titled D will t ery out try"‘, enue, aure} Gun Aunâ€" t of axâ€" the Ors of the In ALADDIN‘S MAGICIAN was portrayed by Pat Boultbee. Although every part was excellently skated, the solo of Beverley Barclay, right, was ‘a little extra special‘. _ bou in onl . se e ho ininnm im oi i when the Skating Club presented its ninth annual ice in the arena. A fullâ€"house thrilled to the performance amateur skaters, from four years old and up, as they st story of Aladdin and his lamp on ice. Here Aladdin ( more) performs a spin. ALADDIN VISITED WESTON last Air, Sea and Land York Travel Bureau Book Now for 1959 To Avoid Disappointment WE GLADLY wors And Srupy HILTON CONSTRUCTION 1043 Weston RoRd Reservations RO 6â€"1777 WM. G. BEECH, M.P @ravelling â€" Culverts ROAD BUILDING LAND CLEARING SATURDAY Children 2.15â€" 4.15â€"15¢ Adults _ 8.15â€"10.15â€"50¢ Ashbee Bros. 8.45â€"Air Force vs. Concord Tavern 10.00 Moffats vs. ETHE WESTON Senior Hockey League will be in Action ... Friday, Mar. 6 1.30 P.M. Keep This Date Open There Are ONLY 3 MORE Dates In The ‘ Regular Schedule 1 ed to the performance of these s old and up, as they staged the on ice. Here Aladdin (Don Gilâ€" Friday _and Saturday evenings Gen. Adm. 50¢ Students 25¢ PUBLIC SKATING DeHavilland carnival | Acetone was spilled on the table tops; a knife was seraped on the finish of the chairs and desks. The comfort of the seat design and the stability of the units were tested by the memâ€" bers of the committee. . The manufacturers submitted products made of plastic, fiberâ€" glass, wood, laminated plastic, wood resin and wood. Some were of uniform construction; some were of combinations of the various materials. Previously, the committee disâ€" cussed the advisability of using metal or synthetic materials for classroom desks and chairs. It was decided that maintenance costs would be substantially lower on furniture made of the recentlyâ€"invented materials and finishes. _ They were to have appeared before the committee at 7 p.m. At 8 p.m. the committee adâ€" journed to the cafeteria where salesmen from nine furniture manufacturing firms demonstraâ€" ted the durability of their reâ€" spective products. ’ The representatives were to ‘meet with the committee to disâ€" cuss school site requirements arising from the added number of pupils who will need accomoâ€" dation when the firm constructs a proposed 12,000 population subâ€". division. \ While representatives for Inâ€" dustrial Leaseholds Limited waitâ€" ed three and a half hours, memâ€" bers of the property committee of the North York Board of Eduâ€" cation tested some twenty. samâ€" ples of classroom furniture last Monday evening. ‘ After two hours of deliberaâ€" I & e Last October an exciting event took place on CBC Radio when a ~_ _ new series of one hour programs «@ started. Its planners called it simplyâ€"‘‘Project ‘59", , & @ For full details of the many other ext#ling things happening on CBC Radio and on CBC Teleyision, may we suggest you subscribe to CBC Times at the nummq:mm-â€"wmhn‘m- $8.00). Write CBC Times, Box 500, Terminal‘ A* Toronto, Ont. for a sample capy. radio : 5 ie s e o e o es e en immediately took advantage of the opportunity. Project "59 is alert. Recently, an apportunity arose to present a special program on Field Marshal the Viscount nont.qmuy. Project ‘59‘s planners !ts purpose was twoâ€"foldâ€"to keep Canadians informed and to do it in an entertaining way. Since its inception Project ‘59 has won plaudits from both press and public. ' @ Red Army choir (especially arranged for CBC‘s Project ‘59). ® 1t has even featured programs @ consisting aimost entirely & Dt sounat presentation contributing to the exciting new sound of CBC Radio. Be sure you stay tuned to your local CBC network station. Project ‘59 is another CBC Since that first radio program (which:explored the world of radio) Project ‘59 has gone to Gaza to visit Canadian troopsâ€" looked in on the revolt in Cubaâ€" talked to Canadians about their leisure time activitiesâ€"told the story of West Germanyâ€"gone to a concert by the famous Last October an exciting event took place on CBC Radio when a new series of one hour programs started. Its planners called it simplyâ€"‘‘Project ‘59", A nation grows: During 1958‘s first quarter 158,306 babies were born in Canada. Inflation at home harms Canaâ€" dian goods abroad by pricing them out of the market. Canada, despite the fantastic growth of manufacturing in the last two decades, still is the world‘s largest net importer of fully manufactured goods. _ Committee members stated that adding the maintenance cost to the cheaper wooden equipâ€" ment brings theâ€" cost in some cases to more than the purchase price of the new equipment. This virtually gives fifteen years of ‘free use‘ of the new equipment, one spokesman for the Board exâ€" plained. The more modern units under consideration cost from $14.85 to $19.45 for chairâ€"desk combinâ€" ations. They are conditionally guaranteed for twenty years. Board officials claimed that the original cost of the oldâ€"style wooden furniture was $12.00 per unit. After five years, an addiâ€" tional cost was needed for refinâ€" ishing and reconditioning each unit. tion, three degigns were chosen to be installed in the new junior and senior high schools on a trial basis. TRENCHING SEPTIC TANKS BEDS INSTALLED and WATER LINES STAN MAXEY Woodbridgeâ€"ATias 8â€"1201 They have also asked that inâ€" formation on local firms who supplied AVRO be forwarded to members.of Parliament in Otâ€" ‘‘They do hot want to see any evictions or hunger," Reeve Wafâ€" fle continued. "They have reâ€" quested Council â€"to provide them with an accurate account of the overall effect in the district." A resolution calling for moraâ€" toriums on all mortgages conâ€" trolled by NHA and Central Housing was endorsed by the members of Parliament. "The MPs were very concernâ€" ed about the situation," he reâ€" ported. "They will do all they can to help those aftected." The Council met in an emerâ€" gency meeting with John Hamâ€" ilton, York West member of Parliament, and Margaret Aitken, representative of Yorkâ€"Humber, last Friday to discuss the situâ€" ation, the Reeve stated % Local members of Parliament are attempting to alleviate the suffering caused by AVRO layâ€" offs by calling for action at the Federal level, Etobicoke Reeve Ozzie Waffle announced at a meeting of the Council Monddy. Council, MPs Meet, Discuss AVRO Layotffs HAWMAN MOTORS & ELECTRIC LIMITED tawa, he adqed "A report on the matter can be expected in two or three weeks," he concluded. iheurk What do these central facts mean for Canada? A man would have to be a prophet to be sure, but some conclusions are pretly bers, size and accuracy and the ICMB threat may be suppleâ€" mentéd by submarineâ€"launched missiles," Prime Minister Dieâ€" fenbaker declared in the House of Commmons, Against this growing threat there is no defence "By the middle of 1962 the threat from the interâ€"continental ballistic missile will undoubtedâ€" ly be greatly enhanced in numâ€" The real direct danger to Caâ€" nada comes from two sources, the interâ€"continental ballistic missile and the intermediate range ballistic missile fired from beneath the waters of the ocean by a submarine off either coast or in Hudson Bay. The number one and most brutal fact is that after the exâ€" penditure of nearly $16 billion since the end of the last war on defence we stang virtually defenceless. Our only shield is the power of the U.S. and the UXK. to retaliate in kind. The Arrow, developed at a cost of $400,000,000 since 1953, was designed to meet the threat of the manned bomber. If it has been made obsolete because the threat from the manned bomber is fast declining, then the Boâ€" mare groundâ€"toâ€"airâ€"missile, not even fully developed, is obsoâ€" lescent for the same reason. Through the smoke and‘ fire that have billowed up after the plane‘s plunge to oblivion, persâ€" pective was hard to find. But some hard facts are fast emergâ€" ing from the ashes. OTTAWA â€" The hludwd'fl:fl that looms so large on the of the A. V. Roe plants at Maiâ€" ton spells out more than just the death of the supersonic Arrow â€" and a lot of national pride as well. It spells out farâ€"reachâ€" ing and even more important changes in store for Canada poâ€" litically, militarily and econo» mically. - WOODBRIDGE =â€"~ PHONE~AT. 8â€"1051 the quick. 2:‘ Report From Ottawa|>>" Special To The Times and Guide The only real hope for susâ€" taining the industry in its preâ€" sent form depends on the U.S. This is what comes closest 'fo touching the, national pride to | The $800,000,000 or more which the government plans to spend on defence equipment, inâ€" cluding construction of the Boâ€" marc bases, seven Restigouche class destroyer escorts, the Argus aircraft for submarine bunting and the new Caribou aircraft for army transport will help but is not sufficient to maintain the great industry that has been built up around Canaâ€" dian â€" designed a n d developed equipment like the Arrow. The Arrow is the witness thï¬t‘ the day. is past when Canada‘ can afford to design and proâ€" duce its own weapons solely fori its own use. s and technicians that have bee welded together? The prospect for a sharp cut back in the it dustry over the next few yea and loss of many of the exper to the U.S. f iar defence in the missile age and the same may in time prove of its role in Europe. It follows that it will speak with a proâ€" gressively ‘weaker voice in the councils of Norad and of Nato. What about the complex deâ€" fence production giant that has been built up in Canada at inâ€" finite expense and highly skilled Canada will have an everâ€" dimil_lls_hing role in continental under U.S. lock and key and be iuud only with U.S. consent. _ If, ~as Defence Minister Pearkes has maintained, some interceptors will be required fo; the defence of the North Ameriâ€" can continent for a long time to eome, then it is probable that U.S. fighter squadrons will be moved into Canada to operate under the Pinetree radar line end Sage electronic control sysâ€" but their firepower â€" the nuâ€" clear‘ warheads â€" will remain y A,.anada‘s defence more +and|j; ; mmimbbedmm.w has by the U.S. Guided missiles will U.s be acquired for its forces 08 | d i g lï¬un sea â€"and dl‘ from ‘the UB: | con THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1959 _ scientists, engineers have been prospect is in the inâ€" few years , The prime minister has mng much of the fact that the Avig |Company was givenâ€"lots of ims. dications that the progrant would be cancelled and sug« gested it should have been take ing steps months ago to meet‘ the day. But could it really? The company had a contract, an obligation to build 37 Arrows for the government and that contract had to be fulfilled until~ such time as it was cancelled. When that happened what else could the company do but notify its employees there was no longer any work for them to perform. After the contract was.. cancelled the government enterâ€" ed discussions with company . cificials to seek alternative emâ€" ployment for its workers. Why were discussions of this nature. not carried on weeks and ‘ months before in an effort to find a solution? tencebu.rdcnlllm" ¢ g the south and its b is : minishing. The U.S. has already um:gm to pick up t ‘of the ,000,000 cost. rew Pinetree ‘ radar stations, and installing the Sage system, _ Surely it is unreasonmble fg Canadians to demand that t» addition the U.S. should spend the money for equipment in Caâ€" nada when it is facing a seri unemployment problem in own country and particular among its aircraft industry. .. What of the decision of # Diefenbaker government cancel the Arrow? Most of ti critics do not take issue wi~ what the government has don but the way it has done it. The; are on safe ground. â€" In most instances, the attrer against â€"the gï¬. is‘ blind . and has not carried the same deâ€" dian .companies consideration on d Even Prime Mi baker admitted to that ‘he was not he was pressing‘ t U.S. is a promise to share of {defence is ‘apparent : really c was pressing‘ the U.S. to do ‘Cet‘ot builaing ) cost radar stations, wo Bomare bases he Sage system, demand that in .S. should spen@ equipment in Caâ€" s facing a seri problem in ind particular aft industry. decision of fl‘ vernment to ow? Most of t)! take issue wi+ nment has done, has done it. The‘ ound. inister has ma ct that ‘the Avig givenâ€"lots of inâ€".