Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Times & Guide (1909), 23 Mar 1921, p. 7

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a) P % «€â€" en i |llllul|nullulnnulluuuullullluulluuuunuuullnuuuuuuuuuluuuuuullluulnununluuuunnnnuuluuuulnlllll THE GARAGE MAN MAIN ST. NORTH, WESTON PHONES : 427 GARAGE, 361 HOUSE l\lIll'llllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIllllIIlllll"llIll"lIllIlllllllllllIllllllllllllulllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllll} [IIIIlIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllllIlllIIIIlIlllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllIIlllllIIIIllllilllIlllllIIlllll‘l‘llllll‘lIIHlllllllltlllll’"r‘rl"llllllllllllll I illlIlIIIllIllIlIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllilllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIlllIlllIIIllllIllll|lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll"lllllllllllllllll“ |"lllllIlIIIllIllllIlllllIIIIIIIIIII||llllflllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIlllllllIIlIIllllllIllIIllllIllllllIIlIlllllIllIIIIlIIlllllIlIlIlllIlIlIlIlllllI"} Are You Looking For a Real Truck ? wWEDNESDAY, MARCH WOMEN . IIIlllIIIlIIIlllllllllIIIllllllIllIIllIIlIllllllIllIlllllllllllIIIllllllllllllIIIlllIIIIlll|lllllIlllIIllllIIHlIllllIlllllllllllllllllllll"llllIllllIllEl John Chapman PHONE 170 Repairing is our business and we are always doing it. See us for real work. * NO LONG WAITS OR TAKING YOUR PARTS TO THE CEFY. FRY US. PREVENT ACCIDENTS â€"â€" â€"LOOK AFTER YOUR CAR Main Street West Why risk your life and the life of your car when a few dollars and hours spent in having your car overhauled will take away that risk. Bring it here and have it done before you get into trouble. . ;Xcetylen.e Welding done here. \ You can get the best make, that you can depend upon to serve you every day. It will pay to look it over. It is the famous TRAFFIC TRUCK WHY? Because they receive prompt and courteous attention at our garage. When bolts or nuts come loose we fix them without delay. _Our repair shop is so equipped we can handle all kinds of repairs. We also bandle OLE and CGASOLINE COURTEOUS ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL CHEVROLET SERVICE STATION THE BARKER GARAGE Phone 254 â€" Main Street, Weston AGEXTS FOR TRAFFIC TRUCK RUSSELL LA ROSE THE MAXWELL ARE OUR BEST FRIENDS THIS IS THE CAR THE WESTON GARAGE A. T. CORBETT Marriott 23RD SsOLD BY Phone: Garage 382, House 433 MAIN STREET, WESTON 3i 6f The swiftest speed we know is that of lightâ€"186,000 miles a second; the slowest is that of the human thumbâ€" nail, which grows 2â€"1,000,000,000ths of a yard a second. This from Science and Invention, which makes some more speed comâ€" parisons, as follows: THE GREATEST SPEEDS KNOWN, AND SLOWEST 000ths of a yard a second. The earth speeds around the sun at 65,533 miles an hour. A snail moves 15â€"10,000ths of "a yard a second. De Romanet flew an airplane on November 4, 1920, 193 miles an hour. Tommy Milton‘s motor car traveled one mile in 23 seconds, or 136 miles an hour. s A cannon ball has been fired at a speed of 2,000 miles an hour. A bamboo tree grows 27â€"10,000,â€" An electric train in tests between Berlin and Zossen made 130 miles an hour. 6: â€" hi miles an hour. Ice boats glide two miles a minute, or 120 miles an hour. The motor boat Miss American has made 76.655 miles an hour. Destroyers made 48 miles an hour. A man has skated 27 1â€"3 miles an hour, run 13% miles an hour, walked gair at° Warsaw without getting sore feet or requiring the services of 3 chiropodist. 9%, miles an hour Vilna is probably the‘ only place in the world where geese are shod. The geese are made to walk first through far andâ€" afterwards through sand: Each goose is thus provided with & durable pair of boots, and is enabled to make the long journey to the goose gest of those Not a liarâ€"He had| been fishing but with bad luck. On his way home he entered a fishmonger‘s shop and said to the dealer: "Joun, stand over there and throw me five of the b%gâ€" "Throw ‘em? What for? asked the dealer, in amazement. "I want to tell my family I caught ‘em. I may be a poor fisherman, but Tem no Mar."" & Take care of baby‘s eyves. Insist that extreme care be taken to prevent infection of baby‘s eyes at the time of uts arrival. A very large perâ€" centage of the blind in public instituâ€" tions are blind from lack of this eleâ€" mentary safeguard. Remember that all baby‘s surroundâ€" ings should not be glaring white. Science teaches that sorter tints are better. D011Tt give a child toys that require near and acute vision. Big things are better. 5 3 Don‘t expose baby‘s eyes to the diâ€" rect rays of the sun or any other bright light. Line the buggy shade with green. Don‘t hesitate to have the eyes exâ€" amined by an Optometrist if there is any sign of squint after the third birthday. Squint may be cured up to six years of age, seldom after that without a surgical operation. ; Don‘t be in too much of a hurry to scold Johnny if he is at the foot of the class. Like as not is eyes need attention and with proper glasses he‘ll be at the top. Don‘t neglect the signs... If. your child squints his eyes, if he holds his book too close, if he would rather stay around the house than run with the boys, if his lessons are a buâ€"e to him, if he complains of headacnes, take him to a skilful Optometrist for a thorough examination of. his eyes and ocular muscles. Allâ€"these condiâ€" tions and more are frequently reflex symiptoms of defective eyes. & on getting glasses at the price.adverâ€" tised or else gracefully withdraw. Don‘t stint yourself in the matter of glasses. You do not tramp the mountains in dancing pumps, are not your eyes as important as your feet? If it comes to a "showâ€"down" a wooden leg is better than a glass eye. The glass that is suitable for indoor wear will prove insufficient protection from the glare of ocean or desert. Why worry along with one pair where two or three are necessary or desirâ€" able? _ â€" Railroad engines have made Don‘t experiment with any sort of fakir. Pay an expert the price he asks. The services you get for noâ€" thing are generally what you pay for them. Never attempt to fit yourself;, you cannot do it. Readyâ€"toâ€"wear glasses frequently are so imperfect optically that their sale should be prohibited by law. \ Don‘t think it is necessary for a competent‘ Optometrist to display an "EYES â€" EXAMINED FREE" sign. Such a sign is usually a confession of weakness and incompetengy. GET THE BEST POSSIBLE ADVICE AND EXAMINATION "Bon‘t patronize cut price advertisâ€" ers. If you should find yourself in that kind of an office or store insist Don‘t attempt to wear glasses preâ€" scribed for somebody else. There are many thousands of different prescripâ€" tions for glasses. Your ‘chances of getting the proper correction are very slight and you run the risk of perâ€" manent injury by wearing the wrong lenses. Don‘t forget that three hours of close application in every twentyâ€"four is all that the eyes were intended to endure, and this more or less interâ€" mittently. Glasses can be made to take care of some of the overload. Never look straight out of a window in a moving vehicle or train, as it is very trying and tiresome on the eyes. Never use your eyes for constant close reading while travelling on cars or trains. In making long journeys it is advisable to â€"rest the eyes by sleeping or keeping them closed. It is much more restful to ride backâ€" wards in a train and in looking out to select a window a little distance from you, so that as objects come into view they are at a distance from you. After a long shopping tour nothing can so refresh the body as to properly rest the eyes. Many things have conâ€" spired to.tire the eyes. The ride or walk; the sun, wind or dust; the movâ€" ing crowds and traffic; their constant use in the stores; the varied attracâ€" tions constantly drawing the attention this way and that, so that when home is reached, the eyes ache, smart or burn. The body is "fagged" and freâ€" quently there are household duties which prevent immediate rest. Bathe the eyes at once with hot water, settle yourself comfortably ° with the eyes closed for five minutes. We believe you will be pleased with the results. ‘Eryâ€" it. FEW GOOD RULES FOR BETTER CARE OF THE EXES em? What for?" asked the trout!" has been fired at a 120 TIMES & GUIDE, WESTON CREDIT SALE OF TARM STOCK, IMPLEMENTS, ETC. The undersigned have received inâ€" structions from MR. FRANK NEWâ€" TON to sell by public auction at lot 22, Con. 1, Township of Etobicoke, on THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1921 the following articles: HORSESâ€"Bay horse, H.D., 9 years old; brown horse, H.D., 7 years old; brown colt, G.P., 2 years old. CATTLE AND PIGSâ€"Roan cow, calf by side; 2 red_cows, calves by side; roan cow, calf by side; red cow, due time of sale; 3 red cows, in full flow of milk; red and white cow, in full flow of milk; red cow, in full flow of milk; Jersey cow, in full flow of milk; red and white cow, due Augâ€" ust 25th; red and white cow, due August 18th; red cow, in full flow of milk; brood sow, due April 10th,. IMPLEMENTSâ€"M. H. binder, M. H. mower, M. H. hay loader, new; 15 disgq drill, International, new; Inâ€" ternational cultivator; 8â€"horse disc harrow; set 5â€"section harrows; 2â€" furrow riding plow, Cockshutt; Judy walking plow, with wheels; fanning mill and bagger,, farm truck wagon, light wagon, 8 H.P. gasoline engine mounted on trucks, oil engine, set harness with breechings, 3 water troughs, pig trough, forks, rakes, spades, cow chains and numerous other articles. Positively no reserve. & Sale at 1 o‘clock sharp. TERMSâ€"All sums of $15 and unâ€" der, cash; over that amount 6 months‘ credit on approved joint notes. Six per cent, per annuym off for cash. . _ J. E. MeEWEN & SON, i Auctioneers. THE BANKRUPTCY AI _ _ In the estate â€"of Charles H. Coombs, Bankrupt. NOTICE . is hereby given that Charles H. Coombs of the Town of Weston in the Province of Ontario was adjudged Bankrupt and a Reâ€" ceiving Order made on the 8th day of March, 1921. NOTICE is further given that the first meeting of the creditors in the above estate will be held at the office of the Authorized Trustee, The Trusts and Guarantee Co., Ltd., 120 Bay St., Toronto, Ont., on Friday, the 18th day of March, 1921, at thethour of eleven o‘clock in the forenoon. To entitle you to vote thereat, proof of your claim must be lodged with us before the meeting is held. And further take notice that if you have any claim against the debtor for which you are entitled to rank, proof of such claim must be filed with us within thirty days from date of this notice, for, from and after the expiâ€" ration of the time fixed by subsection 8 of section 37 of the said Act, we shall distribute the proceeds of the debtor‘s estate among the parties enâ€" titled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which â€"we have then notice. Proxies to be used at the meeting must be lodged with us prior thereto. DATED at Toronto, Ontario, this 9th day of March, A.D. 1921. \ THE TRUSTS & AUARANTEE company, 1P tED, Crushed Beef Bone for Chicken SMITH, Scarlett Rd. Horsemeat for Dogs Sealed Tenders, addressed to the Postmaster General, will be received at Ottawa until noon, on Friday, the 22nd of April, 1921, for the conveyâ€" ance of His Majesty‘s Mails, on a proposed Contract for four years, six times per week on the route Weston Rural Mail Route No. 2, from the Postmaster General‘s Pleasure. E;ost Office Inspector‘s Office, Toâ€" ronto, March 7th, 1921. Printed notices containing further information as to conditions of proâ€" posed Contract may be seen and blank forms of Tender may be obâ€" tained at the Post Office of Weston and at the office of the Post Office Inspector, Toronto. 6 lbs. for 25¢ ; 30 lbs. for $1.00 REMARKABLE opportunity for one high grade dealer in each territory, preferably one who has a knowledge of farm conditions. The position is per manent and the work pleasant and profitable. Experience not essential â€" we trainâ€" you. Exclusive terriâ€" tory, liberal coâ€"operation and excellent pay. To men of energy, ability «nd absolute integrity, this position offers a valuable association,and one that is of real service to the community. Write us toâ€"day. 7 The Shinn Mfg. Co. of Canada & Guelph, Ontario Secretary & Managerâ€"WwW. H. DAY (Formerly Professor of Physics at the Ontario Agricultural w College, Guelph) WE WANT EXPERT ~ DEALERS A. SUTHERLAND, Post Office Inspector. MAILâ€" CONTRACT Authorized Trustee. 120 Bay St., Toronto, Ont 5 lbs. for 25c R. R. No. 1 BUY "MADEâ€"INâ€"CANADA*" GOODS It will give you the extra service that comes of big power in small compass. You will appreciate its ability to go from job to job with ease. It is a service to you to be able to use your tractor not only on the big jobs like plowingâ€"but to use it with real economy on the lighter tasks such as running the grinder, cream separator, straw baler, cutting wood and pumps ino water, y & § p..... GRAHAM&CARTON Phone 292 Cl BLS TAE Nee ege 00 °0o hoii ienenas im en 2% (@) . h j im 4 C©~ 22â€" is â€" a ;O P mak = e e e 2 ‘z . ECONOMY~ â€"â€"oâ€"~ ts Cep "To" a â€" @ ° . N ~ H =â€"<â€" =â€"ENDURANCEâ€" = SERVICE â€"= â€"::(‘5: ho codft BB cocnene Ee en :-',v/:â€"@ â€"<c== m p= @»p#" BE â€"â€"* z woâ€" â€"â€"=s>. w cer.â€" ‘Q\A â€"â€" k > @â€"â€"â€" Ee â€" h . ~â€"_ & â€" Mn es oo esn 22 Tâ€"’r_\g‘. OT only will the Fordson do every farm power job on draw bar or belt work with the greatest economy, but it will bring you more kinds and ereater volume of service than any other tractor can produce. ce on || mesoon uon | [enpexcure ponam toue Coeniin cwak prman ns ; Nib | ty Ciy~) Cepnescmich "Eiie "HaF tA oo‘ JY "Ce C «494 e n long (s ho e lGet mc <ES So Poca Th 0; h o C | ) Mn 9 Uz U3 es Loo / fae e 7 36 " |Mitioe cheazes C 27 vure . l(E s s - f Cl Bs t i en we, Vz mm CC ,, 46 o o win ~C C fam yid ks _ CTRaky s ~tB ieA P * f es icfi AQ coap in tbA ols CE% ht \ Co j We rorradled , cAyCa :'f;f:-\:,w}" d soth) en s Retie k mt Canoovne Pacien s ~=COMFORT More than 500000 Chevrolet cars giving satisfaction in daily use, prove that the Chevrolet Building Platform meets every requirement of economical transportation BARKER & CO. â€" _ WESTON ower Farming SAe Product of Experience" Fordson T RACT OR TRADE MARK WESTON m Nâ€" M â€"/ )\ â€"~ eP B @9 N N ?T=! ~APPE _ d 4 En 2 _ _ ONSTRUCTION > PBS câ€" \Q gqmjggif\f ‘‘<POWERâ€"â€" ‘<POWERâ€"~ fliw-’â€"Evâ€" m E% 4 Te To in hama neuaun s n ts m ‘~CONVENIENCE ) > a @C â€" APPEARANCE= 1 Sn B â€" L_"> -.,\:v‘ /-â€"fv‘ c ai< e m 2 ze s : s > ,’/ 0 ce s o ermmmmsmmtia B Te . oc omag Bs The Fordson plows 6 to 8 acres per 10 hour day on 1% to 2 gallons of kerosene per aere plowed. _ No fuel waste pulling around. extra weight. It is light enough not to pack the earth (2700 lbs.) and heavy enough to hold the. ground. Efficient performance and low |upkeep cost go hand in handâ€" 'you enjoy maximum service at lowest c’ost, s n igee Seven hundred Fordson dealâ€" ers carty full stocks of repair parts and keep skillful mechanâ€" ics ready to render_Ford Serâ€" vice 56 tligt your Fordson will be subject to minimum intetâ€" ruption if repairs are required. Every day in the year the Fordson can be of practical use to you. Get the power farmâ€" ing vision. Buy now. Fordâ€" son dealers welcome your inâ€" quiries and a chance to demonâ€" strate on your own fields. , Main St. ~â€" PAGE SEVEN

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