Times & Guide (1909), 29 Jul 1910, p. 8

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STORE OPEN Z£VENINGS Payments of $1, 2 or 3 per week. MRDERS DEL.[VERED;LDAILY; We Sell the Bost ' _and Purest Drugs _ © AT THE LOWEST PRICES To get 3000 new customers in Weston and adjacent villages, Lam offering the following inducements: No. 8 Dundas St., Nest Millers and Degw‘ers in Grain and Feeds of all Kinds C. & W. Wadsworth INDUCEMENT Macufacturers of "Three Lion Brand" Graham and s tlen _ W holeâ€"wheat Flours. H OW E L L With our complete stock of TOILET ARTICLES and PERFEFUMES, we challenge comparison 400 Boys‘ Suits, special $3.50 to $7 50. 22 Dozen Lawn Waists, regular $1.25 for T5e. 8,000 Men‘s Suits, regular $25, for $20; regâ€" ular $20, for $16.50); regular $16.50 for 12.50; regular $12.50 for $8.50. = 2 fls > 448 Ladies‘ Cloth Suits, regular $25, for $20 ; regular $20 for $16.50; regular $16.50 for $12.50. â€" â€" â€" s oi > = 75 Silk Dresses and Coats only, regular $20 to $35, for $15.00. es‘ * 1 150 only Ladies Wash to $12.50, for $5.95. WEST ON MILLS â€"MORRISO N D R U G GIS T S , (ESTABLISHED 1828. 318 Q@UEEN WEST Suit or Dress, $8.50 THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NSW YORK CiTY. WEST TORONTO Telephone No. 1 ’and 93.s1 in 1909, ,%and this yearâ€"it is 86.99. . Peas is 89.94 this year; last year |it was 84.40 and in Féle previcus year 82. The condition of miked grains is naarly the same, being 84. 5?3 this year, 86 58 jas t year and 84 in 1908,% Hay and clover is better this year than in either of the proâ€" vious years, beiu,\g 9342 compared with 76 in 1909 and 87 in 1908« The condition of alfalfa Iras been éécorded this year for the first time, and f@s average is 88.94. Pasture has a condibibn of 89. 02 this year,. compared with 99 in;fi‘l%)OS and 87. 74 last. The conditions of all field crops are good in Ontario, the hig}éstâ€" being 94.29 for fall wheat and the lowest 84.79 for spring wheat. Quebec croffis range from. 74.45 for mixed grains to 102.58 for hay and clover,â€" Peas is 84%2 and its condition is the next above mi%’ed grainsg. In Prince Edward Island andéi‘lova Scotia all field. crops are reported %)r a condition above 90 except alfalfa, W;’)ich is 83.33 in the Island. Hay and clgver are 104.31 in the Island and 105 79 in Nova Scotia. Whest, oats, mixed grains agg]d alfalfa are neportâ€" ed in a condition above 90 in New Brunsâ€" wick, and all other grops between $3 and 89 except alfalfa, which is 97. _ Hay avd. clover are reported :g;l: 109.68. Manitoba, j Saskatchewan and ATberta have low aver: | ages throughout owing to a light rainfall. in June. The genegal condition of.crops | in Manitoba is much below the average. | Correspondents in r;jearly every disbrict[1 report no rains, only a few light showers ; and hot, dry wind&. that absorbed the | moisture and withered the crops.. The‘ lowest average condition is reported from | around Brandon a.ré:l Morden, and the 1 highest from Marqugebte where it is placed at a standard. In Sagkatchewan the erops do not appear to have suffered from cliâ€" matic conditions to épe same extent as in either Manitoba or A;lberta, as there have been many local showers. The reports from Lloydminster," Battleford, lndian Head and Qu‘Appelle aro very favorable, the condition of wheat being placed at 100 and over. The prevailing condition of crops in that part of Alberta south of _ townships No. 30, is below average in conseqcence of drouth and hot winds. In | the Edmonton district the grains, although suffering to some eXtent from the same . causes, are in much tg‘esher condition. The _ best reports come form the Strathcoua â€" district, and those fr-(?m Athabaska-hax;d. f ing and Saddle Lake districts are also _ particularly favourable. The: field crops j of British Columbiatare all good. The â€" areas of lato cerealsâ€"buckweeat, flax, â€" Baptist Church. Public Worship at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sundayâ€"School, 3 o‘clock p.m. St. John‘s (Anglican) Church. 11 a.m. Mattins and Sermon. 9 45 a.m. Sunday School. 7 p.m. Evensong and Sermon. Celebration of Holy Communion, first Sunday of the month at 11 a.m. third Sunday at 8 a.m. Methodist _ Church. Public Worship at 11â€"a.m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Classes at 2.45 p.m. Rev. B. R. Strangways B.A., B:D., Pastor. St. John‘s (Catholic) Church. On Sunday next. Mass will be celeâ€" brated at 10.30 a.m. Priest in charge Rev. Father Player, 0.S.B. On Sunday next, services held at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m; School 2t 3 p.m. Public service at 11 a.m and 7 p.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Classes at 3 p.m. Rev. S. D. Dinnick, Pastor, Buttonwood Ave., Mt. Dennis. Divine service next Sunday at 11 o‘clock a.m. HAVE YOpIWaARTS? You can cure th p< filfessly nam‘s Corn and Wkrt S(t'.x:;b,ctor kaown to fail. Be uget P in 25¢c. bottles. 8 THE CROPS ANi) LIVE STOCK. OF CA NADA. Ottawa July 8â€"The Census and Statisâ€" tics Office toâ€"day rsports on the conditiâ€"n of farm, animals of tlie Dominion at June 30. For the three years 1908â€"1910 the field crops range in ‘{‘condition from 82.16 for spring wheat to é1442 for hay and cloâ€" ver this year to 80 for spring wheat and 82 for rye and peas lgn 1908. _ _Eall wheat is 85 47 this year comared with 7728 in 1909 aud S7 in 19083 Oats was 90 m 1908 Methodist Church, Mount Dennis Rev. T. Beverly Smith, Rector. CHURCH SERVICES. J. Hughesâ€"Jones, M.A., Rector Presbyteriat Church. Rev. A. A. MacGillivray, ; _ Pastor.! St. Philip‘s. J. L. Sloat, Pastor ?i’nlféssly by Putâ€" }(t'.x;b,ctor Never uget"Pataam‘s" will be Sunday | William J Dnugfias, for the past 20 |years clerk of the Village and Town of (North Torounth, was by a practically unâ€" |animous vote, appointed by the York | Township Council g)the position of treaâ€" surer for the munfiéipahuy. rendered vaâ€" | cant by the retirequ;nt of Mr. S. W. Armâ€" (strong. > The winners of the awards annually offered to the three highest entrance puâ€" pils are Minuie Andérsnn, 488 marks, S.S. No. 15. Fairbank," gold medal; Fred Hawke, 487 marks, No. 22, Swansea, silver medal; Fred Edwards, 478 marks, Swansea, P.S., a years tuition. The GAT.R..were;fi‘epreented by counâ€" sel re the new bridge under the Balt Line Railway at Fairbank. but the railway comâ€" mission will probaljly have to settle the dispute . & _ Fred Miller: pfesif}pted plans for the opening up of Suburban property, and a number of other questions were dealt with. Rev. Charles Scolj:!? of Fairbank wants better county police protection. «290 (AAZ. i Gledhill residents. want some improveâ€" ments on that stregt, and Commisstoner Pinder will report. They also seek to have the powder magazine removed. Harry Jennings presented a report re the value of school buildings recently annexed to the city, Deer Park is rated at $29,509, Don Mills No. 27, $17.606; Wychwood $45,619, Earlscourt $21,958, S.8, No 13, Bartlebt and Salem avenues, $27,444. 4 : 3 Beyoud the selegtion of a Township treasurer, Monday‘simeeting of the Counâ€" cil was not marked} by any special featâ€" ures ¢ A No other remedy is so useful in the home, so universally employed to alleâ€" viate pain and curing the sick. Reâ€" fuse anything offered you instead of Nerviline, which is sold: Large 25c. bottles or five for $1.00. By all dealâ€" ers, or The Catarrhozone Company, Kingston, Ont. a 26 corn for husking, beans, potatoes, turnips and other roots, sugar beets and corn for fodder, have increased this year to 2, 150,â€" 382 acres, which is 279,526 acres more than last year and 247,869 acres more than in 1908. But this increase is altoâ€" gether in flax, which owing to the high price offered for seed has come into favor with the farmers of the North West. the fourth bottle gured. We have since used NervilMe for: Lumbago, Neuralgia, Colds, €Chegt Tightness and other minor ‘@ilysents in | the family and found ‘Nerviline‘ to be the ‘Sick Man‘s Friend.‘" GRIFFITHâ€"At his residence, Church Street, on Frid}v, July 22nd, 1910, Abrabham Jobn Griffith, in his 74th year. § That‘s the Name Given by Thouâ€" sands to the Old Family Standâ€" by, ‘‘Nerviline." 1,000,000 Bottles Used Annually. No better known or more popular family remedy has ever been comâ€" pounded than ‘"Nerviline." During the past half century its success has been phenomenalâ€"dwe\ to the fact that it always cureg. . No one could geg me to go to bed at night unless I ag sure we had Nerviline in the hg1v1§'e,” writes Mrs. R.â€"R. Weightman} of Bolton P. 0. "Six years ago & § husband. was taken badly with Ttheumatism, which affected his right arm and shoulder. It was so sore and stif as to be al most helpless for four years. I read of the cure of Jakees E. Everett, and felf snre that when t on erviline cured a case I CURED I like his, it would cure Fhe only farm gnimals which noticeable increasg since 1907 are while sheep and |swine have d The condition of afl these anima the Dominion exededs 99. Funeral to Riverside Cemetery on Monday, July @5, at 2 p. m. EARLSâ€"At the iesidence of her son, J. G; Earls of Manchester street, Mimico, â€" on Vilednesday morning, July 20, Frances Earls, widow of the late Robert Efrls of Woodbridge, Ont , in her six%yâ€"fifth year. CHARBONEAUâ€"In loving memory of Lloyd Charboneau, age three months, died July 19, 19 10. Just a year ago to-d?.y, 5 Since our dear Lloyd passed away, God called him home, it was his will, But in our hearts, he liveth still, His memory is as de%r toâ€"day, As in the hour he pagsed away, Sleep on dear Lloyd, and take thy rest, God calls home firs%, whom He loves best. $ Street. Tuesday, Tuesday, July 2€-Regular meeting C. 0. F. in Uddfello(gns’ Hall, Church St. Wednesday, July 27,â€" Regular meetâ€" ing A. 0. U. W. in Oddfellows Hall, Church Street. McLENNAN â€"On Thursday, July 21 1910, to Mr. and Mrs, D. M. Mc Lennan, a daughter. _ CURED l 4 YEARS Rheumatism! Monday, Sick Man‘s Friend YORK TOWNSEHIP COUNCIL MEETINGS NEXT WEEK IN ME July 2 in Odd BORN. fe snre tviline c like his, it ay husban dallar‘s wo yiine, five Buffalo, an editg writ ttle gured. vilfine for ds, €Chegt 10F ‘@ilnaen rr_& husband. I got a dallar‘s worth of Nerâ€" yiine, five â€"bottles, in Buffalo, and am pleasâ€" editg write you that D1 swine have declined. 1 these animals over ORIAM. n loving memory of , age three months, â€"Regular meeting Nlows‘ Hall, Church ather and Mother red; _ We have for Lumbago, hegt Tightness Inients in the show a horses, JAMES HUGILL, 1476â€"1478 Dundas St., WEST TORONTO. Alwayskeepa good laxative in thehouse. Take a dose when your cold first comes on. What is the best laxative for this? Ayer‘s Pills. Ask your doctor his opinion. Let him decide. CHCHOSCHCRCHORTRORCHCRERNTROREACATheR®AERErERCACRCH HOBCECKOACECEORerOAenerenrtaerencees yar "Gor 6 x ; ce eeohoeoeoechchopohcensennneanennonoimhoncoo epenchenenoemecprenponchopepommchonchoseee Cold after cold; cough after Zz(. h! Troubled with this takingâ€"cold habit? Better break it up. We have great confidence in Ayer‘s Cherry Pecforal for this work. No medicine like it for weak throats and) weak lungs. Ask your doctor for his opinioni/ knows all about it. His approval is valuable. FolHlow his advice at all times. Weak I hroatâ€"YWeak Lungs No alcohol in this cough medici High Class and Artistic Monumental Wor Brandram‘s B. B. Genuine Whitef Lead carries more Linseed Qil than any other because of its minute fineness. M. G. WARDELL, Actually Makes More Paint »ef. C. A yer Co., Lowell, Mass. WESTON,

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