lil, near Woolner Avenue. Following their, plantation the committee weed to recommend to council two rinks, one for hockey and one for pleasure skating. The deputation appeared last week were council, this time to ask " boards to be erected mad the turkey rink. According to the women, the rink: will be far Imneistttipuasbanging PttArtdir-tdMr.Nry tPJgti"glr'Q baton Emmi â€an“! aeneiiitt-ttsrnaturat Hydro Wally were"! Alamtartltetttultiettnn, Mn. Joye. Jack-no. In. "tArtd-nrtdMr.Nry we "up “was L,gtggg,UJ m m: FOLLOWING AREAS: Montcalm Avenue Beechborough Avenue Bieiuieit Avenue Emmett Avenue Yarrow Road Nordale Crescent Lonborough Avenue Maple Leaf Drive Gulliver Road Snowdon Avenue Notice is hereby given that I have complied with Section 23 of the Municipal Elections Act, 1972 and that I have: (a) posted up in my office on the 16th day of November, W73, the Preliminary List of Electors for the Borough of York for wn. (b) posted in each Polling Subdivision in Ward Eight on the 16th day of November, 1973, the list of all persons in Ward Eight entitled to vote at the Election for Member, Board of Education tor the Borough of York. and that such lists remain there for inspection and I hereby call upon (i) all persons who intend to be a candidate for Member, Board of Education, Ward Eight, to examine the Preliminary List of Electors tor the Borough at York for the year 1973 (2) all electors in Ward Eight to examine such list and to take immediate proceedings to correct errors or omissions in or make deletions from the lists in the prescribed forms which can be obtained from the Clerk's Office and at the locations indicated below where revisions will take place. If you are is years old, a Canadian Citizen or other British Sublect, and have resided in the Borough of York during the period September 4, NN to October 9, 1973, or having these qualifications you were a nonresident owner or tenant or the spouseot a non-resident, owner or tenant, check the list posted in your polling subdivision or visit the Clerk's Office, 2700 Eglinton Avenue West, phone 6sr2700. November 19ttrto 23rd and November 26th,19r3, 9:OOa.m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday, November 24m, 1973, 9:00 am. to MN p.m. ONLY PUBLIC SCHOOL ELECTORS ARE QUALIFIED TO VOTE AT THIS ELECTION THE LAST DAY FOR FILING COMPLAINTS IS NOVEMBER 26, I"). Borough of York Wk“. 1700 Eollnton Avomn West, Toronto, Ontario. mm 1V1 m1 MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1973 IS YOUR NAME ON THE 1973 PRELIMINARY LIST OF ELECTORS? IT's EASY TO CHECK SEE BELOW REVISION OF THE LIST WILL TAKE PLACE AS FOLLOWS: BOROUGH OF YORK ELECTION FOR MEMBER, BOARD OF EDUCATION, WARD EIGHT TO BE ELECTED BY PUBLIC SCHOOL ELECTORS CALL I'IY‘IU‘. I BETWEEN . mm. and 5 pm. (To fill me unexpired "rm “In December 31,1974) "-tirtgtttottoerdithtrttte ttttaqrrirthtttiteqttrrnpll Minimum rirtktNentteirtghttrt. +++ Thtrrttdartdgunelttttot Branch n, Mount Dennis -irtqttttettttnrdoitittottte Tuesday at 8:15 pan. Members interested in hunting and fishing are askédfolgln. Mammals are elt- tendedtoArtandVi Casson their 44th wedding an- niversary, November 2, to HOW DO YOU CHECK? IT’S EASY 249-764 Il +++ 10, to CARRIERS WANTED Boys and Girls fir the 'ill le-rp-ttAr-et-ttgre up hum of tLrtttmey' e? to measure and this you the AvenueotBoutiqueamtsthe ttiggestsueeetsevermrtting, mechurcha ciearpreitot $2,tl00.cortgratttiationstoai1 who worked when! to en- sureitagucCetttt. The handanade quilt was won by Mrs. Ward, Brent. sideCourt,Weston.'Nedoll dressed in 81 bithr-2S of them, was won by Miss Gail Portt,_Mil1torottre,,anti tttt iitarriiAiiiitiiiFaii,und to SEQ w.'aund1e Prince EdititandBiiiBg0tAgoet Edward D'ri7C"ihiieira.' nlverury. November 8. +++ . +++ ci2,2'fl1t Dennll United are holding a holly The a,†ot t','Af,It tyme bunt, Saturday. mm 2li"tt, 'r"ntr November M from n am. Raft, P1U?.'1r.E h until 4 pan. This year H.G. COURTMAN, Clerk . "ttrr'tlnm Officer WESTON-YORK ONTARIO dawn. moss/24 , «52 , I added. 11inch will be served from 11:30 am. until 1 pan. Un the Chalmers auditorium. meet our Tuesday afternoon deadline because of all the attention the puppy was getting. We even took a half hour out to give him a bath. Deadline and I had become great friends-but all that ended on Friday afternoon. I had to run over to the Jane Park Plaza and took him with me. As the two of us strolled past Steinberg's store a woman came out and immediately recognized Deadline. "That's Deadline," she announced. "Pd know him anywhere-I was just reading about him this morning." After a fif- teen minute chat (all about Deadline) and umpteen people stopping to talk to him-l decided enough was enough and took him back to the office informing the rest of the staff that from now on one of them could take our celebrity for a walk. +++ I just had toleave space in the ‘column this week to mention the newest addition to the staff of the paper. Deadline has taken over complete control around the office and last week I +-t--F This column is written each week for the enjoyment of readers in the area. It is a social column and should be filled with many items of local interest, including birth announcements, engage- ments, anniversarys, visitors from out of town and any other item of interest, not just bazaars and fund 1331ng events, Please keep Statistics Canada estimates that as many as one million medical services are provided yearly for Canadians suffering from iii "fiiiiai arid Inform me of the latest social happenings. In the hospital area alone nearly 30 thousand asthma cases were treated in 1971, an increase of more than 22 hundred over 1969. Asthma is not a notifiable disease that is one which is communicable, thus statistics are not compiled on the incidence of the disease making it impossible to determine how many people in Canada suffer from asthma. Dr. R. Bladek, Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Toronto says that asthma affects about two per cent of the population, children and adults, and is present throughout the world. Asthma can be controlled He deed-mes asthma as a respiratory disease characterized by an In- creased irritability of the bronchial tubes and manifested by recurrent shortness of breath. - During an attack the and new potatoes. However, it is easily destroyed, by overcooking vegetables and by delays in serving them. Stale vegetables or those that have been cooked for more than ten minutes have less vitamin C. Old potatoes lose their supply. Even mashing potatoes destroys some of the chemical. But propertly prepared frozen The controversy about vitamin C’a role in preventing the calm cold is atili unuttied. But everyone agreea that people need the vitamin to aunive. Nearly all anilnaia r_n_ake complicated chemical compound «that prevents such diseases " scurvy. But man along with monkeys, guinea pigs, and a few birds has lost the power to make the chemical. So he and they must get adequate amounts from the food they eat. Vitamin C occurs in citrus fruit such as oranges, lemons, and grapefruit. It is Second hand cigarette smoke affets nonsmokers in much the same way as it affects smokers. It increases the heart beat and blood pressure and raises the level of carbon monoxide in the blood. All people, but especially those who are ill, should be protected from these hazards to their health. People troubled by this situation including agencies such as the American Lung Vitamin C essential ap The majority of Americans are nonsmokers. Many nonsmokers are now organizing to protect their rights to a clean indoor environment. But non- smoking hospital patients, of all people, too often get little protection. Efforts have been made to eliminate smoking in some hospitals. But in others, even patients with severe respiratory problems are sometimes confined in rooms where other patients and their visitors are allowed to smoke. muscles surrounding the the treatment. bronchial-tubes go into 1"7 Recognizing the need to spasm and constrict the assist children to control the passages, the walls become severity and frequency of thickened with oedema or their attacks, many swelling, and increased C h r i s t m a s S e a 1 secretions in the tubes oc- organizations are conducting cupy the space urgently asthma classes for children. required for the movement The classes generally of air. involve voumzsters from four Asthma has been described as a reversible lung disease in that its victims go from a normal, healthy state to a violent, like-threatening attack and return to normal again. While asthma is seldom cured it can be controlled withastrongllaison between patient and doctor. Con- tinuing reaearehiatrupp1ying new data about asthma and The outstanding abnor- mality in the patient with asthma is an unusual in- crease in the irritability of the bronchial passages. A variety of harmless and relatively mild irritants producing little response in the norrqusthmatie, produces a violent response in the airways of the asthmatic person leading to an attack. new drugs have improved MalorMy nonsmokers vegetables cream! a}; _up;oir _ by muse-um that atqped up 6098 ptftte yitprpin can mt the common cold. Although several studies have indiceted that the days ot illneu from the common cold may be mttttttNtd by inereatttsddoets,tttertteditat1 profession disagrees about the signMeanee of the fin- dings Doctors do agree, however, thatmany people do not get the _mlnlmum dose, let alone the optimum, of vitamin C. Many elderly and poor people, tor in. gr-tattl_ittieot their ascorbic with and energy to prepare nutritious foods rich in the staying well are ways to help strengthen resistance to all kinds of disease, including lung disease. To find out more about preventing lung disease; contact your local lung association. The classes generally involve youngsters from four to 15 years of age and run from six to ten weeks. The very young children take part in exercise and games programs, the older young- sters in physical activity and a pool period, - Asthma is lust one of the respiratory diseases of major concern to the York - Toronto Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Association, the Christmas Seal organization. Christmas Seals are used in the fight against tuberculosis and other lung crippling diseases, chiefly chronic bronchitis, asthma and emphysema. The funds go to research and health programs to fight these lung crippitrs, and to combat environmental threats to the lung - air pollution and smoking. To find out what's hap- pening in your community, contact your lung association. It’s a matter of life and breath. Association and its affiliates, are encouraging measures to protect patients. For example, the New York Lung Association, working I: “ with other or ,nirationir concerned aboutgée hazards of smoking and its effects on others in enclosed spaces, recently issued guidelines to hospitals inirNew York City allow patients to smoke only in private rooms or in rooms shared with other smoking patients, give patients the choice of sharing a room with smokers or nonsmokers and restrict smoking by visitors and staff to specific areas. Further, the guidelines prohibit the sale or all cigarettes in hospitals and designate smoking and non-smoking areas in hospital dining rooms and cafeterias.‘ , Eating properly and