Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Times & Guide (1909), 30 Nov 1944, p. 5

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PAID of ladieg white boots and | skates, size T. Good condition. tll:, gent‘s blue overcoat, size 40, almost new. Cheap. Weston Phone 1 BLACK MARE, reasonable, 1 police dog, 4 years old, houseâ€" broken. Good with children. Cheap to the right person. A&ply 8 Queenâ€" sley, North York (o Rosemount LARGE SIZE cream seperator on 'iii?fi -N_e_; -$6V5“(‘)0 Phone Wesâ€" ton ‘28â€"J. ncâ€"81â€"1t LARGE SIZE modern wooden crib _ and 11. Golfview QUEBEC COOK STOVE, porcelain finish, high back, also large cupâ€" board. for sale in good condition. Apply 82 Chiswick Avenue. Ave.). and mattress, used ‘one month, $20.00; high chair, $2; hardwood folding {hypen, $5; small folding goâ€"cart. Like new, $8. Phone 318-W. 8 PAIRS KINDERGARTEN setq Hardware well finished, choice of natural and red, natural and green, plain natural. Table, 2 chairs only, $3.95. Eglinton â€" Furniture, Eglinton & Dufferin. 1w QUEBEC COOK STOVE, also 1arԤ,e size jacket heater. Phone 781â€"W. x.31â€"1t SET OF 4 boxing gloves. Like new _ med with Persian lamb, size 20, in excellent condition, also Isabella fox scarf. Apply 92 John Street. oâ€"31â€"1t i â€"pietjel;iaw;e;}:n\ilgd. Phone evenâ€" ings, Weston 368â€"J. > oâ€"31â€"1t size 1. Too small for owner, in good condition. Also threeâ€"burner coal oil~stove, and small heater, oven with stove. Apply 38 Winoka St., Weston. oâ€"31â€"1t _ Also 8 'p;irrg'o‘fl boots and skates sizes 2, 3 and 4. Will sell cheap Phone Weston 58â€"Jâ€"12. ns BLACK COAT (Bromleigh) trimâ€" BOY‘S 7§ICYCLE.V good tires, comâ€" GIRL‘S white boots and . skates, DININGâ€"ROOM suite, 9 picces, walnut. Walnut hall table. Child‘s pink 3â€"piece set, size 2. Girl‘s coat, maroon and Persian lamb, size 14. Apply 230 King Street. oâ€"31â€"1t _ with babies, needed 1 or 2 weeks in January when mother comes home from hospital. Phone 1296â€"M. ; P xâ€"31â€"1t offer takes all. Wood turner‘s lathe, drill press, 70 feet bandâ€"saw blade, 12 feet shaft with 4 hangers, V pulleys also V belts. Apply 80 Fourth Ave., Westmount. pâ€"81â€"14 ONE STRONG steamer trunk. Practically new. Reasonable. Apâ€" ly 2 Victor Ave., after 5 p.m. ?Juna and Dennison). oâ€"31â€"1t ?@RI-'I‘IME employment, good reâ€" liable man wants work 3 nights and all day Saturday. Must be steady. State class of work and rate. Box 3128, Times and Guide. M 0â€"30â€"1w MOTHERLY woman, experienced MUST BE SOLD this week. Best do factory or office work, ‘excelâ€" lent opportunity in business perâ€" mitting fl”im hours; 24 hours weekli/. Refingment, personality esâ€" sential. Write, giv%ng phone to Box BEAUTIFUL black male Persian _ cat. Someone‘s pet. Apply Mrs, Faulkner, 38A Main St. N. Phone Princess Fashion Furs KI. 3674 AD. 8881 xAf HOUSEWIFE over 30, who cannot 1225â€"W. PRICED from $69 and up, Concy (dyed rabbit), Viscacha, seal (dyed â€" rabbit), beaver mouton, (processed lamb), Persian lamb, muskrat, Hudson seal, (dved muskâ€" rat), Your old fur garment exâ€" pertly restyled to the new 1945 fashion. Price, $14. OTATOES for sale. Now is the ‘A*{AIf Am o per elivered. Ring m& J. Gardhouse, W e s t o n BOâ€"Wâ€"1. 0â€"29â€"1w IRL‘S skates and boots, size 3, IRL‘S ski jacket, size 12, in good condition, worn only a few times. hone 1224â€"J after 6 p.m. 0â€"31â€"1w mearly new. Phone Weston 667. 0â€"31â€"1w WANT ADS HELP WANTED, FEMALE EDIATE possession, $3,500, 5 med fnv:loogs\nn,hni;. ))‘tohT, nng ,000 cash, Packham r. m _ 689; aver';lngs b, 6â€"31â€"1t CASH, balance as rent, five ims, brick, drive, garago, mount district, Zone 4â€"460. y xâ€"81â€"1w EMPLOYMENT WANTED ARTICLES FOR SALE i OPPORTUNITIES OFFERED Preâ€"Season Sale 6â€"roomed brick house in district. Hot air heated. m Realty. Weston 689, eveâ€" 65â€"M. oâ€"31â€"1t HOUSES FOR SALE FUR COATS AY, NOVEMBER 30, 1944 men‘s skates, sizes 7, 10 $2.50 per pair. Apply 10 Ave. oâ€"31â€"1t FURRTERS FOUND TIMES & GUIDE oâ€"31â€"1w xâ€"31â€"1w oâ€"31â€"1w oâ€"31â€"1t oâ€"31â€"1t oâ€"31â€"1t oâ€"1w COMFORTABLE home offered to middleâ€"aged lady desiring com Knniouhlp in return for light ousehold duties. Small remuneraâ€" tion. Phone 585â€"J. oâ€"31â€"1w HARRY CRAWFORD, painting _ tional. Gent preferred. Centrall located. 3uiet home. Box Slfii Times and Guide. oâ€"31â€"1t for ‘rent. ‘Apply 1889 Wilson Avenue. 0â€"29â€"3w FRONT BEDROOM, breakfast opâ€" und'flxoratingl,‘ interior decorat ing especially. Phone JU. 4358. . FURNISHED rooms and garage LARGE SIZE doll‘s pram. Box 3110 Times and Guide. oâ€"31â€"1t gite. Apply Mrs. A. Cadeau, Elsâ€" mere Ave. Apt. 4. oâ€"31â€"1t BED SITTING ROOM and kitchenâ€" WANTED warm room within walkâ€" ing distance of Moffats, with garage preferred, in quiet home. Abstainer. Apply 3400 Dundas St. Phone LY. 7797. oâ€"31â€"1t A TYPEWRITER, suitable for a beginner, also 1 pair of men‘s skates and boots, size 10. Phone Weston 58â€"Jâ€"12. xâ€"81â€"1t PASSENGER wanted to College and Bay. Car leaving Weston 7.30 a.m. Leaving Toronto 5.30 p.m. Phone 1132â€"J after 6 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Baldwin announce the engagement of their daughter, Ethel Louise to Cpl. Jack J, Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wright, Streetsville. The wedding to take place in St. Jude‘s Church, London, England, Decemâ€" ber 9th. oâ€"31â€"1t Mr. and Mrs. George Hall, Wilâ€" liam Street, Weston, announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy, to Mr. Mario A. Pesando, B.A. Sc., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Pesando, â€" Huntsville, Ont. Marâ€" riage to take place Saturday, Deâ€" cember 9th, in St. Peter‘s Church, Toronto. oâ€"31â€"1t PORTABLE gramaphone. Phone Zone 4â€"532. oâ€"31â€"1t Engagements Indians of Chihuahua, Mexico, treat the mescalâ€"button, a small cactus plant of southwestern Unitâ€" ed States and Mexico, as a divine being and make the sign of the cross in its presence. Mr. Jennings wishes to thank the Firemen and all the kind friends who remembered him while in the hospital. oâ€"31â€"1w The London Daily Sketch says life insurance companies in Gerâ€" many are preparing to cancel all suicide indemnities because of the great increase of self destruction in Germany. Queen Elizabeth of England first introduced sugar into her domestic household as an article of diet in the middle of the 16th century. Prior to that time, the limited amount produced was mainly used for medicinal purposes. Since 1857, all land in the Neâ€" therlands East Indies has been owned by Indonesians, ‘and cannot be sold to other nationalities, Telling others they are wrong is easy. Showing others what is right is harder, Nobody can give, to others what heshasn‘t got himself. Cards of Thanks Notices Under These Headings 50c Minimum For First 25 Words. 2¢ Each Additional Word. Births, Marriages, Deaths Cards of Thanks, Engage ments. In Memoriams SERVICES OFFERED Who as chairman of E.W.R.A.‘s grievance comâ€" mittee, among other things procured the lights for Church Street; got the town sewer investiâ€" {;flon underway; secured extra post boxes for eston and is asking for more, and had a number of street signs placed. E. W. R. A. SPONSORS NEW COUNCILLORS ROOMS TO LET NOTICES PERSONAL WANTED H. E. (TED) HARRISON xâ€"28â€"1w xâ€"31â€"1t First Indian ever appointed to$â€"â€" sit in judgment in Toronto in the s law courts of the paleface, Brigaâ€" as a pilot dier Oliver Milton Martin, former Before commandant of the Hamiltonâ€"Niaâ€"| Eraduatec gara area of Military District No. |Toronto 1 2 and before the war principal of|it he att Danforth Park Public School, has | Toronto. been named to succeed William|teacher a Keith as magistrate in York|York, an County Court. u'nm 193( The appointment was announced Wednesday by Attorneyâ€"General L. E. Blackwell. Magistrate Keith reâ€" tired some time ago. 800 M®kistrate R. J. Browne in Toronto police courts for instruction. _ _ Brig. Martin commences duties December 1, but will not sit in York county police court until January 1. Dyring December he will sit with Provincial authorities said Brig. Martin is not only the first fullâ€" blooded Indian named to preside over a court of law, but also the first appointed to any public office of equivalent rank. Served as Airman An Iroquois, born at Ohsweken in the Six Nations Reserve near Braniford, Brig. Martin has had a distinguished military career both in this war and the last. He became interested in military activities at the age of 15 and joined the Haldiâ€" mand~â€"Rifles as a bugler. He workâ€" ed up through the ranks to a comâ€" mission, and when the Great War broke out â€"enlisted and went overâ€" seas with the 114th Battalion at Toronto. In 1917 he was transferred to the Royal Flying Corps, with which he served to the end of the war, first as an observer and later Indian Officer Is York County Magistrate By an Order issued early this year under Mobilization Regulaâ€" tions by Hon,. Humphrey Mitchell, Minister â€" of _ Labour, employers were required to check onâ€" the doâ€" cuments of all male employees, and report on those apparently not in good standing under Mobilization Regulations. By a subsequent order of August 15th last the checking process, which had originally car: ried only to May 1st, was made ‘Out of 41,344 doubtful cases reâ€" ported by employers in the last 8 months, a total of 8,343 men not in good standing under Mobilization Regulations have been located, A. MacNamara, Director of National Selective Service, announced. s (C.P.R. Photo). POSSIBLE JAP HEADACHE: Members of the technical comâ€" mittee of the National Resources Commission of China show great interest in the Canadian Pacific Railway‘s Angus Shops, Montreal, where they are inspecting a marine engine tai‘i‘gg shape for use in an invasion barge, which may see service in the Pacific. The visit was part of a factâ€"finding tour of Ontario and Quebes plants in November to aid Chinese postâ€"war reconstruction., Checkâ€"Up Under N.SSS. Mobilization Regulations Teacher And Commander Of Niagara Military District First Of Race In Such Post hazards, and first asked for survey of rblle school accommodation. Has consistently fought for fast local transit, uses street cars at least 700 times a year and will go on fighting. Who as E.W.R.A.‘s public relations man sprung the need for public hall checkâ€"up against fire A. A. (LARRY) STEVENSON Before the Great War he had graduated from high school and the Toronto Normal School, and after it he attended the University of Toronto. In 1922 he enrolled as a teacher at Secord School, in East York, and remained on the staff until 1936. A happy event during that interval was his marriage to one of the feminine members of the teaching staff. He had been Prin- cipal of Danforth Park School for several years before the present war. Went to Coast Brig. Martin never gave up his connection with the military. Asâ€" sociated after the Great War with the Dufferin and Haldimand Rifles he successively became captain, adâ€" jutant, major and in 1930 lieutenâ€" antâ€"colonel in command. â€" When the current war began Brig. Martin offered his services at once, and commanded, first the 13th Brigade. then the 14th, in southern British Columbia, and later the 16th, in northern British Columbia. Afterwards he was. sent overseas on special duty, and reâ€" turned some months ago. Latterly he has been officer commanding the Hamiltonâ€"Niagara area of M.D. No. 2. For a time, after retirement of Majorâ€"General Constantine, he had charge of the whole of M.D. 2. Brig. Martin holds the Victoria decoration, the Jubilee and Coronaâ€" tion medals, and service medals. He ;s a:imember of the Church of Engâ€" and. Mobilization officials take immeâ€" diate steps to follow up on the cases of men who are reported upon and found not to be in good standâ€" ing undgr the Regulations, Icontinuous. It is now necessary for an employer to reportâ€"within 7 days of engagementâ€"on any new male employee who fails to furnish documents proving that he has compiled with Mobilization Reguâ€" lations. These reports are sent to the Reâ€" gistrars of the 13 Mobilization Diâ€" visions across Canada. The 41,344 reports received by the Registrars to date cover the period from the 1st of March, when the first order of the Minister of Labour became effective, to November 4th. TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON Dress Rehearsal for Nomination Night Held by Weston Ratepayers Mr. Dougherty, chairman of the Works committee, while handicapâ€" ped this year by labor and material shortages, gave an excellent acâ€" count of his ncowlishments this year. Saying that Weston‘s sewage disposal plant was "the most moâ€" dern‘" he pointed to the improved garbage pickâ€"up, the sewer inâ€" vestigations which are leading to additfonal work there, as part of his accomplishments in 1944. Mayor Jack Allan again expressâ€" ed his faith in the {r:’u.l progress in the development of Weston, and focussed attention on the fact that in 1945 transportation was the big problem. "I have good news on water," he said, "Preliminary tests show that the new well at 96 feet is pure, soft water in plentiful supply. We should gain 1,440 thouâ€" sand Tlllou a day. Sewers were being improved upon," he added. A little known fact about Council was that this year 27 threatened evictions were handled without any of the adverse publicity. usually associated with such things, the mayor pointed out. Councillor Simpson, head of the Welfare department, elaborated the interesting phases of his job on that body and made a plea for support of the blind. "The work of the Blind Institute is as deserving as any of your nupgort,” he said. Mr Noughartv. chairman of tha Councillor Seagrave, transportaâ€" tion committee chairman and memâ€" ber of police board, suggested that bus service was needed for Weston. He, came in for considerable criâ€" ticism not so much for what he proposed to do as for what the audience felt he should have done but did not do in the past two years. Some further criticism of Mr. Seagrave came on the police question, Finally he built a case for his refusal to accept the salary voted by Council this year, by attempting to show Weston‘s fiâ€" nancial position to be none too good. Ratepayers again expressed their belief from the floor that "a man was worthy of his hire". As chairman of the finance commitâ€" tee, Deputy Reeve Ken Thompson was absent at the Warden‘s preâ€" sentation, Mr. Seagrave was safe for the moment in making his charges. _ _ â€" 0. inttrvatea ie pretnlechion marvey resi & survey of Town Couufi':::‘npli-hwu in 1944, gave them the floor at Tuesday‘s megting. Councillor Cox, reporting his first year in office, as chairman of the legislation committee talked briefly on the work he had been doing on byâ€"laws. He pointed out that he had voted against salaries because he had accepted the job on that basis, but would next year, if elected, accept them because in principle he believed them to be right. Bob Huson, as chairman of the Parks committee explained the Sufferers of bleeding and protrud i n g piles _ should know Bunkers Herbal Pills treat the cause at its source. Money back if the first bottle does not satisfy. Buy from your Weston druggis. 1945 Council irants Talk Of Their Rooordsg:wncillors Give Report On Year‘s Stewardship This Advertisement CAsSUALTY LISTS BY YOUR DONATION. YOU CAN HELP CUT THOSE Will You Wear The Badge of Honor ? This Is Your Question â€" Join The lNil;irTV.vDfiEil;Jil"IIS Donors Army _ M M ,Nmmmw_" ; NOW! 1 MRS. J. DUNNING . Don‘t Delayâ€"Do It Toâ€"day ‘ 50,000 BLOOD DONORS NEEDED AT ONCE 6. sement Sponsored by WESTON ROOFING MATERIALS L WESTONâ€"JACK ALLANâ€"in the interests of the Red Cross | PERSONALS | ning, November 25th, to mark the 53r_5‘_wedgi'x'1_g. anniversary of Mr. Mrs. Jack Perks Jr. of Point Au Baril, Ontario, arrived Tuesday afternoon, the guest of her daughâ€" ter, Jean Perks, and her sister and brotherâ€"inâ€"law, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wilson, for the Christmas season. Billy Thompson of Main Street North, is home on leave visiting his mother and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greer. A family dinner party Was held at the 7015 Mill on Satur:}y eveâ€" and Mrs. William Wardlaw, Coulter Ave., Weston. Following dinner the guests returned to their home for a social hour. Best wishes for many yedrs of continued happiâ€" ness. improvements, the introduction of the permit l{:um Mr. Huson also member of the fire and property eo-n“'ttu, outlined the work done there.""Here‘s an interesting bit of information I obtained as a memâ€" ber of the Illn-nlzl board," he said, "Weston Public Library has 10,300 books and each one is read an average of six times a year." The modern Oxford Bible is said to be the only book in the world that does not contain a typograâ€" phical error. start that had been made on park Weston Municipal Elections â€" VOTE â€" 11 Years in Municipal Life, and Last Year Viceâ€"Chairman of Finance Committee. This Is Your Answer AS DEP.â€"REEVE 1945 â€"____ W NP W l WESTON MUST : PROGRESS o _ . 9 AND STILL 4 ~Hrl PAYâ€"ASâ€"WE GO. POLLING HOURS: .E % 12 Noon â€" 9 p.m. E k Phone 1707 For rVrF m‘ 2 Information in an interview at Vancouver that demand for metalsâ€"base and preâ€" ciousâ€"will continue heavy in the Emds s nione ndvnd B mt ’ ‘s mining industry will see states an 1880 etiquette guide. The J re eating some the -il.m:um. Th‘y are extracting vitamin E ‘from ;iilk‘:worm cocoons to improve their e "If more coffee is desired, place spoon in saucer; if you‘ve had enough, let it remain in the cup," stataes an 1880 etiquette guide. Capital assistance given by the British government towards shipâ€" yard improvement schemes now Polling Hours: 12 Noon to 9 p.m.â€"Election Day : Dec. 4th Phone 656 for Information Reâ€"Elect TOWN OF WESTON MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS F. H. ROWNTREE DOUGHERTY YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE IS ASKED TO "PROGRESS with ECONOMY" THOS. E. COUNCILLOR 1945 covers development and modern tion, including an extension welding. The total estimated cost is $39,870,000. & amounts ) to $26,580,000. The OR JU. $435 IN MT. DENNIS PHONE WESTON 132 ZONE 4â€"550 ZONE 4â€"594

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