Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Times & Guide (1909), 16 Oct 1952, p. 10

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Â¥our columnist. feel such a riteâ€"up is for a good cause, posâ€" bly he is versed on the subject. One . bright balmy _ October orning of late he cycled down THE DOMINION BANK of champague! w» WESTON CUT RATE MEAT MARKET 13 MAIN STREET N. Where You Get More for Your Money WE DELIVER CH. 1â€"0801 w %“riny Notes fellow feel good. Come down to (â€" / is 4 The Domirion Bankcwith meand buy . (Cx BR _ mimm erther pay cash or monthly deductions taken from your account. tt‘s really Why ? Look at it this way. You couldn‘t find a better firm to invest in than Canada. its reallya going concem... And owning bonds sure makes a ‘‘. Shoulder Chuck or Blade M 49c¢ Ib. Choice, Grade ‘A‘ BOILING FOWL RUMP ROAST Boned and Rolled e Round Steak o Rib Roasts These are just some of our Specials â€" Come in and see the rest Any Weight 39¢ i». : wto do with the topic pens as an article on For Your Convenience Our Store will be Open Every Friday Night Till 9 p.m. Buy Canada Savings Bonds Iam. Ivg been buying Canada | Savings Bonds ever since the first issue. Ivegota nice bit of money in them now... and I‘m buying | more this year... | Me? A capitalist? Yes...lquess Is it profitable ? Well the interest avera 3:5 344%kperyear when the bonds are held to maturity. Thats ten years, you Richview Side Road towards Scarâ€" lett Road. He slackened his speed, applied his two brakes and, as no traffic was in sight, he swung out onto Scarlett Road. Less than 50 yards away, b€â€" hind a car, stood an Etobifoke traffic officer, writing, evidently, :;;;lo cor pou'liNy a summons for this columnist. â€" Well! If he gets one he will pay S TEAK or ROAST POT ROAST Boned & Rolled Special 59c ib. 49¢ ip. COTTAGE ROLLS 49c Ib. SPARE RIBS â€" Special â€" Mild Cure Peameal Hundred, yes thousands of girls and boys and even adults can be |seen in the Toronto area nightly not only flouting the law but "Just lAsking" for a broken limb or the | undertaker. Jack was not hurt but his new cycle was. The driver was not to blame, so round he goes a day later to see Pa Smart with a "Why the heck do you allow your boy out at night without a light?" Down King St. he cycled and a motorist pulling out of George St. not noticing the lad on his cycleâ€" well you guess! without a light?" _ Pa Smart felt, no doubt, a wee bit sheepish! "Slip down, son, on your cycle and get me a package". So Jackie starts on his cycle, a new c;\t. just a birthday gift from his Pa who thought it quite unnecessary to buy Jack a light. For the sake of a few dollars why risk possible permanent inâ€" jury? 0 his supper, his dad had forgot to buy his tobacco from the Main St. store on his way home. \ TN would prefer to see such offenders pay the five dollar fine, as under the H. T. Act than a group be tagged for a friendly game of crown and anchor in a local vacant lot. And foolish, to say the least, are the parents who let their two sons cycle to a show or even to school on one bi¢ycle on the chance of not only byâ€"passing a police officer but also, what is more vitally important, courting wellâ€""Just suicide." the penalty without any squawks or appeals to "the higher ups", A stop sign means "Stop"â€"mo matter if a car has not passed the whole day. So! to lads and lassies, adults and parents, buy that light at once for safety‘s sake and make sure your child‘s or your own cycle is used to carry one and one only. Teach and practice safe cycling habits and the drivers of the years to come will, no doubt, be the reâ€" ward of preaching and exemplyâ€" fying sane and courteous habits on the roads of our land. TN offers this safetyâ€"minded column for you, his readers, conâ€" sideration. No model preacher nor symbol of excellent careful and law abidâ€" ing cyclist he is, but it is penned in the interests of all, and includâ€" ing your columnist too! As a constructive "byâ€"product" of the 1952 Olympic Games, Helâ€" sinki‘s specially built Olympic vilâ€" lage, which lodged competitors from all over the world, is to beâ€" come a permanent upâ€"toâ€"date housâ€" ing site for Finns within the next few weeks. Instead of putting up temporary structures to be deâ€" molished as soon as the games finished, the architects erected wellâ€"built private houses, shops, restaurants and amusement centres for regular occupancy after the Olympics. (UNESCO) A total of 5,053 box cars were delivered to the Canadian National Railways during 1951, with 3,670 more to be delivered from outâ€" standing orders as of December 31. WILL PROVIDE PERMANENT HOMES Jackie Smart, aged 1_!,_hnd ‘had SIDE BACON 39¢ ip. Our Own, Delicious Farm Styled Our Own Delicious Smoked HAMBURG STEAK 39¢ ip. SAUSAGE 25¢ i. Lean, Fresh Sgt. Lassardo was born in Toronto, March 19,â€" 1917, and attended _ publie and technical schools there.. He joined the RCAF in September, 1937, and served overseag from February, 1940 to December, 1944. His The recent loss in a fatal accident on October 1, 1952 of Sgt. P. J. Lassardo of 160 Codsell Ave., North York, is deeply mourned by his many friends and acquaintances. Sgt. P. J. Lassardo LES GENT 1744 Jane St. Better See Motorola TV Ad Astra v dn i NORWEST TELEVISION A third of the University of Queenslayd‘s students seldom hear a lecture or visit the university. They are the young Australian men and women who, although scattered over the more remote parts of the State‘s 670,500 square miles, are still able to beneâ€" fit from a university education, thanks to a correspondence sysâ€" tem which now serves 1,250 people a year. At the end of their postal courses, these farâ€"away students can sit the same examinations for diplomas and degrees as those who personally attend college in Brisbane, and results compare favourably. (UNESCO). 123456 Since the end of the war he has been engaged as a Quality Control Inspector at No. 6 Repair Depot Trenton, Ontario, 1 Supply Depot Weston, and later at DeHavilland Aireraft Company. He is surâ€" vived by his wife Lillian, and son he was mentioned in Despatches in January, 1945. Sgt. Lassardo was married in the Church of England to Lillian Butterworth in December, 1944. QUEENSLAND‘S CAMPUS SALES AND SERVICE WESTON Figures on cancer cures were released to a small group of the Canadian Cancer Society recently, when Dr. N. A. McCormack,,cancer specialist at the Metropolitan Hosâ€" pital in Essex County, told, that out of 2,700 of these patients who were given treatment during the past five years â€" the time allowed for study of possible reâ€"occurence â€"1,228 were alive today and workâ€" ing. This was a survival figure he estimated to be about 44%. Of the other 56%, some had been known to die of other causes. He stressed , that the figure would have been higher if more people had received medical attention sooner. Pointing out the reluctâ€" ance of many cancer patients to consult a doctor until the disease had become deep rooted, he cited the results of a small survey that had been made. Out of 100 patients who had allowed the disâ€" ease to take hold before consulting a doctor, 56 held back through fear; the balance through ignorâ€" Early Attention Held Essential To Cancer Fund erything else, but it is powerless against the eternal truths, To give medical specialists a fair chance to improve . their records, the people must coâ€"operâ€" ate by getting medical advice imâ€" mediately any suspicious condiâ€" tion is discovered and get treatâ€" ment as soon as possible, The reâ€" sponsibility for recognizing warnâ€" ing symptoms must, of necessity, rest with one‘s own recognition of it, such as any unusual Jump or swelling, especially in the breast; any unusual bleeding or discharge; any change in normal bowel habit; any sore which does not heal on skin or mouth â€" these while not necessarily indicative of canver are reasons to consult a doctor. 4 as.a4 t C 6 , mick explained here, that 30% of: “::,:m Pmane‘s the patients eannot afford expen=)"‘"*"& * 2o hn a: i sive sickness, but nowhere throughâ€" | that of the "suppressed invention, out Ontario are patients refused | #2ys The Financial Post. treatment who cannot pay. These| A mmumoy indicates Are the records of one cancer clinic | that one in three firmly wates. is in »emannd Anath ate | eederne Bhat stt ngete ef ermdonnct Appro e C n on ce mal s | "he mecotdnle us wuce rom € ears. manufact Other clinics throughout h,Pn' Qu dg{d-nz equipment, nnr:'u ince will have comparable records. Time may alter and efface evâ€" 128456 ganifiot get ‘all four feetoff the ground atithe same inl. worry about a market; For every manufacturer of a cerâ€" tain product, there are thousands of others eager to get into the field, and they would jump at the chance of doing this with @ revoluâ€" tionary improvement. The man who really invents a better mouse trap, concludes The Post, doesn‘t need to reedy manufacturers of much “f“ efficient equipment, so runs the story, have bought up and sup» pressed inventions that would give us electric light buibs that would burn forever, motor cars which would run thousands of milés on a fask “'“lfil:mf"fiâ€"“â€"'fll‘_ a ver h T =e iny oi m think, or course, we would re petition makes any The elephant i‘; one animal that BILL GILBERT CH. 1â€"7371

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