Times & Guide (1909), 28 Oct 1910, p. 1

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P v:..s'c, * Gardeners, Butchers, be JAMES GARDHOUSE yeye AWV A G O NS VOL. REPAIRING 1 EXTRA VAL E“w~m“”mss~ QW"‘“‘S‘Q‘Q‘“E U LLIL L pennnnnneminoemerssepnmnceersmsemmnmacemeneeemenemmene mm reoannommemmme mm emmmemne n McLAUGHLIN, .:. GRAY .. AcoExt Fror MassEyâ€"HARRIS INMPLEMENTS MAIN ST. Fâ€"~~ > = = WESTO uJ A LEmaAaiIPE., | f ASPINWALL â€"POTAIO _ MACHINERY ALL KINDS OF HARNESS KEPT IN STOCK f MELOTTE CREAM SEPARATORS Cafil and Inspect my Stock before purchasing elsewhere. Office and Planing Mill, DurrErin ST., near G.T.R. & < & esc2e22ee0000e0e202880 ascse2e2ee0ee080e0e0000000004 REsIDENCS : MAN STRERT BAYNES BUCCIES Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Cedar Posts and Builders‘ Supplies. Orders for Silo‘s Promptly Attended to Hurnberside e . sPEIGHT AND WILKINSON _ CALL SOLICITED LIVERY IN CONNECTION Eagle Block, ensommmmmmmmmmmsom on mmeenaummmnmmzemeemmeee e m mmen 22000000000 2se28eee2e00ee00e00.00 8 fiW“fi%“‘v"“’\"@ » a Taa: 6 \’c t fan Ne § Raltimore Oyste®s | PETER HAMILTON IMPLEMENTS *L D A MIiS‘° .. w A G G O I Coal and Wood, Sand QRUIGKSHANK & SONS B U G C SCRANTON COAL COAL AND W 0O O D Ice Cream all Winter w AG O N S UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING AND DETECTIVE STORIES new The Standard Anthracite. >â€"rside Waiting Room wEST TORONTO every week, ten cents. . COUSINS Milk Dealers, &c. IN ALL DEPARTMENTS. _UES 1N "BUGGIES. SOLE DEALER IN Promptly attended to FOR . _ FARPFR, DEALER IN â€" w. COAL CO.8 and Gravel, Cedar Posts. â€"â€" AND .. TUDHOPE hp ‘@[impgfl & ”II’:(hP. wWESTON, ONT. O N S WESTON WESTON. tracks wWESTON, C |aeseddesdreeqeeqeeccert H{od liver 01 ;»a‘ssss‘sss‘ms‘s“+ ‘. Good streets and good schools are two assets that émy go ahead place must bave, and léecause of their great importance we again refer to them in our columns thié week. Our streets are in a deploi}able condition and something should be done to put them ‘ in a passable condition before the. weather breaks ilp for winter. Good streets attracet persons to settle in a town, whereas poor streets and untidy front lawns make such a bad impresâ€" sion on visitors that they do not take &up their residence in a place having these. It is too late in the season to \do any permanent road work, but it is not too late to fill in the worst holes AAAGAAAAALAAAAALAALALARLAL gas@secccccccecccceess®s ‘ xotks and commnnits $ and ruts with g%ravel, and to put the ditches in such%; a condition that the water will easil}y get away. During the winter months our councillors should devise sd_‘;me scheme for ‘the porâ€" manent improvement of our streets. Next season citizens could be induced to keep the gra;is cut out to the street. INTDODROSDAITTS Large Bottle reg 50c. for 25c. Large Bottle reg. $1.00 for (5e. Remember that the 75¢. bottle is a specialists prescription ;or wEAK LUNGS, HOaRSENESS TICKLING sensation in the throat and general debility and is guaranteed to help you and in niost cases cure you. * We notice thaé a few on the Main. street did so this year and it added greatly to the appearance of their places. Good streets and well kept fronts cannot bezhidden from the view and the more attractive we make our village the more we can hope to atâ€" tract others to locate in it. A little real progress eagch year along the line of permanent improvement in OUr streets, before many years we will _have streets thf»itt our citizens may well be proud of. It is simply marvellous to see the prices in watehes. Gold filled watches with guaranteed movements for $7 85. Never were such prices quoted for such value. When we test your eyes it is done properly. Glasses complete trom 15 cents to $10,00. WE REPAIRS WATCHES CLOCKS AND JEWELLRY, DRUGGIST AND OPTICIAN WE TEST YOUR EYES FREE OF CHARGE SsUNDAY HOURS. from 4 to 5 p.m. and 8 to 9 p.m. TELEPHONE NO.â€"53; Emulsion of Fiat Justitia, Ruat Coelum, s3az33ceGeE ONT.; FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2;3*’,’ 1910. WITH . _ INCH with the undersfanding that another meeting will begheld in the near fuâ€" ture, and in the};meantime the Public \ School Board is to secure such data that at the next mesting they will be in a position to state about the amount they will require for a neow building . ‘There is no more pressing question | before the electérs of this community at the present time than the school question. _ There are one hundred school pupils requiring accommodaâ€" tion at once, and before a year goes\ by the number will be increased at least two fold. The village should look further ahead than two years, at the very least they should look forâ€" ward at least ten years. At no time in the future will it be possible to seâ€" cure suitable éites for schools as cheaply as now,'jn fact, at the present | time the choice of good sites is limited ‘ and five years from toâ€"day the choice | will be much more limited. Public Z school accommodation must be securâ€" )\ ed by the Public School Board, and ‘| that without delay. As the ratepayâ€" ors have to pay for the maintenance of both the Public and the High School it is certainly of importance to them that they come together and disenss the whole school question. The Public School Board presented to the meeting as their solution of their side of this question, a new sixâ€"roomed building on the present lot, and the. discussion mainly hinged about that plan. Since the meeting a prominent citizen has made the suggestion that a new site be secured for the Public school and that a large sixteen room uilding be planned have the ground floor with eight rooms finished at once and the additional rooms finished as required, and that until this building is wholly occupied and more Public School accommodation required, that the present Public School building be: rented to the High School Board for High school purposes. Provided a suitable site could be secured. This might be the most feasible plan out of the difficulty, and by the time the new Public School building was filled, the High School would in all probability not have sufficient room in the present Public School building and the town would be in a very muci better position to then erect a Ssuitâ€" able High school than it is at present. For a few days the public press of: Ontario and Quebec have reflected the interest the public is taking in the biâ€" lingual Separate Schools of Ontario by the space devoted to this question. The publication of Bishop Fallon‘s views on the biâ€"lingual schools in his bishopric as he stated them to the Hon. Mr. Hanna have brought down upon his head the wrath of the French Canadian press, but it has done more, . has called the attention of the people of this province to these schools in \ such a way that the public will not be satisfied until a full and fair inspecâ€" tion of these schools has been made. Much as it may be of advantage to one to be able to speak fluently both languages, in this province it is of paramount importance that English shall be the language of our schcols. ]Tbese schools are under Provincial laws and receive Provincial aid and are. SuJ people. We are pleased that our village was represented at Berlin last week at the celebration in that city of the inauguration of the new Power and Light plant supplied with electricity by the Hydro Electric Commission of the Province.. Too much praise canâ€" not be given the Hon. Adam Beck for bringing this scheme to a successful issue. Too long have the natural reâ€" sources of this Province and the Do minion been allow d to slip away from the public into the hands of priâ€" vate individuals or private corporaâ€" tions for their ow n advantage. Oh, woman, you are charming, And poets long have sung Their sweetest verses to you In every written tongue ; But noue of them has ever Told why it is that you Will always leave a street car .ot dne gnor W supported by the taxes of the W, J. Lampton, in Success, wWOMAN The working creed of the man who has done more than any other one man to ‘bridge the gulf, separating the workâ€" ing man and the church in the United States. & ©I believe in my job.‘"‘ It may not. be a very important job, but at is ming. { EFurthermore, it is God‘s job for me. He has a purpose in my life with refer ence to his plan for the world‘s proâ€" gress. No other fellow can take my place. It isn‘t a big place, to be sure, but for years I have been molded in a peculiar way toâ€"fill a peculiar niche in the world ‘s work. I could take no other man‘s place. He has the same claim as a specialist that 1 make for myself. In the end, the man whose name was never heard beyond the house in which he lived, or the shop in which he workâ€" ed, may have a larger place than the chap whose name has been a household word in two continents. Yes, I believe in my job.. May I be kept true to the task which lies before meâ€"true to myself and to God who intrusted me ~with it. ©I believe in my fellowâ€"man.‘‘ He may not always agree with me. 1‘d feel sorry for him if he did, because I myself do not believe some of the things that were absolutely sure in my own mind a dozen years ago. May he , never lose faith in himself, because, if | he does, he may lose faith in me, and_ that would hurt me, l ©it bolieve in my country.‘‘ I be, Heve in if because it is made up of my fellowâ€"menâ€"and myself. I can‘t go back on cither of us and be true to? my creed. If it isn ‘t the best country in the world, it is partly because I am not the kind of a man that I should be. ©©I believe in my home."‘ It isn‘t a rich home. It wouldn‘t satisfy some folks, but it contains jewels which canâ€" not be purchased in the markets of the world. When I enter its seeret chamâ€" !bervs and shut out the world with its _care, I am a lord, Its motto is service, ‘ its reward is love.. There is no other | place in all the world which fills its place, and heaven can be only a larger Lhome, with aâ€"Father who is allâ€"wise and patient and tender. _ \ _ Tt is no uncommon thing for some ! people to laugh much in order to \ grow fat that they keep on bein‘ ! thin."‘"â€"Boston Hérald. ©*I believe in toâ€"day.‘"‘ Lt is all that I possess. The past is of value only as it can make the life of toâ€"day fuller and freer. There is no assurance of toâ€" morrow. I want to make good toâ€"day. McEWEN & SAIGEON‘S SALES. October 22 â€"Aué’,‘_tion Sale of Freeâ€" hold Property 0n Jfihn Street, Weston, the estate of the late James Mitchell. October 29 â€"Auction Sale of Free hold Property and Household Effects, the property of Miss Margaret Moran, Church Street, Weston. REV. CHARLES STETZLE, POWED for the FARKM WALTER LONGSTAFF, Weston INSURANCE LOANS REAL ESTATE J. T. LOCKE & Co. 57 Victoria St. TORONTO $8500 84 acres with solid brick house, lovely grounds. $1700 New Frame, seven rooms, furnace, sink, etc. BUILDING SITES $4 per foot. INVEST NOW. Goulding & Hamilton 11 WESTON BARGAINS T â€"24 a im« 9.00 a.m. 1 30 p:m. 4.08 p m T.80 p.m. 15,.80 p m:. ° De act stop on Suzsdays. Money to Loan at lowest rates on City, Farm and Suburban property.. Fire, Life, Accident, Burglary and Plate Glass Insurance effected in all Companies. 8. 44 a. m * 5.29 p m. * 6 32%p m. * or, 106 Victoria St., Toronto, Estates managed. Rents and Interest collected. â€" City, Farm and Suburban property in every locality bought, sold and exchanged. Going West North Bour4. South Boun4. TEpmpHon®, Marm 1967. LOCAL TIME TABLE® 291 Main St, Weston, ESTABLISHED 1862 [amoUs Canadiat Airmotor Going Eas: 7 14 aâ€"m. 9.â€"48 a. m« * 12.08 p m..* T.t8 p m 9.853 p. m, * T00 a.m. 1029 a.m, * 4.45 vo.m * 700 pm. * 2LC

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