[ in IEFREREEEAXE iEpECEAIIREEE EEREAEpEXED EEREeRNZEE r:»'- it Bs i - PAcE SX # Insure Your Health NEILSON‘S ICE CREAM Drop into Moore‘s for your Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candies and Light Lunches. f Moore‘s Ice Cream and Lunch Parlor __OUR WATCHES are the best values in the market. Evâ€" eryone is guaranteed. You can get ideas here for that wedâ€" ding present. EAGLE HOUSE BLOCK 2892 DUNDAS STREET Ts Marriage Licenses issued, Wedding Rings at all prices. IS INDISPENSABLE. wWHEN YOU USE OUR MILK YOU HAVE AN INSURANCE AGAINST ADULTERATIONS THAT ARE INJURIOUS TO THE MILK. MILK IS A NECESSITY IN EVERY HOME. GOOD MILK THAT CAN BE DEPENDED UPON TO BE NOT ONLYâ€"PURE BUT CONâ€" TAINING THE HIGHEST FOOD QUALITIES PHONE 126 _‘ When you buy a home, consider the workmanâ€" ship, the location, the taxes., These are important points. Look at this bargain: Brick Veneer House, 4 large rooms, well trimâ€" med, full sized basement, electric light and water, side drive. Splendid view. Five minutes‘ walk to car line. ~Deposit to suit customer, balance as rent. Liberal discount for;/large cash/payment. Township taxes. BOYS! THE WESTON DARRY . J.SHEPPARD GEORGE ROBERTS A. LUND, PROPRIETOR 6 MAIN ST. . _ BUY A HOME! EVERYBODY ! GET THE HABITâ€" BUILDER PHONE WESTON 238 TRY A BOTTILE LOCK MAIN ST., WESTON g EEEEESZEEZEEEEREEIEEEIRIEIEEEEHZH SERVED AT MOORF‘S J X¢ Y su can secure a (ine a¢â€" lection of Diamonds for Rings, etc. Ear Rings, Stick Pins, or Pennantsâ€" here. WESTON GIRLS! TORONTO In the matter of the Estate of Chariâ€" ty Alicia Welsh, late of the Townâ€" ship of York, in the County of York, Spinster, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given pursuant to "The Revised Statutes of Ontario," 1914, Chapter 121 and amendments thereto, that all creditors and others having claims against the estate of the said Charity Alicia Welsh, who died on or about the 19th day of November, 1920, are required on or before the first day of July, 1921, to send by. post prepaid,~ or deliver to C. Lorne Fraser of the Town of Wesâ€" ton, Solicitor for Henry Welsh of the ToWns?‘p of York, in the County. of York, Farmer, and Peter John Bishâ€" op, of the Township of Gray in the County of Huron, Farmer, the \Exeâ€" cutors, of the estate of the said deâ€" ceased, their Christian and surnames, addresses and descriptions, the . full particulars of their claims, verified by* affidavit and the nature of the securities, if auy, held by them. And further take notice that after such last mentioned date the said Executors will proceed to distribute the assets of the deceased among the parties entitled thereto, having reâ€" gard only to the claims of which they shal& then have notice, and that the said‘ Executors will not be liabhle for the said assets or any part thereof ~~FRor. PAINTING $ PAPERHANGING \~GRAINING AND LETTER WRITING Charges Moderate Address: 8 William Street Phone 210 W. CORMIER LAST (8480) Perchion Stallion, foaled June 10th, 1918. Sire, Cormier 129â€"53767â€"80152; G.S., Campignyâ€"56073; G.GS. Coroiolanâ€" 31953; Dam Kocarde 37180â€"95676â€" 104297; G.D., Mynonne 49774; GGD. Durandal 338§72. e o 8 Description J Cormier‘s Last is a beautiful steel grey, 12 hands high, weighing 1900 lbs. Will make a horse of 2200 lbs. or better. Has splendid astran and bone was first at Toronto National as a yearâ€"oldâ€"only time shown. His sire Cormier was several times champion of Toronto. His dam was also the champion in 1919 atâ€" Toronto. _ In breeding, conformation and size Corâ€" mier‘s Last is the making of a No. 1 stock horse. He will stand for the season of 1921 at Mr. Arthur Sheard‘s farm, oneâ€"half mile south of Maiton. Terms: $18 to insure. Mares disposed of before foaling will be liable for full amount of insurance. Fee payable Feb. 1, 1922. All accidents at owners‘ Dated the twentyâ€"seventh day of May, 1921. s A 2t to any person or persons of whose claim notice shall not have been reâ€" ceived by them at the time of such distribution. Enrolment No. 5818. Form 2. Cerâ€" tificate and enrolment and inspection of the pure bred _ Percheron Stallion Cormier‘s Last. Registered in the Canadian Percheron Stud Book as No. $480. Owner, William Pears, West Toronto. Foaled 1918. Has been enâ€" rolled under the Ontario Stallion Act and inspected on the 21st May, 1921. Ontario Stallion arnd Enrolment Board, Robt. McEwen, Chairman; R. W. Wade, Secretary. Dated May 25th, 1921. risk Take notice that a Court of Reviâ€" sion to hear appeals against the asâ€" sessment roll for the Township of Etobicoke for the year 1921 will sit at the Township Hall, Islington, on Wednesday, the 15th day of June, 1921, at the hour of one o‘clock in the afternon (standard time). All perâ€" sons having business with the said court are requested to appear at the same time and place. Municipality of the Village of Woodâ€" i bridge, County of York. Public notice is hereby given that a Court of the Revision of the Assessâ€" ment Roll of the Village of Woodâ€" bridge will be held in the Public Liâ€" brary, Woodbridge, on Monday, May 30th, 1921, at eight o‘clock p.m., to hear and determine all complaints against the Assessment Roll of the Municipality of the Village of Woodâ€" bridge for the year 1921. All parties are requested to take notice and govâ€" ern themselves accordingly. ED. W. BROWN, Clerk of the said Municipality of the Village of Woodbridge. _ Dated at Woodbridge this twentyâ€" third day of May, 1921. C. LORNE FRASER, Solicitor for.the said Henry Welsh, and the said Peter John Bishop, Executors of Charity Cars overbauled and repaired. TOWNSEBIP OF ETOBICOKE FUDGE MOTOR DELIVERY & MISâ€"HIT Did you make a misâ€"hit the time you employed the last " hetp." Don‘t worry. There are lots of good fish in the sea, and a sure bait to catch them is a Want Ad. 4 wapy niahind mm se W inOsdy NOTICE TO CREDITORS 6 St. Johns COURT OF REVISION COURT OF REVISION S. BARRATT, Clerk of the said Municipality CARTAGE Phone 306 Alicia Welsh, Deceased Panin e ensenes m e ds uen , Weston TIMES & GUIDE. WESTONX world. As already remarked, the primary task of the census is the enumeraâ€" tion and description of every man, woman and child in Canada. Good business dictates that when so large an organization as this requires has once been created,, it should be put to every available purpose. . In other words, the "overhead" must earn its maximum. The _ census therefore should deal not only with the people themselves, but directly. with the peoâ€" ple‘s institutions and affairs, in so far as the latter can be properly brought within its scope. At this point arises aâ€"problem inâ€" volving considerable discrimination. To enumerate the people demands a large organization from the physical aspect, but it does not require any special technical training on the part of those who collect the information, the questions being such that any perâ€" son of fair education can explain. This, however, is not the case when the inquiry is shifted to, certain other fields. Industrial production, for exâ€" ample, is so manyâ€"sided and compliâ€" cated in its processes that no body of men appointed and instructed as are the census enumerators can hope to deal with it successfully. Then again, it has always to be remembered that the census is essentially a stpcktaking. Just as in .businpess certain transacâ€" tions must be recorded continuously as they occur, as in day books, and ledgers, so in the affairs of the na* tion, many phenomena must be obâ€" served as and when they arise, and not through the medium merely _ of a periodical stock sheet like the cenâ€" sus, whose record is that of a given fixed moment. The reorganization of the statistical work ‘of the Governâ€" ment and its centralization under the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, menâ€" tioned above in passing, has enabled this problem to be dealt with more satisfactorily for the present census than previously, because it has proâ€" vided the means of securing certain information from day to day ,which formerly was obtained only through the census, unsatisfactory as the latâ€" As the practice of nations in regard to censusâ€"taking tends more and more to uniformity, the census affords the inestimable benefits of comparison with other countries and enables our rational problems to be studied in their general setting. Especially is this true of the countries which conâ€" stitute the British Empire. The cenâ€" suses of the various Dominions, India, and the Crown Colonies, are now takâ€" en in the same year and within a few weeks of each other’;“sg that when the results are completed we shall have a large and harmonious body of data at command for the study not only of the relations of the dominions inter se but also of the place of the Empire as a whole among the nations of the But the census has far wider uses than to fix electoral representation. It constitutes, in fact, under the modâ€" ern system, nothing less than a great periodical stockâ€"taking of the Canadiâ€" an people, designed to show from the widest angle the point that has been réached in the general progress of the nation. It is difficult within brief compass to explain how this function is fulfilled. Fundamentally, the imâ€" portance of the census hinges upon its analysis of the human element or man power of the eountry. The people themselves after all are the basic asâ€" set of every state. Their numbers, sex, occupation, racial origin, languâ€" age, education, etc, etc., are facts in themselves of the greatest moment. They constitute, moreover, the backâ€" ground against which almost all other facts must be projected if the latter are to have real significance. The well being of the stateâ€"physical,morâ€" al, economic (including such varied phases as birth and death rates, eduâ€" cation, transportation facilities, finanâ€" cial conditions, etc.)â€"with its conâ€" verse in any form, can be apprehendâ€" ed and interpreted only through the medium of population statistics. Even if the census wentimo farther it would be the basis of all study of our social and economic conditions. Linked with other official data, however, it rounds out the scheme of information by which as by a chart the Government directs the national affairs. Without the census, it is literal truth to say that legislation â€" and administration would be carried on in the dark, and that there would be no means of knowing whether the country was on the road to success or disaster. So cogently is this felt that censuses at five years‘ intervals, instead of ten, are universally advocated, the only drawback being the heavy cost. ter admittedly was for the purpose,. This is too large a subject to describe in detail here. ‘Reference has been made above to industrial statistics (mines, factories, etc.); these are now collected annually by correspondence on a large number of different forms adapted to each particular industry and in coâ€"operation with the differâ€" ent administrative departments, Doâ€" minion and Provincial, that are interâ€" ested in particular sections of the field. Thus an annual census of\dairy factories is taken in collaboration with the Provincial Dairy Commisâ€" sioners, in fisheries the Bureau works with the Dominion and Provincial Fisheries Departments, and so on. Similarly the Bureau now collects the statistics of births, deaths and marâ€" riages in coâ€"operation with the Regâ€" istrars General of the several Provâ€" inces, and the old mortuary schedule of the census has been dropped. Also, statistics of education have been largely eliminated from the census and dependence will infuture be placâ€" ed‘t on concerted action through Proâ€" vincial Education Departments under a uniform scheme centreing in the Bureau of Statistics. This principle, in short has been applied throughout the census. On one case, however, a partial exâ€" ception to this rule is made, namely, the important industry of Agriculture. Approximately fifty per cent. of the population of Canada . is dependent upon agriculture, and the most exâ€" pensive part of the census organizaâ€" tion is that of the rural districts. For agriculture, moreover, the ordinâ€" ary population enumerator proves a satisfactory field agent, most of the processes of agriculture being familiar ores and such as an enumerator who lives in an agriculture district can well cover. Hence the decennial cenâ€" sus of the Canadian people is a cenâ€" sus of population and agricu‘lture, that is, a comprehensive survey of the Canadian people themselves and of their primary inéustry. Scope of the Canadian Census THE CENSUS SEEEEEEEEEREIEEESIEEHPSEESEERREEEEEERIEEDIE;:EEEEREEZE, W % EMEEEEIIEEW!EEHEE’EEIIIHIIII!IIIIIL‘ FereweOre reOet e e e e eeOeeOeer )e e e eB e l ere e ant eet hul Jact Je eC e it C t JC es Jt NC EC )9 KXXX MZXEZZAMMAAAAZAIAEEREEAEKEZEEAXIEEIAIEAERIEE * 2 ; he s es A s q raprey r epameo 1 t x x h C f BCA (g 3 ode Ra h : M CS ht s & s C B H t toa ts t E & y : i 4 "A. 4 f ; ros taom 19A J e § y s â€"TBy w2 F a Pe 5 e & o s j M 3 h : E. M RSP P a w it B h Py e Every home needs screen doors and window screens. If you don‘t put them on, your house will be filled with flies and other insects. You can get what you want at one of our stores. Our doors will fit any door or can be madQ to fit. We have all kinds of screens and screening wires, and reâ€" member, one thing we pride ourselves on is our low prices. It pays to shop at Sutton‘s. WESTON STORE WEST TORONTO STORE _ 12 Main St. S. 2 Stores 2912 Dundas W. Phone Weston 274 Phong Jct. 7327 | 3â€"inâ€"] Ultona, that plays all makes of records without ""‘m‘/@* attachments or extras. ‘See the allâ€"wood oval horn, the s automatic stop, sutomatically balanced lid, and Tone F3 Modifier. All these features are included FREE with % every Brunswick purchased on this special deferred 1st payment plan during Brunswick Week, which positively closes at 10 o‘clock Saturday night. H. 0. COUSINS, DEALER MAIN STREET WESTON On Monday next our regular terms will apply. But until 10 p.m. Saturday night we will deliver to your home immediately any of our standard cabinet models of this beautiful "All Phonographs in One" for only $10 cash. The balance will be arranged in weekly or monthly payâ€" mrents, spread over an entire year. For only Come in while this wonderful offer remains open. Come end see the " Phonograph‘s Secrets Revealed." Hear the Brunswick play all records correctly. _ See the Any Brunswick Phonograph s P Fanea peamenay) es h <oomg on Mss CA mm onl e s ho c 6e o hy i s 6 6: < B5 y® 3 itik T HeeA « \g‘ï¬, 4 t Noh A € fr 9. Ey hA 4 [Bead &TA tz e 2s NB3 th & ‘%u Py NNR SAgow e en Mas AJ Y ty Phcs 7 Cuee e';"?{,!’fl-& ie mvo Mag. & tar Chet s & .00 uied 5 Et 0o t old Ca ing: & &A J es Ey s iW 4s ie psiamrence? clite m Srerpyet? fal w ivrpgae dock Puets ... MRS. HOUSEWIFE : _ I1st. There is a big assortment of wellmade articles. These are made in Canada. 2nd.. . There is value for every dollar spent. ard.. There is prompt service and good delivery given. ‘ We ask you to look into these points and then visit our store. It will be to your advantage and also to ours. % MADAMEâ€"It is not necessary for you to take a long, disâ€" agreeable, street car ride down town to secure smallware kitchen utensils, china, light hardware, paints, screens, wire netting, floor polishes, and oil stoves, because you can get them all here. Think what it means to you to have this convenience. Think of the time it saves you. Think of the money, you will save once you get the habit of dealing at our stores. We say this because we know that it is true. One visit to our stores will convinee you. of these facts: s SCREEN DOORS Saturday closes Brunswick Week at our store and is your last chance to get aulll P > 8 tb L 1{' & 72 ag j yE Cis on ; 48 5 8 A bye ts t‘ ~['i." xd n E6 C x & A 5 x7 es ha C 3,‘«5 KX Bd R â€~‘l~’f§;:"" ePBal q | 5 )gc xd l & :5‘4‘ 7 U [ V ul You‘ll need a hose, watering can, lawn mower, clippers, wire fencing, to keep your lawn and garden in a good, healthy, and productive condition. These are necessities around your homes. You can‘t do an effecâ€" tive job without them. Will you let the whole of your work be ruined because you try to do without these? â€" No, you will not, if you will see what we have to offer you. Our prices are right on these goods, and they are made in Canada. See them before you decide. These LAWN TOOLS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8§TH, 1921