou" labors in a speech to an Air League dinner in London, Sir Thomas said the number of workers in shadow factories had increased 15â€"fold in the past nine months. Province Cannot Protect Those On East Slope Of Rockies Sir Thomas Inskip, minister for defence coâ€"ordination, stated perâ€" somnel of factories manufacturing airplanes for the Royal Air Force was increasing at the rate of 1,500 to 2.000 a month. The figure of 3,500 firstâ€"line plan.“, set for realization by April, 1940, "may not be the limit of what we must ohe day reach," Sir Thomas said. Airplanes For Ropal Air Force Built At Rapid Rate He declared Lord Swinton and Lord Weir had doubled Britain‘s ummin the air in a short time and completely transformed the air industry. 0 STORIES ABOUT DICTATORS M on Ud‘y M ooo s "Some of the best things toâ€"day | !7â€" " cannot yet be disclosed and that,| "That is a big bass," Mortimer incidentally, may well be rememâ€"| ceplied. undwhuu-&-mm "Oh I would like to play that," seem to cover most of the picture." said the Princess, Mortimer was embarrassed unâ€" > _2 T itil the King interrupted with the William Washburn, George at the Dome gold mines near here. %mwm.muwï¬mmmh Wilkins, James Wilkins, Herbert precipitates. The burglary was dis» !f_lil.b‘.‘ ’_okn Winder, Leonard covered when mine officials openâ€" Edwin L. James, in the New ALBERTA‘S FOREST AREAS FOR _ _ Our MAXIMUM 1 to 12 MOTOR "Performance | _ DURING THE HOLIDAY DEFENDS LORD SWINTON EFFICIENCY So that you will get maximum motor efficiency, dllyo your car in and let us give it our famous "1 to 12 Perâ€" formance Check" every 3,000 miles. It includes Checkâ€" ing and Adjusting: (1) Battery, Cables, Lights; (2) Starter; (3) Spark Plugs; (4) Valve Clearance and Valve Action; (5) Compression; (6) Distributor Timing Governor Action; (7) Coil and Condensor; (8) Ignition Cables and Suppressors; (9) Fuel Pump Pressure and Connections; (10) Vacuum Test and Manifolding; (11) Carburetor Ad.]u.mncnt and Air Cleaner; (12) Generator and Charging Rate. SPECIALIZED MOTOR TUNEâ€"UP 122 Main St. N. Zone cnuncxsuux GARAGE Princéss Elizabeth, heir preâ€" sumptive to the throne, was reâ€" ported to have a new ambitionâ€" to play a tubs. She ‘ first saw the instrument when the Fodens Works band gave a concert at Windsor castle. After Elizabeth Expressed Wish T Learn To Play The Tuba i Quene zabeth -nd“'the Princess met Fred Mortimer, the bandmasâ€" ter. "What‘s that big instrument there?" Elizabeth inquired g nearly enough to fikhagh thstm sny case $ou Burglars Steal Gold South P ine, Ont.â€"Gold valâ€" at “l% was stolen when broke into the refinery at the Dome gold mines near here, WESTON MUSIC & RADIO Enjoy the world‘s bes" entertainment during your vacation. RENT Your _ Su‘mmer Cottage J. PETRIEâ€"Proprietor WESTON 842â€"W LY. 4098 AMBITION Zone 4â€"387 for £200%