Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Times & Guide (1909), 22 Sep 1949, p. 11

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

" In W the life “new” ig " rum; in and. it g. ow you. fiifimnmw u:ws---0Timfnfiwzmfimi§c---THE Ala-Juli 'uimru Ruilvored, Remodellid Mirrors, Any Silo, Made-to- “ Oder have" Glass & , erm company Desk and Furniture Gina Top- Medicino Cabinets Complete MAyfdr 3189 mmmmulm '8l'd,"lll'ltr/sira-s. THE IELL TELEPHONE C2trir 22:2“ "sl) 3...: Plans and Specifications Supplied Alterations and Repairs 48 “engaging" on “was ROM] OILING R. F. WHEELER There remains much. to be done! Many applicants are still waiting for telephone service, and many more sub. scribers' present service is not adequate to their needs. We intend to, meet their wishes, and to continue making Ahe service clearer, (amt. better in every way. Building Contractor ls THE PMT four years we added men than half a million telephones and installed new equipment in every ex- change in Ontario and Quebec. At the same time we were able to make substantial improvements in service. But it took a lot of money. over two hundred million dellarsl This will take more millions for new equipment and buildings As in the past, this money must come from the savings of thousands of Canadians who are willing to invest in the telephone business. Weston 420-143 WESTON Weston 1901 PRIVATE DEFWAYS PUBLIC TH OUGHFARIS PRIVATE ROADWAYS PARKING AREAS Sundnd Time. was serving the majority of linen": um" the country. The" in “on remain. ing on Daylight Time in Central Canada should tune in one hour Inez chm the time listed in thin schedule. September M brings a new line-up of Sunday night programs on the 151qu“. notwork. At 7.00 pm. listeners will htar the debut of a new series, Makers of Munic - a. 45-minute program which will present letraer.known works of grant composers. per- formed by outstanding Canadian artists. Rue-rein and commentary for the series will be done by Richard Johnston, professor of Music, University of Toronto. Limou- mm a. Wooten and me will have to any": the brotdcut time. for mm. at their fevourite pron-ml. for all time! listed in thin "hodule-etfeett" Beptamber 26'." bet-m it.» dud. The eotttittues of Dull.» In!“ Time in certain um, via the mt of the country reverts to Standetd Time, producee I lime- tiona'n network radio Ilmoet im- possible to cope with. The pet- works will therefore open.“ on John Fisher. the CBC'I roving THE WAY I HEARD IT COMPANY OF CANADA TORONTO PHONES Lyndhunt 3969 d mm UOUHEUMIN' This Space Donated By Inch‘s * Null/lid The Amity Club is for those young people 16 and over and meets at 2 pm. Any young people not already attached to some other group are invited to share the fel- lowship of the Icthus Club and Amity Club, Christian Science, Next Sunday, Sept, Mth, will be Harvest Home with special services at 10, " and 2.80 o'clock. "Come ye thankful people come, raise tho son: of Huvut Home". This will be Rally Day in the Sunday school. L Westminster United The evenin} subject, "These Col- laborators". Watch for I full an- nouncement of fireside groups next xx‘nk. Both of them will be meet- ine after church on Sunday even- mg. Correlative citations from the Christian Science textbook, “Sci- ence Ind Hench with Key to the Stripturtss" by Mary Baker Eddy, The Icthus Club for youths 14 to 16 is meeting at 2 to 3 putt. The ume hour Sunday school for thike 9 years 3nd up. TheWolden Text was: "Tremhle, than Garth, It the presence of the Lord. at, We presence of the God of Jarob." Solutions from the Bible [n- eluded the following from Habak- kuk 2: 18, 19: “What profiteth the gravpn imagv that the' maké'f thereof hath graven it; the molten image, and a teacher of lies, that the maker of his work truatoth therein, to make dumb idols? Woe unto him that saith to the wood, Awnke: to the dumb stone, Arise, it shall tench! Behold, it is laid over with gold and silver, and there in no breath " all in the midst of it." Coninued tmm pig. 4- "Matter" w“ the subject of the lesion sermon which was read in all churches of Christ, Scientist, throughout the world, including Third Church of Christ, Srientiat, 70 High Park Ave., Toronto, at 11 a.m.. on Sunday, September 18th, 1949. V The Toronto Symphony's present conductor, Sir Ernest MacMillan. took over the orchatrn. on the death of Dr. von Kunits in 1931. Sir Ernest will conduct a concert from the stage of Massey Hall " 8.30 p.m. immediately after the broadcast of The Old Lady of Shut" Street. Toronto was dependent on visit ing orchutru from that time until 1923 when local nuuieiana, led by Abe Gesenéway and Abe Fenboque, inaugurated the Twilight Concerts under the baton of Dr. Luigi van Kunits. This group revived the name of the Toronto Symphony Orchestn in 1927 when it began the full-length evening concerts that have continued to the present. At 8.00 pan, thus will be a Mt.. hour pmxnm at o" ”uphold: Inuit introduced and command upon by Sir Thomas mum. At 9.00 p.m.. immediately following the Beech-m proxy-m. CBC’I "moo Sundu night Stage lotion, produced by Andrew Allan, will get and" wny for its “sleuth Beagort on the air. "Peyton will bi M at T.45 'att. on mum at and tteh Inlay thrower. tlit ftglt Modem " tht new time will come from both- bridge. T The Nutionul News will be hand at 10.00 p.m., foll wing Stage M), and the new: will be followed by Weekend Review and a period giv- en over to Ipukm prominent in 'international affairs or in Can. ada’s n-tional life. The Toronto Symphony Orcha- trat name duel back to 1908 when the aixty- ieca orchestra formed shortly before by 'hank S. Wels- man was chartered under that title. Under W.';mui the group gave concerts in - Hall until the strain of the First Gran War interrupted its activities in 1918. ( CHURCHESI WESTON Queen’n has collected more than Foot Five! 14800 rue Canadian pamphlets JAMES M: which mu] obscur- event- in the The country's put Filo- ot ClMdiIl -----o- mm but: but to 1810 Idem" in an“: rm“. 'trl,',":':' amo- an on- nmpton'a club» to t an M tty, no - ahmmforam was in km '00qtt& tt “I and amp. Hm. among the piles M pnperl you an link out the most unusual hm 1nd piom of Gun-dint In with a lot of old phototrlphl was a pine! of corraspondence paper on which wu written I Aqnnot. silnod hy Archibald Lunpmah in Ottawa. It w" Apparently sent to Bliss Carmen, the. 22, IMO. This mm not called “Fusion" comply" the Canadian nnnw in "My spring with the pinion of tho loul. ', Thu. Complet- fltrere in the pom Town of the Dough- “bury at Queen’s In puckod solid with Mae" if what forms one of the moat con-I’m. collec- tiam of (Tm-din government Me. nmu m my “bury. Thus official - am from ttu, They in- elude the nmum of both Upper and Low CHI“, the harm]: of both the t_tiv. Council no! the Aalembly. Ind reports of upo- ein] parrupetttarr, committal. Among these. Are the manu- scripts of Bliss Carmen, Sir Charles G. D. Roberts, William Wilfred Campbell and Marjorie Pickth-ll. A analogue of this col. lection has been published. But many of the documents themselvea are wrapped in brown pnper and stack-d on the floor because ot luck of - to file them. Lust pasta in the old Canadian account book is signed: "T. Douglas bHarrington. Compiler, Blue Book." ‘It is dated at Montreal, May 9, 11846‘ Salary of Mr. Harrington is ‘listed inside as 270 pounds sn- (,i,i,i,i,i,i,i.'y. His duties were written down as: "Compiler of the Blue Book, Accountant for contingent expenses of the Public Offices, Re, 'etiver of Office Fees'which are paid by him into the public chest and the issue of marriage licenses and the engrossing departments for both sections of the Province are under his charge." "ntetmationally known, is the Lorne Pine? collection of ('ann- diana, housed at Queen‘s in a_ronm which in literally piled to the ceil- ing with original manuscripts of Canadian authors and poets, their letters and copies of their pub- lished works. Frank footnote to one of the ecclesiastical reports of the volume is this paragraph: "The religious census is very incorrect and the persons employed to take it, com- plained of great difficulty in get- tinz satisfactory replies as many members would nht declare them- selves members of any particular church." . Oldest document in the Queen's Library concerning Cnnada, is an original parchment dated 1623, signed by Louis XIII of France with the bulky green wax Royal seal tied on with jute. Hand printed in old French, this docu- ment in I pnrdon granted by the King of France to one of his tho. testant subjects for military serv- ice. This treasured piece is part of the valuable R. S. McLaughlin Ca. nadian historical collection recently donated to the University. In 1846, Csnnds‘s receipts and expenditures, us well as all her factual reports and statistics, could be contained under one cover in 288 pages. Five handwritten copill were made by the chief clerk each your. Two were sent to the Co- lonill office, one wns kept for the Governor's use, one retained by the Council and one by the Assembly. One of the five copies for the year 1846 is now at Queen’s in the Me- Laughlin collection. 1 For an the pile of ragged papers lhangs much of the history and per- lhnpa the fate of I great nation. And “his particular bundle is only I very small portion of the prceleu treasures in Canndiana which Queen's has built up over the last century for the benefit of present and future generations. If you should trip over an old pile of papers on the floor of the Archives secxion in Queen's Uni- versity, Kingston. - don't call the urban department, Mister. That one préciona heap is morn valuable to Canadians than I couple of gold bricks any day, Pile 0f Ragged Papers Contains Much Of This Ytatttltatitrrt's History Andre Kenning“. who will con- duct the Toronto Philharmonic Orchutn " the Prom Concert to. night. Last number on the pro- !rgm y |___modley of music from Imam-i 141mm in CM‘M'II. Noah- nmpton'a chin to be the an» when aggro foty British HIM hoart I sympathize with you, I found myself in such aplight and knew not, what to do, So in the muse let me oxplain how this all came about, One dw I saw a pretty lag: and said I'd take her out. Luk- you. I found a pricclou gem. at least I thought I did. My luck at Int! I cried and aid. for this dour mud I'll hid, With hurl erect and Ibouldm squared. I smiled my Mum.“ Imilt, _ _ To malt. my story short. the taid, I'll me6t you at the new. l ke'pt my promise like 3mm and litte6md by the glide. And neu- the stile “do the an“: to Imp the "we we mm. Jun that I uni-d hot waning am but In" In you‘re Alive. liar height at but was " Foot Four - while mine wu FM Fort Five! . Every section of the library in cramped for space. Valuable his- torical reference material in difti- ealt--aometirmm impossible to at at, because of overcrowding. Stu. dents and post-graduate werkerl are hampered at every turn, not for lack of material. but for the very abundance of data. A True Story On Mating a Brtt,theri6r" ___ V _ similar situation Dear Brother Bard, with all my Dear Brother Bard, with all my Turn: in a country town one day, a good few years ago, I spied a little window in an iviod bungalow. And framed within that tiny punt. a Mrs-at angelic In". Looked out and nweotly "nil? to me with molt bewjtchint tt use. To cope with presént overcrowd- ed conditions, the current fund- rnising campaign of Queen's Uni- versity, is expeeted to bring in enough cash to build a new Ffrly eral administration building. TMi will release the maximum space in Queen's library for the storage and display of books. Of necessity. some rooms IrOmw occupied by “ministration offices. THE LONG AND SHORT OF IT "Where is the past?" queries Mr. Gundy. "It is stored up in the pugs: of books, newspapers und yallowing manuscripts, Lucient let- tus and documents. Even the scientists cannot carry on research without books." Why are valuable bundle: of old historical documents Allowed to spill over the shelves onto the {loom and Into the hallwnyn of tho ttueen's Library? Simply because theré's Ibsolutely no room, no flue to suck books Ind words, at alone display them for ready reference. Queen's library with in quarter of I million volumes. finds itself a bottleneck. _ Much of the heritage of Canada is being lost to students, historians and the people, became of the elut. ter and crowding in this grunt library. H. Parson Gundy, Qu-en'l librarian, carpi-ins that for the Btu, dents Ind staff in Arts, the library is the laboratory where munch in dono--"traeing the history of ideas down through the ages in countles- records of the past; forming hy- potheses and testing them by the printed word; forming implica- tions, interpreting the present in the light of the past. Hen too, Brit a dozen large puk- ing box» containing the latterl- p-pers, rttattuBeripts nnd document- of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. While these are not n permtment acquisition, Queen's history department will hnvo Icceu for several years to thOuunda of Laurier documents of the first importance and which have never been nude public. , Thil story in the tale te an postwar mdjultmcnt tel-unlo- and mum of thm nun)“. whore livu become intertwined. Myrna Loy. Frederic Much, Dunn Andrews, Tenn Wright, Virginia' Mayo. can O’Donnell. and “any Carmiehaal lay the Indira role. This drama pray: Mt. Donni- Thobtre Monday, Tuesday, Wed, The In! You" " Our Lin Poets' Corner JAMES MWREGOR. The then Warbler. W3 REVIEW A becuti full y teehnieolored musical which plays Weston Theatre Wednesday and Thursday. September 28 and 29th, which stars Judy Garland, Fred Astaire, Peter Liswford, Ann Miller, Jules Munshin, Clinton Sundberg and Jeni LeCon. Irving Berlin's melo. dies are enriched by modern orchestrations in a way that will leave the oldsters with happy memories and the youngsters gnily humming and whistling under the illusion they are catching up with the latest song hits. Judy Gar- land is Ray, sad and comic by turns. Both her singing and her dancing are outstanding. Fred Astaire has never been better. They ate practically the whole show. ' Accidents do not Uppen--thty are caused. in the south profiteering during the Civil War. The only sym- pathetic character is Florence Eldridge, the beaten mother. Dan Duryea, March‘s second son, pro- vides lighter moments as the family buffoon. Edmond O’Brien, the eldest. gain: control of the family fortune by throntening to expose March as an informer for the North. This drama plays Weston TheMre Monday and Tues- day, September 26 and 27th. Enter Panda A grim story-of family ttttreds, [churning and greed is forcefully portrayed by an outstanding name cast of Frederic March, Dan Duryea, Edmond O'Brien, Ann Blyth, Florence Eldridge. John Dull and Donn Drake. Frederic Munch is superb as the self-styled demigod who amassed a fortune youll love it. You'll cheer through your Iears when a boy’s ahauy- haired pal fights again rnan's prejudice in a story that will stir the hearts of kids everywhere. Featuring Brenda Joyce, George Nolus, Robert Shayne, Alex Fraser and of course, Shaggy. this drama it featured at Weaton Theatre Friday and Saturday nights alao Saturday's matinee. Another Part of.the Foreat A colorful and exciting “ven- ture drum plays Wanton Theatre Frldny and Saturday niylm, September " Ind Nth. With Louis Barward and in“ Blair heading . out well versed in continue fire, thin Robert Louis suvonlon's immortal ndnnture novel ll filmed in tll its glory. The story, which is hid in Mth century England, shows how a nobleman returns from the wan only to tight his nncle'n treachery " home. Shy" 7 Ting-y to I boy’s heart is ghngugh h/s dor 113d this picture in juit what tile dug): oiderod. It'shghp Itqry of {do life-but nudoy lad Thursday, layman: " to 29th. Thu luck Aru- WINDER’S -m- ANOTHER PART or THE mm with EDHOND ONIEN. ANN It"! and DORA I MON.aTmt-i. an! FRIDEIIC MMtetr.atAN DUIYIA TAXI 111 ALSO SILICIID BIO.“ 4 JOHN ST. WESTON PHONE "Where sound sounds best" 1i7J,"o'attenteC1f1uhPfta"o'o" Plan-gluon i483 - fl2IiiEriLailll) THE BLACK ARROW m cmncomn BRENDA JOYCETBOBERT sum: TWO FEATURES LOUIS RAYWARD-JANET BLAIR “I've m . mun-b n- - iyr.'ie?teCtget_h9tatto -eteruutohui'TtUii, ”VAM'IMMmdm t9rrtil yr no uGriuudaGiG. "Aw, isn‘t ht that W you,‘ FRMAT.-tmpr. ttat Eric Portman, Phyllis Calvert In Technicolor Opening Dance Sat. Sept. " ADMISSION 50e JIMMY TUCKER'S ORCHESTRA Old Tyme and Modern D A N C l N G with Lon McAHi-tcr, June Ever ADAMS FURNITURE col MOUNT DENNI THEATRE “Scudda Hon, Scudda Hay” In. NEW)! In. PIONI. no: OFFICE OPUS CAI-kl. MN “Men Of Two Worlds" and Household Appliances Call J. H. Mchoy (Agent) at Woman “Cl-W _ Transportation Arranged Terms I -m... SHAGGY FRID'A r, SEPT. 23 THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES NORTHWEST DRIVE " IN THEATRE MON., TUES., WED. & THURS.-SEPT 26-7-84 4--DAYi5--4 THE MOTION PICTURE EVENT OF THE YEAR.' THE ACADEMY WINNER FOR FINE FURNITURE MON., TUES. SEPT. 26 & 27 At CANADIAN LEGION MEMORIAL HALL BLOOR ST. W. (At Itsiington Ave.) "ONE SUNDAY AFTERNOON" Technicolor with DON DeFoRB-JANrs PAIGE ADDED FEATURE "THE GAS HOUSE KIDS GO WEST" with EMERY PARNELU-.CrHLLr WILLIAMS with MYRNA LoY--FREDErtrC MARCH-. DANA A1ipREWS--TERESA WRIGHT --m.-.. FRI. & trAT.--SEPr. 23-24 DENNIS MORGAN-rp0R0TBY MALONE MALTON ROAD ON HIGHWAY " TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY FIRST SHOW AT DUSK 1227 ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST COMING SOON NOHNNY BEUNDA" Plun- Selena! Shah: JUDY . -IN.2 Advoraae raw-m t George Brent, Joan Blond." “Trouble With Women" Ray Milluld, Theresa Wright “Corpse Came c 0 D” SATURDAY, SEPT. " WED., THURS. SEPT. " & " E PHONE 111. 1060 WHEN I“

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy