Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Weston Times (1966), 26 Oct 1967, p. 5

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| No Experience Necessary INTERMEDIATE square dance club startin; Thursday, Noâ€" vember 2nd, Cloverdale School. Caller Art Fricker. Dial 81. PERSONAL‘ 45 Help Wanted DOW CHEMICAL Of Canada Ltd. 122 Arrow Rd., Weston 50. HELP WANTED 47. HELP WANTED Woman for Cafeteria An opening in our marketâ€" ing department for an agâ€" gressive young lady. Areas of involvement include general _ secretarial â€" duties, marketing analysis reports, plus other related duties within the marketing function. Telephone experience beneâ€" ficial, Excellent working conditions within a progressive organâ€" ization. Apply Mr. M. Gough 249â€"8282 Rate $1.30 per hour to start advancing to $2.00 per hour after first week. modern dale. BUREAU _ _ _â€" Why Not Join One Of Our Canadian Escorted Tours? SECURITY GUARDS REQUIRED FOR WEST TORONTO AREA Minimum Height 5‘9" â€"â€" Age 25â€"55 yrs. > Apply In Person To POST HOUSE TRAVEL Phone Mr. Legge CH 4â€"1741 ext. 276 For Appointment Phone 241â€"4449 SECURITY & INVESTIGATION SERVICES 737 Church St. Toronto 5 NV;': r‘i,é{letr r:atf’ady employment and excellent salary to GILL INTERPROVINCIAL LINES LIMITED Phone 677â€"4220 Mr. T. Anderson Stenographer Preferably from 35 to 50 years of age, with previous collection or accounting experience, able to supervise collection staff and delegate detail work To work in our new 401. Technical â€" Professional Required by Toronto Branch of a leading Transport Company. Albion Mall â€" Kipling & Albion Rd. ~ ~ 741â€"9811 â€" 741â€"9812 NO FEE TO APPLICANT Office Personnel For Appointment Telephone 248â€"2601 â€" â€" â€" â€" 248â€"2601 Male and‘ Female FACTORY WORKERS Good Typists Required Immediately FOR CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW Collection Manager Falkner Placement Excellent Salary Plus Commission Day Shift â€"â€" Steady Employment Complete Welfare Package 167â€"5401 Steady work Due To Our Rapid Expansion We Require > 77 Catlingview Dr., Etobicoke © 677â€"4440 Apply Personnel Manager EATON YALE & TOWNE INC. Permanent â€" Temporary Driver Salesmen Male and Female offices near Dixie Rd. and Highway but â€"â€" Age no barrier Five day week Monday â€" Friday Apply In Person Mrs. R. Rouse 840 Caledonia Road (Just North of Castlefield) INSTITUTE 922â€"1186 â€"â€" 240 Bloor W. Career Training ©. Advertising Catering Company requires (near St. George Subway) MALE & FEMALE Learn the Art of Makeâ€"up For Appointment‘ Fall Courses Start Oct. 30th Limited Enrollment FICH ATTENTION Call Today Move Launched . . cal cash revenue during Japan‘s 1966 Olympics was $515 million. "It will be a crying shame," 60A. HALLS FOR RENT acre carâ€"parking facility for the stadium and anciliary buildings; 100 aeres for such Air Force facilities as cannot be, or should not be, removed elsewhere; an easterly strip to allow compleâ€" tion of the Spadina Expressway; and the remaihing land used for the â€" highâ€"rise residential, and lowâ€"level industrial areas, which BRANCH 57 Royal Canadian Le. TY Hoffa or Hal Banks organizâ€" gion, 351 Silverthorn Ave. Hall ation." rentals, for information call USES THE SOFT SELL Mr. W. Sharkey, manager, 769â€" While every union has its own 6674 | set of rules on union checkoffs se -â€"â€"|(dues) and other internal matâ€" vy C 0 on ters. Local 183 uses the soft sell At the Humber Memorial Hosâ€" pital, on Tuesday, Oct.‘ 17, 1967, Cecil Walters of Weston, beloved husband of Florence Walters; dear father of Banbara‘ of Weston Friday, Oct. 20th. Cremation. WIGGINS, ANN HESLIP At her home, on Wednesday, Oct. 18. 1967, Ann Wiggins, beâ€" loved wife of Jack Wiggins. Dear mother â€" of Maureen Elizabeth (Mrs. J. Smith) and Carol Ann, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Heâ€" gan. Service was held in the At the Princess Mangaret Hosâ€" pital on Thursday, Oct. 19, 19§7, Emily Tomkinson, beloved wife of Fendinands Savelovs of Wesâ€" ton, dear mother of Lynda, dear Lawrence Ave.â€"Royal York Rd sister of Sam, Agnes (Mrs. T. Foden) and Fred. Funeral to St John‘s Anglican Church. Weston. dear brother of Jessie (Mns. A. Booth), of Hamilton; in his 81st year. Service was held in the chapel Friday, Oct. 20, 1967, Interâ€" ment Glendale Memorial Gardâ€" pital, Weston, on Tuesday, Oct. 17, 1967, William Stewart, husâ€" band of the late Jessie Stewart; 57A _ CEMETERY LOT WARD FUNERAL HOME Interment St. Phillips Cemetery STEWART, WILLIAM 47. HELP WANTED 45. HELP WANTED 57. Young man, age 18 â€" 25 years to train as dye machine operator in modern textile plant, in Rexdale. For Appointment Experience preferred for ladâ€" ies readyâ€"toâ€"wear store, 1183 Weston Rd. at Eglinton. Over 25, permanent position, good company benefits. 40 â€" 55 age group welcomed. At the Humber. Memorial Hosâ€" WALTERS, CECIL ALFRED SALESLADY Death Notices Of The Past Week SAVELOVS, EMILY Riverside Cemetery and ‘Crematorium Truck Driver (Continued from page 1) Phone 241â€"4449 2035 Weston Rd. Weston (At King St) . CH 1â€"2233 e Maclling Operator CH 1â€"0861 249â€"8242 PHONE DEATHS Park munity where we‘re trying to orâ€" ganize the men, he explained. Many are hesitant about joinâ€" ing and the one or two who have worked for a Toronto union "may make the difference on whether we n:reed or fail," he noted. AVEN‘T HAD TIME Gallagher _ expressed _ these weieks or so. I know the problems some men have when they finst get a job, because when 1 arrived in this country I coukdn‘t have surâ€" vived if the dues and initiation were taken off my first pay cheque." Gallagher also believes â€" that students slould be protected by the union when they take sumâ€" mer jobs. "I know some unions don‘t, but we refund: a student‘s initiation fee if he has only been with us a short time. A few of them will be our employers someâ€" day and if we give then a break chances are they‘ll give us one when ‘they get the opportunity." P.R. APPROACH Gallagher‘s union uses the same public relations approach for regular men. Some of them he says, "he is not asked for the $25 or $50 initiation fee until he Several important amendments have been made in Ontario labor legislation because the press exâ€" posed dangerous working condiâ€" tions and both the city of Torâ€" onto and the Ontario Governâ€" ments have at the same time inâ€" creased the size of their safety inspection branches. At times crusading Gerry Galagher and his umion receive more press than the Prime Minister gets, a reporter remarked recently. Being a union organizer has| its problems, notes the tireless business agent. "Often a work, crew will refuse to have anything to do with us because one or two men accuse us of running aJimâ€" my Hoffa or Hal Banks organizâ€" ation." approach in obtaining new mem Gallagher says he couldn‘t pay for better publicity, When a picâ€" ket line is thrown ‘up, the press is informed so that reporters can question management and labor and then reveal the facts for the public to judge. construction companies and munâ€" iclpalties refuse to listen to reason, Gallagher emphasized. The labor â€" boss began his "Love Affair‘ with the press, on assuming his duties as business manager of Local 183. On getting the job, says the man who origâ€" inally hailed from Ireland, he was warned that the press was "poison, antiâ€"union and someâ€" thing to be avoided." Gallagher‘s Job . . Can Net The Cosa Nostra Up to $65 Million A Year How Taxes Inadvertenty New York could eliminate all this and make it possible for a. thousand legitimate businessmen to start up their stores again if it repeals its cigaret tax. In my opinion however the New York legislators won‘t ever see the error of their ways in levying a 25 cent tax on a pacâ€" kage of cigarets. Instead they‘ll double the size of their police force and pay off informers â€" something tried Guring Prohibition days, and something that was doomed t6 failure then as it probably is destined for failure now. By FRAZER CACHE Q: How do you put 500 to 1,000 small businesses out , of business with a mere stroke of the pen? A: Raise the laxes on cigarets to a point where unhappy smokers look for a cheaper source to buy their stmokes. Last Thursday‘s Toronto Star ran an article headed: "Bootâ€" leg smokes latests racket for gangsters." Whoever wrote the piece said that uptil two years ago, 40â€"yearâ€"old Elliott Who can we blame for this new found source of Cosa Nostra income? Who can we blame for the estimated 500 to 1,000 smoke shops that the Star article claims have been put out of business because the public purchases its smokes from the underworld. Why obviously the state and cy governments. Many people, particularly government officials, actually believe that taxation is a form of redistribution of wealth that doesn‘t really hurt anyone because taxes are usually ;Zeld over a wide base. Perhaps the Toronto Star article will prove to any doubters that high taxation should be avoided like a plague if at all possible. Up to 1,000 busiâ€" nessmen have been indirectly taxed out of business and ruined because of New York State‘s cigaret tax and the Cosa Nostra is propering as never before. How many people have been thrown out of work and what tax loses will New York State suffer because it taxed cigarets beyond the point that the free market can bear? How many people will have their lives warped, bent or destroyed because the Cosa Nostra has stepped into a lucrative racket that will employ hundreds of gangsters who will resort to anything including murder to make a buck? Naglar had a modestly flourishing little tobaccoâ€"shop busiâ€" ness a few feet from the grimy Spring St. subway stop in Lower Manhattan. Then guess what happened? The cigaret bootleggers moved in and Naglar lost oneâ€" third one his customers. New York State is perhaps the richest state in the world and no city rivals New York City in prosperity and wealth Yet, both find they must repeatedly increase taxes to pay off their debts and maintain essential services. But since cigarets in North Carolina are tax free, the gates are swung wide open for the mobsters and putrid outfits like the Cosa Nostra to move in and make a killing. According to the Star report, city and state estimate their losses at $64 million annually which surely is the profit being picked up by the underworld. Since you can‘t make this kind of profit unless you have the customers, it seems that‘ millions of New Yorkers are aiding and abetting the underworld by purchasing disâ€" count cigarets instead of the brand carrying the high state and city taxes. In other words, ordinary people like you and me will go to almost any length to avoid what we believe to be unjust taxes. _ Everyone knows that smoking is a menace to health, so what better source of income is there than a 25 cent per pack cigaret tax? ¢ â€" LABOR AMENDMENTS (Continued from page 1) Beth Am Sfsterhood is holding its annual bazaar from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Wed., Nov. 1. There will be a coffee shop and bake sale to please the palâ€" ate, and groceries and canned goods to fill the shelves. Drugs, notions and confections, rugs and remnants, electrical appliances, power â€" saws â€" and motors. Interesting features will be teacup reading, hair stylist. anâ€" tique shop, hat rack and our most famous clothes horse. "To tell you the truth we‘ve been so busy down here that we haven‘t had a char e to check into the contracts and working conditions along the 401. But it has been drawn to my attention, we‘llâ€" drop around to see what their problems are up there. "If we only had more time and staff . . . there is so much to be done ... " views when asked by the Weston Times for his opinion of Departâ€" ment of Highways‘ casual labor employment practices. A 1 RADIATOR SERVICE LTD. 2441 WESTON RD. WESTON Remnants, Rugs At Beth Am Sale When it happens remember, we are srpecnhsts equipped for any and all rathator emergencies. For fast service we are r:iiioug:gak.hed. Why wait, your car cam be free of radiator trouble this winter just by visiting us now for its We Manufacture Radiators For Automobiles â€" Taxis â€" Sports Cars â€" Racers Automotive Radiators Cleaned â€"â€" Repaired â€"â€" Rebuilt â€"â€" Recored yearly check up, How long has it been since the last Forkâ€"Lifts and Industgial Equipment Blow Their Tops Without Warning MAD CARS Call 241â€"4416 "The Duke of Beaufort held a fox hunt at Bull Inn, Hinton near Pucklechurch, and‘ I was presentâ€" ed with the ‘brush‘ (fox tail," she said. & SLEPT â€"WHERE BORN The front part of the building| is now used as a variety shop.| But generations of â€" Akermans used it as a bakery to turn out fragrant loaves of cottage bread and crusty buns, and cakes with names like lardy, fruit dough, maâ€" Pigs were once slaughtered in the basement below and bacon cured there. rev And old lady from the village always bought the blond to make blood puwidings, for which she beâ€" came wellâ€"known. Mrs. Golding also slept in the room where she was born, at her childhood home, a 14th century halfâ€"timbered house which stands to the north east of the church at Bromham, in Torquay, Devon. "IL_was. treated royally." Mrs. Golding said, "and I went everyâ€" where: Windsor Castle, Shakeâ€" speare‘s home and lots of resort areas. This summer she flew to Engâ€" land to visit brothers B. J. (Bert) Akerman of Malinesbury, Wiltâ€" shire and Victor Akerman of Chelmsford, Essex. ROYAL TREATMENT Fox Hunt Nets A ‘Brush‘ For Visiting Westonian M LEO C. BEEBE, viceepresident â€" marketing and planning of the Ford Motor Company of Canada Ltd., advised Rotarians to emphasize Rotary‘s motto: ‘‘He profits most who serves best." Speaking at the Skyline Hotel to a joint meeting of the Rotary Clubs of Woodbridge and Weston and Mount Dennis, Mr. Beebe emphasized that Rotarian should have his business affairs so arranged that he has time to devote to the community service work of his Club. He spoke from personal experience being a Past District Governor of Rotary International and a Past President of a Rotary Club. On the right sharing the lecturn is Lloyd Huff, president of the Westonâ€"Mount Dennis club. Born in Dublin, he travelled extensively in the "colonies." to which he dedicated his poem "A Canadian Boat Song." Moore also authored "The Twoâ€" penny Post Bag." in whichâ€"the Prince Regent was mercilessly Heavy Vinvl many colors to choose from Box Spring, Mattress, Headboard complete 3 SEATER SOFAS SPECIAL PURCHASE ROOM SIZE wR PE covers Many Scandia Style 3 seater floor samples, priced to clear. n Free Matching Desk Chair 48 x 18 Walnut Finish 39" Continental Bed Slatted Benches $39.95 Student Desks Extra Special RECLINER 19" Admiral Portable TV â€" $69 Seats Four Sleeps One Sofa Day Bed â€" Reâ€" versible foam mat tress, 4" deep with] full size boisters, removable zi covers. Choice Sofa Day. Bed RUGS 30°" 36° In August the elder Mr. Akerâ€" man won first prize for his mare "Dunsdown" (and her foal) in Grittleton Horse show. Her nephew is an eager steeplechase fan and enters horses for competition throughâ€" out the country. Mrs. Golding and her husband {now deceased) settled in Wesâ€" ton in 1927. She has lived here ever since, except for a short stay in Toronto and occasional transâ€"Atlantic trips. â€"Her son Geraldâ€"hasâ€"twin daughâ€" ters nine years old. f All hor ism iy are farmers, Mrs. Golding said, and live in the heart of rich farmlands. Her brothor Bert and one of her nephews are ardent horseâ€" breéeders. ridiculed RICH FARMBELT M any styles and colors to choose from. Priced to clear. Luxurious Uphoistered Chesterfield Sets $49.95 .. Satin ‘ Walnut, no m ar â€" finish, 54" b 0 0 k _ headboard bed, dresser & mirâ€" ror, dhest, all for $59.95 /; to /2 Bedroom Reg. $199 $149 â€" $9.95 $149

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