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Times & Guide (1909), 18 Sep 1929, p. 5

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af / _ WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1929 Night Classes willâ€"be opened in the i â€" following subjects: Stenogfaphy, Typing, Commercial Art; Gookery, Dressmaking, Millinâ€" ery, Bookkeeping and Penmanship, Auto Mechanics,~ Woodworking, Machine Shop Practice, Electric & Armaturé . Wiring, â€" Mechanical Drawing. ..>_ _ L / § ||f Clakses: begin‘ Thursday, October 10th, 1929. § Enrolment Thursday and Friday evenings, September 26th and 27th, from 7,30 to 9.00 p.m. For further information apply to the Principal, Mr. A. Pearson. . Weston \ Vocational School 1929 Rispb EVENING CLASSES FALL AND WINTER SEASON *New telephone plant and . service improvements & will mean an outlay, forâ€" 1929 alone, of more than | $27,000,000. f DE Forest CrosLEy ANYONE trying to call this telephone will be ‘told by the operator: "Line‘s Busy". But the line is not busy. It is really: idle. . Someone at the other end of the office is wanted and the telephone waits there until he arrgves. § The idle telephone, with its receiver off the hook, is a common cause of "Line‘s Busy", and a comâ€" mon cause of uncompleted calls which are wastâ€" ing two million minutes every day in Ontario and Quebec. Other causes of unnecessary "Line‘s Busy" areâ€" inadequate office equipment, long conversations during peak hours, trying to repeat too soon after the "busy" report, and asking anâ€" other to get your party for you. Many offices may not need more telephones, but they do need to have their present telephones more conveniently located. You may be losing calls because your line is thus "Busy" but really idle. And you may be losing business. We want you to have the best possible telephone service and we are making every effort to provide it.* We are ready at any time to survey your telephone equipment and submit a report. HERE’S a radio we can recomâ€" mend to anyone. It‘s the De Forest Crosley "Renown." Already proven by actual sales the most popular of all new radios. Powerful neutrodyne circuit. 8 tubes. Builtâ€" in, Inductor Dynamic speaker capâ€" able of handling immense volume. Beautiful cabinet of rare woods. This is a set that you can be proud to own â€" that will serve you for years to come. â€" Hear it. Easy payments if you wish. â€"= / WESTON RADIO SALES & SERVICE 202 MAIN ST. NORTH any De Forest Crosley in our stock with the best radio or phonograph you can hear elsewhere. om pareâ€"â€" | Elwoo;i Farnaby, a poor boy, son of ‘the town sot. As Remember and Dr. | Bretherick discuss the problem a teleâ€" Rev. Doctor Steddon, violently opâ€" to what he considers "worldly" things, posed to what he considers "wordly" things, accepts motion pictures as the cause for much of the evil of the pre:â€" sent day. Troubled with a cough, Remember goes to see.. £ Dr. Bretherick, an elderly physician, who is astonished at the plight in which he finds her. Pressed by the doctor, Remember admits her unforâ€" tunate affair with Remember Steddon, a pretty, unsoâ€" phisticated girl, is the daughter of a kindly but narrowâ€"minded. minister in a small midâ€"western town. Her father, FIFTH INSTALLMENT z & "< / 7k § C CS 3.A 21 o t NfC ie x 3 s * , \@ h â€" e Rroad t t 1e n T T se @es. 1. 22 3 1e ‘> e rem y e C 5 t C hy C Eo o i l Byr . B AWaW in s jaserac| ud 5i mcA Ca.poP :':é‘(»fi:'.,_f-‘ smB 6 4Lre Cl\ Tal P « ipiâ€"oo 2BBb Chiar 1;‘*’:’;;:5.4\2&‘.:5. ty c tey e i vha â€" U E pore '7!3}'-1«?'«'23»:;;_“- Aek 44(’...\5_;,%-3 s t in '5.,4..-.‘â€",.: ~ Pn Ticp RENOWN g $2235 $00 Down 00 payments of $00 Mem decides to kill off her imaginâ€" ary husband by saying he died of thirst in the desert, meanwhile she starts off for another town to get a job as a servant. On the way she runs into the movie company of Tom Holby. Tom insists that she become an extra, and is most cordial to her. She finds herself in the movie game. Now Go On With The Story Closeâ€"up of the individuals were taken, the, most striking types being selected and coached to express crises of feeling:"‘You go mad and babble, old man, will you ? Tear at your throat and let your tongue hang out? . . You, miss, will you fall back in your mother‘s armsâ€"you be mother, will you, miss, and catch herâ€"you are to die, you. know; just roll your eyes back and sigh and sink into a heap. And you, mother, wring your hands and beat your breast and wail. You understand â€" Oriental staff, eh? ... "And I‘d like somebody just to look up to heaven and pray for méereyâ€" somebody with big eyesâ€"You, the young lady over thereâ€" will you step out? Oh, it‘s Mrs. Woodville, isn‘t? I Met you this morning. Here‘s your chance. Do this for me like a good girl; and give yourself to it. Look up to heaven; if the sun brings tears to your eyes all right, but let them come from your soul, dear, if you can. You see, you have seen your people dying like flies about you, from famine and hardship. You look up and say, O God, you don‘t mean for us to die in this useless torture, do you, dear God? Take my life and let these others live. Won‘t you, dear God?" & Mem stood throbbing from head to foot with embarrassment and with a strange rush of alien moods. The fierce eyes of the director burning through his dark glasses, the curious instigation in his voice, the plea to do well for him, quickened her magically. At Tucson Mem meets Dr. Galâ€" braith. a pastor, who knows her father and takes an interest in her. She misâ€" calls Tom Holby "Mr. Woodville" in order to make her fanciedâ€"suitor seem more real.~While the Galbraiths are away, she writes them as well as her parents that she has married "Mr. Woodville" and that they are to live in Yumaâ€"for which place she buys a.ticket. Her mother agrees with the plan of the doctor. Mem leaves town. On the train .Mem accidently meéets Tom Holby, movieâ€"star, traveling with Robâ€" ina Teele, leading lady. in the movies, who are the cynosure of all.eyes, The train comes ito an abrupt halt, a disâ€" aster having been narrowly avoided, and the passengers get out and walk about. _ WESTON 1340 phone message brings the news that Elwood has been killed in an accident. Dr. Bretherick accordingly persuades Remember to go West, the cough servâ€" ing as a plausable excuse; andâ€" write home of meeting and marrying a preâ€" tended suitorâ€""Mr. Woodville"â€"and later write her parents announcing her "husband‘s" death before the birth of her ‘expected child. Unable alone to bearher secret.â€" Remember goes to her mother with it. rorcr HUGHGS§ z, eveent HUGrb ILLUSTRATED â€" BY poNaALD RILEY â€"~ THE WESTON TIMES & GUIDE Every time she made the begining her hands flinched from the lying pen. But one night in a frantic fit of hisâ€" tronic enthusiasm she dashed off her fable, sealed it in an envelope, and dropped it after dark in the, mail box. Darling Mamma and Papa:â€" How can I.write the terrible nmnews? I can hardly bear to think of it, let alone write about it. But my darling. husband: passed away in the desert. L.cannot write you the particulars now, for I am too agitated and grief~ stricken and I do not want to harrow you with details..I know your: poor hearts will ache for me, but Iâ€"beg you not to feel it too deeplg@‘e- cause I am trying to be| braie. _And I remember what you taught me that the Lord giveth angfi}e She.â€"spent much thought upon the letter home that she had not yet writâ€" ten, that she must write it were she ever to go home. again. The whole purpose of this long, long journey into lonliness was to be able to write that letter; and it had not yet gone.. _ seemed to see God peering down upon the little multitude, and moved her lips in suplication. f She was doomed to spend a certain time in increasing heaviness, and then to die or to go about thenceforth with a nameless child holding on to her hand an anchoring her to obscurity. She found a place as maid in the home of a storekeeper at such wages as he could .afford. She began the sordid.routine of her tasks, but, conâ€" trasting them with the glamour of playing tragic roles, she felt herself entombed. o >, A Then the summer. heat began (and grew so fierce that her employer and his family went to the seashore. _ There was such weird reality in her grief that the director‘s glasses were blurred with his own tears; the camâ€" era men were gulping hard. As her upward stare again encounâ€" tered Tom Holby‘s eyes she saw that tears were dripping from his lashes and that his mouth was quivering. â€" The director was already calling the mob to the next task. She could not help glancing toward Tom Holby., His camel was moving off with the crowd, but he was turning back to gaze at her. He was nodding his head in, apâ€" proval and he raised his hand in a salute of profound respect. _ Mem‘s sin had led her to<the edge of paradise, and then drawn her back by the hair. 3 j Ma% She felt the words and the anguish wringing her throat, ‘and the tears came trooping .from her eyes, ran shining into her mouth, and she swalâ€" lowed them and found them bitterâ€" sweet with an exultion of agony. . The sight of his tears sent through her a strange pang of triumphant sympathy, and she broke down sobâ€" bing, would have fallen to the sand, if »Leva Lemaireoshad not caught her and drawn her into her arms, kissing her and whispering: "Wonderfull! Wonderful!" ""God bless you! That was the ‘redl stuff! You‘re a good girl! The feal thiill’g!” § 7 I 3 + .7 _ 'fj, # This was her experience of the‘ pas sion mimicry. She was as ashaméd as glorified, as drained yet as exultant, as if a god had seized her and emâ€" braced her fiercely for a moment; then left her aching, an ember in the ashes. Then she began to laugh and choke, became an utter fool. : mss She felt a hand on her arm and was drawn from Leva‘s arms into a man‘s: Her shoulders were squeezed hard by his big hands and she heard a voice that identified her captor as " the director. He was saying: [ oi Then she flung her head from=side to side in a torment of woe, cast her head back, and heaved her big eyes up into the cruel brazier of the skieg} iShe, felt herself bewitched, benumbâ€" ed, yet mystically alive to a thousand tragedies. Her eyes rolled around the staring throng, and made out Tom Holby gazing down at her fromihis camel and pouring sympathy from his own soul into hers. Folger took her by the arm and murmured: "Now, dear! Let your neart break! Look round and see your dying people. That‘s your father over there just gasping his life out. Your mother lies dead back there; you‘ve covered her poor little body with sand to keep the jackals from it. Can you do it? Will you? That‘s right. Look round now and let yourself go!" % JEWELLER AND OPTICIAN Phone Junet. 9717 _ 2C % t mz lc f cheR t “e..(\ '> oi | ‘;Z’“ff” I taby c io l aa" yOb y Fogs | 486. { sY L éfiw ta 9 & -‘, £ AU >A Ap /A -[‘1 ,«#3 al . KK ue m :“J j JP NRA h Aayy ) Aif -';-'- $ 0M.JY Mo i ar\oo oo El MV e s yit\| ArRasw ): P halel es &2 OhA\ s en / 17 AYAl Y Famie‘ s AyY \Sosts | |/ iA Cy " uen aN Ns ) 4 / "O ol dH AbEf Y T sgfr Sae $ 7) Dt We 2 9k E2 7 f ) o) yrally / U 1\ e ed h KX o Pausty/ 71| m "*.‘!}'7 § hx 4 #A 7/ 1 tsell i gip EiD / 5/ 3 }; m i bay?" 38 P28 }; e 2e «fig J s »Ai l wasn \ "God bless you. That 3 ~_â€" ufess & yz~ aap wand 4s {;fi.\.:.%;__;z o ‘;s‘g&rfi 3z sy & 29 <"<A s eastie & Ug$/~"‘ :m °. ug ) &Â¥ /o NR s iss ay, |9 3\ & 32 7 ... ~B * eA * / éess\ .e / SHEPPARD was the real stufl.. Y uirre a good giri." o pucee, mOua us __Sonnyâ€"Then I‘d get a beating beâ€" sides. _ You said you‘d give me that if you ever heard me swear again. __ The thought of working in the dark and the coo],\ was a hint of Paradise to Mem. & Paâ€"Aren‘t you ashamed of yourâ€" self to ‘how!l like this over a mere wasp sting? Act like a man. _ _ "But if it has, you can still find something to do in the movies. I‘ve given up trying to be an actress and taken a position in the laboratory proâ€" jection room, correcting the films. It‘s cool and dark and interesting. I think I can get you a place, if you‘ll come up. â€" There‘s no excuse for a woman of your education and charm wasting your sweetness on the desert air. _ Do come! I‘ve sent my three children out to their uncle‘s ranch. ranch. _ You could live here with me and my friends." - During his illness Mem received a letter from Leva Lemaire, saying that she had just seen an old paper a parâ€" agraph describing "Mrs. Woodville‘s" fall from the mountain and her mirâ€" aculous escape from death. Leva exâ€" pressed the utmost sympathy _ and prayed that her beauty had not been marred. She added. ; The boy Terry was of the Ariel breed. _ His fancy girdled the earth in forty minutes. He mimicked birds and animals and often covered his mother with terror and amused chagrin by imitating her clients with uncanny skill. __ ie o. Once the child caught coldâ€"in all that heat!â€"and Mem sat by his bedâ€" side through several _ smothering nights, while the backâ€"broken mother slept. _ Mem excercised her skill in making up little dramas to while aâ€" way the tedium of the long nights and to keep the wakeful child‘s mind from his cough. 3 5 â€" â€"She bore this blow with a fortiâ€" tude that surprised him. She was dazed and he was timid, and he had some difficulty in makâ€" ing her understand his bad news; that she would not be a mother. A young Indian girl chasing her stray pony about the sand had seen Mem stumble, then fall; had heard the thump of the body on cushionâ€" ing ~sand; had run to the nearest house and told what she had seen. Mem was taken home. _ The village doctor did all that his skill could do. Though she had. never dared to visit him, he knew of her, and knew her as a widow. _ When â€" she was strong enough to be talked to he preâ€" pared her for bad news. "Am I to be crippled for life?" she cried. "No," he sighed. _ "You will bear noâ€"marks of yourâ€" accident.â€" But you will notâ€"but your other hopes gmc(ii & expectationsâ€"will not be realâ€" ized." And now Mem was weak and woebegone, at the bottom of the cliff of life. _ She had never climbed very far, but she had fallen far enough to give both soul and body an almost fatal shock. She was a drudge in a poor family in a scorched settlement abandoned by all that could get away.. & The only inferiors she could see were a youne widow named Dack and her fiveâ€"yearâ€"old boy, Terry. Mrs. Dack took in washing. _ 4 shook her from her balance. _ She wavered, cluched at nothing, whirled, struck, bounded from the hard rock, fell, and fell, and thenâ€"a smashing blow, blackness, silence. The exertion of climbing was more than Mem had bargained for.. The steeps that looked so inviting from a distance were ragged and forbidding. The burntâ€"almond mountains were hot and sharpâ€"edged gridirons to her feet. The sun came blazing forth and seemâ€" ed to spill upon her a yellow hot mass of metal that slashed her about the head and rolled over her shoulders in blistering ingots. Mem. After she had slipped the letter irâ€" revocably into the mail box she realâ€" ized that the â€" postmark of Palm springs would be stamped on the enâ€" velope. Her place of concealment would be disclosed. a clouded sky gave a little shelter from the sun she set out to obey the impulse to â€"climb as far as her strength would take her. Still, it would not matter. She was a widow now in the minds of her people and she could go back to them and face the future in calm. The mountains had a beckoning look always, and on this afternoon, when The mornings are getting dark when it is time for rising. Do not be late. Have one of our Alarm Clocks that never fail to alarm. Fine line of Mantel Clocks. Beautiful Musical Chime Clocks. Moderate priced. A stone rolled under her foot and Lord taketh away. *â€"**1=ganâ€" not write you more now. I am in no need of money and I will ¢ome home when I get a little stronger. All the love in the worldâ€"from Your loving _ Continued Next Week CLOCKS 1| i Like a Man 2915 Dundas St. NCE upon a time Robinson Crusoe became stranded on a lonely island. O Now, instead of weeping and bemoaning his misfortune, he showed good horse senseâ€"and ADVERTISED. Yes, sir, he put up a white flajil,on.a pole on the highest peak of the island. As one copy, or piece of celothing became worn out he put up a new one. Things looked pretty bad for a time, but Rob. kept his ad in the air. Then one day he got what h2 was advertising for. A vessel passing far out at sea noticed his ad, ar" came and took him home. Can you imagine old R. C. saying to anyone tt itâ€"doesn‘t: pay to advertise, ________ _____â€" o > 1 fos ol imut; j T‘S . BETTER OBECAUSE IT‘s CAN A DT AN «P *Â¥ 2e .e Bs Y ho COs | io: Bsc iva Heaeoe oaet SE en t omm e F nc in Pn kul, . wl uce (57 > tPard| / thos h [ o > i o SA $ is" is hi ty RARZS, a . e NE D iÂ¥ _ Trapt i EWe y zP ud Calyip Clse S & o Phod bd W c on bors hes dyit® A io ath® ‘am.!. e fls se / C o s m . 5 tJmm > T > ies 1 CA 5o 25 w1 & Cagml 5i y £a M mA 9 o Eo ho Caettcoh â€" (£0..5 HpLs Pss â€" d A & Bb o E+ Mess T2 o pl M the? _ CA es Cre tA YJ TS Je Te ies it ’:“ 4 <a2" dn «iD 5 s § 8. $ 3 & m i . (t‘ cLQ" o CA Pss i f M 9 o «D i seq nsl T/ 4 B cam in e 2B ans ( D) sep) Cotisp | F hn xc Pet®4*m 1i 244X f ¢ * is i on Je tha i7 4 t w @4 o d _ E_ wA o tos BA Toh l An 6y 2y s Tt i PE tfi t c uoi ts# Li C3E ho WB €3h.. xo â€" bna tsA J s oL e F ire Moo ons CE ies oma AJ Cis Toee 9 i cce i .ts vo 5p5 traost i CGegP tah € ib U»> s 1 eblim Tpts ns CHHD thas T. 0. DOLSON, 44 Brampton Fair Toronto Phone: JUnction 8376 TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY September 24th and 25th WEDNESDAY EVENING J. T. FARR & SONS ONE HOUR behind the wheel of the New Chevrolet Six will give you a better idea of motorâ€"car â€"values than you could gain by weeks spent in the study of catalogs or in listenâ€" ing to sales arguments. & Chevrolet owners sell themselves on Chevroret, They learn, ‘behind the wheel of the New Ghevrolet, just what it means to drive a real six . . a six with a highâ€"compression valveâ€" inâ€"head engine, with staunch and stylish Body by Fisher . . yet a Six at the price of a four. They taste the joys of sixâ€"cylinder power and smoothness .. . sixâ€"cylinder snap and acceleâ€" ration. They experience Chevrolet‘s marvelâ€" ous comfort and handling ease. They discover that this amazing new Chevrolet gives them every modern convenience feature . . such as twinâ€"beam, footâ€"controlled headlights; finely upholstered, deep luxurious cushions; highâ€" speed window regulators; Ternstedt quality hardware ; completely equipped, indirectly lighted instrument panel, including electric temperature indicator and theffproof Electrolock. _ € C When you are considering the purchaé’% of a car sell yourself on the car you want.; Get behind the wheel of the New Chevrolet and make your own tests. Then dacide on Chevâ€" rolet only after you have proved to yourself that it offers you more for your money than any other car in the lowâ€"priced field. j va4â€"0â€"20» \Asé about the GMAC Deferred Payment, Plan / PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS OE CANADA, LIMITED yen"" President. MANY SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS ONE OF THE LARGEST FAIRS IN ONTARIO Dance in the Armouries Meet Your Friends at WESTON, ONT. T. W. THOMPSON, â€" Secretary. Weston Phon«e: 254 35 #% PAGE FIVE

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