4s (â€") RE(ORDS 61 Wl /# N A K 48 Â¥8 i N WESTON Simpson‘s Drug Store 50 MAIN ST. N. We have never been ashamed of the fact that our estabâ€" lishment has the "aroma of an apothecary" because that is emphatically what it is, and we hope always will be. Here the compounding of prescriptions is a primary conâ€" sideration. Your physician will assure you of this. Next time, why not come to us with confidence. © HARRY JAMES AND ORCHESTRA WITH DICK HAYMES © HARRY JAMES AND ORCHESTRA © soONGS BY THE 5 RED CAPS © SONGS BY BON BON THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1946 ©® YoU I LOVE © LAUGHING ON THE OUTSIDEâ€" Store Will Be Open Through All the Summer Months For Your Convenience 1 LITTLE AVE. LOU BRING AND ORCHESTRA WITH TEDDY POWELL BOB CROSBY AND ORCHESTRA Repairs to Irons, Toasters, Lamps, Washers, Motors, Fans and Fixtures Called for and Delivered EVENINGS PHONE 422â€"R The Record Centre COME WITH ME MY HONEY JAVA JUNCTION > CEMENT MIXER WHERE DID YOU LEARN TO LOVE ROOFING and INSULATION DUNCAN ROOFING B. E. HAJIGHT ASPHALT SHINGLES â€" SIDING FLAT ROOFS â€" HOT OR COLD APPLICATION We can give you prompt service on insulation, Call is for free estimate. With New Albums Continually Coming In SMILEY BURNETTE AND THE SUNSHINE GIRLS & â€" SPECIAL â€" TURF DERBY AND MOTOR BOAT RACE You Never Know Who Wins Base PIJ MODERN APPLIANCES LIMITED t Plnï¬lâ€" Wiring for Electric St Specializing in New Residences ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR «â€" IT‘S SENSATIONAL â€" ©® COoOL WATER © FOGGY, FOGGY DEW Cecil Simpson, Phm.B. â€"ALBUMSâ€" 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wiring for Electric Stoves STON . 1149J. e Go Any where © THEY SAY ITS wWONDERFUL ® WHAT coULD BE SWEETER PHIL HARRIS AND ORCHESTRA © JELLY BEAN © THE DARK TOwWN POLKA CLUB GINNY SIMS PHONE ZONE 4â€"514 ZONE 4â€"435 Jack Morris, Eglinton Ave., stated: "Let them go on strike, I wouldn‘t mind taking a couple of months‘ holidays. From what I can make out there is not going to be any beef anyway." * ‘"The prices have not been fair to butchers â€" in fact we have lost money on beef. We haven‘t any pork or lamb to give customers so a shortage of buyers wouldn‘t matâ€" ter in that resgect," commented Bill Newton, who owns a meat market on Donlands Ave. "If consumers stop buying, I‘ll have to close my store and go home," said A. Wons, meat market manager. "Some of my meat is ?oing bad now because salees have fallen off." "Such an action is ridiculous," said N. D. Roose, president of the Retail Butchers‘ Association. "When she looks around and sees wages rising everywhere, it‘s only natural for prices to rise. I‘ve taken a trimmingof $80 for the past six weeks an account of havâ€" ing to sell at such low prices. This price rise will only cost the conâ€" sumer 10 or 15 cents extra a week. My consumers would rather pay extra for good beef, As soon as you kill agriculture you have a deâ€" pression." _ _ _ _ s | “Theg would be better off doing the dishes and minding their own business," eaid Charles Laycock, butcher. "All they will accomplish if they are successfulâ€"and I doubt if they will beâ€"is a black market." "You can buI' lamb, chicken and liver, and the family can eat fruit vefvtables, esgs, drink lots of milk," she said. "It‘s the o:? way to bring the cost down, and we are out to do it," she continued. "I can‘t speak for all the housewives in the city, but the members of our associaâ€" tion will not buy a single pound of beef at the increased price. ‘"Tell the housewives of Toronto that they don‘t have to belong to our association to become a memâ€" ber of this ‘beefless‘ buying peâ€" riod," said Mrs. Arland. "Let all the women stick together on this and the beef will remain on the counters unwanted and unbought!" Terms Action Ridiculous The Toronto president said that the housewives‘ organization would attempt to have all women who purchase household meat in Toâ€" ronto and the ndjominf' townlhigl join with the association in the "We will bu{ veal and pork and other meats but we won‘t buy beef," Mrs. H. Young, president of the ‘Ward Six branch, explained. She explained that the recent .gor- mission given b{ Ottawa to beef sellers to raise the price was the reason for the boycott. {iez women who refrain from buyâ€" ng beef." Will Seek Recruits i[;’iii’ with the association ycott. . There are six ward organiza: tions functioning in the city and several in the greater Toronto area qutside the city limits, Mrs. Arland went on to describe what a family could eat instead of Mrs. Anni¢ Ariand, president of the Housewives Consumers Assoâ€" ciation in Toronto, said last week that the six ward branckes of the organization in the city and those in some adjoining townships are folng on a beef buyii_x{ strike from uly 20 to July 29. The move is in support of a similiar strike plan« ned at the same time by the Winâ€" nipeg association. â€" in touch with Rfuldehta of branches and added "our organizaâ€" branches and added "our orwiu- tion will support fully the Winniâ€" Housewives Now Urge Boycott on Beef for 1 Week aâ€"9.43 a.m. dâ€"6.08 p.m. Xbâ€"2.13 p.m. bâ€"6.43 p.m. câ€"3.48 p.m. câ€"9.33 p.m. aâ€"Dly. except Sun. and Hol. &â€"S§Sun. and Hol. onlr bâ€"Sat. only dâ€"Dly. nur Sat., Sun. and Hol. Xâ€"Through to BARRIE â€" Mrs. Arland said she had been BUFFALO $ 5.80 DETROIT 10.60 NORTH BAY . 12.60 foull Empoy CGRAY COACH LINES BUS CONNECTIONS AT TORONTO FOR NORTH BAY â€" BUFFALO â€" DETROIT OTTAWA â€" MONTREAL Buses Leave Weston To SCHOMBERG Fares are Low Round Trip â€" Tax Included (Daylight Time) This data is tabulated and reâ€" ports prepared recommend the best Land use embodies the selecting of a small representative waterâ€" shed in the area and making an intensive study of the soils, the use to which the land is being put as well as the amount of soil erosion that is taking place. . Flood control covers the selecting and surveying of storage basins for the holding of water to prevent flooding and./also to increase the summer flow[|in the rivers. This means that survey data will serve to show the best locations for dams but no indication of possible sites can be given until all the field work has been completed and reduced to paper. ols n oatics This work is under the direction of Clayton: Bush, civil engineer and Provincial Land Surveyor, who has a staff of 12 men, mostly students with preference given veterans. A survey of the Etobicokeâ€"Humâ€" ber w:zrsheds is at present being conducted &t Elder‘s Mills, nortn of Woodbridge on the Humber river, by the Department of Planâ€" ning and Development. The camp is staffed by graduates and students of the University of Toâ€" ronto, Queen‘s University and Mcâ€" Master and under the direction of A. H. Richardson, Chief Conservaâ€" tion Engineer for the Department, and Professor F. Ross Lord of the University of Toronto as conâ€" sultant in hydraulic engineering. The five phases of the survey which is to becarried on during the summer and fall are flood, control, land use, forestry, wild life and recreation. tion in general train, inm-lm:kinge rules and safe rncdeel. a theatre on rails has begun its tour of ines from the Head of the Great Lakes to the Atâ€" lantic seaboard. When schools reâ€"open children at divisionsl points will be invited to visit the car," in which have been incorporated all the features of a modern theatre, and see film& which will teach them to avoid trespassing on railways and to prevent crossing accidents. Here, J. C. McCuaig, general safety agent for eastern lines, is lecturing to a Designed to i'a" more than 20,000 men of the Cfl:v dian Pacific Railway on eastern\lines "visual" educa: Conduct Survey of Watersheds in Land Conservation Program OTTAWA . 1225 MONTREAL ... 15.55 Government Plans Reforestation And Flood Control TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON use for the land to prevent erosion and to increase the capabilities of the land. Conservation practices such as contour plowing and strip cropping may be used by the farmâ€" ers. Contour plowing is the prinâ€" ciple of plowing along the contour of the land instead of the usual method of plowing up and down the slopes. This means that the water will be held in the fields and will not run away carrying top soil with it. The land use &hase of the program is under W. J; P. Creswick, graduate in geography of the University of Toronto. Areas will be chosen as suitable for overnight camping, and picnics. Often they will be situated in natura) woodland spots. Forestry, as it applies to land conservation, is the examining all trees on woodlots of the waterâ€" sheds under survey and reporti what could be done to improve the situattom, _ Special attention is given to reforesting of land at the headwaters of streams. A report on the wildlife in the riversheds is being ‘preparéd, and the number and species of fish are being recorded. Recommendation will be made for the improvement of streams for game fish. _&eRASPBERRIES» «POTATOES +TOMATOES |. e MONTMORENCY CHERRIES | British Fruit Market f 169 Main St. N. PHONE 535 class of railroaders on the operation of block signals with the aid of light panels which give an exact replics of the signals‘ operation on the line. The rule in question is shown on the screen. Inset, N. R. Crump, general manager for eastern lines, who conâ€" ceived d{o idea of such a car, is speaking over the car‘s public address system in describing the operaâ€" tion of the lighted panels to CPR officials when the car was put on display in Montreal when it was turned out of Angus Shops after conversion from‘s World War II hospital car. HAS STRANGE JOB One of the strangest jobs in the world is that of Tom Smith, Norâ€" wich, England, who bathes canâ€" aries, wrapping each customer in a %iny blanket and drying it before a candle. 36 Main St. S. Zone 4â€"370 â€" Store will be closed from T1 Saturday, July 27â€"â€"Tuesday, Aug. 6 SUMMER HOLIDAYS DIREGT | FROM | &â€"GROWERS | THIS WEEK 1139 YONGE STREET . KJ. 6135 ’ JACK ALLAN F F 75 Station St. Weston Zone 4â€"577 |_ ELECTRIC â€" GAS â€"C. P. _RAIHES FOR PROMPT EFFICIENT SERVICE PHONE WESTON 1001â€"J 1871 STOVE REPAIRS Weston Roofing Materials Wm. McGill & Co. "Mcaill‘s Coal" HOUSEHOLD RAPPLIANCES Zone 4â€"370 HAS BEEN A FAVORITE WITH DISCRIMINATING BUYERS FOR SEVENTYâ€"FIVE YEARS. Established 1871 229 WALLACE AVE: ME. 2491 1946