Times & Guide (Weston, Ontario), 16 Apr 1909, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

â€" gam st., .i COAL and WOOD | VOL. XIX ~~THE TIMES ANDGUIDE Sole Agent For _â€"«_~>~ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~â€" McLAUGHLIN AND TUDHOPE Light Wagons and Buggies HOLRRRR@QRARAORORRAUCORAOARRCAOOCAORRAAORAOARARORAOARLAOARDAA®R â€"<4eseseece2e02e000e0e0000e e s2se0020e0020ee0e42%000 04 Cruick&as‘ak_â€"WagOn Speight Wagons and Wilkinson Plows nen Cruiy _TUEUk p : DBritish and Canadian culture with a . jhe proposal is not a nReW ONé, commmmenmnnmennnommnmemmmmmcomiiemmmmremnincomemcmmmmqmtnenmmmumcmrmummnnmensetmie ‘further string of adjectives that do havingâ€"been discusgad periodically at ‘Hurmberside Waiting ROQOrTY & |anot show the efect of culture of any the meetings of the mssociation, but i MD WOR ESE CALETAL am n.‘ancalarat. and give better satisfaction all round. The quality of the wheels is all right â€"only the best materials used and only skilled mechanics employed in construction . The equipment is right upâ€"toâ€"date and the machines throughout are such as we can thoroughly recommend. We sell automoâ€" biles as well as bicycles and our plan is to make wheels serve as a good advertisement to the entire business. Send for illustrated folder. L_. A. LE M AIRE, The picest and most useful farm wagon on the road. Is made at home, fally guaranteed, and costs no more than others. Fitted with our Standard Spring if required. All kinds of Business Wagons. Repairing and Reâ€"raiating by Expert Mechanics. LIVERY in CONNECTION LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES AND CEDAR PGOGSTS. Main St., t \ag Highâ€"Class Automobiles and Bicycles $50 Wheels for $25 Send and Gravel. WESTON, ONT § JCYCE SLOP Byc H. COUSINS HYSLOP BROS., Limited TORONTO, ON1. A Call Solicited n & nong WESTON, ONT. C WESTON, ONT. Prices Right Ai*‘Ialse. pnd. pedantic and injurious to .‘ British and Canadian culture‘"‘ with a ‘ ‘further string of adjectives that do nationality. Nowadays it is unusual. x) to hasr ‘Georgy Merpdithâ€"attacked and â€" Iespeciany with the fervour displayed 1b, Mr.â€"Campbell who, in his address :'to the Ontario IAbrary Asrscn:iation,i displayed a curiously© narrow and inational ideal of literature and its_ ’sims. He discredited cosmopolitanâ€" ; ism â€" in literature and informed his !hesrérs that the puspose of Canadian . , libraries was to inculcate souns, old | ’:time, ethical, British ideals. As a{ ‘protector of our respectabilities Mr.; Campbell would be eminently trustâ€"| worthy and may doubtless be relied | on never to bring a blush to the cheek of the young person who should tperuse his poems and plays but as a critic of George Meredith or even ' 1William De Morgan we think that he 'iwill have to achieve greater things' ‘than he has yet shown any promise) of. Through Woodbrklige the C. P. R. [has installed at itsgcrossings, automâ€" atic bell signals which give ample warning of trains gpproaching these crossings. In Westen there are four crossings â€" on somef of the principal streets of the vill%ige that are more dangerous than any in Woodbridge. Why have not these%automatic alarms been installed here.. We think that this is a matter ofi which the Railâ€" way Company zmgzt be_approached while in the event of their refusing any protection at these crossings an With the adVenfii' of spring, things are taking a bfgst right here in Weston. The emp§§ houses are filling up while the nugnber of new houses to be built this‘spring bids fair to establish _ a recogd. The anticipaâ€" tion of water W%I‘ks has led to a large number of?nquiries for sites both for residenges and _ industrial purposes. With w%fiten works, Weston‘s assessment _ will %double in . three years. # ‘ In his recent strictures on some ;modern literary _ productions, _ Mr. Wilfrid Campbell displayed a narrowâ€" ‘mess of vision that is unlooked for in "a gentleman of his intellectual atâ€" tainments. â€" He uttered wholesale lcondamnation of the works of George iMeredith â€"which â€" he described â€" as ~ Colonel Hami}:g:on Merritt in his adâ€" dress before iHe Canadian Military Institute on Mo%eday drew attention ito the totally jnadequate nature of our militia and advocated its aboliâ€" tion in favor oi patriotic military service. The ideal military defence ‘system in a denfi)cracy is a patriotic service as outlined by Colonel Merritt in his address. If it is necessary for Canada to have a militia at all, and we think that pone will deny the necessity, it is necessary to ‘have [something very different from the preâ€" lsent comic opeti battalions. _ The 5amount of train;h" g that can be obâ€" tained daring twé weeks in the sumâ€" mer is so totally inadequate that it is remarkable thgt it finds any supâ€" port at all. Gélonel Merritt who should know what he is talking about says that Canadians are from a military point of view, living in a veritable fool‘s p%radise. If such is the opinion of an expert on the matter, â€" who wc;\}lld carefully weigh ‘his words before committing himself ‘thus far, it is time that some steps were taken towards facing the proâ€" (blem and arriving &t some solution. The question is oé”e that involves our very enistence as & nation and is not one that can be shelved or paltered \with. _ The man who is always sneering até his own town is pretty sure to be the | cheapest guy in ithe town. If he had | the courage of h,:fis opinions he would{ move to some more congenial place, but the troublezis that no place is] congenial to this“‘ class of man who is | always at odds with his surroundings ‘ and who makes no effort to adjust himself to cireumstances of adjust{ circumstances to | suit himself. We ) have one word of advice for such in-‘ dividuals, they si;iould either get in‘ line or, get. | #eeseersceeeeeeccacececcee+q|application to the Railway Board 0 € rwould be money well spent. _ The C. ; NOTES afld GOMflE‘PS ; P. R. Willihave i gang of men here € shortly laying anm entra track across teasessessstess8sss84=8=»8+ |o o /. Co (1o C(l| : e streets and it is ~ Colonel Hami%ton Merritt in his adâ€" |now that an af lication should be dress before | Canadian Military | made for the proper protection of the Institute on Molieday drew attention |level crossings in ‘the village. WESTON, ONT., FRIDAY, APRIL 1%6, 1909. * Hiat Justitia, Ruat Coelum." patriotic military al military defence cracy is a patriotic d by Colonel Merritt S se an ‘to 220 pounds, |J. H. Taylor, 54 Bond St., Toronto, ' Breathed Hyomei and Cured a Longâ€" Standing Case of Chronic Catarrh That Defied All Other Remedies Also Toronto and New York Specialists. l Without taking a drop of medicine ‘into the stomach, J. H. Taylor,54 (Bond Street, Toronto, tells how the idistressing troubles of Catarrh were ‘overcome by simply inhaling Hyomei |air. It‘s the history of ten of thouâ€" !sand_s simi‘ar cases on record, provâ€" ing that Hyomei can be depended upon to cure Catarrh, Bronchitis, jCoughs, Colds and Croup. It has no ‘equal for any distress of the breathâ€" \ing ‘organs. No man can pro#fuce great things who is not thorofighly sincere with himselfâ€"Lowell. â€" $ _ _Mr. Taylor says: ‘"‘Some years ago | while on a hun’éing trip in Northern Canada, I coni}fracted a severe cold ‘that settled. in my head and finally affected my throat. It rapidly develâ€" oped into,catarrh and caused a miserâ€" able throat ‘iwgeakness‘. My head would becomg ; clogged during the night and tBefe was a catarrhal ‘dropping from ; the nose into the throat. Many days I had been unâ€" able to breathi gxher than through my mouth, and / het;constant hawking and spitting was almost unbearable. I had been treated by the best throat specialists here and in New York, but nothing benefitted my condition. I obtained Hyomei at W. J. Inch and soon found relief, the throat dropping ceased and my head began to clear. I continued with Hyomel for six weevs and after that time I was well in every, detail.â€" There has been no. reâ€" turn of the trouble since, and I feel grateful in speaking well of Hyomei, as it cured me when all else failed."‘ the ‘present action has been acceloratâ€" ed by the unfortupate friction, more ‘or ‘less acute,> between theâ€" farmers and the city retailers during the last two years. S y ~ It is claimed by the promotera of the new company that when the deâ€" tails are all warked out, and a central plant and delivery aystem instituted, a formidable rival ~to existing companies will be at once in operation. A â€"charter will be immediately apâ€" plied for, and if the bheartiness which marked the meeting and the amount of stock subscribed at the close may be taken as an indication, the whole amount will be absorbed within a few days. sure for Cataftth, and in throat trouble it work 1§(e a charm. Catâ€" arrhozone is a/ permanent cure for bronchitis and thrort trouble. Not an experimentâ€"noféa temporary reâ€" liefâ€"but a cure that‘s guaranteed. Get "Catarrhozone‘‘ toâ€"day. 25¢. and $1.00 sizes. At a largely attended and enthusiâ€" astic meeting of the Toronto Milk Producers‘ Association, held at the Albion _ Hotel, Toranto on Saturday afternoon, the project to form a joint stock company, with the purpose of distributing their products throughâ€" out the city direct, without the inâ€" tervention of the middleman, was unâ€" animousily adopted.. Nothing cures so quickly as the healing Pime esgences in Catarrhozone. It fills the bre@;%:ing organs with a healing, soothi:} vapor that relieves irritation at @ée. Ordinary colds are cured in ten minutés. Absolutely The proposal, as: submitted by a committee named in February, is briefly to capitalize the company at $60,000, divided into 1200 shares of $50 each. A provisional board of directors was named as follows: J. G. Cornell of Scarboro Village, George 3. Henry of Oriole, Levi G. Annis of Toronto, W. C. Grubbe of Thistletown, John W. Breakey of Thornhill, R. L. Crawâ€" ford of Emery, R. M. Holtby of Manâ€" chester, A. J, Reynolds of Scarboro Junction, and W. C, Ross of Bowmanâ€" GUNNS*, Limited, wish to advise armers ithat they prefer deliveries of ve hogs at their packing house, ‘est Toronto, on Wednesdays and ridays and in any. case, not earler FARMERS TO RETAIL THEIR MILK. YOU CAN CURE CATARRH. A Company organised. FOR A BAD COLD. preferred, 16 Fight hundred mileg of new teleâ€" phone lines in the provifice of Alberta is the probable estimat« of what the telephone branch of thegAlberta pubâ€" lic works department &ill construct this year. $ The mileage for last gear was about | You are sure to derive the most 800 miles, but the demi@nds this year pleasant results from Catarrhozone. are greatly in excess of anything the It has been tested many times and telephone superintendeBRt bas known. | never found wanting. Every druggist If all the demands om the four in Canada sells it. Complete two auarters of the provincé were granted, months‘ treatment, guaranteed _to thare wonld_ be between 2.000 ‘and cure costs $1. medium size 50¢: or a. thereâ€"â€"would be between 2,00U _ and pCute costs o1, medium size avC. OFP a 3,000 _ miles constructed instead of |trial size 25c. By mail from N. C. 800. ‘Polson & Co., Kingston, Ont. The meet will involv&@championship events in nearly all the field sports, short and long distfnce running, standing and running jumps, high Jumping, vaulting, thr@éwing the disâ€" cus, etc., with probabl¢ a marathon race, and contestants f#fom all parts of the Dominion will cogaplete. |to The championships h&retofore have never been held westkof Toronto. Last year, they were Econducted in Halifax with such sufgcess that the board of governors weke desirous of giving the west an @portunity of undertaking the premie®athletic event of the year. § No less than twelve %Jportant inâ€" | quiries have been recgived by the | Winnipeg Development afi@d Industrial Bureau recently from rmanufacturers | who seek to locate if this city. These include a large Achinery firm‘ of Johnstown, Pa., an Ipwa firm that makes agricultural mchinery and tools, a leading iron #orks of the state of Wisconsin, one 3 the old and | reliable manufacturing $concerns > of ; Glasgow, Scotland, a Montreal firm that makes architecturaf and interiorl‘ iron work and brass fiktures, a big hardware making house §f Pittsburg, Pa., and a large shir@making firm‘ from Troy, New York. 8 President E. C. DuVa ‘of the Maniâ€" toba Amateur Athleti¢ association, announces that the Donfinion of Canâ€" ada amateur athletic &hampionships will be held in the Cit® of Winnipeg on July 15 and 17, if conjunction with the Winnipesg Ind&gstrial exhibiâ€" tion. x has created a boom % extra large proportions in farminp operations, and the spring has opeged up in good season for pushing them forward. James J. Hill has begun active work on the construgtion of the Great Northern line from Michel, British Columbia, to C&lgary, Alberta This line will be a pa 6 of the Great Northern trunk line which will conâ€" nect Winnipeg with thé Pacific coast by a thirdâ€"oz fourth line of railway communication, and it may be comâ€" pleted by 1910. Work amlorg various sections of the Great%‘lorthefh will be vigorously pushed this season and the new Michelâ€"CalgaETg line is exâ€" pected to have part in the work of taking out the 1909 crop. The building permits in Winnipeg for March fixed the value of the buildings to be erected at $851,700, a sum which exceeds the total for any preceding March. % 1306, the year in which Winnipeg‘g new buildings reached the total cost of $12,500,000, the total of the Permits issued in March was a little oÂ¥er $782,000, and in March, 1907, it wasg $703,000. From the beginning of the present year to the end of March the fotal is well up to the total of the fArst three montha of 1906, and the indidations are that the total for April will be of excepâ€" tionally large propd%tions since it will include permits for some of the largest new structures of this year, including blocks and additions to businese establishments. s a to the regular force at Emerson and North Portal, p cipal ports of entry into Western“éCanada from the States. 26 Trade in this line hasg increased 700 per cent. of late â€"among the Winnipes dealers, who complain that the eastâ€" ern factories do not supply the goods as fast as the trade demands. â€" The big crop and good prices of last year | _ (Special Corréspondent to _ the | Times & Guide.) t WINNIPEG, anitoba, April 15, 1909.â€"The spring rush of settlers to the West is on. rains from the East are crowded wit immigrants going lto homesteads §r purchased farm lands. From the %onth, other trainâ€" loads are comin% into Western Canâ€" ada, and men wha ale in touch with the rush of settl%s from the United States place the= figures of immiâ€" grants who will %oss the internatâ€" ional boundary to fnd homes in Canâ€" ada, during the geason of 1909, at 70,000 or more. All settlers who take up land are welco re in Western Canâ€" ada, but the far%ers who come in from the United S‘@ates are generally better equipped as %o money, machinâ€" ery and knowledge ‘f;.gjof grain growing and are, thereforezglisted among the very best settlers ;hat come to the country. This year‘s influx from the United States is so great that extra immigration officer% have been added An encouraging si ity lies in the excep Reports from vartous parts of the West, indicate excellent business. In this new country,; the activity or dullness of the %xilding trades is looked upon as one ;pf the best guages of general businesg. Measured by this standard, the y%r 1909 has startâ€" ed out for a record.> Our Winnipeg Letter. Jorri'_spon‘ de.) ; » anitc pring rus n. aing with im York. 8 . DuValf Athleti@ he Dongh hletic & he Citk 1 17, if eg Indgs hips hfre 1â€" westkc _ were & ch suge ts _ woke an â€" Gpj premie® a nvolveéc all thg diSt( unning , _ thr@w robablg _ ants fifol will cognr mile® c provige stimaté ( of theg A ment $il last fea e denfinc ess of a tendeRt â€" nds fror ovinee w activâ€" \ _ Mr. Dutchers Law," a ptominent ‘!citizen of Italy Cmogs, N. S., says: 22t experimented‘Wéthfi;‘\hundreds of caâ€" tarrh remedies and~found the major‘ ity to be worthless, dismal failures. Catarrhozone was the first to give (lasting relef; it cured me and I am |\ with pleasure testifying to its merits ’as a cure for Catarrh of the nose and throat. / (Signed) DUTOHER LAW. â€"â€" You are sure to derive the most It doesn‘t matter How deepâ€"seated or chronics your #ease may be, Catâ€" arrhozone can cuge it; Even though a thousand pthergremedies have failâ€" ed, don‘t give upg hope till you have used Catarthozofkie. It has cured other cases ‘ proBably worse than yours, and will ¢&re yours if it gets a chance. & â€"!% _ Catarrhozone is & rational, common sense treatment trfat finds favor with everybody. _It @ures by the inhalaâ€" tion of medicategl air, which comes into contact with the mucous surface of all the breathirlg organs. _ It gets at the source of the trouble, kills the germs and drives every vestige of catarrh right out dof the system. __ Druggists boldly recommend Catâ€" arrhozone in preference to other reâ€" medies, because they know it is the best, and every progressive doctor prescribes it for ‘;he same good. reaâ€" son. f 3 Remember the best Catarrh medicine that money can buy is Catarrhâ€" ozone; it cures quickly and perâ€" manently when all others fail. The remedy doesn‘t â€"exist that will cure Catarth as quickly as Catatthâ€" ozone. It relieves the most stubborn cases in a short time, and drives the disease so thoroughly from the, sysâ€" tem that it never returns. 57 Victoria St. TORONTO WALTER 0 J. T. LOCKE & Co. INSURE _ YOURâ€" BUILDINGS AND CONTENTS wiTH US LOWEST RATES and BEST COMPANIES. * POWIR for the FARM SUNLIGHT Sunlight Soap actually makes the dirt drop outâ€"saves you time and moneyâ€"but injures neither hands nor A ‘ clothes. That A is just the \.@p *sl difference ‘\\/’;fi_\ b e t w e e n CV ""“":,/i yst Sunlight Soap 6 o ‘< JN‘ y and ordinary SOFEIA soaps. Do you know the difference between working and having the work done for you? Wrire TerErHon® or Canu FOR~FuunLâ€"PARTICULARS cas C A T A R TELEPHoXrE Marm 1967 ESTABLISHED 1863 IF YOU HAVE Famous Canadian Airmofor Follow Directions

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy