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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPP1970_09_03The Nautilus lo¢ per copy Bay Ridges 6515 Kingston Rd. Published by Bakery Bay Highway 2 Can -Tech Publications BRidges Plaza Visit us at the C.N.E. Every Thursday EVERY HOUR Arts & Crafts Bldg. Dufferin Gate Second Class mail reg- FRESH BAKED GOODS 284-1171 istration number 1645. BAKED ON PREMISES $4 per yr. by mail 839-3966 Vol. 6 No. 35 West Hill, Ontario Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 i PICKERING 0 S formerly The BAY Weekly REPORTER �c■r■r.r�r,. rA. Don Beer Sports Arena Open Sept. 19th. Annual At the Frenchman's Bay Yacht Club .:: nuai casualty was a Star Boat which was L vmasted. LL.,... 1u injuries (bottom photo). In the top photo Paul Kirby, rear commodore of Sail, is congratulating Regatta Paul Waterhouse who won the CL16 class. His dad, David Waterhouse, placed second. (Photos-G.Rochon) Balsdon Park Residents Complain A petition signed by the residents in the area of Balsdon Park requesting certain work be done on the park will be acted upon, said Chairman George Ashe of the Parks and Recreation Committee this week. The residents are de- manding the fencing around the park be completed, that the en- trances to the parks be asphalted to cut down on weeds and dust, and the play- ground area be clean- ed up and regularly m aintained. Recreation Director Dave Bass said he had met with Mrs. M. Lyn - den who started the petition, on the advise of council, which ad- vised her it would be necessary to have sev- eral complaints be- fore they could act on such a matter. He said he was in full agreement with the resident's complaints and a cost estimate was being done for the 1971 budget. Mr. Bass advised committee the woods have been cleaned up and the sandbox filled in the playground. Reeve John Williams suggested the surplus money in the Bay Ridges Community Centre Board, about $4000, could be util- ized in the area now, in order that some of this major work could by Carol Hughes Pickering Township Council and press alike had a tour of the new Don Beer Sports Arena this week, to open in Flickering on Sept. 19th, from the architect William Saccoccio and the Township's Recreational Director, David Bass. The Arena is just about completed with only the finishing touches left to do and the whole Township is anxious for its opening, originally set for early last spring. Later at the Recreation and Parks Committee meeting Mr. Bass lost his request to have his office located in the new Sports Arena. The unanimous opinion of the Committee was this arrangement would not be advantageous. They said he might in time become nothing more than the arena's "manager" and be involved in the everyday problems there, whereas his posi- tion covers a far greater scope in the Township. Mr. Bass said he felt being at the arena, he would reach a greater number of people and feel closer to the community. The rental rates of the ice and community centre upstairs in the building were set. Prime ice time will be available for all the Town- ship's youth groups at $17.50 per hour. rhis will allow every youngster in the Township a chance to use the ice at this rate. If any additional ice time is necessary. it will be available at the "local groups' rate of $25. Out-of-town groups will pay $28 der hour. Cheaper rates are available for "non -prime" time. The hall may be rented at $75 with a liquor permit or $50 without a permit per event per day. Mr. Bass assured the committee these rates were competitive. Councillor Ron Chatten moved acceptance of them until April 1st. 1971, at which time the rates will be subject to a review and may change. The motion was carried. The official opening will be at 1:30 p.m. on Sat. Sept. 19th and will follow the opening of the new Fire Hall which is at 12:30 p.m. on the same day. The usual round of dignitaries will be on hand as well as other prominent people in the Town- ship. After the official opening, an ice skating display will take place, followed by a "beans and weiners" supper compliments of the Town- ship. The Council will then take to the ice on skates for the opening hockey game. although many protested they are non -skaters. Mr. Bass is suggesting they get out and try and accepted Mrs. McPherson's protest only, so long as she fills the role of "coach" of the Township's latest hockey team. A family skating party will follow with a teen dance upstairs in the community centre. Every- one is more than welcome. be started this year. I he 1971 budget fig- ures could include the balance to finish the job, said Mr. Wil- liams. Councillor Don Kit- chen said the fencing of the Liverpool Road and Krosno Blvd. en- trances should be looked at but he said there would be some- thing else coming up in the near future that this money could be used for. Reeve Wil- liams answered, he thought "Council dealt with priorities". Councillor Ron Chat - ten mentioned the real reason for the state of the park is it is being used for major sports that it was not design- ed for. Councillor Vic Rudik said talks are going on with the Hy- dro for a sports field and questioned that once the major sports were removed and the park became "pas- sive", would the ex- pense of fencing be justified. He pointed out in West Shore Glen Park there are only shrubs between the parks and its resi- dents. Mr. Bass said the homes in the area are lower than the park and there will always be the problem of stray balls on private pro- perty and children re- trieving them. He said regardless of the park being passive, younger children would contin- ue to use the park. Councillor Don Kit- chen moved Mr. Bass obtain the estimates to completed the two entrances and the cost of fencing and report to the next committee meeting of the whole Council. Page 2 THE POST Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 PICKERING POST Published every Thursday by CAN -TECH PUBLICATIONS Postal Address - Box 193, West Hill, Ontario Publisher - R.A. Watson TELEPHONE 284-1767 Opinion Need Action On Pool Dear Editor: As a Pickering resident, I share your feelings about the need for some action concerning a swimming pool for the township. I am referring specifically to your Page One comments on this topic (issue for week ending Aug. 21st). In your comments you seemed to me to suggest that the Ontario County Board of Education was reluctant to press forward with recreational facilities, and that the 'technicalities" you say are re- sponsible for the inaction are somehow thefault of the board of education. At least that was my impression, and, should your other readers gain a similar impression. I would like to reviewthe present status of the School Board -Pickering Township situation over the proposed pool. First -Area .42 school Board and Pickering Township entered into an agreement in 1968 whereby a pool constructed on the Woodlands Centennial School site would be a shared facility, with shared costs. At that time, the estimated construction cost would have been $150,000. In 1969, Area 2 School Board was discontinued, and the Ontario County Board of Education as- sumed responsibility for education in Pickering. By the terms of its creation, the new County Board was to honour the previous agreement between Area 1#2 Board and Pickering Township, and in the early months of 1969 it did in fact assume responsibility for the Area =2 board's part of the action. Before it ceased to exist at the end of 1968, Area ##2 Board had donated $35,000 to Pickering Township toward the cost of the pool. That sum of money has become subject to the arbitrators' report and will be deducted from any sums returnable to Pickering from Area ,+#2 board's assessed assets. The Ontario County Board of Education has sought Department of Education planning per- mission to add a pool to Dunbarton High School. following a request by Pickering Council for a pool to be built there rather than at Woodlands. That's where the situation rests so far as the Board of Education is concerned. So far as Pickering Council is concerned, the terms of its pool agreement as it now stands would require the township to pay annual debent- ure costs on a pool built on funds raised by the County Board of Education. The agreement also has terms on cost sharing for operational pur- poses. The Township's capital forecast was recently approved by the Ontario Municipal Board. The forecast contained sufficient funds to build a swimming pool. If the township decides that it wishes a pool to be built --at Dunbarton High School or anywhere else in the township --it will need to apply to OMB for specific permission for that project. So here's the situation. Pickering Township has asked the board of education to build a pool at Dunbarton High School, and the School Board has said it would if the township repays the � •'�nl 4k.f•17' 4�- - M � _ Y * r .4 <<t = a Would you believe that this scene is at the shoreline of Lake Ontario? Nance Gluszek found that the rocky shore was good for getting a suntan, too. (Photo - Bob Watson) Artificial Gravel Used To Stop Cars A car, a bus and an empty tractor trailer have been "crashed down a hill" to see if a British country town can protect itself from serious road accidents with piles of artificial gravel. The answer from scientists at the British Government's Road Research Laboratory is, "yes, it can". Trucks, buses and cars can run out of control down a steep hill and be brought to a stop without harm to drivers and occupants, and with very little or even no damage to the vehicles. According to the Public Service Division of British Leyland Motors Canada Limited, it has been proved with a substance called Lytag Lightweight Aggregate, an artificial gravelfirst developed for making lightweight cement for tall buildings. Vehicles will run into beds of Lytag, which will slow them down, without harm, injury or damage. The Old World town of High Wycombe, about mid -way between London and Oxford, has steep hills approaching its picturesque centre. So town officials asked officially: "Will Lytag stop runaway vehicles from crashing on the hills?" British Leyland reports that scientists simulated the hill crashes in several series of school board over twenty years and if the De- partm_nt of Education gives its o.k. Pickering Council has a capital forecast approved byOMB that includes funds to build a swimming pool. Pickering Township now has to make specific application to OMB for a pool, the money to be spent in repaying the school board. However, some members of Pickering Council are advocating publicly the construction of a swimming pool adjacent to the new Arena in Bay Ridges, even though the only official act regarding pool location taken by Pickering Coun- cil is a request to the school board to build it at Dunbarton High School. Yes, there are 'technicalities" --unfortunately and inevitably. But the decision as to whether that perhaps any "reluctance' in recreational matters might be more justly laid at Council's feet rather than the door of the board of education. I have no particular axe to grind. I think Pickering residents want a swimming pool. I think they wanted one in 1968 when the estimated cost was $150,000. I believe they want one now, even though the cost has no doubt doubled. As a resident I would like to see this facility added to our township and, although I have preferences on its location, would be glad to see it located anywhere rather than nowhere. Sincerely It wants a pool or not, whether it wants it at a school site or somewhere else in the town- Don Quick ship, is that of Pickering Township Council, so Trustee, Ont. County Brd. of Education, tests combining beds of Lytag gravel and crash barriers to prevent out -of -control vehicles from mounting the sidewalk. Result: It worked in tests with all three types of vehicles: car, truck, and bus. Each test vehicle was crashed from various angles to exactly simulate the run -away effect of a vehicle careering down a hill with its driver helpless at the controls. This is the third time in recent months, says British Leyland, that Lytag has been used as an effective "soft ground arrester". At the foot of a steep hill in Consett, a town in County Durham, potentially serious accidents involving heavy trucks have been averted. The vehicles were undamaged and the drivers unhurt. At Southend, a popular English seaside resort, the town's airport is alongside an electric railroad. Several times crashing planes have only narrowly missed striking high voltage overhead train cables. Now a bed of Lytag has been installed by the town council "to decelerate aircraft in the event of overshooting the main runway". Lytag Aggregate is fire resistant, crush proof, it will not damage vehicles, will not powder in frosty conditions and allows maximum pene- tration by a crashing car or truck because it will not compact. Equip Test Cars Tests are being car- ed natural gas. Initial ried out in Canada and tests carried out by the U.S. on the use of one research project compressed natural indicated exhaust pol- gas as an automotive fuel, report lutants were cut by Oilweek 90 per cetn using magazine. Dual fuel natural gas, while systems are being in- spark plugs andengine stalled in various car and truck units so that life were more than engines can be switch- doubled. Cost was about 40 per cent less ed at any time from per mile than with gas - gasoline to compress- oline. - Five Partners! PRINTED PATTERN 4952 B-16 10%2-20%2 Plan a marvelous Fall - or two • to blend toge- recipe dresses up new Winter wardrobe around potatoes with a sweet shake pan constantly caramel glaze. these Battering princess co- ordinates. Included - ,at. This romantic evening suit in black Swakara broadtail comes complete dress, tunic, skirt. overblvus.-. with guru jacket, sable cuffs and deep satin edging. potatoes and peel while Printed Pattern 49521: NEW Fur seems to be very popular this year in both the midis and maxis. Halt Sizes 101,,2. 121.. 14L2. say that the butter and y saucepan. Cook over sugar may seem to sep- Sizpi X. 10 20.1 NEW aliases' Sizrx X. 111. 12. 14. 16. No Need To Pay Funds SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS 75c 1 together as mixture then add 2 1/2 tblsp. coats. Serve with pork in coins Ino stamps. please) There is no need for considerable concern counsellor can oppose for each pattern --add 13 cents for each pattern for first-class most municipal ici al coun- to some school that" said Mr. Hale. mailing and special handling. cils to pay any funds boards," said Jack So, with this legis - Ontario residents add 4e sales to Boards of Education Hale, General Man- lative loop -hole they tax. I'rint plainly SIZE. NAM E, during 1970. With the ager of the O.F.A., can, with a clear con - S,S NUMBER. exception of Halton p but it should help p science, act tosU rt pPo Send Send order to ,+►\XE r t ADAMS, are of County School Board, municipal counsellors the property owners no Boards of and elected officials who are being un - Watson Publishing Co. Education presented a reasonably taxed to Ltd., Needlecraft budget by the 1st of across the province to pay for education.' Dept., 60 Front Street March, 1970. As a re- see their way clear to Legal council for the W., Toronto 1. sult, there is no ob- supporting the reason- Ontario Federation of ligation on any munic- able demands of their Agriculture brought Dynamic. fashion changes in ipality in the Province constituents. All the this to the notice of new Fall -Winter Pattern rata- of Ontario, with the farmers are asking for the last members' log Free Pattern Coupon. 50,- exception of Halton is a fair and equitable meeting and municipal INSTA\T SEWING BOOK-- County, to pay any tax system for every- councils throughout cut. 8t, sew modern way. $1.00 - INSTANT FASHION BOOKK- funds to their school one, based on the a- the province have been wardrobe planning secrets. boards this year. bWty - to - pay, and notified of this fact by cattery. accessory tips. $1.00 `This fact has caused surely no municipal the Ontario Federation Kinette Club Of Bay Ridges The Kinette Club of Bay Ridges sponsor a Volleyball Team and a Softball Team in this community. On Fri. Aug. 14th, the Kinette Club gave the two teams a bar- becue -swim party at the house of Kinette Sylvia Kilpatrick. The girls had a good swim and a hearty appetite for hamburgers, hot dogs and pop. There were plenty of sweets around as Kinette Judy Steeb baked a lovely c ake for the girls and a Mr. John Hallis baked a beautiful two tier cake in the Kins- men colours with the Kinsmen emblem on it. The girls had a good evening as well ' as the many Kinettes Caramel Potatoes This Scandinavian or two • to blend toge- recipe dresses up new ther. Add potatoes and potatoes with a sweet shake pan constantly caramel glaze. to coat potatoes, about CARAMEL 5 minutes. POTATOES Cook 10 unpeeled new Home economists at potatoes and peel while Macdonald Institute, warm. Put 2 1/2 tblsp. University of Guelph, white sugar in a heavy say that the butter and y saucepan. Cook over sugar may seem to sep- low heat until sugar arate but will blend begins to brown and together as mixture then add 2 1/2 tblsp. coats. Serve with pork butter. Cook a minute or game dishes. who turned out. Upcoming event is the Kinette Club's Fall Fashion Show, Wed., Sept. 16th at Annan- dale Golf and Country Club, 8 p.m. Please follow this newspaper for further details. of Agriculture. It was also widely circulated to indiv- idual members of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, so that everyone should be well aware that there is no obligation on any municipality with the exception of Halton C ounty, to pay over any funds to Boards of Education this year. Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 THE POST Page 3 YOUR WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHS '< IN COLOUR NOW ONLY :✓`;, ,:'; �, 95' EXCLUSIVELY AT b CORAL R ST U D I OS`'�,N"(`1',,_t CALL NOW - - 261-9561 2637 EGLINTON AVE., E. SCARBOROUGH, ONT. ' Ellen's Nouse of Fashions 20% OFF SPECIAL ON FALL SKIRTS SIZES 6 - 16 RF(: S4.QR 0 i in SHELLS AND SWEATERS $3.98 UP t FULL SLIPS $2.98 & $3.98 HALF SLIPS $1.98 & $2.98 Bay Ridges Shopping Plaza 839-2848 i 4 FOOD MARKET Rwy.2 Rouge Hills just east of Rouge Bridge No. 1 Home Grown Sweet Tender Corn on the cob `obs 39E doz. No. 1 Home Grown Tasty Field Tomatoes 6qt. Basket 69c Strictly Fresh Grade A doz Large Eggs 'ins 39 carton C No. 1 Selected Firm Golden Ripe Bananas 10C Worth 10.00 on the u" auf 0 $ p chase of any chesterfield• Wide selection of suite, bedroom suite, S'OE top quality material dining room suite; or and patterns. recovering chesterfield OFF a Shop -at -Home Service suite. (LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER),JI'I'I'tuffiI'I'III' VV VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV UUVUV V VVv�% Spend Your Money Where You Earn It. Be Canadia Buy Canadian C'4 57a144t. M *eAlft 12 LARGE SHOWROOMS OF MODERN AND TRADITIONAL Buy Todd. FURNITURE AND OVER 100 MANUFACTURERS FAMILY OWNED.p4e 44 eillwl td4.. TO CHOOSE FROM. FA OPERATED / 745-761 WOODBINE AVE. (At Gerrard) �4�- -[crrtcIure PHONE 694 1121 FOR OVER 50 .Its YEARS Oper. 8.00 A. M. to 8.30 P. M. Mon. -Fri.--8.00A. M. to 4.30 P. M. Sat. Page 4 THE POST Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 WEST ROUGE NEWS by Kay Brooks SUMNIER'S END Well, can you believe it is September? Where did the summer go? Now comes a whole new season with the start of Fall and Winter act- ivities, school days, club meeting and much more. Keep up to date with what. is happening, when and where by reading The Post each Thursday, and if your particular group is not mentioned, please let us know about it. BEACHCOMBERS' BALL Tickets are now available for the Beachcombers Ball sponsored by the West Rouge Canoe Club, and may be obtained from any of the members. This popular event will take place on Fri. Sept. 25th at the Heron Park Community Hall. There will be dancing, refreshments, prizes and a chance to meet and greet friends you haven't seen all summer. Make a date right now with your favourite dancing partner and be sure to book your sitter well in advance. VISITORS Guests at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Calderone. Ridgewood Rd., this summer were their nephew. Tony Calderone, and two friends Frank and Roger of Massachusetts. Fellow Kiwanian Fred Stacey's daughter, Linda along with Debbie Davis and Susan Lankin of West Rouge, and Julie Girvin and Vera de Keere of Bay Ridges, all helped to show the young men some of the interesting features of Toronto and district. Among the areas visited were the Toronto -Dominion Centre, the Planetarium, the Museum. the Balmy Beach Canoe Club and the C.N.E. Before leaving here for a visit to Montreal to see "Man and Isis World-. the three young men, who are Biology students at Boston University, expressed great appreciation to their hosts and the young ladies who added much to their vacation. 'They were very impressed with Tor- onto and district, especially Pickering Township. Let's hope the rest of their stay in Canada is equally enjoyable and they return in the near f ut u= e. NEW ARENA The official opening of the Don Beer Memorial Arena will be held on Sat. Sept. 19th. Mrs. Don *AUSTIN . , �IG1_ • ROVER • TRIUMPH The ALL NEW 1970 %IGB and MG. MIDGET are now on DISPLAY AT Reptune Sports Cars & Service Centre Sh*ppard Avo. E., at Hwy. 2 A lease plan is available for all models. 284-0246 We Service All Makes Of Imported Cars. Kinsmen Bingo $3500 IN CASH PRIZES WEDNESDAY NIGHT SEPTEMBER 9th. Annandale Golf Club Church Street South Pickering JACKPOT $2000 EARLY BIRD GAMES AT 7:45 P.M. ADMISSION $1.00 CllP TNIS Al FIA FREE CARO F ickering I ost Beer, widow of the late councillor, will perform the ribbon cutting ceremonies. Other officials taking part willbeM.P. Norman Cafik, M.P.P. William Newman, Reeve John Williams and members of the Pickering Town- ship Council. Mr. Tom Quinn, Assistant Dir- ector of Recreation, will be the arena's man- ager. The building is located on Quigley Road, off Brock Road, South, and it is expected that a large number of residents will be interested in watching as doors are opened for the start of the Fall season. CONDOLENCES Sincere sympathy to the family of Mr. Wallace Hobbs, Fairport Rd., who passed away sudden- ly at the Ajax -Pickering Hospital on Aug. 26th. AUCTION SALE The West Rouge Kiwanis Club have started collecting articles for their annual Auction Sale w'.i.ch promises to be bigger and better than e--er this year. It will be held at the same location as last year --the Boy Scout lot on the corner of Hwy. No. 2 and Deep Dene in Highland Creek, on Sat. Oct. 17th. Anyone with items to contribute is asked to hold them for Pick-up Day which will be an- nounced later on. In the meantime those with furniture or other large objects may call qtr. Fred Stacey, 2ti2-3534 for special arrangements. GREETINGS Happy Birthday Wishes to Chris. Helyar and Ian Wright who both celebrate on Sept. 5th. Belated Greetings to Terry Rivet who cele- brated his eleventh birthday on July 29th in England with his chum. Mark Hazelgrove. More about Terrv's exciting summer will be mentioned next week. SOCCER While the West Rouge Atom House League has wound up a most successful season, members of the Mosquito. Bantam and Pee Wee teams who have been playing in Ajax and Scarborough. have not yet completed their full schedule. De- tails of final games will be given as soon as possible. In the meantime let's give a hearty vote of thanks to the coaches and managers of the Atom League who gave so much time, patience and honest perspiration to the young lads under their wings this summer. The League - winning Green Hornets were coached by Gunther Veirich and managed by Trig Holmes. In second place were the Blue Bombers, coached by Mike Collins and managed by Brent Durnford and Mark Valic. Ron Large was coach and Clive Kingston manager for the Red Devils, while Mike Mutapovich and Carl Schneider were coach and manager respectively for the Yellow Flyers. All of these fine sportsmen were greatly as- sisted during the season by other enthusiastic dads and moms too, who helped out whenever necessary and whose support was most ap- preciated. HOLIDAY TRIPS Jean and Dusty Lutes and family enjoyed a trip to the Maritime Provinces this summer. while Jean and Bernie Boutet and family had a boating holiday. Along with ten other families, they left Frenchman's Bay and sailed to the Thousand Islands area. Other West Rouge residents are still vacationing east, west and across theocean, and we hope to have a few details to report later on. HANDICRAFT SALE Plans are going ahead for a delightful after- noon at the Altamont Nursing Home on Sat. Oct. 24th. Tickets at just 50 cents each or 3 for $1.00 include tea and a chance to win one of several special prizes. On sale will be many attractive items handmade by the residents of the Home, such as the popular crocheted vests, driftwood table centres and much more. Don't miss this event! TRACK STARS Among the members of the Pronghorn Track & Field Club who took part in the Juvenile and Junior Championships held Aug. 22 -23rd in B.C. were Pam Delavigne, Paul Bekking and Mike McDougall. They flew to Vancouver and spent nearly a week practising and getting ready for the various events which were held in the Abbotsford Valley region. Pam reached the semi-finals in the100- metre race, and the relay team of which she was a member, placed fourth. Mike McDougall also reached the semi-finals in the men's 100 - metre race. The next event for these active young people was the International Sports Meet in Philadel- phia. Approximately 70 athletes from Central Ontario travelled by bus to take part in the Meet, which included girls and boys from 8 to 18 years of age. Accompanying them were Coach Don Hopkins who has been associated with the Pronghorn Track Club for many years, and Coach Andy Diamond of Woodlands Centennial School. Hope to have more details on this event later on. LADIES CLUB The West Rouge Ladies Club will hold its first meeting of the new .season on Thurs. Sept. 10th at West Rouge School commencing at 8:30 p.m. All ladies in the district are invited to attend. Newcomers are assured of a special welcome by this active group. SENIOR SOCCER Hats off to the special Soccer Coaches and Managers Team who have been making quite a name for themselves in our area this summer. Started as a fun -type thing, fifteen West Rouge men who served as coaches and managers for the Junior Soccer teams decided to play the game more seriously and wound up beating all comers. After playing four exhibition games, they participated in a tournament organized by the Oshawa German Club. This event, held at Cedar Park, Oshawa, was attended by their families and a great time was had by all. Especially when the West Rouge men beat the Oshawa German Club with a score of 4-3 and won the Soccer Cup! HOCKEY The West Rouge Hockey Assn.. which is now part of the Picketing Minor Hockey Assn., islooking forward to the new season with great antici- pation. Meetings have been held and the following men have agreed to act as coaches for the All- Star teams: Paperweights -Don Chambers; Tykes Bill Bennett; Novices -Fred Stacey, Pee Wees- Ernie Cochrane; Bantams -Bob Maclntyre; Mid- gets -Willy Williams and Juveniles -Bill Cowley and Mike Willoughby. There also will be a House League composed of teams from Tykes to Juveniles. Coaches, managers, referees, timekeepers, and just about anyone who would like to be part of the action are required in this category. Please give it some thought. Remember the new arena is practically around the corner this year. No more long cold drives to other areas. SCHOOL DAYS With the start of the new school season many little ones are attending for the first time. Older girls and boys get excited at seeing their chums again and may dash across the roads without thinking. Drivers are urged to take extra care during the new few weeks, especially in the vicin- ity of schools. Results Of Regatta Over 45 sailboats from the Metro area registered for the annual two day regatta which was held in favourable winds on Lake Ontario, adjacent to Frenchman's Bay. Competition was keen in most classes and the many guest competitors from Metro clubs made this regatta a success. All are F.B.Y.C. mem- bers unless otherwise indicated. The following is a list of class winners: HUGHES 25: 1. Klaus Zimmerman, 2. Blair Slight, 3. Gerry Rochon. SHARKS: 1. Derrich Leeson, 2. Bruce Burgess, 3. dike Kingsmill. CLASS 22: 1. Bernie Boutet, 2. David Enns. OPEN KEEL: 1. %lurray McCullough, 2. John Woods (N.Y.C.) 3. Mike McInerney. ALBACORES: 1. Howard Goldford (F.B.Y.C. Junior Instructor) 2. George Hunt, 3. Bruce Som mers. OK DINGHIES: 1. Steve McKeen, 2. Herb Usher. CL 16: 1. Paul Waterhouse (Son), 2. David Waterhouse (Father). OPEN CENTERBOARD: 1. Bruce Reeve(N.Y.C) 2. John Frenke, 3. Doug Walters. SEARCH & RESCUE: Lloyd Dove. PILOTING: Eric Jones. Kiwanians Hold Dance The Dunbarton and Pickering K i w a n i s Club is busy making preparations for a dance to be held at the new Pickering Town- ship Arena (Don Bear Sports Arena) on Fri. Sept. 11th at 9 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend this dance and the proceeds will be used to buy sports equipment for the new arena. Tickets may be pur- chased from Vice President Sid Ballik at 839-7604 or Charlie Smith at 939 2959. Dave Bass, Recrea- tional Director of the Township has arrang- ed for the use of the Arena and hopes for a large attendance to m ake the evening a success. Aspnalt & Concrete RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL_ 82:, Danforth Rd. 267-9407 Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 THE POST Page 5 New Sites Suggested For .Proposed Swim Pool "Let's attach the pool to the new arena" suggested Dave Bass, the Township's Re- creational Director in a written report to the Parks and Recreation Committee this week. Mr. Bass offered this suggestion after an- other meeting with the Ontario County School Board concerning the originally proposed location of attaching the pool to Dunbarton -High School. The conditions of the Board to such an ar- rangement are similar to the Board's agree- ment with Oshawa and the General Vanier Secondary School there, which dictates the Board's control in m any areas, that coun- cil would prefer to have in control of the Municipality. Mr. Bass said there are many advantages to having it attached to the school, the main one being the guaran- tee of 1200 students and rental of the pool from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. by the school. However, Mr. Bass pointed out there are as many strong argu- ments for the pool at- tached to the new sports arena, such as the utilization of joint maintenance s t a f f, more people in the structure at any given time, arena access- ibility to many schools, and to the GO train. Councillor John Kru- ger said the Township has come to a point in time where, like the buildin4 site for the Arena, ' council must make a decision now and get on with IC'ars & Trucks For Wrecking as■s�s?• WE SELL Al a= MOTORS Transmissions Rear Ends Cylinder Heads Brake Drums U sisd Tires Phone 755-9214 371 Comstock Rd the building of what we hope will only be the first Pool for the Township. ' He said he had per- sonally favored the school site over the arena where he fore- saw parking problems, but pointed out talks with the school board have been going on for a very long time. He said it is time council took control of it themselves and con- sequently he moved the architects, Messrs, Half Size Flare PRINTED PATTERN h-A's.r. _�4-3 The most fashionable flare swings soft and low -- the re - 3 cult of simple front pleats True autumn flattery in crepe flannel. wool jersey. Printed Pattern 4a•{S : N E W half sizes 104x, 1"z. 144 1612. 194=. ��. Size l4tt bus 37 i takes '-' yds. .74 -in fabric SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS 17�,-) in coins lno stamps. please) for each pattern—add 15 cent for each pattern for first -clan mailing and special handling Ontario residents add 4t sale tax. Print plainly SIZE, NAME ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER Send order to ANNE ADAMS. care of Watson Fubiishing Co. Ltd., 60 Front Street W., Toronto 1. I dynamic, fashion changes i new Fall -Winter Pattern rata log. Free Pattern Coupon. ;it), INSTANT SEWING BOOK - cut, fit, sew modern way. 11.1 INSTANT FASHION ROOK wardrobe planning secrets flattery, accessory tips. $1.0 Kenson Enterprises Everything For Your Home Custom Carpet Installation Wallpaper, Furniture, Draperies, Stereos Free Estimates Shop At Home Service 285 Lawson Road - corner of Lawson 282.8462 & Centennial Rd. 282-8462 Bedall and Saccoccio be consulted about the cost of a free stand- ing pool at the arena site, keeping in mind the budget forecast figure of $350,000 al- so, prices should in- clude the cost of both an Olymic size and a standard size pool in order that Council could compare the ad- vantages of having an Olympic size pool against the additional coat. Mr. Kruger said his main concern was to get the pool built. Concerning the park- ing problem, Mr. Bass said the Township Clerk, Doug Plitz, had sent an inquiry to the Ontario Hydro on the possibility of renting their land to the west of the Arena for park- ing. So far, Mr. Brain of the Hydro has indicat- ed they would consider the request seriously and would want a long term lease but other than that they could not foresee any other difficulty. Mr. Bass said he is quite hopeful of com- ing go some, amicable agreement with them. Councillor Vic Rudik pointed out a survey in the Township in- dicated the residents desire for the pool, and agreed with his colleague , this will probably only by the f irst pool in the Town- ship. Based on the Town- ship's growth potent- ial. he said there will be a tremendous in- crease in population south of Finch Ave. over the next few years. He said he too fav- ored the school site but if the Township can move easier on the arena site, then he would endorse this site for expediency sake. e Councillor Don Kit- chen too voiced the fact all the members of council supported the school site but the i talks just seem to go on and on with noth- ing accomplished. s He said politics is the s art of getting things done the best way pos- Bible and if talks con- tinue with the Board, the pool may never get vuilt. Mr. Kitchen said if the pool is at the arena site, the Townshipmay be able to get it built this wear, and said he felt the members of council shouldproceed n as quickly as possible. Councillor Ron Chat - ten said he had ser- ious reservation about the demands of the school board if the if the pool is attach- ed to Dunbarton High. He said they wanted priority time and the right to ehangc the time allotted to the Township before Aug. 1st of each year. among other things. Whereas if the l'own- ship builds the pool said Mr. Chatten and would share in the maintenance cost on a pro -rated basis of time used by the Township. He said he did not favor wholeheartedly the arena site but if the parking problem could be resolved, he would agree to it to get the thing moving. Reeve John Williams said he favored neith- er site, but had in mind a parcel of land con- taining about eight acres where phase one of a huge recreational complex could be the swimming pool and later accompanied by a new arena, when the need arose, and acom- munity hall. He said it would re- move it from the in- dustrial area and it would still be easily accessible to the pub- lic and schools alike and there would be lots of room for expansion. by Carol Hughes Since the Reeve did not want to divulge the location in public, the committee went into closed session for fif- teen minutes to dis- cuss this location and its advantages. Upon returning to the open session of the meeting Councillor Kruger changed his motion to read "at the arean or other sites" and the motion was carried. 1971 CHRYSLER PRODUCTS AT A FRACTION OVER COST We are almost sold out of 1970 models but rather than lose your business we will make a low profit deal for a 1971 based on our 1970 cost. This will be the third year of displaying our cosh openly in the showroom. Avoid the confusion caused by discounting from the manufacturer's sug- gested retail price. Know what you are paying above our cost qnd know what you are actually getting for your trade. We need your business urgently to keep our rvpondcd oacd car, service. parts, body and point facilities busy. It's summer savings sale. Make as prove it by getting our price now for a 1971! (sketck" on wiew) Now at one big location Eglinton just east of the Parkway SALES 759-4137 SERVICE 757-1135 PARTS 759-4145 Attention High School Students The Ontario County Secondary Schools Will Open For The Fall Term On Tuesday, September 8, At The Times Listed Below If you plan to attend one of these schools, but have not yet registered. you should do so at once in person at the office of the school you will attend. School offices are open Monday through Friday during office hours. Anderson C. V. L. General Vanier S. S. , Anderson Street, Whitby 155 Gibb Street, Oshawa Telephone: 668-5809 Telephone: 723-5227 G rades 10-13 - 9:00 a. m. All Students - 9:00 a.m. Grade 9 - 10:30 a.m. Ajax High School, Bayly Street, Ajax Telephone: 942-1610 All Students - 9:00 a.m. Henry St. High School, Henry Street, Whitby Telephone: 668-6742 All Students - 9:00 a.m. O'Neill C. V. L. Brock District High School, 301 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa C annington Telephone: 728-7531 Telephone: 432-2311 (705) All Students - 8:45 a.m. All Students - 9:00 a.m. Central C. I., 240 Simcoe St. S., Oshawa Telephone: 723-4678 Grades 10-13 - 9:00 a.m. Grade 9 - 10:30 am, Dr. F.J. Donevan C. I., 250 Harmony Rd. S., Oshawa Telephone: 728-7313 Grades 10-13 - 9:00 a.m. Grade 9 - 10:30 a.m. Pickering High School, Church St. N., Pickering Telephone: 942-4761 All Students - 9:00 a.m. Port Perry High School. Rosa Street, Port Perry, Telephone: 985-7337. Grade 8 - 9:00 a.m. All High School Students - 9:00 a.m. R.S. McLaughlin C. V. I., Dunbarton High School, 5', 0 Stevenson Rd. N., Oshawa 655 Sheppard Ave„ Pickering Telephone: 728-9407 Telephone: 942-0350 Grades 10-13 - 9:00 a.m. All Students - 9:00 a.m. Grade 9 - 10:30 a.m. Eastdale C. V 265 Harmony Rd. N., Oshawa Uxbridge Secondary School, Telephone: 723-8157 Third Ave., Uxbridge Grades 11, 12. 13 - 9:00 a.m. Telephone: 852-3391 Grades 9 and 10 - 10:30 a.m. All Students - 9:00 a.m. G. L. Roberts Director of i'ducation S. E. Lovell Chairman Page 6 THE POST Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 11 ' Union -Oshawa Fj of I AM, I Ilk Mq1 fk* W! STARTING SEPT. 8TH GO BUS -RAIL SCHEDULES AND INTEGRATED GRAY COACH SERVICES BETWEEN OSHgWA- WHITBY-AJAX-PICKERING AND TORONTO Fares will be at the same rate per ride be- Gray Coach service schedules tween any two points, and GO Bus -Rail available at GO rail stations and'GO bus tickets and Gray Coach tickets will be terminals. interchangeable in most cases. For GO Transit information in Oshawa - Pocket -size combination GO Transit- -Whitby-Ajax or Pickering, call 942-2000. EASTBOUND - MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS - EASTBOUND RFen nM1uA1 I DesTn Try \ben F Tra+ P omben n 902 946 9009 1006 901 '4010 1 932 4011 906 Children's Fares 1021 1027! 4012 4036 1042 1046 4050 IO�SI ]1 1058 4062 4066 Sen. 1 ride free when accompanied�� by an adult. 1072 ricrAu T- tJVWN 1078 4080 4062 5555 To, .A4 1 AM ! AM AM AM A4 AM 1 .AM I AM PM I PM PM 6 I3 131 PM i I'M ! PM ►M PM 1 W ( PM 4090 91 , Ix„u`ronto � n(on Uantorth - S e - Bus Fare. ( hnR iA4 T -Train Fare. Smlk IOTnp 112 171 4 131 513 1 13 21Il 112221 122 .221 5 221 .' .' .' ;' 613 713 622 7 22 813 8 22 913 1013 II 13112 11 ..... 9 22 10 22 11 22 12 �1: 1.00 8.00 j-i11i1'1w1 `408 3.20 .60 5.00 .80 6.40 .90 Single 10 Tnp .60T 5.00 ..... ...........!.... - .161317331 908 910 912 914 916 918 920 922 964 966 921 971 926 6381 738 833 838 928 .... 96 LPrckrnwl(.)Su 9>D 1 932 934 I1086 i 936 938 143' 2431 343 4434 3431 K191 949IIn19111491121191 1191 249! 349 1191 3191 64)1 743 6191 749 1 Toronto'Union_ AM AV AM AM AM AM AM AM 1 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ r ♦ r + iii . I i i ♦ 1 PM PM PAI PAI 1 PAI PM SIJ\ 4,11 d r1.rr..d Are.::: L.<' t ;- 5Z 737 y<=I y5, 1u c' II t? 125211 52 2521 352 432 SSI 652 732 852 9521105211152125 9x= white, a. IdHnwk St. Lv 9_' . Danforth .................... --__ 5'1111 57 11 5, ^11257 1 307 257, 3571 457 557 963116 r13111413 1203. 103 203 )0314031 '„ ' � ,� 6:% I 7 13 7 22 x 0, 722 � R "_ L yy L 913 1013 9 22 10 22 11 13 1213 1 1 t3 213 3 t3! 4 I) Illi 433 2 13 3 22 1 S 131 53) 613 .......... 903 9 10 T 13 ...__ __-,- � PM �)' 91)tN1111113 � 1113 12 151 1 15 2 15 315 4151 515 1 615 .AAI :Atl \M PN W PAt PM PM PM 1 PM 715 815 PM 93'- S'arbo - _ • • - - 93F- F niton .................'_ 11 1511' 15 1 IS' ..._. ---'• 6 _ 6 633 653 Bus Trip \umbers 7,8 KOR ... _ x58' ..::: + 1 21 12 22 i 1 221 422 442 3 228 328 4 28 448 3 5 22 542 � SIR 6 '- •-•-••- 1123' 72V. 728'.__....... ........ 1 11 11 1122 N zz 11 22 11 21 u -- -• 1 733 R 13 738 Rix x13 x38.--___---- 3 533 33 $531 _ 6331..... ..__. 733 /2x v2N 102t1t1281128 811. 933�10)31i123 95 Rou Hill _ • ... rnrrs 96 PSck WSta16a R I. , .... -- A I i 7 O3 -•--- ..... 7 4 t 143 ..-•------ 933 1038 1138 1233 138' 2381 3381 433 453 s I 503 5 S 38 S 308 1 6 38 ... _ . 43 _ ... 738 :.. . ......... . _ - lx v 1R 1 1038 1 I 38 1`33 I ' tR _ - X CO -tons bul > rdsc, _ - _ - -Ar - • .... 619 7'o ti9 t ... 7 49 I, _ _ /r19 ___ 949 104, 1119 1249. 1491 2491 34912491 5091 529 519! 6109` 6. .•- 19{.5.5..55__ __•__ 7 I3 4!19 _. .•_.._. 43' 943110/3 8 19' 9 49 � 1019 8 114)11_40 1 1 49 ,- ' 1.19 ----- via aluay Hease 2 Trawler to Bus ........... 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D�'�r s AV AM AM AM AN I AM AM I P!1 I PM P111 x111 PM PRI PM I 633 P!1 PM I 715 ._... 1'M __.._ 15 ... ...... 911113 N is w5 i 12 IS 1 15 .. between 11114n Trip ` A ken 90101 9003 ;9005 19007 9009 ,9011 I 9015 9019 19023 9027 9031 1 9037 9011 9045 9019 19035 19037 I PM AM AM I OOintt narked R. 19053 9061 9065 !9069 907319077 9081 90s5 9009 Oshawa -Toronto Union WESTBOUND - MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS - WESTBOUND Z+ READ DOWN _ READ DOWN F Tlraross T tm►nv rn n 9 9010 901 i 9010 9020 9oz/ 9026 19032 19036 90{ 2 901( aQSO 19os1 9048 9062 9oA6 9070 9071 �9o7x 19x02 9006 j 9o9oT909z 9091 9096 ' 90% 903 919 191kS 953 9305 907 961 909 911 91) 915 917 1 1019 1921 I 923 92171 973 927 973 i 929 931 i 933 19)5 937 S. 1 `M 6tNI 6.0 AV AM AM AM AM AM AM AM PM FM Ihl ( hl fee r1M ' r% ►M h1 ►M;rM~ V PM rM l AM _ AM I .AV Oshawwa hu, icrmlrt�l ..... _ . R .Lr ... 5 O .. � � I 6 tri 7 (N) 7 2O _ _ _ N !rl 9 20 l0 20 11 20 12 20 1 2071 6 271 220..... 320 4 M I 4 40 S 001 S 20 S M A M 7 M', x 2(1 v 20V 10 20� 1120 1220 C G+wnectny( 1ws l.0 Stn r,x k Sun... It .. ..... - - t +' . _ - « 114 1 6 14 ; ft SJ 1 7 1104 7 7 7 7 1 R 31 9 31 110 31 I 1 it 12 31 134' 2 3.1 11) 27 11 27 1227 1 27 2 27 I 3 34 I 447�I 07 I 5 27 5 47 11 27 7 27 R 27 q 27110 27' 1 1 27 111 _'7 fr,.n( <1tilu+a 9N� MiOtM 16IlBro.k ....R - 542 1 - -- , ��.. - Nin q_ IIl4_ II JI 12121 1121 2421 _...1 3 27... ��' $O 522 3311 531 334, 742 812 y42'101OK11I 34 1131 via I11BA+�r 2. Ale 461 11 +., 1 Ar .._ 5 I..... Is 6501 1101 730 7 1...._ 5 9501030 1150112501 1501 25U1__..I 330�._...I- _..1 150, 5101 S3oI SSOI 612 6420 ASO 750; RSO VS .1211112 1212 96 _ Pick (A) Ste 1 Rd 3 42 1050 11 50 11 50 t I I I Traasfe*wTraul............ � 1 , cl l • �l � � I l ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 1 • I ♦ ♦ l/ 96 ^PlckMrK (:/) $Iw (nay RrAF,1 - ..... 1 " la 6 111 1 7 IN11 7 `01 7 4111 K too , Lv 6 1N 1 . _ 6 10 _ • 1000 1000 1 1 00 i 1200 1 011 o0 , 3 00 95 Ruu HJI _ -• . - .... 400 . 1300 5 .. 1. _ . 1 .:.. - 6 1 2 1 11 5 . 1 ^ �M � - iA ! - c � 1 Kj 1IN+ � N 3 2 912 I O i2 1 1 121 12 12 1 /21 211 ' 312 ; _ 1 f 1 j S OA , 5 26 ; 5 16 1 6 06 1 626 7 061 R 6 Off 620 700, A OA v M1 101M 11106 R NO local 101 94 61!' r 071 7171 7171 7571 R 7 X37 417 1017 111711217 117 517 617 637 717 R17i Y17'11117 1103 •- - -, �K�s C ^ S )7 1 between 91 ti a h n u¢h 1 2 17 1 1 1 17 6 02 6 121 6 )7 7 12 8 171 9 12 W 11 11 12 .... 1 IN 'M; -.. �nnts 8 ;_K1 74'; yllN R;N1 Y4Nl 9iN IU _N 11 8112281 128 Ij 428 .I 111171 .55.5..5. marked + _ 2 tri 3 17 5 22 1 5 12 606 Da 9_ 0x110.,1111 2 22' ) 22 9. ) hnton 7 10 1, , t 1 1 12 )71 1221 2m 3 37 ; I )T 15 37 5 47 ' 6 08 6 281 6 48 7 281 x 28 7 , 111 22 : 1 1 22 . _ . , 5 5 5 5 _ marked R. 422 1 1 617 337 V22 1 Toronto. Union Ar. 1 61- 7I. :-, c ! 1- 527 518 622, 141 722. 722 928,1028 1128. •---- - I .' Ku_ K__ N/_ 9__ IUII 1222 122, I..... 1 j 657 7371 A37I VS '1037111)71_..._ Toronto Union -Oshawa EASTBOUND - SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS III HOLIDAYS - EASTBOUND lZ READ DOWN tilun n o 4054 4QS8 1902 904 1906 9M 910 912 914 1 916 1 918 1 1006 '1012 11021 11028 .1032 ;4036 i/012 �1o4sT33 4066 11072 4076 4x001082 4006 4090 i Children's Fares j El 922 924 926 928 930 932 934 9361 938 ]1 f C Sra i se Sen. 1 ride free when accompanied�� by an adult. - shale 10 imp t 5555 To, .A4 1 AM ! AM AM AM A4 AM 1 .AM I AM PM I PM PM 6 I3 131 PM i I'M ! PM ►M PM 1 W ( PM i .50 aa11r eOTrp 91 , Ix„u`ronto � n(on Uantorth - ....L.i--- 1- e - Bus Fare. ( hnR iA4 T -Train Fare. 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AM AM AM AM AM AM ( AM PM 1 PN IAI PM I pee - -- 11u, Trr�an.11 ... _ _R .Lv 5 2111 6 211 7101 K 26 y 10 In 2 1 1 I PM PM PM PM PM 1 PM PM AM vv rO5ih3W8 - - 0, II 20 12201 1211 21111 320 4201 520 620, 720 820. 920!10201112011?20 ._ c,u un 41.1 3 tilmareR 5 17 6 ,71 7 r7 K 27 9 27 l u '7' I I `7 12 27: 1 27 1 27; 3 21 4 27 5 271 6 27 ! 7 27 8 27 v 27110 27 ill 27 12 27 '� a KLnhy 4� lAbn,ak ..R .._1 -.__ 534 h'a 714 x34 934 In 14111 14 1234 134 23J. 331 434 534! 6341 734 831, 4 34110 34111 34 I' is 'v -'a \1.•. 4111 & Harw,J ' 3 42 1 42 S 42 6 42 ' 7 -' - -•.-_ 4_ K42 942 IU42 1142 12411 142 242 42 8421 941 111421142 I2 a2 It LPkkenn <(IStnIBa Ral ...... 1 501 KSU 950 IUSIIIIISO 125111 150 2501 350 450 5501 6501 750 850, 95011115011150 12511 ---- R r le.l Ar �1 �. in6srerluTrust ............ � l ; 6IX,. ,� NO(1' 9013 r ... 9(. I Plckennl (:f) Son (Bay Rdprsl...... 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Children's Fares Children 5 years of age and under 12 will be charged IStK1e 107110 - - one-half the adult fare. Children under 5 W&* ride free when accompanied�� by an adult. - shale 10 imp ^ Sark l0 Tnp 40 3.20 .50 4.00 i .50 aa11r eOTrp 4.00 .60 4.30 JO 5.60 e - Bus Fare. ( hnR iA4 T -Train Fare. Smlk IOTnp .408 3.20 i .60 .1107 5.00 5.00 .75 6.00 .BV 6.10 1.00 8.00 j-i11i1'1w1 `408 3.20 .60 5.00 .80 6.40 .90 Single 10 Tnp .60T 5.00 710 r� I� • .60 5.00 .508 4.00 1S nelk�Tnp .60T 5.00 ~ 65 520 .95 710 1.00 8.00 1.10 8.80 _ 0 .60 5.00 .508 4.00 5x0110 10 np ' .60 5.0 .607 5.00 i .65 5.20 .85 710 1.00 8.00 1.10 8.80 1 calk I0 Tnp .60 5.00 .60 5.00 .60 5.00 1 .60 5.010, .85 6.80 1.05 8.40 1.15 9.10 1.25 10.00 y" IO n .60 5.00 .60 5.00 1 60 5.00 .65 500 .85 10.00 1.05 10.00 (9 TNT$) (15 (12 TRTS.) LN 9.60 1.30 10.40 1.45 11.60 4h,Aft Eqr GOVERNMENT OF ONTARIO TRANSIT a service operated by Canadian National Railways and Gray Coach Lines for the Province of Ontario. Hon. John P. Robarts Hon. George E. Gomme Prime Minister Minister of Highways Visit the GO Transit display of now buses in thoTravel and Tranwiltatim pariliae at the C.N.E. Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 THE POST Page 7 For Larger - Sizes The Discontent Of Parents PRINTED PATTERN by Councillor John Kruger 31 J.A. Fulton, Public Relations Officer for the Nuclear Power Station, announced the hours of operation for the Visitors Centre will remain the same, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. seven days a week. School tours and Or- ganizations are invit- ed, and may make ar- rangements for tours by telephoning in ad- vance to Toronto 282- 5781 or Dunbarton 839-1151. Naming Of School Postponed The naming of the Ajax Vocational School has been postponed for two weeks at the re- quest of the "Naming of Schools Commit- tee". Several Oshawa Schools were named this week at the School Board Meeting, how- ever the spokesman for the Committee asked the indulgence of the Board in defer- ring this matter until the next meeting of the Board. Fall Dance being shortchanged just as there was the same danger a few years ago butfordifferent reasons. Students at every age need varying amounts of structured instruction, good support and dis- cipline. Man by nature is a competitive animal, with an instinct to be structured under some form of discipline and to strive competitively within that structure. Most people are not bril- liant no more than they are dumb- they tend to be average. I submit that an average person will not give his best response in an unstructured, undisciplined, selfcentred environment. By tradition and experience we have looked to our schools to have as an identifiable purpose the preparing of students to fit into the econ- omic and social structure. To equip them so that they might be able to compete and strive successfully. We expect them to have an ideal- ism and sense of purpose somewhat different to our own so that they might intelligently challenge society and cause it to evolve into something better, But in order to change things in a ra4Sonable and responsible way they first must become a part of our institutions. We do many students a disservice to expose them in the school system to an experience which is completely foreign to that which they will encounter when they leave school. In industry and government the student will find a highly structured and well disciplined society wherein he, as an individual. is dom- inated by the goals of the total enterprize-not like school at all. He will learli that making individual decisions for himself on his like; and dislikes is a luxury he cannot afford in a work world. He will learn that the needs of the group are more important than his own desires, and that man would never have reached the moon if astronauts were self-centred. He will learn with great shock that the idea of com- petition with himself is not the standard of business for his work will always be related to what the enterprise expects of hi m. For some students it will be a traumatic experience to find that in this competitive world a man's performance is judged by relating it to his peers and what the enterprise sets as a standard - the pace becomes not his but that of others. Parents know all this. They attempt to instill it into their children, but it seems at times the schools are pulling the other way and parents get wedged between the kids and the educators. If something isn't done soon in establishing proper communication between parents and educators a crisis of declining respect will result. In this respect I have a suggestion to make. Let the educators take a leaf out of the book of industry and begin establishing for schools a m2nagemant by objectives technique. Let the parents and students become a part of the pro- cess. Management by objectives as successfully practised is opposed to any one party in isola- tion setting the objectives. Only when the person charged with attaining the objective has agree- ment from all parties as to what the objective should be can the process succeed. If educa- tors ceased setting their objectives in isola- tion to the community they serve, if they listened to parents a little closer (and not in their normal condescending way) the objectives of education would be vastly improved. In my view educators can no longer continue on the defensive and reject the thoughts of non -educators as untenable and unprofessional. After all the parents have the children and they pay the educational bill. This at leastgives them a right to have a very positive say in what the objectives of education ought to be. Perhaps the educators may reject their ideas but I submit they have a duty to encourage and listen to parents if for no other reason than establish a means of communication. Not just the parents who bitch, not the do-gooders, but that vast body of uninformed ratepayers who are sitting in a state of utter confusion. If something in the way of meaningful objectives are not established soon, and objectives that each parent can easily understand, we are perhaps in danger of reach- ing the point recently described in an issue of Sunshine magazine: "In our public schools the teachers are afraid The Bay Ridges Re- of the principals, the principals are afraid of creational Association the superintendents, the superintendents are will hold a Fall Dance afraid of the board, the board members are on Sat. Sept. 12th at afraid of the parents, the parents are afraid the Ajax Community of the children and the children are afraid of C entre. nobody". In the past few months at ratepayer meetings 4958 in Pickering Township I have encountered a body SIZES of opinion which is very critical of the public and high school system. On analysis I find that 34-48 J this criticism is quite widespread throughout the Province. There is no way of knowing if it represents a majority view in Ontario County, - but its undercurrents are sufficiently strong and so positively felt that it deserves the at- tention of our educators. A collision course is developing between these parents and the educators over the new methods �----' being taught in the public and high schools. Most parents over thirty years of age look to the school system to impart knowledge, establish some sense of idealism in students and provide a basis which will prepare the students for a future in business or government. But something is happening to students in our schools which is not completely understood by parents and I suspect by many educators. Something is going +� f ? wrong. ` It seems that Canadian educators in their goal setting as to what they think a school should do are so mired down in their concern with technique, with method and with how something is done that the real purpose of what a school ` is supposed to teach comes through as a blurred ♦' image. Educators have to stop admiring how well they are doing things and start looking harder -� at what their actual results are. In business and industry there is a process called variously management by objectives, management by results or accountability man- agement. It is not very complex, nor does it have many platitudes to confuse the issue. Its basic premise is that in any human under - J. taking the more important thing is what is achieved and not so much how it is achieved. When our school system is stacked up against this measurement it gives cause to wonder how well we are really doing. The central theme in schools seems to be that �..3 a students' learning is built around an area of interest to them. This is fine for some self motivating students, but there is a great body Sew TWO fresh. easy- sew of other students who I suspect take advantage tops s pat over skins, pants, of the stivation. Man are not emotional) or shorts — soddenly you're Y y doubled your wardrobe. scholastically capable of accepting this chal- Printed Pattern 4958: NEW lenge. They deliberately avoid the hard con - Women's sizes 34. 36. U. 44►, 42. 44. 46. 48. size 36 (bust 40) centration and discipline associated with learn - jacket 2 yards 45 -ince: over- ing a solid base of knowledge. bloupc 1-%, yards 39 -inch. Who can blame them? Its a very human thing SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS i ,5e) to avoid the difficult. By making the theme of in coins ono stamps. please) for each pattern—add 15 cents interest central to their educational experience for each pattern for first-class$ these students row to believe that what they mailing and special handling. like to do is what is important, and their values Ontario residents add U sales become not what society will expect of them so tax.Print plainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS. STYLE NUMBER. much as what they expect of society. In recent Send order to ANNE speeches I have heard some highly petted $ Y reS ADA.Is. rare of educators suggest that the very fact of our re - Watson Publishing Co. s pe tint individualityof to ex - a Ltd., Front Street we doei cases leading o self r Wa Toronto 1. centredness that often, becomes unacceptable arrogrance in the classroom and the home. Dynamic. fashion changes in new gall -Winter Pattern Cata- In encouraging these students to make deci- loc. Free Pattern Coupon. 5,1, sions of which many are not capable we are INSTANT SEWING BOOK— telling them that the values of right and wrong cut. fit. sew modern way. $1.00 are what they believe, and idleness is often INSTANT FASHION BOOK— wardrobe planning secrets, equated with some vague anti-establishment flattery, accessory tips. $1.06 t protest. In the experience of most parents idleness is synonymous with Y Y plain laziness. Nuclear The ungrading of schools, the setting up of individual studies and the deliberate exposing of students to many sources of information not Program normally found in the classroom is a great step forward in education. Few parents would deny this. But not every child can wear these seven league boots. As with everything else Effective Sept. 8th, no system can assume that what is best for some 1970 the popular bus students is best for all in exactly the same tours of the Construc- doseage. It used to be that when most parents tion Site at the Pick- went to school the system was geared to the ering Nuclear Power pace of the slowest learners, and now we are Station will be dis- swinging in the reverse- the system is geared continued until next for the fastest learners. As a result there is summer. today a whole body of students in danger of J.A. Fulton, Public Relations Officer for the Nuclear Power Station, announced the hours of operation for the Visitors Centre will remain the same, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. seven days a week. School tours and Or- ganizations are invit- ed, and may make ar- rangements for tours by telephoning in ad- vance to Toronto 282- 5781 or Dunbarton 839-1151. Naming Of School Postponed The naming of the Ajax Vocational School has been postponed for two weeks at the re- quest of the "Naming of Schools Commit- tee". Several Oshawa Schools were named this week at the School Board Meeting, how- ever the spokesman for the Committee asked the indulgence of the Board in defer- ring this matter until the next meeting of the Board. Fall Dance being shortchanged just as there was the same danger a few years ago butfordifferent reasons. Students at every age need varying amounts of structured instruction, good support and dis- cipline. Man by nature is a competitive animal, with an instinct to be structured under some form of discipline and to strive competitively within that structure. Most people are not bril- liant no more than they are dumb- they tend to be average. I submit that an average person will not give his best response in an unstructured, undisciplined, selfcentred environment. By tradition and experience we have looked to our schools to have as an identifiable purpose the preparing of students to fit into the econ- omic and social structure. To equip them so that they might be able to compete and strive successfully. We expect them to have an ideal- ism and sense of purpose somewhat different to our own so that they might intelligently challenge society and cause it to evolve into something better, But in order to change things in a ra4Sonable and responsible way they first must become a part of our institutions. We do many students a disservice to expose them in the school system to an experience which is completely foreign to that which they will encounter when they leave school. In industry and government the student will find a highly structured and well disciplined society wherein he, as an individual. is dom- inated by the goals of the total enterprize-not like school at all. He will learli that making individual decisions for himself on his like; and dislikes is a luxury he cannot afford in a work world. He will learn that the needs of the group are more important than his own desires, and that man would never have reached the moon if astronauts were self-centred. He will learn with great shock that the idea of com- petition with himself is not the standard of business for his work will always be related to what the enterprise expects of hi m. For some students it will be a traumatic experience to find that in this competitive world a man's performance is judged by relating it to his peers and what the enterprise sets as a standard - the pace becomes not his but that of others. Parents know all this. They attempt to instill it into their children, but it seems at times the schools are pulling the other way and parents get wedged between the kids and the educators. If something isn't done soon in establishing proper communication between parents and educators a crisis of declining respect will result. In this respect I have a suggestion to make. Let the educators take a leaf out of the book of industry and begin establishing for schools a m2nagemant by objectives technique. Let the parents and students become a part of the pro- cess. Management by objectives as successfully practised is opposed to any one party in isola- tion setting the objectives. Only when the person charged with attaining the objective has agree- ment from all parties as to what the objective should be can the process succeed. If educa- tors ceased setting their objectives in isola- tion to the community they serve, if they listened to parents a little closer (and not in their normal condescending way) the objectives of education would be vastly improved. In my view educators can no longer continue on the defensive and reject the thoughts of non -educators as untenable and unprofessional. After all the parents have the children and they pay the educational bill. This at leastgives them a right to have a very positive say in what the objectives of education ought to be. Perhaps the educators may reject their ideas but I submit they have a duty to encourage and listen to parents if for no other reason than establish a means of communication. Not just the parents who bitch, not the do-gooders, but that vast body of uninformed ratepayers who are sitting in a state of utter confusion. If something in the way of meaningful objectives are not established soon, and objectives that each parent can easily understand, we are perhaps in danger of reach- ing the point recently described in an issue of Sunshine magazine: "In our public schools the teachers are afraid The Bay Ridges Re- of the principals, the principals are afraid of creational Association the superintendents, the superintendents are will hold a Fall Dance afraid of the board, the board members are on Sat. Sept. 12th at afraid of the parents, the parents are afraid the Ajax Community of the children and the children are afraid of C entre. nobody". Page 8 THE POST Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 Classified Ads Can Be Accepted Up To 11 Noon Tuesdays INWANT ADS Call 284-1767 FOR SALE FOR SALE =GARDENING GARDENING EMPLOYMENT PLIES fit SUPPLIES UEEN i e c U cal bed -- =HELP LE FEMALE ANTED HELP WANTED Q s z on nen s. Brand new. Worth $179.00 sell for $ 95.00. Cash and carry. Li- -quldators. 3368 Yonge.-488_7911_ 24" G.E. stove $30. Shallow well water pump with tank good as new $50. 839-5228. -------- ----------------------- BED Davenport, sleeps 2, seats 3, sells $65.00. Cash and carry. L1 lesions 3368 Yon a 488- 4248 Sheppard E. 291-33011 7911. ------------------------------ NIGHT tables. Brand new. Un- DiNiNG and bedroom suite, Burma painted $8.95 each, cash andcar- Teak, complete, month old, rea- ry. Liquidators, 3368 Yonge. 488- sonable. 241-5971. 7911. ------------------------------- ------------------------------- TWO antique china cabinets and A SLENDERIZING machine in your what -not, excellent condition. own home, belts, cycles, rollers, 691-5342. steam cabinets etc. lowest ------------------------------- momhl a cal F d Liv PERSONAL ■ LADIES! Need you floor, walls, windows cleaned? You'll have the lightest, brightest floors you've ever seen. Satisfaction guaran- teed. H. Dantelewskl--PL.5-9858 s. Angus Frank Co. 653-e%03 cryPOOL table, Geadron, 4' x 8'. TOP soil for sale by the load ---- -------------------- -- Brand new, accessories incry. Li- Delivered. 755-2524. --------- ---------------- --------------------- td, $100.00 cash and carry. L/- EATING - Fm estimates, no quWantore. 3368 Yonge. 488-7911. obligation. Special Fall prices. ------------------------------- Call Consolidated Heating. Scar- CONTENTS, unpaintedchests, borough. 291-7781. dressers, bookcases, night DAY CARE ---------------------------- --- tables, wardrobes, desks, and Cash OLD things, furniture, glassware. antiques. 698-5464. ------------------------- 50 HOSPITAL, hotel mistresses. Brand new. , . 39", and 54" sixes Cheap Liquidators 3368 mirrors. Cheap. Liquid rs. 3368 Yonge. 488-7911. - - PICNIC TAB -- -- - - - ------------ THREE LITTLE LES SAND boxes. Cape Cad lawn chairs, patio furniture, trellises etc. Made to order. unpainted. 226 - FISHES Private School For Children. NURSERY SCHOOL Yosge 488-7911 4716• KINDERGARTEN FACTORY CLEAROUT SA VE $2 - $5 sq. yd. on wall to wall or room size. Up to 50% an remnants. runners. k ovaLs. 100's to choose from. Well kn,wn brands. 1938 Danforth Ave. Open every day from 9-6. Thurs. t Fri. till 9 p.m. 421-$220. -- ---- BUNK beds new 30 size. mattress included. $48.00. Cash and carry. Lignidacon, 3.'!64 Yongc. 469- ------------------------------- 111 A E X Tow oft, e-t.-et- S@erle hr 1 ueT Canes FuRNISHO&OW ►"Volts thorn - Tow- Rein - teerne-tvt - Etc atsor IM Ogle p1 -M faCrOeT Ow�Pont spetws Of p.ttw.a..ws IntEn 1k. At Ross Se.,yt Lags Stet& 0- tow raCTORy SNOWa00r r sr aMetimroErT i s m Ten 0 m s.r TIN t•sw@ l� ams" W 366-1701 anon•. F-duewr Apples For Sale Bring your own container. Early varieties, Halmeswood Or- chards, Finch Ave. E. at LAW" Ad. Mor. rltm cru. • a. S p.m. 282-8232 BOOK cases. Unpainted. New $6.95 each, cash and carry. L1qu1"- tors. 3368 Yonge. 488 7911. FURNACES, oil Brea- forced -air Special clearance price _.- Don't miss that opportunty. Con- solidated Hewing. 291-7781. ----- ------------------------- Looking for a gift BEAUTIFUL cushions, custom made if desired, floral arrange- ments i small unusual gifts. 267-3275. BUNK beds, wagon wheel, brand new, 39" size, worth $129.00. sell $89.50. Cash and carry. Li- quidators_ 3368 Yonge.-488_-9L1_ MINI BiKE, Rittman 250. 3 1/2 b.p. estimated speed 2S to 30 miles per hour, $145. 1 year old, excellent condition. 499-0432 ask for Glenn. ------------------------------- FURNACES, forced air only $159. or terms. Can install. Call 291- 7781. FRESH vegetables 6 corn for your freezer. 241-691,5. ENTERTAINMENT THE ESSON PLACE Parties Of All Kinds Swimming pool t bar-b-que available fur all functions. Capacity $6. Fully licenced. 282.9651 ON LAW -',ON RU. DL MIL'S TEAROOM, upstairs at 1960 Danforth. Expert readers, 1:30 - 10:30. 421-6116. HEAD boards, vinyl, white. Brand new. 30". 36" and 39" sizes. $5.00 each. Cash and carry. Li- quidators. 3368 Yonge. 4114-7911. Pianos ----------- TUNED, repaired, reconditioned. estimates. Hua House cc ►wale. Scarborough. PL.9-6864. ------------------------------- BEDROOM k chesterfield suite. SpaNah 2 mosths old, reason- able241-6990. --- - --------- KITCHEN Butte, S piece. arhorite, and new. Sell for $29.50. Cash and carry. Liquidators, 3368 Yonge. 488-7911. ------------------------------- BED, double, walnut with "win and mattress. good condition. 444-2925. 1969 YAMAHA. 125 twin, 6.000 miles. excellent condition. $390. or best filer. 291-43M. MOVING MOVING man with trucks, big or small. Odd jobs, cottages. Reasonable. 261_ 3610. ----- PETS -PETS Grooming Service DAY NURSERY Limited number of opening@ evadabie. 293-6846 WEE FOLKS DAY NURSERY Stop 13, Kingston Road licensed -- Trained Staff Transportation Available 261-7633 266-0405 CLUB ESTABLISHED 1957 Is the place to meet eligible men and women who like yourselves are genuinely interested In social contact with members of the op- posite sex with whom they share common interests or, thosepeople seeking a mon permanent rela- tionsbip and prefer ttteeting com- patible men t women with a view towards marriage. Age groups in- clude 21-60 - single, divorced or widowed. separated applicants welcome. All enquiries treated in strictest confidence. Remember our club has been operating suc- cessfully for 13 yrs. Call MR BLACKBURN 924-1551 To arrange appointment Office boars 12 noon to 10 pm. Moa th" Sat. Offices: 501 Ytoge St., SWtes t R 2 Toronto 5. Vro cW!%GFRS, 11_' ASF DRAPES & UPHOLSTERING TAMARACK NURSERY SCHOOL mot competent day care. licensed. Midland Ave.. earth of Sbeppard. Agincourt. For tuirther Informs- • tioa. phone AX.3-3152. ----------------------- ------- Chesterfield 3 Odd Chairs WEST ROUGE GRACE Rebuilt and Recovered 1-6873 NURSERY SCHOOL 26Clair 3549 St. Clair Ave. E. 2 to 5 yeor olds 9 to 11:30 a.m PICK UP SERVICE 284-5640 284-7200 RELIABLE day care In my borne. • 22 are a rlenCe Cliaria meeown or Centennial Road Public School. 268-9189. --------------------------- CHAATWELL Nursery School. Midland Awe. For eppticarb- pbose-39-4372.--------�-- RELIABLE mature Indy m beby- EXPERIENCED for dogs W apt two pre-scbooiersinmyhame. breeds. Will pick -0.p and deliver Regular part-ti.e ileal$. Wynn- (ohh�etty b SON If necessary. Please call evenaw banes commtnsty. Agincourt. CLERK TypW- experienced, wants after 6:30 pm. for appointment 293-74". Iioeae work, will pick-up. 282- 282-2353. -__- ---- ---- --- ----- --- AsphahiConcrete W46. ------------------- ---------- Parvies pyo, 2 n000ths old ovist ewpaoy ----------------------------- nicely marked $25. 293-S,34.Estabtubsd 1951 iYPaVG done at home. 293-11W. ---- ---------- ----- --------- - - NURSING HOMES --------------- --------------- ------ puppies, well marked 8 755-2010 weeks. 294-1493, after 4:30 Iyer BUSINESS ------ ----- ---------- ----- _ ROSEBANK CONVALESCENT Sodding eft Grading, OPPORTUNITIES Home Ltd. Private and Sam► - TUITION aCCOmmodwi°° for chronically Driveway Sealing 111. R.M. supervision, 24 -horn 'ur'i'g care. at assets. 267-8979 244-1628. BEGINNERS, piano lesson, vio- Lin (private or class) voice. theory and harmony arranging. 282 _5963 DRIVERS NEEDED TRAIN now w drive semi truck. local sed over the road. Diesel or gas; experience helpful but am necessary. You can earn over $4.00 per [tour after short train- ing. For interview and appil- HOME cation call 416-362-4002. or J.E. O'F'learn write Safety Dept., United Sys- Piano Accordion. Qualified tems. inc.. % Transport Training teacher. Classical - popular. No Son Systems of Canada. Ltd, 207 rKistracwr. fee. .ask Fur Refer - Systems J OmaniCan Wew, Toronto 1", eO"'. 636-7136 Ontario Canada PAINTING 8 DECORATING ------- ------------------------ WALLPAPER -VINYL - ye xpe • 5.000 fabric samples • free home consultation 299 DA-NFORTH RD. 698-3012 PAVING AVON Repr•sentatlyes lead Inti:- LADY required pare time to act eating lives. They meet new people constantly. become involy- ed In the beauty business and Rave the money for many earas. Call now 895-9939 or write. Mrs. J. Cunneyworth, 149 Sheldon Ave., Newmarket. WOMAN to Mioland It 401 area from 11:30 m 1 each school day to prepare lrscb for 3 *chow aged chllds and to tWY house. 293-8014. WANTED, lady In MrttingwoodDr. area, to give lunches to two children and look after one child to afternoon. 11 to 4:30. 291- 540. 91- s9slt GIRL FRIDAY LOCATION Lawrence - Midland, aborthatd i knowledge of book- keeping. Excellent position, starting salary $370 - $390. Call Nan W ague r Personnel. 491- 2750. Accounts -payable clerk, to handle ale" urro6cl g r, general office duties. Must be good typist. Salary in accordance with ability Ii experience. 1i to. Knott, +43-7400 Pother IConado) ltd. 74 Railside Rd- Don Mills LADY WANTED, part time, 10 am. to 2:30 pm. Mosday to Friday ISdayaL Agincourt Smoke. (;I"Wdord Dr. EMPLOYMENT WANTED ------- ------------------------ evenings. FREE ESTIMATES TUITION PAINTING b DECORATING ,. J�ee v�ef A encfy THE KEE MODEL 425-5043 SCOTCH DECORATOR, guaran- teed paperhanging. painting. Gavin. OX.9-0180. CITY WIDE PAINTING Enaeriors std Interiors PAINTING and decorating, ex- terior and interior. 293-2192. PAINTING by E. Morris Reasonable Safi e: aGt:un Guar entice. 264-2751 LUUR1ny rU1 A TUU OVERSEAS Interviews by INTERNATIONAL SERVICES 234 Eglinton E., Suite 602 486-1060 PART TI ME Office Cleaning Route for sale. $200. - $300. per mooch. call 485-9425 T.V., RADIO & HI-FI Television Repairs e Emergency Service Day -Night -Weekends 284-0322 284-6682 • Atomic T.V. - Professional Color Service So hostess In Scarborough ares. No selling and own transportathon. Phare after 4:30 - 293-1506. ------------------------------- Experienced Teller Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce F1embKdon Past Shopping Centre near Don R1JUS - Eglinton 429-1177 THORNCLIFFE PARK 2 openings in Toronto Branch of 'atsraacbnal company. Appikarta should be aggressive. Orem Y English with good tel ;W voice. Typing essential and preferable High school graduate. Earnings to $350 per mo. to watt with sute- wantial increase after 3 mos. ra;1425.0831 Mr. McNerney REQUIRED YESTERDAY Full Time TELLER For Ittervfew Phase MR. F. NAYLOR 291-1631 bank Of Novo Scotia 4220 Sheppard Ave. E. EXPECTANT toter to live Is. Honest sed reliable, to care for two school children. 291-5948. CLERK TYPIST REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY General typing with some clerical duties. For appoint nneat call - 1AV RITZA 291-1631 Bank of Nova Scotia Agincourt HELP WANTED MALE & FEMALE Apple Pickers ADULTS ONLY apply Iollneswood Orchards Finch Ave. E., Scarborough 282-8232 Weekdays 8 am. - 5 p.m. DEADLINE for CLASSIFIED ADS Tuesday 11 Noon Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 THE POST Page 9 Second CLASSIFIED Page. MOTOR CARS r"""�MOTOR CARS MOTOR CARS 11 COMING EVENTS HOME HOME IMPROVEMENT MPROVEME NTS YOU MAY PAY LESS AT BUT YOU'RE TREATED LIKE YOU PAID MORE H 11tritaar s=orb TELLS IT LIKE IT IS . . HERE'S PROOF .. . Hen's ttemired let of of equip- Come out to I4awRsge Ford menta ponces and charges that select your 1970 MUSTA support our IoW. low price on a right now from a * de t:110tC0 ane per NG 78 month o/ new 1970 MUSTANG that tegs colors. k's your great opportun- it as it is Seeing is believmg dy to own a new car lir as little as $78 per month NEW 1970 MUSTANG New 1970 MUSTANG 200 a, n 1V This payment is based on a selling 6 ni engine 1120 H P i 3 speed floor pace of 52963 Plus height of S26 *wit locking stewing column, bucket 36 less 6832 cash dowrn payment of a gem. cigarette Irghter. as vinyl ntN� trade-in worth as much for an unpaid EQUAL or. 8 way Rashers outseda. wauda day cash balance of S21s7 Finance and right taw New mwrors Fibeg- PAYMENTS charges of $623 90 and rnswonce of lam belted tires. 2 speed electric S30 22 for a total of payments of as pens and washers $2011 12 Metro Lncer. - 4^4 Total deferred payment price A -I Carpenter 53643 12 The annul percentage rasa a 17 0" or equal so 9 5% add LEAKY basements wterproaed on O S T i Lican" anus NO PAYMENTS TILL OCTOBER • Gerwey for Volvo • Ontario's largest display of new and used Volvos. Immed- iate delivery. Highest trade�in allowance. Save Hundreds BUY NOW AT GOMY The Service That • iERWEY MOTORS LTD. • 3475 Daafa * Ave. Scarkwevo 6N-3261 Only 3,400 Miles '69 Pontiac Laurentian V 8 Automatic. Spode". Private 282-8212 lirritagrforb 2660 KINGSTON RD. SCARBOROUGH. 261-3311 E OMMODATION Higher Price WANTED WANTED, have to rest, Eau or longer Skit t West Row area. in-&- m 3 bedroom&. 284-8427. - -------------------------- Out of all the con - APARTMENTS f u s i o n surrounding FOR RENT minis, maxis and midis, Style, the busi- UNFURNLSHED basement apatt- ness publication for ment. Scarborough area. 439- women's and child - 1607• __ ren's wear, says there --------------------------- ROOM is an almost direct FOR RENT COTTAGES correlation between FOR SALE the price range of a store and how many FURNISHED room in Scarborough area. Suitable for working man. 759-2991. ONE single room, suitable for working mea, 77 Bergen R4.739- -3878 before 2. - ---� White Swan Motel RESTAURANT LTD. 3370Kingston Rd. Under new management has avail- able on weekly basis newly decora- ted single i double units, with broadloom, T.V., radio, telephone,, parking. CALL 261-7168 longer garments It has REAL ESTATE- room, good retirement home. given to Style by Tor - PROPERTIES onto and Montreal PROPERTIES FOR SALE Porches R Peaces eac, Free FOR SALE E OMMODATION Higher Price WANTED WANTED, have to rest, Eau or longer Skit t West Row area. in-&- m 3 bedroom&. 284-8427. - -------------------------- Out of all the con - APARTMENTS f u s i o n surrounding FOR RENT minis, maxis and midis, Style, the busi- UNFURNLSHED basement apatt- ness publication for ment. Scarborough area. 439- women's and child - 1607• __ ren's wear, says there --------------------------- ROOM is an almost direct FOR RENT COTTAGES correlation between FOR SALE the price range of a store and how many FURNISHED room in Scarborough area. Suitable for working man. 759-2991. ONE single room, suitable for working mea, 77 Bergen R4.739- -3878 before 2. - ---� White Swan Motel RESTAURANT LTD. 3370Kingston Rd. Under new management has avail- able on weekly basis newly decora- ted single i double units, with broadloom, T.V., radio, telephone,, parking. CALL 261-7168 low the knee" outfits FREE RENT are to be found. WHILE you do a little decorating Several chic metro - with our palm- Fresh air, 2large politan stores' stock shopping centres, Go train i 401 close (30 mite. Metro). Extra contains up to 90 per large 2 bedroom bungalow, with cent longer garments, basement, garage, largebackyard. See It - you 11 rent 1- at while mass merchand- 36 a. otty, Ajax isers are sticking to 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturday short dresses and $172.00 Month skirts almost exclus- ively, KINETTE Fashion Show, Sept 16th. 6 p.m., Annandale Gold `Country Club. DRESSMAKING DRESSMAKM i new ng lessons. 291-2394. ------------------------------- Ladies Bowling The Gay Ladies Bowling League will start bowling at the West Rouge Plaza on Wed. Sept. 9th at 1:30 p.m. sharp. Anyone in- terested in an after- noon of fun and exer- cise should come out, or for more informa- tion phone Gale Scott, secretary at 839-5658. Opening The Pickering Town - chip Fire Dept, will have the official open- ing of the new Fire Dept. Headquarters, located on Bayley St. just west of Brock Rd. on Sat. Sept. 19th at 12:30 p.m. The public is invited to the opening cere- monies at which mem- bers of Council will be present along with other dignitaries. The Fire Dept. is also planning demonstra- tions and displays of interest to residents Air Show The Canadian Inter- national Air Show will be held over the wat- erfront of the Canadian National Exhibition on Friday. Saturday and S u n d a y afternoons. Sept. 41h, 5th and 6th beginning daily at 3 p.m. A full-scale dress rehearsal will be held on Thurs. Sept. 3rd, at 3 p.m. The Air Show will this year feature the top civilian and mili- tary fliers of the wes- tern world. The U.S.A.F. will have t h e i r Thunderbirds aerobatic team per- form. One of the cruelest thieves we face is carelessness, Most of us are pretty cautious about safe- guarding our money, documents, clothing, cars and other valu- able objects. Butcare- lessness can rob a family of even more precious things -- its health and safety. According to the drug industry's Council on Family Health in Can- ada, many accidents in the home can be pre- vented by taking some routine precautions and establishing cer- tain habits. COMPLETE ALTERATIONS free Estimates, Sketched Designs I<edgetTersas o FAMILY ROOMS o KITCHENS o HOME ADDITIONS o INTERIOR REMODELLING Call JOE WALMSLEY of COMRIE BUILDI116 CENTRES Scar. 267-1161 Aiox 839-3660 Pickering 839- 2275 Evenings . 266-4786 47 Yrs. Experience. Metro lic.482 We Guarantee Our Work. 11r4EDALLION FENCE Company FOR QUALITY AND LOW PRICES ON GALVANIZED 8 VINYL COATED CHAIN LINK FENCE AND WOOD PRIVACY FENCE NEW PRIVACY WEAVE CONVERTS CHAIN LINK TO PRIVACY FENCE ` Free Est, as 749-1050 East Area Representative lCall Don Mock ley Anytiwe 267-1076 Modern Paring Co. Oorontol Ltd. ASPHALT PAVING CONCRETE WORK • Established Company • work Guaranteed Phone 293-2484 For Free Estinnte FIREPLACES Built of brsek or stone; smitten guarantee as to smoke Brick- work s stonework. Call West Mill Construction Co. 284-5248 Metro Lk. E-448. FLOORS Sandfag, dustless, no-w;.x arethane fialsn. work guar aaceeo. Free es- longer garments It has LAKE Ontario cottage,d. one ad -ed. electric heat, panelled. one bed- purchased. Figures P g room, good retirement home. given to Style by Tor - Phone 942-47M after 6 pm. _ --------------------------- onto and Montreal KitUeas.Ret Rooms. Addilaces. stores prove that the Porches R Peaces eac, Free ter boxes, porches ea. For free higher the general PROPERTIES 282-3897 price range of the TO RENT Metro Lncer. - 4^4 store, the more "be - low the knee" outfits FREE RENT are to be found. WHILE you do a little decorating Several chic metro - with our palm- Fresh air, 2large politan stores' stock shopping centres, Go train i 401 close (30 mite. Metro). Extra contains up to 90 per large 2 bedroom bungalow, with cent longer garments, basement, garage, largebackyard. See It - you 11 rent 1- at while mass merchand- 36 a. otty, Ajax isers are sticking to 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturday short dresses and $172.00 Month skirts almost exclus- ively, KINETTE Fashion Show, Sept 16th. 6 p.m., Annandale Gold `Country Club. DRESSMAKING DRESSMAKM i new ng lessons. 291-2394. ------------------------------- Ladies Bowling The Gay Ladies Bowling League will start bowling at the West Rouge Plaza on Wed. Sept. 9th at 1:30 p.m. sharp. Anyone in- terested in an after- noon of fun and exer- cise should come out, or for more informa- tion phone Gale Scott, secretary at 839-5658. Opening The Pickering Town - chip Fire Dept, will have the official open- ing of the new Fire Dept. Headquarters, located on Bayley St. just west of Brock Rd. on Sat. Sept. 19th at 12:30 p.m. The public is invited to the opening cere- monies at which mem- bers of Council will be present along with other dignitaries. The Fire Dept. is also planning demonstra- tions and displays of interest to residents Air Show The Canadian Inter- national Air Show will be held over the wat- erfront of the Canadian National Exhibition on Friday. Saturday and S u n d a y afternoons. Sept. 41h, 5th and 6th beginning daily at 3 p.m. A full-scale dress rehearsal will be held on Thurs. Sept. 3rd, at 3 p.m. The Air Show will this year feature the top civilian and mili- tary fliers of the wes- tern world. The U.S.A.F. will have t h e i r Thunderbirds aerobatic team per- form. One of the cruelest thieves we face is carelessness, Most of us are pretty cautious about safe- guarding our money, documents, clothing, cars and other valu- able objects. Butcare- lessness can rob a family of even more precious things -- its health and safety. According to the drug industry's Council on Family Health in Can- ada, many accidents in the home can be pre- vented by taking some routine precautions and establishing cer- tain habits. COMPLETE ALTERATIONS free Estimates, Sketched Designs I<edgetTersas o FAMILY ROOMS o KITCHENS o HOME ADDITIONS o INTERIOR REMODELLING Call JOE WALMSLEY of COMRIE BUILDI116 CENTRES Scar. 267-1161 Aiox 839-3660 Pickering 839- 2275 Evenings . 266-4786 47 Yrs. Experience. Metro lic.482 We Guarantee Our Work. 11r4EDALLION FENCE Company FOR QUALITY AND LOW PRICES ON GALVANIZED 8 VINYL COATED CHAIN LINK FENCE AND WOOD PRIVACY FENCE NEW PRIVACY WEAVE CONVERTS CHAIN LINK TO PRIVACY FENCE ` Free Est, as 749-1050 East Area Representative lCall Don Mock ley Anytiwe 267-1076 Modern Paring Co. Oorontol Ltd. ASPHALT PAVING CONCRETE WORK • Established Company • work Guaranteed Phone 293-2484 For Free Estinnte FIREPLACES Built of brsek or stone; smitten guarantee as to smoke Brick- work s stonework. Call West Mill Construction Co. 284-5248 Metro Lk. E-448. FLOORS Sandfag, dustless, no-w;.x arethane fialsn. work guar aaceeo. Free es- Branch Assists Employees Employment Stand- ards Branch of the Ontario Department of Labour has assisted 33,852 employees to collect $1,213,859 in underpayments from 5,505 employers dur- ing the first seven months of the year. In its monthly activity report for July, the Thief Of Safety For example.... Replace medicine in its proper storage place, after you give medication to a mem- ber of the family. Nev- er leave it on a table or counter surface where a child may reach it, warns the Council, a non-profit public service organ- ization working to en- courage family health and safety. When you return from marketing, put your purse on the closet shelf or in the bureau drawer. Do not leave it on a couch, chair or bed, where a child Branch noted the col- lections represented an increase of $520 23- over the same period last year. An additional 10,000 employees this year benefited by the audits carried out during the seven-month period. can open it. When you finish sew- ing, replace needles, scissors, pins and buttons in the sewing box. And store the box on a high shelf. Little children consider the contents of a sewing box as new toys. When you clean the bathroom and kitchen, m ake a conscious effort to put the clean- ing agents on a high shelf, beyond reach of little children. They cannot recognize the smell of lye and other caustics as danger- ous. The odor, be- ing strange, may ever tempt them to taste. tim ste 3. 264. 2-5; Bonded Company PETER FLICKE C-Pent.ta Cabinetmaker Pacific Stonework Co. KitUeas.Ret Rooms. Addilaces. WALLS. p•tw•. fireplaces, plan. Porches R Peaces eac, Free ter boxes, porches ea. For free estlmaurs. Lic. E1307. eatLetes call 2Q3-04" . 282-3897 FIREPLACES Metro Lncer. - 4^4 A -I Carpenter 755-896 LEAKY basements wterproaed CUSTOS/ carpeatry. rec room,. Call anytU a 284-"20. Metro alterations. addKsoes, special- license E912. All work gwaran- tslag in -mut-ase. 634-2042. aced. Branch Assists Employees Employment Stand- ards Branch of the Ontario Department of Labour has assisted 33,852 employees to collect $1,213,859 in underpayments from 5,505 employers dur- ing the first seven months of the year. In its monthly activity report for July, the Thief Of Safety For example.... Replace medicine in its proper storage place, after you give medication to a mem- ber of the family. Nev- er leave it on a table or counter surface where a child may reach it, warns the Council, a non-profit public service organ- ization working to en- courage family health and safety. When you return from marketing, put your purse on the closet shelf or in the bureau drawer. Do not leave it on a couch, chair or bed, where a child Branch noted the col- lections represented an increase of $520 23- over the same period last year. An additional 10,000 employees this year benefited by the audits carried out during the seven-month period. can open it. When you finish sew- ing, replace needles, scissors, pins and buttons in the sewing box. And store the box on a high shelf. Little children consider the contents of a sewing box as new toys. When you clean the bathroom and kitchen, m ake a conscious effort to put the clean- ing agents on a high shelf, beyond reach of little children. They cannot recognize the smell of lye and other caustics as danger- ous. The odor, be- ing strange, may ever tempt them to taste. Page 10 THE POST Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 Tasty Dishes For Your Collection SCALLION POTA FU E, POTATO POWER Great daily replays, interest in potato goodness never flags because potatoes are changeable as the weather! They parade to breakfast, lunch and dinner with equal delight and a wide range of nutrients, boiled, mashed, scalloped, baked, creamed and French fried. 1 Cook them in chicken bouillon with scallions, making 1 a cream sauce out of the liquid. You'll find another reason 1 they're in such enormous demand. Feature this dish with buttered fresh carrots and green beans as a tempting 1 vegetable dinner. j Scallion Potatoes I 2 pounds potatoes I 1 1/2 cups chicken broth 1/4 cup chopped scallions 1/2 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons flour Pare potatoes. Cut potatoes into halves or quarters, as 1 desired. Turn potatoes into medium saucepan with 1 1/4 cups chicken broth, scallions and salt. Cook, covered, 1 until potatoes are just tender. Do not drain. Mix flour 1 with remaining 1/4 cup broth to make a smooth paste. Pour into potato mixture, stirring constantly. Heat to I boiling point, stirring constantly. Makes 6 servings. I 1 1 1 I i I ' I I I I `-----------------------------------------� :'R1" K.'• ;R -)RS D' OhUVRFS 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I I 1 1 ---------- 1 I 1 I I I I I I I I Dry Kawab Hors d'oeuvres j Ingredients 1 lb, minced beef or meat of your choice. 2 medium onions minced or finely grated 1 1 teaspoon chili powder 1 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder 1/2 teaspoon ginger powder 1/2 teaspoon black pepper 1/2 teaspoon garam masala 1 1/2 teaspoon coriander Dash powdered cloves 1 finely chopped hot green pepper 1 sachet Bovril beef bouillon powder 1 egg yolk 2 tablespoons lemon juice F at for frying Method: Mix all ingredients together. Shape into small patties approximately 1 4" thick and 2" in diameter. PP Y / r. Then fry at low heat until golden brown-. Serve with ketchup. A superb variation is to put the mixed ingredients into puff pastry rolls and bake until the pastry is golden. The spices needed for this recipe are carried by most supermarkets. Garam masala, however, may sometimes be difficult to obtain. It's available from most gourmet specialty stores. If hard to find, Shashi Sawni says it can be omitted provided all the other spices are used. 1 I I I I I I I 1 --------------- -----� Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 THE POST Page 11 *11001 .10 Paul Kirby, rear commodore of Sail at the Frenchman's Bay Yacht Club, is seen here congratulating Klaus Gimmeman of the Club who won the Hughes 25 category at the annual regatta recently. (Photo - G. Rachon) Joe Ilus� ickering, is sworn in as an officer cadet be Colonel f'. •• _:.ter of Canadian Forces Base, Toronto. An Ur,tar iv 6,:.Aar and graduate of Pickering High School. U; C; bL,.. will begin a four-year course at Royal Military College, Kingsiun, in September. On completion of the course, he will be commissioned in the Canadian Armed Forces. (Canadian Forces Photo) CORN ROAST The West Shore As- sociation will hold a Corn Roast on Sat. Sept. 19th at 8:30 p.m. at the West Shore Glen P ark. Tickets are available cy calling 839-1516 or 839-3515. In case of rain this outing will be held on the following Sat. Sept. 26th. IFORMAL RENTALS BILL ADAMS MEN'S WEAR Highland Creek Plat 282-2331 YOUR SYD SILVER AGENT HOLY REDEEMER PARISH Rev. A. G. Quesnelle Rectory 830 Naroch Blvd. Phone 839-3865 Sunday Mass 9, 10:30. 12 Holy Redeemer S.S. St. Mary's S.S. 9:30, 11 a.m. Ajax Pickering Soccer ATOM LEAGUE Ajax Lions 1 West Shore Glens 0 Goal by -D. Byers Imperials 3 Bay Ridges Rangers 0 Goals by -M. Adams. J. Connelly; F. Amann F.H. Rovers 2 Ajax Kinsmen 4 Goals by -A. Lay, P. Spencer; S. Trantau, [.Day, D. Jarvis, D. Roberts West Shore Albion 2 Travellers 0 Goals by -G. Green, D. Smith LEAGUE STANDINGS P W D T Pts. Imperials 13 13 0 0 26 Ajax Lions 13 9 0 4 18 Ajax Kinsmen 13 6 2 5 14 Bay Ridges Rangers 13 6 1 6 13 West Shore Albion 13 4 1 8 9 Travellers 13 3 3 7 9 F.H. Rovers 13 4 0 9 8 West Shore Glens 13 3 1 9 7 ATOM CHALLENGE CUP Semi Finals Ajax Lions 4 Bay Ridges Rangers 1 Goals by -F. Gifford 3, D. Cini; C. Sumner Imperials 5 Ajax Kinsmen 1 Goals by -M. Adams 3, D. Knight, F. Amann; I. Day MOSQUITO LEAGUE ',Vest Rouge Astros 1 West Shore Falcons 3 Goals by -D. McMillan; R. Kuehn 2, G. Tsagrinos West Rouge Spurs 1 Ajax Canadian Tire 2 Goals by -M. Howitt; J. Edwards, R. Lake J.B. Hotspurs 3 Cascade 40's 4 Goals by -W. Moran, B. Crann; R. Bradley 3, P. Aiken Ajax Advertisers 0 Bay Ridges Wanderers 2 Goals by -J. Catney 2 Pickering 2 West Rouge Raiders 9 LEAGUE STANDINGS P W D L Pts. C ascade 40's 14 11 2 1 24 REGISTRATION FOR HOCKEY - RINGETTE FIGURE SKATING Mon. to Sat. Sept. 8 to Oct. 2 i� 9 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. BirthCertificate Are equired For Ringette & Hockey CONTACT Tom Quinn—Arena Manager 839-1136 or 942-2760 FEE $16.00/CHILD FOR 26 WEEKS 45.00/FAMILY FOR 26 WEEKS ------------------- REGISTRATION FORM NAME DATE OF BIRTH ADDRESS PHONE NUMBER West Rouge DISTRICT Bay Ridges Brougham etc. LAST YEAR'S TEAM OFFICE USE & AGE GROUP IND. FAM. B.C. W -mi IF YOU DRINK, drive "scared" of AND DRIVE...... DRIVE "SCARED"! Piling up somewhere, Your luck may run of hitting someone, or being of arrested for Gary Deighan, 10 captain of the Green Hornets receives the Atom League Trophy from Deputy out. If you take a drink, then climt behind the impaired driving. Phis idea was put forth at a Reeve George Ashe at the West Rouge Soccer Club finals. safety conference of Behind is the happy Green Hornets coach Gunter Vierich, of Rouge Hills Dr. (Photo -Bob Kipfer) wheel of a car drive off, and the Ontario Pulp and you should Paper `aakers Safety -*•**�*.** Association by %'r. Donald Buck, Director Ajax Canadian Tire 14 10 3 1 23 of _safety, Departm::nt J.B. Hotspurs 14 9 1 4 19 of the Army. Fort _ West Rouge Spurs 15 6 5 4 17 Monroe. Virginia. West Shore Falcons 15 7 1 715 Today's society tends West Rouge Astros 1.1 6 2 6 14 to overlook the fact Bay Ridges Wanderers 15 5 3 - 13 that a high-puwerrd West Rouge Raiders 11 3 1 7 7 car in the hancti u: a Ajax Advertisers Pickering 14 2 2 10 14 1 0 13 6 2 Iiquured-up driver is a ueadl; cum_�inatiur. Joe Ilus� ickering, is sworn in as an officer cadet be Colonel f'. •• _:.ter of Canadian Forces Base, Toronto. An Ur,tar iv 6,:.Aar and graduate of Pickering High School. U; C; bL,.. will begin a four-year course at Royal Military College, Kingsiun, in September. On completion of the course, he will be commissioned in the Canadian Armed Forces. (Canadian Forces Photo) CORN ROAST The West Shore As- sociation will hold a Corn Roast on Sat. Sept. 19th at 8:30 p.m. at the West Shore Glen P ark. Tickets are available cy calling 839-1516 or 839-3515. In case of rain this outing will be held on the following Sat. Sept. 26th. IFORMAL RENTALS BILL ADAMS MEN'S WEAR Highland Creek Plat 282-2331 YOUR SYD SILVER AGENT HOLY REDEEMER PARISH Rev. A. G. Quesnelle Rectory 830 Naroch Blvd. Phone 839-3865 Sunday Mass 9, 10:30. 12 Holy Redeemer S.S. St. Mary's S.S. 9:30, 11 a.m. Ajax Pickering Soccer ATOM LEAGUE Ajax Lions 1 West Shore Glens 0 Goal by -D. Byers Imperials 3 Bay Ridges Rangers 0 Goals by -M. Adams. J. Connelly; F. Amann F.H. Rovers 2 Ajax Kinsmen 4 Goals by -A. Lay, P. Spencer; S. Trantau, [.Day, D. Jarvis, D. Roberts West Shore Albion 2 Travellers 0 Goals by -G. Green, D. Smith LEAGUE STANDINGS P W D T Pts. Imperials 13 13 0 0 26 Ajax Lions 13 9 0 4 18 Ajax Kinsmen 13 6 2 5 14 Bay Ridges Rangers 13 6 1 6 13 West Shore Albion 13 4 1 8 9 Travellers 13 3 3 7 9 F.H. Rovers 13 4 0 9 8 West Shore Glens 13 3 1 9 7 ATOM CHALLENGE CUP Semi Finals Ajax Lions 4 Bay Ridges Rangers 1 Goals by -F. Gifford 3, D. Cini; C. Sumner Imperials 5 Ajax Kinsmen 1 Goals by -M. Adams 3, D. Knight, F. Amann; I. Day MOSQUITO LEAGUE ',Vest Rouge Astros 1 West Shore Falcons 3 Goals by -D. McMillan; R. Kuehn 2, G. Tsagrinos West Rouge Spurs 1 Ajax Canadian Tire 2 Goals by -M. Howitt; J. Edwards, R. Lake J.B. Hotspurs 3 Cascade 40's 4 Goals by -W. Moran, B. Crann; R. Bradley 3, P. Aiken Ajax Advertisers 0 Bay Ridges Wanderers 2 Goals by -J. Catney 2 Pickering 2 West Rouge Raiders 9 LEAGUE STANDINGS P W D L Pts. C ascade 40's 14 11 2 1 24 REGISTRATION FOR HOCKEY - RINGETTE FIGURE SKATING Mon. to Sat. Sept. 8 to Oct. 2 i� 9 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. BirthCertificate Are equired For Ringette & Hockey CONTACT Tom Quinn—Arena Manager 839-1136 or 942-2760 FEE $16.00/CHILD FOR 26 WEEKS 45.00/FAMILY FOR 26 WEEKS ------------------- REGISTRATION FORM NAME DATE OF BIRTH ADDRESS PHONE NUMBER West Rouge DISTRICT Bay Ridges Brougham etc. LAST YEAR'S TEAM OFFICE USE & AGE GROUP IND. FAM. B.C. Page 12 THE POST Thurs. Sept. 3rd, 1970 �S�t�PT�s P.M.A. 'REALTY LIMITED cAS„FOR Y FRti FIRST & SECOND MORTGAGES ARRANGED, BOUGHT & SOLD OUR �lpM 1308 BASELINE ROAD 942-2611 839-5533 N1 EMBERS OF(th-east corner of Liverpool THETORONTO REALESTToronto 699'1 E BOARD -- PHOTO M.L.S. 11 i r 40 �, y r = � s,►t _-T&-Ctill 1 UAV' ST. :j_ - ra Everybody Loves A CIQwn Taking time uut d"r r,.g c - •fest Shure Recreation Day parade recently are the P.M.A. Realty Mascot, Igor, and Ray %'int. Igor is an Irish rerrit•r owned by Ken Gedge and our friendly clown is a salesman with P.M:A. (Photo - Bob Kipferl Sid Ballik Plumbing and Heating Contractor All types of plumbing 6 sheet metal work, Industrial Commercial Residential 24 Hour Service P.O. Box 11, Pickering, 839-2359 Kinsmen Club Of Bay Ridges INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS Bay Ridges Kinsmen and Kinettes official- ly launch the 1970-71 Kin year with a joint installation dinner and dance Friday, Sept. 4th at Annandale. Deputy - Governor Doug Gurr will officiate. Del's Auto Service 6096 Kingston Road Highland Creek ( Behind Ted's Restaurant) GENERAL REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES OF CARS & TRUCKS We guarantee complete satisfaction - all work done by licensed mechanics 284-8075 284-8075 M 1:11a Professionol Directory::1 OPTOMETRISTS CHIROPRACTORS J.S. Pollock, O.D. Optometrist IGA Bay Ridges Shopping Centre 839-4644 Daily 9:30-6 Thur. to 9 Closed Monday You Get The Most W ith The POST Edward Demchuk D.C. Doctor of Chiropractic 905 Grenoble Blvd BAY RIDGES 839-4723 ROY C. KI ELY Chiropractor 305 Port Union Rd. Fanfare Plaza 282-6750 W. O. BENNETT General Insurance Associate R.J. Bosley FOR THE BEST IN ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE 942-4155 Telephone 839-4026 On Highway No. 2, One Mile East Of Pickering KIN BINGO The Kinsmen Bingo runs for three more Wednesdays at Annan- dale. Why not give it a whirl and win some Instant cash? Early Bird games at 7:45. FAMILY FUN DAY Plans are being formulated for the 2nd annual Bay Ridges Kinsmen Family Fun Day. The- date will be announced shortly. NEW MEMBERS Bay Ridges Kinsmen are always ready to welcome new mem- bers. If you're between 21 and 40 and inter- ested in learning more about this exciting all - Canadian young men's service club, phone Kin Eric Gale at 839- 2473. Socia! Worker Chosen by Carol Hughes Chairman Deputy Reeve George Ashe told the Parks and Re- creation Committee this week the Township has been successful in obtaining the full-time services of Greg McClare who will head up the newly -formed Ajax -Pickering Social Planning Council. Mr. Ashe said the area was very fortun- ate to get Mr. McClare whose background and experience are of the highest calibre. He stresses Mr. McClare would not be "a case worker” but will direct the people to the various agen- cies available and pointed out it will be necessary for Mr. McClare to "feel his way" to begin with. Addition Approved Ontario County School Board this week approved the ad- dition of four rooms to the Lincoln Ave. Public School in Pick- ering Village. George Roberts, Dir- ector of Education ad- vised the Trustees oc- cupancy would be Sept- ember, 1971 provided all the approval dates are met. Currently there are two por- tables at the location and a third one will be added for this for the coming school year. Mr. Roberts said this new addition will elim- inate the need for such portables in future based on their project- ed estimate of students for the next few years. At C.N.E. Glen Glaspell and sons of Oshawa won first place in the Can- ada Quarter Staple in the fleece competition at the C.N.E. Agri- cultural Show. The same outfit won fourth and fifth place In the Canada Coarse section, while another Oshawan, R. Hepburn placed third. Ajax Pickering Minor Soccer BY Half Time The Imperials sponsored by Ford Bennett Imperial Esso Furnace Service have clinched the Atom league. With two games still to play they are undefeated and are hoping to complete the double of League and Cup winners with a per- fect record. West Rouge held a most successful soccer jubilee day on Sunday with about 200 residents and friends turning out to enjoy the fun. An exhibition game between the Red Devils and Yellow Flyers ended with the Reds being the victors --2 to 0 on a pair of goals by J. Jessup. After this opener the finals of the West Rouge Atom Cup were played between the Green Hornets and Blue Bombers and a goal each by G. Deighan and K. Turquotte gave the big prize to the league winning Green Hornets. Deputy Reeve Ashe and Councillor Kruger were there toenjoy the frolics and presented the cups and awards to the winning team and players. Our Ladies Auxillary are holding a dance on Saturday September 26th at the Union Hall, Ajax. Tickets are $3 per couple and can be .obtained by calling 942-0948, 839-1456 or 839- 2433 or from any of the Association members. Get your tickets early and don't miss out on a good night of entertainment. SOCCER STATISTICS Mosquitos Pickering O --Cascade 40's 7 (P. Aiken 2, J. King 2, A. Turner 1, N. Shanks 1 and D. Thomp- son 1.) Falcons 1 (A. Dietrich) --Canadian Tire 5 (L. Carrigan 3, D. Crilley 1, J. Edwards 1). West Rouge Spurs 4 (W. Carroll, K. Burns, F. Moger, M. Howitt)--Alax Advertisers 0. West Rouge Astros 1(D. Turquotte)--Bay Ridges Wanderers 5 (Scorers not available). STANDINGS P W T L Fts. Cascade 40's 13 10 2 1 22 Ajax Canadian Tire 13 9 3 1 21 J.B. Hotspurs 13 9 1 3 19 West Rouge Spurs 1.1 6 5 3 17 West Rouge Astros 13 6 2 3 14 West Shore Falcons 14 6 1 7 13 Bay Ridges Wanderers 14 4 3 7 11 Ajax Advertisers 13 2 2 9 6 West Rouge Raiders 10 2 1 7 5 Pickering 13 1 0 12 2 Pee Wee Ajax Legion 8 (B. Bradley 3, J. Hoskins 3, J. Grilley 1, S. Aiken 1). --West Rouge Alcons 3 (M. Lenard, W. Nicholson, G. McFarren). Bantam Oshawa Old Country Club 2 -Bay Ridges 606's 0. Junior A St. Andrews Scarborough 3 --Ajax Kiwanis 0. Atom Imperials 3 (F. Amann, J. Connolly, M. Adams) - West Shore Glens 0. Travellers 4 (G. Foxwell 2, C. Berry, L. Hurl- burt)--F.H. Rovers 2 (N. Fisher, A. Lay). West Shore Albion 6 (D. Smith 3, G. Green 2, S. Sutton) --Ajax Kinsman 2 (I. Day). Bay Ridges Rangers 6 (F. Hudson 5, R. Curr)- -Ajax Lions 0. STANDINGS P W �= ti V� L Pts. Imperials 12 12 i r 40 �, y r = � s,►t _-T&-Ctill 1 UAV' ST. :j_ - ra Everybody Loves A CIQwn Taking time uut d"r r,.g c - •fest Shure Recreation Day parade recently are the P.M.A. Realty Mascot, Igor, and Ray %'int. Igor is an Irish rerrit•r owned by Ken Gedge and our friendly clown is a salesman with P.M:A. (Photo - Bob Kipferl Sid Ballik Plumbing and Heating Contractor All types of plumbing 6 sheet metal work, Industrial Commercial Residential 24 Hour Service P.O. Box 11, Pickering, 839-2359 Kinsmen Club Of Bay Ridges INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS Bay Ridges Kinsmen and Kinettes official- ly launch the 1970-71 Kin year with a joint installation dinner and dance Friday, Sept. 4th at Annandale. Deputy - Governor Doug Gurr will officiate. Del's Auto Service 6096 Kingston Road Highland Creek ( Behind Ted's Restaurant) GENERAL REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES OF CARS & TRUCKS We guarantee complete satisfaction - all work done by licensed mechanics 284-8075 284-8075 M 1:11a Professionol Directory::1 OPTOMETRISTS CHIROPRACTORS J.S. Pollock, O.D. Optometrist IGA Bay Ridges Shopping Centre 839-4644 Daily 9:30-6 Thur. to 9 Closed Monday You Get The Most W ith The POST Edward Demchuk D.C. Doctor of Chiropractic 905 Grenoble Blvd BAY RIDGES 839-4723 ROY C. KI ELY Chiropractor 305 Port Union Rd. Fanfare Plaza 282-6750 W. O. BENNETT General Insurance Associate R.J. Bosley FOR THE BEST IN ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE 942-4155 Telephone 839-4026 On Highway No. 2, One Mile East Of Pickering KIN BINGO The Kinsmen Bingo runs for three more Wednesdays at Annan- dale. Why not give it a whirl and win some Instant cash? Early Bird games at 7:45. FAMILY FUN DAY Plans are being formulated for the 2nd annual Bay Ridges Kinsmen Family Fun Day. The- date will be announced shortly. NEW MEMBERS Bay Ridges Kinsmen are always ready to welcome new mem- bers. If you're between 21 and 40 and inter- ested in learning more about this exciting all - Canadian young men's service club, phone Kin Eric Gale at 839- 2473. Socia! Worker Chosen by Carol Hughes Chairman Deputy Reeve George Ashe told the Parks and Re- creation Committee this week the Township has been successful in obtaining the full-time services of Greg McClare who will head up the newly -formed Ajax -Pickering Social Planning Council. Mr. Ashe said the area was very fortun- ate to get Mr. McClare whose background and experience are of the highest calibre. He stresses Mr. McClare would not be "a case worker” but will direct the people to the various agen- cies available and pointed out it will be necessary for Mr. McClare to "feel his way" to begin with. Addition Approved Ontario County School Board this week approved the ad- dition of four rooms to the Lincoln Ave. Public School in Pick- ering Village. George Roberts, Dir- ector of Education ad- vised the Trustees oc- cupancy would be Sept- ember, 1971 provided all the approval dates are met. Currently there are two por- tables at the location and a third one will be added for this for the coming school year. Mr. Roberts said this new addition will elim- inate the need for such portables in future based on their project- ed estimate of students for the next few years. At C.N.E. Glen Glaspell and sons of Oshawa won first place in the Can- ada Quarter Staple in the fleece competition at the C.N.E. Agri- cultural Show. The same outfit won fourth and fifth place In the Canada Coarse section, while another Oshawan, R. Hepburn placed third. Ajax Pickering Minor Soccer BY Half Time The Imperials sponsored by Ford Bennett Imperial Esso Furnace Service have clinched the Atom league. With two games still to play they are undefeated and are hoping to complete the double of League and Cup winners with a per- fect record. West Rouge held a most successful soccer jubilee day on Sunday with about 200 residents and friends turning out to enjoy the fun. An exhibition game between the Red Devils and Yellow Flyers ended with the Reds being the victors --2 to 0 on a pair of goals by J. Jessup. After this opener the finals of the West Rouge Atom Cup were played between the Green Hornets and Blue Bombers and a goal each by G. Deighan and K. Turquotte gave the big prize to the league winning Green Hornets. Deputy Reeve Ashe and Councillor Kruger were there toenjoy the frolics and presented the cups and awards to the winning team and players. Our Ladies Auxillary are holding a dance on Saturday September 26th at the Union Hall, Ajax. Tickets are $3 per couple and can be .obtained by calling 942-0948, 839-1456 or 839- 2433 or from any of the Association members. Get your tickets early and don't miss out on a good night of entertainment. SOCCER STATISTICS Mosquitos Pickering O --Cascade 40's 7 (P. Aiken 2, J. King 2, A. Turner 1, N. Shanks 1 and D. Thomp- son 1.) Falcons 1 (A. Dietrich) --Canadian Tire 5 (L. Carrigan 3, D. Crilley 1, J. Edwards 1). West Rouge Spurs 4 (W. Carroll, K. Burns, F. Moger, M. Howitt)--Alax Advertisers 0. West Rouge Astros 1(D. Turquotte)--Bay Ridges Wanderers 5 (Scorers not available). STANDINGS P W T L Fts. Cascade 40's 13 10 2 1 22 Ajax Canadian Tire 13 9 3 1 21 J.B. Hotspurs 13 9 1 3 19 West Rouge Spurs 1.1 6 5 3 17 West Rouge Astros 13 6 2 3 14 West Shore Falcons 14 6 1 7 13 Bay Ridges Wanderers 14 4 3 7 11 Ajax Advertisers 13 2 2 9 6 West Rouge Raiders 10 2 1 7 5 Pickering 13 1 0 12 2 Pee Wee Ajax Legion 8 (B. Bradley 3, J. Hoskins 3, J. Grilley 1, S. Aiken 1). --West Rouge Alcons 3 (M. Lenard, W. Nicholson, G. McFarren). Bantam Oshawa Old Country Club 2 -Bay Ridges 606's 0. Junior A St. Andrews Scarborough 3 --Ajax Kiwanis 0. Atom Imperials 3 (F. Amann, J. Connolly, M. Adams) - West Shore Glens 0. Travellers 4 (G. Foxwell 2, C. Berry, L. Hurl- burt)--F.H. Rovers 2 (N. Fisher, A. Lay). West Shore Albion 6 (D. Smith 3, G. Green 2, S. Sutton) --Ajax Kinsman 2 (I. Day). Bay Ridges Rangers 6 (F. Hudson 5, R. Curr)- -Ajax Lions 0. STANDINGS P W T L Pts. Imperials 12 12 0 0 24 Ajax Lions 12 8 0 4 16 Bay Ridges Rangers 12 6 1 5 13 Ajax Kinsmen 12 5 2 5 12 Travellers 12 3 3 6 9 F.H. Rovers 12 4 0 8 8 West Shore Albion 12 3 1 8 7 West Shore Glens 12 3 1 8 7 (Imperials clinched League Cup.) West Rouge Atom Cup Green Hornets 2 (G. Deighan, K. Turquotte)- Blue Bombers 0. Exhibition Game --Red Devils 2 (J. Jessup) -- Yellow Flyers 0. Atom Challenge Cup Ajax Kinsmen 4 (I. Day 2, D. Byrne, D. Roberts) - West Rouge Blue Bombers 0. Imperials 1 --West Shore Albion 0. Albion for- feit game, unable to field team. Semi Final Draw Imperials vs. Ajax Kinsmen and Ajax Lions vs. Bay Ridges Rangers