Times & Guide (1909), 11 May 1934, p. 8

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& The sting of the following 1 i 5 is the To ng letter is ~ > OBEY THE AIR RULES â€" _ One of the members from the castâ€" erm townships recently. received a from an aged constitwent, a who had attained her ninetieth A &f. .f.h?:’fllk f‘l l?lte wrote) : "Times are very , and I‘m ting on in ?fl-' health is m I don‘t ? ever see you again till we mfluven--nd that can‘t come too now!" Signed, Mrs. Soâ€" T eRn® Der mile per passenger| Did you k 22. th ’ seat. Doubling this charge to allow ten vac{mciesn'(i‘nw the Steni?tethfe(firflt:: %1{- ;dmlnistra:.(iion, the air line fare to \the government side, six on the oppoâ€" mnipeg would become approximateâ€" ‘sition . . . that Senator Cote is a desâ€" ly $48.00, of less than fll'-‘e’clflfls railâ€" ‘cendant of the Abraham Martin, pilot vwx“ny-re w:th sleepler. . f ‘of Quebec, who gave his name to the £ ot ':’n y WOUfi such a trip be Plaino of Abraham, where Wolf and l:ntejr‘ a m‘?lr,e economical," stated ;Montca]m fought . . . that Sir Robert r. Murray, "but it would ‘l?'f‘ more|Borden was once a professor in an coafiorgm;a?ttnax‘ rt;.}:l\v{n'yi $is in !lAmerican institution of learning . . . . s P Jloyd‘s â€" n ‘s f4 surance rates on lives of passengers}-hat Sfenator B.arnar(? 4 f.Ath‘er. i o# for Imperial Airways was exactly the ;"®°, 9 stage couches in Pritish Caâ€" e as ‘the rates Inr ruil or acean ‘lumbnia nver‘ln ruiute 400 miles long, sam: it. ;i‘arrym% mail and passengers up the m k ; |Fraser to the regions where gold had on e ittt .ts sttime . thr e M ho cndintied «Most accidentsâ€"and they are not â€"â€"â€"â€"aâ€" frequentâ€"occur when someone doesn‘t â€" "The Antarctic winter night is a obey the rules." |period of tranquility of a sort you will =â€"â€"â€"oâ€"â€"â€"â€" :ne,vei' Bac:lieve in civilization."â€"Adâ€" @eomnnmemmemmnmimmnmnmanmmnmng | Miral Byrd. Mr. Murray pointed out that there! was not a decent flying field in Toâ€"| ronto, that no equipment or facilities | existed at present for passenger: traffic. "At the present time Canâ€" adian wiafiontisa&ack;;ard. There ii no T traffic between any of | the Eig c?g:s of Eastern Canada and most peofle don‘t realize the possiâ€" bilities of such development," he said. Mr. )lum{‘ stated that it was exâ€" rtad that the London, England, to ; elbourne, Australia, air race to be run next year in connection with the . Melbourne Centennial celebrations would be won in a time of about four days, that with equipment such as this it would be possible to cross the Atlantic from Newfoundland in twelve hours and buck a head wind of fifty ( milés per hour all the way. Mr. Murâ€" 1 ray stated that, on this basis, Winniâ€" t peg was within seven hours‘ trave}| of toronto, Detroit, one hour and a |P half, and ‘!ontreal, two hours and a /C half, Mr. Murray stated that the operating cost of an air line with | V modern equipment was two and oneâ€"| half cents per mile per passenges | seat. Doubling this charge to allow t for administration, the air line fare to |t Winnipeg would become approximateâ€"‘ s ly $48.00, of less than firseclass railâ€" !c way fare with sleeper. P _ "Not only would such a trip be | p faster and more economical," stated | Mr. Murray, "but it would be more |p comfortable than by railway." LA Mr. Murray stated that Lioyd‘s inâ€" 1“ surance rates on lives of passengers ||; for Imperial Airways was exactly the !h same as the rates for rail or ocean | _‘ Pmuu Club of Toronto West in Parkdale Canoe Club. The question was asked by Mr. Lee Murray, general manager of the De Haviland Aircraft Company, in an address before a meeting of the "There is a big aircraft industry coming for Canaga_ Will it be cenâ€" tred in Toronto or somewhere where there are better facilities?" Nothing Dangerous in Sky Travel If Flyers Obey the Lee Murray Telis Progress Club Members Canadian Aviation Is Backward CANADIAN AVIATION ACOMING INDUSTRY Parliament Hill | Heare | Weston Flower Shoppe 19A MAIN ST. N. PHONE 798 Greenhouses: Seariett Rd.â€"Phone 298 A great shout went up at Mr. Fowler‘s expense, and the opposition ceased. Ever afterwards, so Mr. Graâ€" hams tells me, there was little trouble with any of his estimates. ‘"The oil," mellifluously rejoined Mr, Graham, "was purchased by the galâ€" lon, whereas the plush was bought by the yard!" t oo e mt e l ‘is done. He went patiently through \the examination, and finally Mr. Fowlâ€" er sat‘ down, breathless, ready to jump on the next vulnerable item. Along it came, plush, for upholstering cars. _ Mr. Fowler got wp wrathfully. "Was this plush '_Purchased in the same way as the oil?" "Oh, no," sweetly replied the minâ€" ister of railways. "In quite a differâ€" ent way," "What is the difference?" shouted Mr. I:‘owler:, madder than ever, The late Senator Fowler, then a member of the House of Commons, ‘took advantage of the presentation of ‘the intercolonial estimates by the !)oung minister to comb the latter ‘down. ‘an hour, on one occasion, Mr. Fowler proceeded to attack the system of purâ€" chasing oil for the railway for use in locomotives, and worked himself up into a fever heat, with the idea that he would make the new minister lose his temper, and then demolish him. But even in those juvenile days, George P. seemed to sense that a minister who loses his temper while pilolting estimates through the House |_ Federal members never really take [too kindly to the transfer of provincial |representafives (as George P. was \then) to the Federal House, much less |tor Graham keenly recalls the gruelâ€" |ling initiation he had to face when he first came to Ottawa as minister |of railways. The inexperienced Mr. Graham was fair game for Mr. Fowler, who was a hard hitter and a relentless critic, For to the government, and Mr. Graham felt keenly at first.the chilly atmoâ€" sphere created by some of the Libâ€" erals, and the antipathy. of Conservaâ€" tives who, is his own words, "had it in their minds to straighten the humps on the younger man." NIGHT TOWING SERVICE D A Y T ies eeli cce Aiiseinddicic s ts it t d â€"but we‘ll wager your mother loves them. That‘s why you‘ll please her tremendously on Mother‘s Day with a bouguet or with a corsage. We have every delightful type of flowerâ€"priced low enough for your pocketâ€" book. Why not order them sent today? Is there a mother in all the world who doesâ€" n‘t actually love flowers? . Perhaps there is Weston 96 Ly. 3883 DODGEâ€"DE sOTO Night Phone Weston 550w Ne prennd ce iesb en ) Mc a n in The name of Loch Katrine arose from hordes of robbers, "or caterans", who invaded its shores, at one time, the shores were almost inaccessible, and if a stranger > set foot in this area it was at the peril of his life, It is haunted by the romantic charâ€" acters created for us under the names The Glamour of the Trossachs ul (The Glen Warbler) \__Who is he who has never heard of "The Trossachs"? The name is often | used to mean all arouned Loch Katrine {and Loch Lomond, whereas the Trosâ€" | sachs, strictly speaking, only extend | westward from the head of Loch |Vennacher, and Loch Katrine, Dorothy _ Wordsworth, Nathaniel Hawthrone and Alexander Smith all tried to describe this wondrous beauâ€" ty spot, but no one ever surpassed what Sir Walter Scott described in his immortal "The Lady of the Lake". "And mountains that like giants stand, To sentinel enchanted land, Crags, knolls, and mounds, Confusedly hurled, T}Be fragments of an earlier world". P EORDIENEELPTOLE nntititPbatiofican dsc The Bonnie Hie‘lan Heather is specially tall "in some places as tall as a man", and luxuriant. _ Bounded on the north by Ben Alan, and the southwest by Ben Venue, it is a contracted valley covered all over with huge emineneces on either side. Covered all over wildly and irregularâ€" ly with a variety of trees and scrub. M. L. GRAHAM Weston 126 ‘4TC Ssummer play uses up a lot of energy which mqst be replaced if those youngsters are to be healthy. Milk of guarded purity gives balanced nutriment. Hard summer play uses up 20 V P0 DCTâ€"p sCOTLAND‘S PRIDE WESTON DAIRY (Charges Reversed On City Calls) DUFFERIN ST.â€"At Main 2 Dennison Rd. W HUDSONâ€"TERRAPLANE "My wife says that if I were to die she would remain a widow." a failure. But a noble river and a thriving Dominion are his everlasting monument. â€" Cleveland Plain Dealer. For three or four years Cartier in successive trips explored the St. Lawâ€" rence and the Saguenay, tried to estabâ€" lish a colony and accomplished a conâ€" siderable amount of amazingly acâ€" curate chartinfi. But like ntany. anâ€" other pioneer he was too far ahead of his time. The kings of France had European wars on their hands, They came to look upon Canada as a cold annoyance, Cartier led, but for a long time there were few to follow. It was half _ a century or more before Champlain, La Salle, Marquette and others came who were to carve New! France from the wilderness, In the! estimate of his generation Cartier was _ When the Ottawa Agreements were _made, the Daily Express was the only newspaper in this country to denounce them, apart from those which were fighting the sham rearguard action of a Free Trade system which had alâ€" ready vanished. The Daily Express is now almost alone in defending the Ottawa Agreements, Why the change? The Daily Express opposed these Einpire treatiesâ€"because they did not go far ehnough. It defends because they are the best we have obtained, and even they are in danger. This newspaper fights, not for less Empire trade but for more. The quota is breakâ€" ing up the Empire.â€" London Daily Express, FOR STRONG BODIES! mental regulation> the following resoâ€" lution was _passed without discussion "That following the advice of the diâ€" rector for technical education, the moâ€" tion appointing members of the vocaâ€" tional committee to standing commitâ€" tees of the board be deleted from the minutes," It was reported that an increasing number of graduates of the school are obtaining employment. BEAVERBROOK AND sleep here, but in the little Ki o‘ m, near the lootm Voil. A favourite beam;y spot is the "Brig o‘ Turk®". Here Malige deliverâ€" ed up the cross to Angus and in the great uag.hut by Sir Walter Scotc. lk:n,le", admost horseman _ rode The ancient deer forest of the Scottish kings, Glenfinlas, _ now is owned by the Earl of Morey. The |Turk, at first a peaceful, murmuring | streang, suddenly plunges into a chasm, to run underground, then to a-nerg\-, then to muke a long waterâ€" Of later events, I think of two outstanding, In 1752, six years after Culloden, Lochiel‘s brother, Dr. Archaâ€" bald Cameron, was arrested and exeâ€" euted at Tyburn. A century later, 1859, the spot presented a scene of very different significance, Amid much ceremony, attended by notables and fluardod by a fine stalwart body of volunteers, Queen Victoria opened the sluice gates and let the crystal waters of iock Katrine, "the purest water in the known world", flow away through huge pipes for fortyâ€"seven miles, to supply the inhabitants of the second city o] the British Empire, Glasgrow. CHILDREN OF RELIEF FAMILIES IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS GET MILK 3’:;:‘ E'.; Lord below. ;::"u sleep here, but So e little Kirkyaird of Rhoderick Dhu, Fitzâ€"James, a the l-fi Rob Roy MacGregor, *‘The e he was Lord above, (Continued from Page One) JACQUES CARTIER THE TIMES & GUIDE ju. 7216 | EMPIRE TRADE _ After waiting 10 months monks at the Hospice :f St. Berna:Jn in the Swiss Alps have just received word that Father Melly, Father Coguez and two lay brothers from St.quernnrd have arrived at the Siâ€"La Pass, in the mountains between China and Tibet, and are preparing to found a new hos pice, ~8Siâ€"La Pass is 13,000 feet high and always covered with snow, The pilgrims report that Chinese and Tibetan bandits are taking to the new idea. On their way the monks bandaged one bandit‘s Â¥oot, and to another with a cold they gave | a gargle. In gratitude the chief gave the travellers a â€" bandit bodyguard. The natives are being taught to ski and are helping to build a hospital. "It is quite as i;;lpormnt to balance the nation‘s life as to balance the nation‘s budget."â€"Glenn Frank, PHONE 935â€"J. °_ Sport in all parts of the world is being united by English, uccordmfi to a European student, und football is one of the games with an almost uniâ€" versal language.\ The French plag "football" and Spanish and South American countries call it "el futbol," which is near enough. The German "outside" wing man scores a "goal" in football, he plays for his "team" and does his "training" if his club is playing for a "cup." And the game itself, as in France, is “!ootg:ll." Players in France, Germany and Italy are all penalized by the referee, if they have committed a "foul." In fact, no footballer need worry about being misunderstood anywhere in the world. "Goal," "offside," and "cenâ€". tre" are practically universal words today. \ MONKS REACH TIBET RETREAT "FOOTBALL‘ NOW WORLD WORD times and of the contemporary exâ€" perience of most other countries, It is the result partly of the rigorous pruning of expenditure since 1931, partly of the improvement in trade during the past twelve months, and, above all, of the grim sacrifices which all sections of the community have borne with characteristic cheerfulness and restraint. At long last the time has come when the nation can look forward _ with confidence to . the flldlul relaxation of its burdens.â€" ndon Morning Post. limbilities stood at their usual level the surplus would have been converted into a deficit of about similar dimensions. Even so, the surplus howâ€" ever achieved, is sufficiently gratifyâ€" i_-‘invu_wa_ilkgaf&helu-o!th Marvellous selection of the large head sizes. No better selection can be found anyâ€" where. For Mother‘s Day Specially Priced BUDGETARY YIRTUE®S REWARD It would, for instance, be legitimate topoiuoux&a.twsa-dtbeum to the sinking fund and to America MILLINERY Weston Ladics /fihcppe $ 1 .9s ir Polka Dot Dresses as illustrated above. 41 MAIN ST. NORTH WESTON 2‘s tall, per tin Kellogg‘s CORN FLAKES, 2 for PALMOLIVE SOAP CHIPSO DEAL : Lynn Valley PLUMS Penman‘s Service Weight and Chiffon ‘All New Colors * Guaranteed First Quality were held imperative to restrict the competition in home meat production. Similar | grievances 'u:hvou:od at meetings ghrouflhou country. Farmers in the vicinity of Hawick deâ€" clare they cannot provide a livelihood for their families. es plete &tohlbmon meet situation. tory,‘ and it was held that only a comâ€" plcr{oAptoh.lfifi_qn of | inp;;lsy .-?u.ld 83 MAIN ST. N.â€"Opp. Town Hall 5 for Weston Grocery Storeâ€" Mother‘s Day Specials WAGLO FLOOR WAXâ€"Ib. tin POST BRAN 8SCOT FARMERS MAY STRIKE â€"COAÂ¥TS HOSIERY Here you will find just the suit you have been s 95 up looking for. New swaggers and some tailored * models. Splendid opportunity to purchase the season‘s popular choice at We are anxious to coâ€"operate with the Spirit of Mother‘s Day and therefore have marked our prices down with a view to enable Mother to conâ€" éince Dad she should have a new Dress, Suit or oat. These goats will thrill you at first glapce and you will stay thrilled if you wear one. X irnnds 95 up selection to choose from and at a remar ably * low price. * â€" g Splendid selection of new SprinF Dres.%es, new materials and styles. Exceptional value at these low prices, Theso.‘coats \y_ill._t_hr:il_l‘ you at first gla Specially Priced 75¢ Mother‘s Day . Cormack â€" Grocer _ 8c 15¢ ‘ 23¢ unsatisfacâ€" for Made of All Silk Crepeâ€"deâ€"Chine Some Printed A most delightful selection co n wnlch she said was the gang‘s Te sihet is c naied i. Th r day a handed in a card inse P aeraue son‘s gang. Representativeâ€"Erb Smasher," gave the secretary $1,000, the balance due, in bank notes, toâ€" gether with an illuminated sealed docâ€" ument signed by all the members of the gang. . isitedsthe Trust offices and handed Mow bog" containing Beod m "allves P ited it to â€"fi. £Euet wfi_w ':t:l% endowâ€" _ n -‘llln:‘.: masked Yiliikcthe Truat offices ons Bidd}" "GANG" GIVES MILL To NaTiON Chase & Sanborn COFFEE, Ib. NEW CRAX Aylmer TOMATOES 1 Chipso, BLOUSES OPEN EVENINGS COOKIE, 1b. 16 oz. tin s 1 .98 SUITS pso, Small, Free With Each Large Pkg. * $9.95 w PHONE 199 15¢ 10¢ _ 6e 38¢3 10¢

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