Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Weston Times Advertiser (1962), 26 Nov 1964, p. 4

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1379 Lawrence Ave. W. â€" North Park Plaza â€" Keele & Lawrence Phone 241â€"7380 Gifts â€"â€" Bank of Nova Scotia Financing â€"â€" Records Tawny Owl, Jean Bryant as sisted Brown Owl in the award ing of the following service stars: PIRST YEAR â€" Laure Moyles and Sandra North: SECâ€" OND YEAR â€" Ornella Bresil, Diana _ Fitzsimmons, _ Brenda North, Carol Pascoe, Pamela Skinner, Ruby Paulin, Caroline Watt; THIRD YEAR â€" Debbie Coomber and Janet Thomson. The Armourdale Liberal As sociation has extended an inviâ€" tation to all voters to attend an important municipal candiaates meeting on Monday, November 30th at 8:15 p.m. at the North York â€" Community Hail, 5090 Yonge Street Willowdale. Brown Owl, Jean Mark i forms me that in two weel time another tweenie, Mara Sa tarossa will be enrolled as fullâ€"fledged Brownie, and th will bring their pack up to th full strength of 24 Brownies To complete the presentaâ€" tions, Sixer Stripes were given to Diana Fitzsimmons and Carol Pascoe. Tweenies being enrolied were Lois Fry, Dianne Preston, Susan Randell, Elizabeth Statts, Carole Cancelli, Heather Hipkin, Louâ€" ise Martin and Gail Watt. STEREO CENTRE Mrs. Young of the North York Red Cross Society has asked in> through this column, to extend en behaif of the Toronto Brach and themselves, their apprecia tion to all the voluntger workers and the blood donors who stien ded the clinic at Crang Plaza on Monday, â€" November 16th. This was one of the largest clinics that North York has had, with a eollection of 323 bottles of blood for the biood bank Commencing in January is to be a monthly clinic, : porating all the smaller c of the area. At their last meeting, the lea ders of the 166th Pack meetng at Maple Leaf School, held an enrollment, and presentation of service awards. CANDIDATES MEETING ‘66th Brownie Pack Page 4 â€" THE TIMES ADVERTISER â€" Thursday. Nov. 26. 1964 Mr. Charles B. Templeton will BE LECTROHOME Distinctively new outside stunn Ingeniously new inside! 7 Maple Lleaf & Amesbury â€" News TAV AT TV WITH THE DIFFERENCE g enrolled were Some weeks ago, we monti Preston, Susan | ed in this column that Gar« S h Statts, Carole lers of 56 Dorsey Drive was t Hipkin, Louâ€" the Hospital of Sick Childr« Gail Watt Since that time he has und. Jean Mark in~ gone a very serious Obersti; ( ets the e anada pertc ne vital 4 gone a very serious obe: and 1 am pleased to repor he is making good progres will be remaining there some time yet. Most children in at home get very e the postman brings ter. To an even gr would get great joy ceiving cards. Wou our readers, whether know Gary, consid him a card. 1 know tha. he would appreciate this very much. Gary is in room 8B 628 of Hosptial for Sick Children North York Junior and Senior High Schools for almost t entertainment It is to these men y« the affairs of your town Community. You owe i‘ self to learn how they to carry out their staw Saturday Movie The regular Sarurday will be available to the ching the UGre game, gvie the | and send them HOSPITALIZED introducing the candidates for Reeveship, Board â€" of Control and Council. be the chairman of the meet st advanced teleâ€" 1 Micl â€"first to CH 1â€"5978 sider rselt 6) xcited w the of eq dre | WESTON SILVER BAND Sunday afternoon at the |legiate Auditorium â€" was North Park Presbyterian Church Meeting The group at the Pleased _ to report Donnie Hammond is home from hospitâ€" al. Also Mrs. Warn Sr. is home and feeling much better M\Ur. Fred Crowther Endicott The Ladies Auxiliary Royal, is in Humber Memorial Hosp Canadian Coromation Branch 286 . tal. held a Euchre on Monday evenâ€" â€"â€"â€"â€" Low score Mrs. Johnstone 52. Men â€" W. Tomkin (77) Pat Long (67). Low score. Mro Wilson (44). "The Dece the Women‘s ing in their hall. 11 Irwin Rd Winners were Ladies â€" Hazel Sears 184), Marg. McArthur (70). In jumor and senor high schools great efforts are being made to keep teenazers in school. About 86 per ceni of all 13 to 18 yearâ€"olds in North York Township attend school compared to an estimaed 65 per cent ten years ago. At the end of the spring term in 1964 Han North York Board of Education. This was the first class which had the advantage of a comâ€" plete Junior High school educa: tion. ember 8th me awalls you Get well wishes to Mrs. Ann lis who is hospital Mrs. Boyd Elmhurst Dr. who Rose Music Centre 4 JOHN ST. V ow TAKE NOTICE that Ontario Municipal Stationers Company Limited has sold its printing and stationery business carried on at 1624 Weston Road, West Toronto, in part. All creditors of the business or of Harold A. Russel] are requested to file their claims with the underâ€" signed on or before the lith December 1964 after which date distribution of the proceeds of the sale will be made. up held their weekly game, he home of Mrs. Ellen Scribâ€" Byng Ave. winners Mrs. ora Petrie, Ellen Scribner Mrs. Gladys Patterson. Guitars â€" Trumpets â€" Amplifiers Accordians e were 24336 high schools Bulk Sales Act of Mini Bri ) last Thursd Complete Range of Musical Accessories Fred Crowther Endicott s recuperating at home ng an operation 43 ] it the Chur Erie Street Elmlea & District to â€" Mrs a war lies â€" Euchre h and LG ; of 11 be Deâ€" wel HARRIS & DUNLOP, Lil A.‘ ing weight apy please enings. att concert held Weston Colâ€" The Good â€" neighbours . club held their weekly Euchre at the home of Mrs. M. Nash 36 Braeâ€" crest Ave. Winners were: Jule Skally (78) Helen Lindsay (74). Elenore Payne 74. Low score, Greta Wellwood (34). Door pr zes. Julie Holbrook and Flo McLaughlin. The Ladies Auxili ian Legion Branch N a â€" very . successful Saturday. orial H A new chapter of T.O (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) begun in the Elmlea + Rex Winners of the draw wer ectric Blanket Mrs. Evan Flindon Ave.. ticket No Birthday Greetings to 4 Burley Redwater Dr. Nov. Mrs. Boyd, Henley Ave. Nov Mrs. Eleanor Payne, Dec. Rosemary Smith. Dec. 3rd. Mrs. A. Carbis ended by Th THE WESTON LIONETTES 10th Anniversary seated left to right: Ann (Nettie Jennett, President) McGlening, Marg. Perry. S Marg. Curtis Gorgie Lega Marj. Brookbanks, Marj. Be Dorothy O‘Brien, Doris Johr 4e s C e geza Hardington 467 pital Sellcitors, Dundalk, Ont imn does not appear due to Mrs. Rhodes /m throu phon / WESTON | about 350 people. Band was conduct H ed by Wallace D. Mason & District News by Mrs. J. Rhodes . . . 241â€"9830 sroup . 741â€"6934 No. 447 741â€"5884 M Anita 23rd. l4le El id Ann Wilson, Helen Trew, lent) Joan Reeves, Gwen ry. Standing left to right: Legard, Monica Pearson, j. Beith, Isabel Gardhouse, Johns, Betty Boddington. warded to 41 Renfield St., rath er than telephoning. Floral arransement. Mro S:il Waite Elmburst Dr. ticket No. 549. The Massaze Pillow P. La‘ Pierme, 2 Newholme Dr. ticket No. 655. 1, G. H. Clarkson, Clerk of the Town of Weston. do hereâ€" by certify that the above is a correct statement of the Question to be submitted. NOTICE is hereby given that the Council of the Corâ€" poration â€" of the Town of Weston intends to submit to the Electors~ the following Question: "Are you in favour 0 moving . pictures after 1:3( o‘clock in the afternoon 0 the Lord‘s Day to be regulat ed by Municipal Byâ€"law un der the authority of Th Lord‘s Davy {Ontario) . Act The Mayor will attend at his office,‘ Municipal Buildâ€" ing. on Thursday, the 3rd day of December, 1984, at the â€" hour of _ 12:00 o‘clock noon for the purpose of apâ€" pointing, if requested. perâ€" sons to aftend at the polling places and at the final sumâ€" ming wp of the votes by the Clerk. The vote of the Electors shall be taken on the proâ€" posed Question at the Anâ€" nual Election to be held on the 7th day of December 1964, between the hours of 10:00 o clock in the forencon and 8:00 ‘clock in the afterâ€" noon, at the places and by the Deputy Returning Offiâ€" cers appointed for the said Municipal elections. The final summing up of the votes given in the affir mative and the negative on the said Question will be made by the Clerk on the 9th day of December, 1961 at the hour of 12:00 a‘clock noon at his office in the Municipal Building DATED this 12th day of 1960â€"61? November Notice To Electors Mrs. Rhodes asks that ms. information. etc.. be Town of Weston G. H. CLARKSON Clerk. 1964 The Act, of 30 for of In our opinion, news media such as newspapers, radio and television have the means at their command to shape and ed: ucate the public opinion and they should do so by using true facts and the services of individâ€" uals who are well versed in the Last week following the teleâ€" vised hockey game on channel 9 a so called program pointed at the hunting sport in Ontario was presented. During the course of this program statements were made by those taking part that made the hunting fraternity look like a group of irresponsâ€" ible, drunken, uneducated indiâ€" viduals who could only think of shooting themselves and any thing else that should come inâ€" to the sights of their guns. The system of game â€" management which in our opinion is rated among the finest in the world was attacked as not being a sysâ€" tem at all. The out come of this fiasco that could not have had any research put into it was that all hunting in Ontario should be barred. ucate the public opinion and they should do so by using true facts and the services of individâ€" uals who are well versed in the activity that is to be debated. This hunting season in Onâ€" tario will see some four hundred thousand hunting licenses being issued to citizens from all walks of life, Professional men, Docâ€" tors, Lawyers. mechanics, aad the young hunter just starting out. There might even be some television commentators includâ€" ed in this group. One of the inâ€" Door prize H. Turner (ticket No. 2.) Bean guessing Mr. Fred: Wilson. Table Centre Piece MF. Fred Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Staples and Phillip have returned home from a motor trip to California. Mrs. Alice Laidler who made the trip with the Staples while in California they visited alr. and Mrs. Swan and Mr. and N. Bob Frost formerly of Isling:on Ave. N. Rexdale. We are continually amazed that hunters, both individuals as well as organized groups of hunters, continue to allow themâ€" selves to be maligned by the nonâ€"hunting public, the press and their fellow hunters when it comes to defending their sport. 19, 20 Pt 21 22 Pt 21 & 23 24, 25 & Pt 23 8 & Pt 7 Pts 5, 6, 7 Willowdale, November 18th, 1964 The Corporation Of The Township Of North York Building Lots For Sale By Tender . Builder‘s Terms Tenders are invited for the purchase of any or all of the under mentioned serviced Building Lots situated in the Township of North York. Tenders properly completed and sealed in tender envelopes provided will be accepted up to 12:00 Noon on Monday. November 30th,. 1964, in the Clerk‘s Office, Municipal Building, 5000 Yonge Street, Willowdale, Ont. Tender forms, envelopes, conditions of Sale and all relevent is available from the Real Estate Department, 5000 Yonge Street. Telephone: 225â€"4611 Loca 343. Monday, December ith is election day throughout Metro. On that day, several thousand residents of Ward One in North York will go to the polis to seleit one reeve, four controllers, one school trustee and one councilior. Ward One‘is comprised of part of the old Ward Seven. John Booth was elected counâ€" cillor in Ward Seven in 1962 with a strong majority vote. To those residents who voted in the election of 1962 he needs no introduction. These people showed him by the vote what they thought of him. Since then he has worked to serve these people,. to represent them and to show them the finest example of leadership this ward has seen for many years. Therefore it is to the new voters that this message of introduction is written. Before December ith, many of you will be receiving election brochures from many candidates. Read and study them thoroughly before you cast vyour ballot. Many candidates that run for reâ€"election claim all the progress in their area simply because they were there. Not so with John Booth. More than 50© of the itemsÂ¥isted in John Booth‘s reports were made possible by his hard work and efforts and the coâ€"operation of his fellow councillors and Mr. Goodhead. John Dean Booth is 37, an engineering representative, former Ratepayer‘s president and a family man. His wife. Rosemary is the daughter of Reverend and Mrs, R. Davison. They have two children, Dianne â€" age seven and Richard Vote For JOHN BOOTH, For Councillor â€" seventeen months. Mrs. Booth is also a former North York schoolteacher and presently the organist at Thistletown United Church. For many years before his election to council, Mr. Booth was active in his community and was president of the Humber Summit Ratepayers Association. He was responsible for organizing other ratepayers groups even before his elecâ€" tion and since then has continued this work. If you are a taxpayer in North York and you value your community and your property, you owe it to yourself to vote for John D. Booth. Lot The Township reserves the right not to acerpl the highest or any Tender Yours For Conservation TENDER LIST NO. 17 2268 2268 2268 1997 1997 Plan Among â€" the â€" four _ hun thousand hunters of Ontar a group of some fifteen t and members that are reper ed by an organization callec Ontario Federation of An and Hunters Incorporated. organization has for the thirtyâ€"five years strived to mote a better understar through education of the p of the problems involved ir management of our natura sources. One of these progran is the promotion of proper 2an management in Ontario. Mel bers of this organization wo hand in hand with members the â€" Ontario _ Department Lands and Forests on such pr jects as deer counts, repropos tion of water foul, and spru patrols during spawning wh pickeral are vulnerable to p: dividuals taking part in the disâ€" cussion was a so called white hunter from India. Having.had the opportunity to discuss the munting situation in India with a former resident of that coun try this writer was informed that the opportunity to bunt is limited to a very small percen age of the population these beâ€" ing the very well to do. This doesn‘t give the average citizen much chance to enjoy a wholesome outdoor recreation as is the case in this province North York Township Queens Drive Queens Drive Stella Avenue Stella Avenue Queens Drive by Ed Harper Street our natura these prog of proper ; our _ hundred of Ontario is fifteen thous are repersent ion called the i of Anglers This th 60.21 60.21 60.21 45 45‘ A. G. STANDING Clerk Administrator N. C. GOODHEAD, Reeve Size as a result hunting accidents have been drastically reduced. It is a scientific fact that there are more deer in the Province of Ontario today than there ever was before the settlers arrived in this country. Why? because of the fine and thorough proâ€" gram of game management that is carried out by our Departâ€" ment of Lands and Forests. chers. It was through the insy tance of this organization thag the Ontario Hunting Safety im struction course was introduced, Much of the Game and Fishâ€" eries act as we who are informâ€" ed know it today are a result of the â€" coâ€"operation â€" and . interest hunters of Ontario have shown towards the improvemeni of their sport. This doesn‘t sound like a group of irresponsible, drunken, wanton killers at work to us but rather a group that are interested in improving and proâ€" tecting our natural heritage for all to enjoy. Mr.= Brian â€" McFarland â€" and company you have with your thouzhtless and unfounded proâ€" gram | misinformed the public much to the indignation . of sportsmen and we challenge you to give us the opportunity to deâ€" fend our. sport through the medâ€" ia of your program with a parel of members who are informed in the subject both pro and con 1964 110‘ 110‘ information Willowdale, Lone R4 R4 R4 R4 R4

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