0| Bleep Essential to Welfare of Eyes working at top speed. g‘-ï¬qm'sgc usual because we very 1 Mï¬.h read while r Now, are going t« time, they lutely f musi ‘mmt. mty of slee onl {... (0%.00 have t ur ns night into day, e oo shiting reating. the oper ate we are resting, eyes are still working at top s Perâ€" hplghcymwrh&c rder than usual because we very often pick up Mxh read while resting. Now, are going to funcâ€" tion throughout a lifeâ€" time, they lutely must lu: mtwath‘;‘q-.““pi;'hh is nature‘s best method of resting necessary to form the habit of lookâ€" h(thmktor-!w seconds at intervals to reâ€" lax and rest the muscles of the eyes, and make them more comâ€" T elable. This pringiple is aiready recognized in industry where in umhfmmnlhmhm with so thmmwm.t them from time to time. Thus, instead of wasting time and cutting down of wasting ;:iuii".'nd cutting down Eou'v"qm“ stions to E. F. Attridge, .P.R. Optometrist, c/o Ostrander‘s, 2955 Dundas Street West, or phone JU. 9821 for an appointment. KING STREET HOCKEY TEAM BEATS MEMORIAL muscle fatigue and improves genâ€" "ral health and .mm‘:,. hite This subject will be continued "Joe" Primeau, worldâ€"renowned hockey player and member of the Toronto x&-ple Leafs, fwead-oltf n!:: puck in the opening of t newly formed Weston l‘l]oehy Asâ€" sociation, at Chapman‘s Rink on Tnudliy afternoon. President Jack Allan introduced this well known plwr to a packed house of school children whoâ€" had been admitted free by the Manager, Stan Chapâ€" man. * ; _ Several other notable amateur w promoters were present, and on all sides the executive of the League were congratulated on the success of their venture. "Joe" Primeau Faces Off Puck ‘The new Association is sponsorâ€" inï¬m series, teams bein! Minor Midgets with an age limit of 16 years and under as at Jan. first, with a team from each of the eleâ€" mentary sehools in the town, and Dr. J. Alan Bull‘s "Maple Leats." School children will be admitted free to these games from 4 to 6 p.m. on Tuesdays and Fridays, _ _ On Tuesday afternoon Memorial School were defeated by King St. School by a score of 2 to 1. _ Proceeds of these games will go to further amateur sport in Wesâ€" ton. Come out, you hockey fans and fanettes, _ _ _ The following officers were reâ€" cently elected: Honorary Presiâ€" dents, Arthur Mallaby, R. J. Flynn, H. O. Cousins and Harry Jennings; President, Councillor J. P. Allan; Viceâ€"Presidents, S. G. Cousins, Elâ€" ic:ty Farr and Cecil Grosskurth; secretary, Alex J. Ross; treasurer, A. L. Coulter; gemeral committcs. F. J. Bridgman, W. C. Riddell, Reeve Gordon Harris, James Sumâ€" merhayes, H. Coulter and E. Mcâ€" Ginnis, The Sponsors‘ Committee is made up of Emnie McGinnis, A. L. Coulter and W. C. Riddell. The aim?.'“"' for the ice, referees and wames, Jas. Summerhayes, Alex Rote. 3. €. Chapman. ‘The Publiâ€" Li wacs i 96 Adttâ€"â€"> PÂ¥ oane. + w *~ Tt t CVÂ¥ PC :ix gu}mLt::: is W. C. Riddell A chemist‘s assistant had deâ€" signed a notice and exhibited the same, when the owner confronted him, ."You idiot," said the latter. "Read that again and think, Fancy saying, "Try Killem‘s Cough Cure râ€"{ti’:'bc bestâ€"-m’.ll Cdnll:l:rCu‘: NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN t. Daiton Bros. Limited of the of Toronto, in the Province of Ontario (Head Office, Weston, ) made aft assignment on ith day of January, 1988; and 2. first meeting of Creditors h‘&‘m the 2ist day of :P-q‘nl at the hour of 3 n'm'"" e ï¬â€˜u. in unhm ot m t’ _ To vote thereat $C Tlea whh me and proxies must be filed with me ng claims t the en i se en ie or when aj Sutnted before distribution )s made, otherwise the mï¬a of the estate will be buted among the es entitled thereto, without such claims. ¢ ,AI'& at Toronto this Tth day of Janua Editor‘s Note:â€"Please address f J“Ix 1 E. G, C N, Custodian, 15 We on St. West, ‘oronto 2, Ontario. xâ€"1w Dalton Bros. Limited IN THE MATTER OF THE ;BANKRUPTCY OF Notice To Creditors THE BANKRUPTCY ACT t 4 For Opening Game NOT s0 GOOD DEBTOR EYES I‘Anacondu Down Stockyards worzo || Mercantile League Tightens in so much deâ€" eyes. All our :.hh‘hom he eyes are on Tne oh. ind ‘There is no Stockyards Handed Second Defeat of Heason By Anacondsa sind. to" the un'â€a-'t-. R’&‘umï¬u hie: dvnha them 4â€"1 in ...â€œï¬ Anacondss moved up into second theie ‘:.'.t‘.".:.'?'a::g'.""‘-:éf ut saue ho meoame Iny Pacp s moeee ooo m i In the first game of Saturday night‘s double â€" header ‘ Canadian Kodaks yanked themselves out of their slump wiflnslutrl'lod rally, defeating West End Indusâ€" tries by a 6â€"2 score. Kodaks broke Mrhn':luoth'ithtuhdu- tries, with Gordie Kerr helping himself to a lot of credit by scorâ€" ing the first three goals. F staged in the popular t":tul‘l:tuhl.glï¬h_m Rolph Sim‘s Stocky: aggregation nm%. po:ll'g edge over the rest of the field in first place with a total of 13 }ninh, while Anacondas have 13 or second. R. H. Sloane are right behind them with 12 while Kodaks have nine and West End seven. Bill McMullen, brilliant Anaâ€" conda left winger, broke his first lace tie with Eddie Zulauf, of gtockyu-ds. on Saturday night by helping himself to a pair of assists !W%M got one, Mac is now iafront‘dthxtohlolwwor.i:s points garnered on six goals nine assists. Zulauf has 14, on ten goals and four assists. _ _ _ $ Next ';chnudsy h:in‘htnl'“hle lz tockyard Packers or nigl Ravina Gardens and a lively time is being arranged for tho"flg-. Special prizes are in store for those attending, with the usual indiviâ€" dual introduction of the players over the public address system also Nn{ made. This will be one big night for the West Toronto _ho_&ty fans, with West End Indusâ€" tries meeting Sloanes in the first game, while the powerful Stockâ€" yard team take on Canadian Koâ€" daks in the second game of the niqht. The same admission prices will prevail d _ X0.__ Oni Sntnnhf + ylnhht the {hans ;:z a pair o vely games that couldn‘t have been crammed with any more action than was present, Anacondas, with a strong defence and outstanding goaltending by Omer Kelly, were easily the better team against Stockyards. Dave Dennison opened the score_for the brassmen on McMullen‘s pass in the second period and â€" Bruce Lackey‘s brilliant solo effort gave them a twoâ€"goal lead before the halfway mark was reached in that frame; Frank Sheedy bagged their _ Fasuargy UFRBBNIE WEEKâ€"END SPECIALS HUNDREDS OF REAL BARGAINS ON ALL LINESâ€"IT PAYS TO SHOP AT "BOTNICK‘S" Penmans No. 71 line in all sizes. Priced MEN‘S MERINO COMBS. MEN‘S BRUSHED COMBS. All sizes. . A soft good weight garment at ... MEN‘S WORK BOOTS Pance or Solid Leather Soles, Heary uppers. All sizes at . MEN‘S WORK SHIRTS Dcak!:.‘ l:‘ Chambrays. _All color zes at * s m __.___._ssc MEN‘S FANCY HOSE A special lot of good z patterns to clear at ... MEN‘S FELT HATS Plath‘or brashed fclo 4 @iR p or isl e at ~.____.._~__-1 195 Gl::d.‘:el‘llyé kv'vm ear _band, i ri=a‘"!« __ 98c MEN‘S LEATHER CAPS BOTNICK‘S Department Store â€" 2874 â€" 6 Dundas 8t. W. CLEARANCE MEN‘s O‘COATS A ® 1 lot of luvmh Coats. l‘l".‘ wizes. Come in and see these at 12.95 ‘__25¢ VE Te at 1 -59 | r Soles. | 2. 49 | 1.19 third tally after 14 minutes of the third on a play in which both Tilâ€" parn, mt Gourlh seorers Winh but s minute of play left in the ma.flummw- ley Moore and McMullen figured. third Mally Phillips broke through gqï¬ghu&e:udm“ with the Industries‘ defence Foilny up on tham in the Initet Zulaut‘s pass. In the Kodak.»West End tilt both teams battled hard all the first and made it two in the second. His third goal broke the ::dhw'n?ouw%lm for West End. Crocker, Nixon and Kiely were the rest of Kodak‘s goal scorers in the third. Last Wednesday night Anaconâ€" das nosed out & close 4â€"8 verdict over West End Industries with lley Moore being their s star, Moore -::fl three B‘b in the third period to bring the brass miul‘ t?o:c ':g.lnd into their last ming . Fullerton opened '-hnn scoring for Anacondas in the first with Harry Chapman scoring al to tis it for West End in the second. Robertson and Gord Dipâ€" lock put the Industries out in front scoring with Moore‘s brilliant efâ€" fmrhalmnhw a> real tussle. In the whey gane ther nigit Aivante and Kodaks battled to a zi(.u tie after a game. Murray Puuam%._ MacPherson each scored for Kodaks to: give them a 2â€"0 lead b‘i:kthc tlntm viwfl.x second period with Jack Culverâ€" well .J' George Grigor tieing the count. Only one penalty was count. Only one penalty was fanded out in that gime, with the boys ing strict attention to good ï¬fy playing. This mmsmm night anâ€" other outs! ing doub{vhudcr is ariens. ‘%’W“" is piey "wen 8. s play End Industries the 't.lnt game with Sloanes and Anacondas, two bitter rivals, locking horns in the second affair. 4 Don‘t f to . s the teams in mhmt m The formalities will start sharp at eight p.m. as usual, with the first game getting right under way choose: foods much more ‘wisely than others;s~> is oh ons S can families eat shows that not all families are equally well nourished oals to break a 2â€"all tie. Gordie err started them with the first oal after three minutes of the A study of what 25,000 Ameriâ€" MEN‘S WORK PANTS All sizes, dark worsteds, well made. l}r:ist ll?l% value yet at this Clearing CG U imcccrfomentirntiemiienticravrnldhe en naisres MEN‘S FINE SHIRTS Fused Collars, plain and fancy patâ€" terns, all sizes. Get yours now at MEN‘S BLACK OXFORDS Well made, solid leathers, rubber heels, all sizes. Clearing Sale Price shades, all quickly at .. MEN‘S WINDBREAKERS Heary Mackinaw Cloths in several iinl'g??ï¬iy'vï¬m-d: interlined. Guaranteed linings; Sizes right up to 44, most colors B6 seitscercesmemenecrsmenccansaalleateans MEN‘S 2 PANT SUITS A special clearing lot of men‘s wWOMEN‘S FURâ€"TRIMMED COATS CLEARANCE WOMEN‘S SHOES Strap styles, Ties and Oxfords, Several heel sizes, blacks and browns. All KNITTED SUITS New styles, pure wool, all sizes. Colors Brown, Grey and Rust. A bargain CLEARANCEâ€"WASH FROCKS Many styles and colors to choose from. All sizes. Fast colors.. On sale now <# 2 Pants Suits, at a very to clear at .CK OXFORDS solid_ leathers, | rubber 2 49 s. Clesring Sale Price e The score was 3â€"2, By periods the mm: 1st Richmond 1â€"0; 2nd Hill 2.â€"0; third Hill, otg.A ufl-::i.ub. -u-m.bim. Brother Allan before Weston: could score again. _ There was one, injury, At+. the the upper lip. After medical attenâ€" on by Dr. Wilken of Richmand Hill he was O.K. again, The play Bill McLean, Oscar Fillman, Lioyd Miller, Lioyd Kirby, Jack Haxton, Harry MacDonald, Alec MacDonâ€" ald, Carl Cathoun, Jimmie Mcâ€" Innes. Jack Harris is coach and Weston Hockey H.-.l"&‘m J.â€Ll“-"a'fl to clear 6 COMPANY LIMITED 139 MAIN ST; S; ~~~*~ Weston 74â€"Phonesâ€"JU. 9662 IRVIN LUMBER 1425 1 225 n Suce: tiiteck. Aup illman, Lio: 69¢| 298 298 | 100| 100| neviein ts wl t 92 Doors East of CHIFFON HOSE _ New shades, all sizes. A special lot to clear at ... Good quality. Magog make. Fast colors. 1 5 PCE YO. ............ccomsominmaiee c NEW SPRING PRINTS SALEâ€"FLANNELETTE White and striped. On 13° sale now at, per yd. .._.. a'rlllled I;nlts. }n natural shade. arm and comfy. MJ maices..____ado sale now at, per yd. ... WOMEN‘Sâ€"VESTSâ€" BLOOMERS ï¬m-. DllPkC wool, fine snlity. .dh make, N oncCâ€"._____ 00G CHILD‘S VESTSâ€" BLOOMERS Pl:z 'r?ih eolorleid trims. Well made. ce quality. To clear at _,_.____._.__.1 -39 FLANNELETTE PYJAMAS » WOOL TWEED SKIRTS Q.ll' ::lol Tweeds. New styles. ‘To SIORE BU sumemcem 1 -‘9 CLEARANCEâ€" BLANKETS Esmond satin trimmed blankets, 66 x 80. Large check 1 98 pattern. To clear at ... E the idea of having loâ€" eal school students both Public and High and Vocational see a number of educational films which could be shown in the Weston Theatre some afternoon. He mentioned two or stressed their educational value. Iunipe Wopsertot oo Mightand eased with the idea, as were a CAE ET . One Boud.::nhr expressed g:_ belief that in time all schools will have their own projector and their own films, instead of having to rent them, so much is "visual education" coming to be recognized as a means of teaching, and at =-C. very v:lubln means of In-‘t perting knowledge., During the World War longâ€" lz:-(immsdro»duh- ‘ 308 shells on Paris and its immediate suburbs, with a death toll of 256. 39¢ cers of Mount Dennis chapter No. 207, Order of the Eastern Star, mldiiathluuk% Weston, on Tuesday evening, About 200 guests were present to witness the ceremony, which was under the direction of Sister Secord of chapâ€" wfll. Friendship H.'?‘,mm.-u«- w of the incoming matron and wnt matron of Elects chapter, est Lorne, who did the playing for the evening. The floral cereâ€" Siakee Teite Ruith: werlhy gread ister & y mh&n(thlm.pn. Gifts Presented The newly installed matron and gctna. Sister Sadie Murray and ro. Wim. Hillmer, were tendered a welcome by the members and guests, and received gifts from the chapter and friends as they assumâ€" ed their stations in the east, The retirin -nmu‘udrm ShurAnuï¬omund rother John Boom, were presented with Newman‘ also with a walnut dinner wagon and Bro. Boom a silver tea service from the chapter, in recogâ€" nition of t past year, _ At the close of the meeting refreshments were served by Sis. ‘The Evening Branch of St. John‘s Anglican W.A. announce that the seating capacity for the lay "Romance" to be presented i'h.w.'dar evening, Jan. 13, in St. Thursday evening, Jan. 13, in St. sn s Anglican Parich Hall, hee been sold. Second performance has been arranged for Tuesday, Jan. 18. Notices under this heading 10¢ COMING EV ENTS per count line, M charge 50c. OLDSsMOBILE Curtain at 8 p.m. sharp. xâ€"1w THE BIG NEW CAR THAT HAS rol’xvnl w-mwilnw TMlustrated 6 eylinder 5 pessenger Sedan with trunk. Hoyle J. T. FARR & SONS LTD., Weston 254 JU. ee and drive the 1938 A. J. BARRY, BOLTON, ONT., sting‘ and p.ide," he said in charch Fecontly. "It breather batrad | 17 and vengeance upon our foes." _ \Jan, Sist, #t * AHEAD IN STYLEâ€"Oune glance will tell you that Oldsmobile is again the Style Leaderâ€"with new dashing * AHEAD IN SAFETYâ€"Only Oldamobile gives you the new Safety Instrument Unit with Safety Dashâ€"plus Unisteel Turret Top Body by Fisherâ€"Superâ€"Hydraulis Brakes â€" and Centerâ€"Control Steering. f * AHEAD IN COMFORT â€"Note these quality features: Kneeâ€"Action Wheels . . . Dual Ride Stabilizers .. . Adjast» able Front Seats . . . Fisher Noâ€"Draft Ventilation ... Roomy, luxurious interiors and WeatherScaled Doors. * AHEAD IN VALUEâ€"â€"Oldsmobile provides every new and proved feature. Nowhere clse can your money buy so much. Step ahead and be money ahead with a new 95 TELEPHONE TALKS IN THE WAiTSON That LONG DISTANCE Habit is Catching! Horsepower Oldsmobile Six. cerything rromâ€" *1161 (Bâ€"cyl. ?â€"Pass. Sport Coupe with Opere Seats) "ariv iepnntt Sistere Inttaimard Plan" Bâ€"yl., 110 hp. model: also available (Prices ewhject to change without notice ) 'Il‘l:o Watson mfluym not merely m-'-a: !orâ€"h-; D.l.:uu.h x habit with the Watson family â€"an inexâ€" r::nh&hdntm-:iflynlt the family together. Let the teleâ€" Long Distance; for Long Distsnce is a habit with the Watson family â€"an inex h-bhï¬um-ï¬uynlt the family together. Let the tele ?lnl.mdyo'hodubq-d: immediate neighbourhood. Let it you in touch with faraway relatives and friendsâ€"the cost is surprisingly small, #49n d th "WVo‘re so glad you‘re Jeeling better, Mother!** P jE