F!JRNACES Oil Burner Sales & Service SHEET METAL WORK JACK WRIGHT 225 John St. â€" CH. 1 Educated: The Royal Danish Conservatory of Music, Copenâ€" hagen. Certificate: Royal Conâ€" servatory of Music, Toronto. * Classes At MASONIC TEMPLE 98 Main St. North, Weston CRANG PLAZA AUDITORIUM Jane and Wilson Information CH. 1â€"3098 / MARION dEMOREsT PIAKO . TEACHKER lust tell us where â€" we‘ll be there For further information please . _ AND REPA‘RING WM. A. RIGGS 1230 JANE $T . MT. DENNiS N. R. Agnew & Co. 1288 WILSON AVE. OIL â€"BURNERS FURNACES CLEANED REASONABLE RATES DOWNSVIEW VETERINARY HOSPITAL WE Eavestroughing /1‘?§:/ï¬ng "FIRST CRASH®" W. J. WARD Charlotteâ€"Anne Duffield BANCING ACADEMY PIANO, THEORY, SINGING Kelly Kirby Kindergarten _Modernize Your Old Furnace Pipes To Concealed Square Type J. |. Robinson, D.V.M., M.S. CH. 1â€"8298 2772 Keele Street ot Wilson GRANT‘S COLLIS 1O N PIANO TUNiNG SERVICES OFFERED K TAKE THE DENT OUuT OF "AcCiâ€"DENT" Gravity & Forcedâ€"Air FUNERAL HOMES FUNERAL DIRECTORS CH. 1â€"2233 of all description OLE ISHOY CHERRY 4â€"0960 * _ BUSINESS DIRECTORY + IS$ YOUR CAR IN PUPILS ACCEPTED HOMES VISITED CH. 1â€"6201 VETERINARIAN 1999 Jane St. CH. 1â€"7781 CHATCO Call EM. 8â€"2655 CONDITION ? WLART. LOB.C.M Work Guaranteed DANCING CH. 1â€"1451 Alfred H. Herman, B.A. BARRISTER â€" SOLICITOR 2 John St. at Main Evenings by appointment WESTON CH. 1â€"6071 OFFICE RESIDENCE CH. 1â€"0111 CH. 1â€"0123 Associate: R. E. McKerrow Woodbridge 27 7 MAIN ST. S. â€" WESTON CMH. 1â€"0s61 CH. 1â€"7060 CH. 1â€"1153 Barristers & Solicitors 29 MAIN ST. NORTH Weston CH. 1â€"9159 Mortgage Money to Loan 7 Speers Ave. CH. 1â€"1776 OPTOMETRIST F. L. MERTENS BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Erc. EM. 4â€"1863 Money to Loa N. GUNN, D.S.C. CH. 1â€"0621 OPTOMETRIST â€" OPTICIAN 8 JOHN STREET WESTON CH. 1â€"3781 CHIROPODIST 8 MAIN ST. S. _ CH. 1â€"2421 BY APPOINTMENT onLY I N CH‘S DRVG STORE Chartered Accountant TORONTO 19 Melinda St. _ EM. 4â€"1825 EYES TESTED VERN HARROP GEORGE W. BULL WESTON CH. 4.0370 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT Eyes Examined â€".GLASSES â€" P. E. STAITE, R.0. WILLIAM McKAGUE, B.A. BARRISTER and SOLICITOR 10 MAIN ST. SOUTH Bank of Nove Scotie Chambers C. Lorne Fraser BARRISTER, SOLICITOR Bank of Nova Scotia Chambers â€" Weston Surgical Supports Elastic Stockings GENERAL CARTAGE MmoVING STORAGE GARDEN PLOUGHING 125 Downsview Ave. PHONE CH. 1â€"9641 1 Main St N. â€" Weston Phone CH. 1â€"0701 8. Com, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR NOTARY C. W. LEASK TRUSSES MEDICAL SUPPLIES 4.1863 Money to Loan 18 Toronto Street, Toronto Edgar Parsons Certified Public Accountant Anywhere â€" Anytime HEAKES and MacDONALD J. T. FERGUSON BARRISTERS, Etc. ACCOUNTANTS 46 Main Street North J. MILES â€" at CHIROPODIST Phm.B.. R.O CARTAGE CH. 1â€" MU. 4593 Retidence 0â€"16â€"52 Monday, November 8th was the last night of the first series and the Injuneers took four points to bring their total to 37 and make them the winners. The Bums didn‘t give up their place at the tail end of the league and finished the series with just 15 points. George Harman was top bowlâ€" er for the men with 724 High Three flat. Don Archer took the Men‘s High Three with H/C with a total of 771. "Boathouse" Goulâ€" den took both the High Single scores, with and without handiâ€" cap with scores of 311 and 303. Ron Schofield‘s High Average dropped and George Harman is now top average with 216. Ev. Cole took all of the Laâ€" dies high scores for the evening with High Three scores with and without H/C of 754 and 658 and High Single scores with and without handicap of 289 and 257. Arleneâ€"Yardâ€"is stillâ€"the top lady bowler, as she has been for the full series, with an Average of 192. Other top scorers for the evâ€" ening were George Harman with 282, Charlie Baggs with 270, Gord Hubbard with 258, Jim Wemyss with 267, Joe Neil with 252, Don Archer with 248, Betty Golding with 244 and 237, Gert Flett with 236 and 228, Willi Miller with 221 and 211, Loretta Hines with 218, Doreen Lee with 206 and Joyce Young with 200¢ 420 ELECTRICAL ' MANUFACTURERS More than 420 companies in Canada‘s electrical manufacturâ€"| ing industry are capable of proâ€"!| ducing practically all Canada‘s electrical requirements. | THE BIG WAGE Canada‘s electrical manufacâ€" turing industry has an annual payroll of around $250,600,000. cx.1â€"1 133 Outâ€"ofâ€"Town Trips a Specialty MOFFAT Recreation Club â€" N EW $ â€" Veteran‘s TA X 1 24â€"HOUR SERVICE â€" Radioâ€"Dispatched â€" WINDER‘S T A X I LIMITED Twoâ€"way radio and phones controlled from 1 Windall Ave. Taxis stationed at 34 Main St. N, 500 Main N. at Bus Stop Hearl‘s Courtesy Corner Jane & Wilson cH. 1â€" 3525 B A K EPE R OFFICES JANE & LAWRENCE AND MAIN at LAWRENCE RADIOâ€"DIiSPATCHED 10 Cars To Serve You FLEETLINE CH. 1â€"9131 T A X I TEEPHONE PHONE TAX!S | _ Carl Nielsen‘s "Concerto for \ Clarinet" is more than a solo | instrument‘s display, It has a ! constant mood of tension, even !â€"distress, and its four sections are fused in one movement as [Sibelius might do. Scored only |for the clarinet, two bassoons, ltwo horns, snare drum and | strings, it assigns some sinister ksigniï¬cance to the drum which | continually enters to harrass | the brief moments of tranquilâ€" ‘\lity. The work may have a ‘personal connotation or proâ€" | gramme which the composer | has not divulged. It is Col. MLâ€" 2219 in the series, "Distinguishâ€" | ed Concerti for Wind Instruâ€" Jments" but unlike some of the reprints of this series, it is a | recent hiâ€"f recording. More of | the clarinet‘s varted colours and Record Reviews When the CBC launched its | first unsponsored television dra-i ma series two years ago, it venâ€"| tured boldly, and with great sucâ€" . cess, into fields Whl(‘g now in its | sponsored series it "seems less; inclined to touch. The national| service not only dared to resurâ€" rect a number of plays by such jmportant dramatists as Ibsen, Shakespeare, and Shaw, but it even had the courage to assume | that these plays could not be| done properly in the usual | cramped half hour or hour, but ; QRAY COAGH LINES "Anna Russell‘s Guide to, NOt Just a clarinet Concerto, it Concert Audiences" on Col.|iS 4 Eripping, brief symphony in ML â€" 4928 is the third of her| modern vein, | records which feature songs she| Turning to a popular style, wrote _ herself, _ spoofing mc;the latest of Morton Gould‘s, foibles of serious musicians.| Necords is called "W agon! This one includes French, Engâ€"| Wheels" and includes highly| lish, German, Spanish and other | Coloured scores of that song and | songs, and even includes her| Others like the "Tennessee! takeâ€"off of Spike Jones, There: Waltz", <"I‘m An Old Cowâ€" are plenty of laughs, many of| Hand, "Riders in the Sky" and ; them based on her misuse of "The Last Roundâ€"Up". ‘There| the assorted languages. Colum.’?ls also Gould‘s own "Buckaroo‘ bia lavished its "High Fidelity; Blues" proving his sympathy for| Plus" technique on this disc. fwestern music. Those who don‘t Carl Nielsen‘s "Concerto for know Gould‘s style of writing Clarinet" is more than a solo @nd arranging can be assured| instrument‘s display, It has a) that it is thoroughly DODular,[ constant mood of tension, even| Yet built with many of the skills| Shown above is a scene from the cinemascope picture, "How To Marky A Millionaire" starring Marilyn Munroe, Betty Grable, and lauren Bacall, now playing at the Fox Theatre, Weston. TORONTO BUS TERMINAL ; By Harold A. Miller, LRSM _ Going Oy Bus ! sor BUS TRAVEL INFORMATION stt Your tocal AgeNt Most popular of the new Buicks in the Century Series is the stylish Riviera, unmatched in its field for advanced design, power and perâ€" formance. The Century styling for 1955 features a completely new front end with a wideâ€"screen grille, visored headlights and a rollâ€"edge bumper with strikingly different dual wing guards. .It has four ventiports instead of three as in the past, Buick‘s DAILY SERVICE . â€" LOW FARES 1O All CANADIAN AND U.S.A. POINTS Cinemascope At Fox Theatre CHARTERED BUSES OFFER IDEAL SERVICE AT ATTRACTIVE RATES FOR ALL GROUP TRAVEL Bay at Dundas EM. 3â€"4221 THE HIGH LIFE By ALLAN JONES | _ This has always beek one of ‘the virtues of the CBC â€" that| [ it can, since it does not have to ; | pander to the lowest common ‘ |denominator which is the ecâ€"! [ onomic lifeâ€"line of the advertis-; er and sponsor, attempt to proâ€"| duce drama, music programs,‘ etc., which are frankly for a | minority taste. I say it is a virâ€"| | tue because we are too apt to , forget in this country that while | (the right by democratic definiâ€"‘ in no less than a cumpl](e hour and a half. is also Gou‘ds own "Buckaroo‘ Personally, I hope that the Blues" proving his sympathy for| CBC can continue now, and evâ€" western music. Those who don‘t| en more in the future, to attempt know Gould‘s style of writing| despite the persuasions and presâ€" and arranging can be HSSuredfsures of the advertising wallahs, that it is thoroughly popular,| giving us dramas which are not yet built with many of the skills |soapâ€"opera forntula floss. If Caâ€" of full symphonic music, It is as nadians are not to sink to the if your neighborhood theatre comicâ€"book level, it is important was to be built entirely of‘ that the kind of entertainment polished marble and immaculatek; they get â€" or at least some of if your neighborhood theatre was to be built entirely of polished marble and immaculate workmanship, worthy of a palace. Yet it does not seem inâ€" appropriate or unconvincing. Col. MLâ€"4858. registers are displayed than brilliant technique. If is played by Louis Cahuzac with the Copenhagen Royal Opera Orâ€" chestra under John Frandson. Not just a clarinet Concerto, it is a gripping, brief symphony in modern vein. LADIES‘ EVENING SWEATERS All colors, jewelled . collars, reg 1ADIES‘ FLANNEL NIGHTGOWNS All coors, SML. reg. $2.98 for | Fleece lined, first quality, F l $1.89 | for . Mundreds of other Items at bargain prices. Come and shop now and lay away for Xmas, OPEN EVERY NIGHT Ti 6 PM. Wednesday ‘¥i 1 p.m. â€" Priday W 9 pm. _ Size 7 to 14, fur hood, fully lined, reg. $10.95 $BP . man vomonmmmnmene Mommatiemienine s $6.90 cmipren‘s 1â€"9c¢ swow suits Nylon gabardine, fur collar and lapel, reg. $24.95 feh C ommc e . â€"ommienions n $15.95 MEN‘S HEAVY DOESKIN SHIRTS Sizes 14!4 to 17%4, reg. $3.98 for First quality, . oll sizes, reg. $1, | eSE mm m 59¢ | $2.98 â€" for Bright colors, size 3 to 6x, reg. $9.95 for MEN‘S CUSMION FOOT SOCKS MEN‘S STATION WAGON COATS CHILDREN‘$ PARKAS Every Day Is Bargain Day At JACKSON‘S panoramic windshield, and lower rear fender with a sweptâ€"back tail light design Th« Century, which last year was the highes powered car for its price in the auto industry has increased its engine output to 236 horse power for 1955. The distinctive wheel cover: and Buick‘s sensational new variable pitch Dynaflow transmission are optional accessories at extra cost. (Opposite Biltmore Theatre) 40 Main St. S., Weston $1.89 , tion belongs to the majority, there Iis equally and just as imporatntâ€" \ly a minority right, Millions may | want to see Red Skelton â€" a ‘(ew thousand may want to see Sir John Falstaff, and they should have the opportunity. \ lt was exhilarating in those |early days of CBC television to | see such plays as "Othello", alâ€" | most full length, with actors like | Lorne Greene; and unexpurgated |Shaw and Ibsen. It was a little | like having a front row»seat at |the unfolding of a cultural re‘ naissance in this country, with a bright future looming for draâ€" ma and the arts generally. | _A striking instance of the !quality of CBC production, diâ€" ‘rection and acting was seen reâ€" |cently in a television version of !Oscar Wilde‘s hauntingly neuroâ€" }tic story "The Picture of Dorian ©Gray." Adapting this for teleâ€" \ vision required not a little imâ€" |agination and skill, particularly in the handling of the horrifyâ€" ‘ing transition of the picture itâ€" |self from that of a handsome : young man to one of a diseased ‘and appallingly evil old man. The honeymoon, unhappily, | didn‘t last. Before long, .CBC ; found it too costly to produce| such plays, at such length, and | though it probably would have‘ liked to continue doing so, was forced to go out scouting for sponsors. | It got the sponsors â€"â€" and the drama series was almost immeâ€" diately dropped to one hour, with the usual generous amount of time allowed within the hour for advertising. The sense of adâ€" venture and exploration, develâ€" opment, was almost immediateâ€" ly lost, and the series threatened at times it seemed to become the wateredâ€"down, safe kind of that flows in a constant barrage over the American networks. It threatened to â€"â€" but didn‘t quite, Somehow, probably I hope with CBC insistence, the choice and the manner of the hourâ€"long plays now produced Tuesday evenings on CBLT, has been considerably above averâ€" age, and even more important has included a number of plays written by Canadians â€" more than in the maiden voyage perâ€" jod. People such as Lloyd Bochner, Barry Morse, Bud Knapp, to mention a few, have carried as much talent into the TV series as they displayed in CBC radio. I have never seen an American drama production which had better quality in the acting than some of the outstanding CBC efforts. it â€" be on a mature and intelliâ€" gent level. The CBC is giving us this in radio â€" it should be posâ€" sible in television. Long Sleeves,, size 2 to 6, reg. $1.49 fer â€"..= 79¢ AlL WOOL SCARFS An ideal gift, 79¢, 89¢ ... $1.29 MEN‘S LEATHER DEES$ GLOVES Fleece lined, frst quality, reg. $3.50 BABY 2â€"PCE, PYJAMAS Fleece lined, 1st. quality, reg. $1.49, pr. i 97€ CMILDREN‘S POLONECK SWEATERS CMILDREN‘S FLANNEL SUITS With ripper, size 4 to 6, reg. $1.59 $5.98 some 8â€"12 DAVID AND BATHSHEBA â€" Silver medal award, Excelâ€" lent, but mature for some 8â€"12. HOW TO MARRY A MILâ€" LIONAIRE â€" Good, Mature for LAST OF THE COMANCHE â€" Good but tense. Mark Twain, good â€" Medal For weekâ€"end of: Nov, 18th, 19th, 20thâ€" _ . THE TIMES AND GUIDEâ€"Thursday, SMOKING To The Ladies â€" IAON. â€" TUE. â€"â€" WED. Treasure O‘Gold Dinnerware ROSEMARY CLOONEY (In Coler) JOHN PAYNE â€" MARI BLANCHARD (In Color) â€" also â€" GREAT DIAMOND ROBBERY RED SKELTON â€" CARA WILLIAMS MAN WITH A MILLION â€" CH. 1â€"7661 GRABLE â€" MONROE : BACALL MT. DENNIS RED GARTERS MON. â€" TUES. â€" WED. Earthakitt RAILS INTO LARAMIE THURSDAY â€" FRIDAY â€" SATURDAY THURS. â€" FRL. â€" SAT. (In Celor) Child ° Movie Guide NEW FACES In the meantime, don‘t wait any longer to take USED CARS AND TRUCKS we are selling during our Fall Clearance Sale. When a couple of pioneers put together the world‘s first horseless carriage (you‘d be surâ€" ; prised how long ago) they foresaw there was A going to be an inevitable conflict with pedesâ€" trians. The frst vehicle in history to move without help from an animal was assembled in 1649 in Nuremburg, Germany. | heard the story rome time ago and looked it up the other doy in order to pass The "cor" rattled along the streets ot cbout two miles an hour, and it seemed to run by magic. It wasn‘t until weeks after its first demonstration that the baffled and frightened people disâ€" covered the two men who were hidden in the vehicle‘s back section. They turned a winch and this moved the rear axle, The vehicle had a mechanism for clearing the way if anyone strayed too close (few did). A great dragon‘s head stuck far out in front. It moved from side to side and sproyed a stream of woter out its mouth for thore than 15 feet. s ; That dragon‘s head, ! suppose, was "optional equipment" as they say nowadays. It‘s the optional equipment on a large number of our used cars, the little extras that so many people like, that make them such outstanding buys. In purchosing a good used car you umally save tremendowsly on the extros that the original owner has installed. (Maybe they weren‘t so :‘ruxy after all, it might be an idec to adopt those automatic windshield washers for the same purpose) There is a car I‘ve heard of that 1 would never, never want to sell. Tell you about it next week. x FOX * "DAVID AND BATHSHEBA" _ N_A Th codbommeccienintienia ie THE MODERN MIRACLE YOU SEE WITHOUT GLASSES "LAST OF THE COMACHES" Air Conditioned MONDAY â€" TUESDAY â€" WEDNESDAY BARRY SULLIVAN and BARBARA HALE It‘s Big â€" It‘s Beautiful On Our New Wide Screen TELEPRONE CBarry Cinemascope R{ï¬gm E â€" also â€" GREGORY PECK and SUSAN HAYWARD "MIAML STORY‘ GUY MITCHELL JV. 1960 â€" Plus â€" â€"â€" Ag â€" . In by Jack Pink Award. of Ca RED GARTERS â€" paper industry in Definition: Text category of Book â€"gmz=e CH, 1.1821 2 a * 259 s "tisllndiet Malis â€" Thursday, Friday, MAN WITH A MILLION VICTOR MATURE . PIPER DANGEROUS MISSION THEY LIVE BY WANT Wednesday, Thursday November 24, 25 JOHNNY O‘CLOCK RIDING SHOTGUN Monday, Tuesday HUMPMREY BOGART RANDOLPH SCOTT FARLEY GRAINGER GREGORY PECK DICK POWELL SIROCCO (ADCLT) (ADUCLT) (TECH.) (TECH.) (TECH.) 10% tuon tw m AND AND SMOKING