P e un e COs C CCC °C e 3 Migh School audiâ€" ~'\M .’::.:u- n by ' th.‘hd“ g In the receiving line were Sister Marietta, Superior; Bister Mary < nhmiuuumm.m 5 of Our Lady|with the rich lighting and Rev. C, Iredale of Michâ€"|which decorated the stage. Pete ael Migh Sehool, representâ€"\Dymont â€"and his orchestra proâ€" ing J; B. Mullines; Mr. vided the music. and Mrs. D. J. MeDougall; Mr.! Miss Margaret Dickinson, grade -dlno.m;mumm,mcmwmamm Anne MeKentic and Paul Brown; and presented with a bouguet of Miss Barbara Jaske and James red roses. Miss Judy Marchildon, Kerins. \grade 19, and Miss Gail .Keefe, Wisinhctizns wasse alunued and|wrade 11 were chosen as Prinâ€" _ Decorations were planned and grade made by the students of grades cesses. 12 and 13 under the charge of Lun Mise Karen Meno and Miss Margâ€"iteria & aret Phillips, Royal blue eurtains sumed Burnhamthorpe Addition Slated For September Burnhamthorpe Collegiate now is in the horme stretch on its conâ€" version to & eomiposite school that will, in September, offer technical ewnu to Etobicoke students for the first time as well as general and commercial eourses, ‘The Etobicoke Board of Educaâ€" tion opened tenders for a 24â€"room addition to the school and awarded the contract to build it to Redâ€" fermn Comstruction Company. Its price of $1,187,000 wasâ€"$1,000 higher than that of the low bidâ€" der, Cooper Construction, but Redâ€" fern officials said they could comâ€" plete the adition by September 1, whereas the other company said its completion date would be in widâ€"December. Dominionâ€"provincial grants will eover the capital costs of the building. The addition will include 10 elassrooms, two laboratories, a business machine room, two typâ€" ing rooms, a merchandising room, a commetrcial art room, an indusâ€" trial chemistry room, electricity, electronics &n 4 autoâ€"mechanics shops, a drafting room and two oecupational training shops. In the commercial mï¬on'l Raviour in aMY MNW EMMIEI ERPERCCT courses will be offered in merch. if any usually shy animal such as a andising ahd accountancy, as well| fox, attacks a human or big dog. The as secretarial work and typing. Inme warden or agricultural repreâ€", sentative should be notified in such For the 700 EtobicGke StUdENES cases. | who will start technical education| s | in the township this Fall, there! _A great deal of publicity is given to is a great deal of planning being|food fads that may prove useless or done by the school board, the adâ€" even harmful. The reducing plan preâ€" visory vocational committee (made|scribed by the family doctor is the up of four board members andisafest to follow. If it is a matter of four citizens representing bothijust a few extra pounds of fat cut management and labour) and the out betweenâ€"meal snacks, rich desserts edâ€"ordinator of technical education,| and follow Canda‘s Food Guide sugâ€" Frank Mitchell. | gestions for balanced meals. WEST GROVE RAMBLER 3300 BLOOR $T. W. at Islington BE 97321 » And Silver Theme Annual Winter Whir! MONDAY TUBSDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY SATVRDAY The Etobicoke Township Public Library announces the addition of a second bookmobile and a new timeâ€"table. We Sell R A M B L ER S Antioch & Storey Ridgeway §t. (Bloordale ) Benbow & Sturton (Valleyfield School) Chapman & Brentside (Westmount Scheol Olef Agor Plaza Reyal York Plaza Therntrest Ploza ETOBICOKE PUBLIC LIBRARY â€" BE 3â€"2105 Renforth & Burnhamthorpe Efingate & Sanctbury Fairhaven School Wineott & Molin® Culnan Ave. (Queensland School) Gien Agér Plas® Bergamat & Resdale Blvd. (Rexlington Hgts Catperdown & Bridesbury (Westway Park) Waterbury & Clérion (Westway West ) Princass AnM® & Kingsfold Court Mountbatten & Fremont (Humber Heights | Elmiea School Cloverdale School Cloverdale Mail Albion Gardens School Renforth & Peocock §t. Andr®ws & York Rd. 1mm) Amblesid® & Chartwell ( sehee!) Briarerest School Westdeans Pork (Wesitdeans School) Montersy Drive (Bedumends Mgh School) Meadowbank & Keane Muncey Aveâ€" (The Elms) Martingreve Shopping Centre Thistlstown Plasa » Martingrovre & $wan (Wadgewssd School) Kingsway & Anglesey Sunrow & Prentice Court EPE OECCC ge oll Lunch was served in the cafeâ€" Margâ€"‘teria at 11.80 and dancing was reâ€" irtaing sumed until 1 p.m. tâ€"room‘| ‘The advisoryâ€"vocational commitâ€" varded ‘tee has recommended that an openâ€" ; Redâ€" house be held in each composite y. Its sehool (Thistletown Collegiate is $1,000 |the other) and invitations sbnt to w bidâ€" key persons in Etobicoke indusâ€" t Redâ€"‘try. It also recontmended that Mr. 4 comâ€"!Mitchell join local chapter of the ber 1, Professional Engineers to develop y said lisison with its members and the be in industries they represent. He is also to contact local labour groups. s will The committee reâ€"elected school f the trustee, B. B. Williams, a proâ€" ‘fessional engineer, as its 1962 42 in chairman. EFFECTIVE FEBRVARY 12th, 1962 draped the walls, with ailver were suspended over« head. The room assumed a Surâ€" priging richness with the silver and blue decorations, contrasting with the rich lighting and flowers lmmudmmhfl Dymont ~and his orchestra proâ€" i Rabies, a disease of animals. can ib‘ transmitted to humans if there is contact with the animal‘s saliva. Domestic animals can be infected and people in rural areas are advised to ‘keep their dogs under control and to | watch for signs of abnormal beâ€" lhlviout in any wild animal, especially ‘if any usually shy animal such as a While much work has déalt with decisions about what should be taught and the equipping of shops, there is also an effort being made to mequaint local industries with the type of education being ofâ€" fered. A Selling Job For further information call blue, bails and and â€" decorated By MARGARET SCULLY y |_Our senior citizens have done so. lmuch lately and plannéd so much, that it makes the heads of the .junicr citizens swim to hear about ‘it. They have just completed & \new, standard size stage across the end of the gecond floor auditorium and a mixed choir is in training under a qualified instructor to proâ€" vide entertainment at the monthly meetings. The billiard table, donated by the Humber Valley Kiwanis Club has arrived and is now in use. Also, well under way is the cribbage tournament, which takes place every Wednesday afternoon. Saturday morning from 9 a.m.‘t"(;;r;l; to 12 p.m. finds the men extremely | gy;p: busy in the woodworking t’wpi _ class. Mr. L. Hicks, Industrial Art| teacher for Etobicoke Collegiate u\Fou the instructor. A definite program of coâ€"ordination with other érafts| A' has been mapped out. Tables as| bases for ccramic work and frames for baskets are to be produced aalnou an aid for the annual bazaar. | h. Ed. Downs, a member of the club, has agreed to instruct learnâ€". ers in wood sarving. Two nblui have just recently been donated 10.00â€" 11:00â€" 11:30â€" 10.00â€"11:00 11:30â€" 115 1:30â€" 1:15 11 10:00~â€"11.00 10:00=11:18 11.30â€" 100 11:45â€" 1:15 3:00â€" 5.00 11:30â€" 3:30â€" 6:30â€" 9:30=10:30 10:00=11,00 11.00â€"1200 11:30â€" 148 8:30â€" 630 030 1:30= 330 3.00â€" 800 4.00â€" 5.00 11:15 1:15 1:15 8:30 8:30 1:18 115 by the Firefighters Association ‘and the Kiwanis. Tools, also, were ‘a gift of the Kiwanis. For the Senior Citizens Club, \Don Forfar represents the club ‘woodworking committee and Stan ‘Bailey the liaison director. Four More Rooms ‘At Dixon Grove Board Decides On. Monday afternoons, the woâ€" men of the Senior Citizens Club are busily engaged making cancer dressings for the Etobicoke unit of the Canadian Cancer Society. Amyone is welcome to participate in the worthy work. The bridge tournament, which i8 .1 hospital and withdrawal from played on Fridays, is now im i!® people and from the community fourth week and the number of nad been part of your illness. ~ntestants has grown and con(in-‘ When these things are considerâ€" ues to grow. Winners of the last‘ed’ the plan of a number of people tournament were Mr. & Mrs. Sfml“n this district to form a chapter Dixon Grove school is slated to get a fourâ€"room addition in Sepâ€" tember, but, it is uncertain wheâ€" ther this will be built on one or two floors. 4 If built in accordance with the| Ontario Fire Marshall‘s regulaâ€" tions (and it has to be eligible| for provincial grants) the addition| ‘would have to include a third! stairease to the school to accomâ€" modate one extra classroom planâ€" ned upstairs. The value of this ‘would be lost thrée years from mow when further classrooms will likely be added upstairs and, in "u:cordnnce with fire regulations, |staircases built at either end of "the corridor running past them, The Etobicoke school board‘s business administrator, D. L. Emâ€" ond, asked if this number of stairâ€" cases is necessary in view of modâ€" ern, fireproof materials umed in construction, and trustee Sydney White, said that "speaking as an MEâ€"6â€"2461 32 TANGIERS ROAD N O W ! HAVE THAT SECOND BATHROOM C. G. BROUGHTON LTD. SPRING! FOR DEPENDABLE SERVICE CALL ME. 6â€"2461 PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTORS COMPLETEâ€" HOME RENOVATIONS & REPAIRS WHY WAIT FOR . . . . Canadian Mental Health Chapter Discussed For Etobicoke District If you‘ve ever spent a week or| two in hospital, you begin to get, an isolatedâ€"fromâ€"theâ€"world feeling.| You don‘t have to stretch your| imagination to realize how intensiâ€"| fed this feeling would be if you* spent two or three years in a hol-. pital. ' Add that the hospital was a menâ€" tal hospital and withdrawal from people and from the community had been part of your illness. of the Canadian Mental Health Asâ€" sociation as a preliminary step t6 setting up a social rehabilitation centre for exâ€"mental patients, beâ€" gins to make sense. A chapter could have many other functions, but the need for a reâ€" habilitation centre prompted sevâ€" eral of Etobicoke‘s White Cross visitors (to mental patients) to initiate this move. At a meeting, held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Chadwick, 28 Koos Road, January 25, over 20 people heard Mrs. Eleanot Fogâ€" den of the Canadian Mental Health Association outline the work of & #ocial rehabilitation centre. "Basically," she said, "the proâ€" gram is designed to help people who have been under paychiatric care by providing a sheltered aoâ€" cial environment in which they can veâ€"learn skills in social relationâ€" ships engineer," he felt two staircases should be adequate The board decided to ask the architect and officials to consider reâ€"designing the addition to one sthrey. Slated for expanded library faâ€" cilities â€" this â€" fall â€" are â€" Mumber Heights, Douglas Park and Sir Adam Beck schools. it a week or| "Some of these people have lost that begin to get the ability even to walk into & ru-+ï¬nt world feeling. taurant and order a meal. Getting |it‘s | stretch your themselves across town on pnblicl St how intensiâ€" transportation is even a chllleng!."aflllt ! _ °+ mesoverniee _____ â€"f Double Bonspiels In a White Cross centre, it is necessary to have & professional director to plan the program, volâ€" unteers who will offer the benefit of their social skills and healthy personalities. "The objective is to enable the members to achieve sufficient perâ€" sonal and social growth so they can move on to more notmal assotiaâ€" tions in the community." themselves acroks town on pnblicl She told the Etobicoke group‘‘ transportation is even a challenge." |that included representatives of 1‘ In a White Cross centre, it is}service clubs, township officialdom, | necessary to have & professional|the medical profession, the clergy,| director to plan the program, volâ€"|social workers, White Cross visitâ€" unteers who will offer the benefit|ors, that in such a centre the proâ€" of their social skills and healthy|gram ¢ould not be casually preâ€" personalities. pared because the exâ€"patients don‘t | "The objective is to enable the|attend each activity regularly md.i‘ members to achieve sufficient perâ€" as a result, the leader is faced with | sonal and social growth so they can a relatively new group each meet-i move on to more normal assotiaâ€"/ing and must be "oft her toes to| tions in the community." ‘make the program meaningful w} Mrs. Fogden outlined the proâ€"‘&t.hem." | gram of a similar centre on St.| Mrs, Fogden explained a dl-pter‘ George street and asked one of its of the Canadian Mental Health volunteer workers, Mrs, M:rlefleiAluciltion can do a great deal in | Smith, to describe what a group the community in such ways as; she works with, does. ‘helping people recognize early| Mrs. Smith said her group is symptoms of mental illness, sponâ€" made up of people who are trying/soring researtch projects a n d re-; ‘to learn again how to express habilitation centres, hospital visitâ€"] themselves verbally. ing and "social action". : Mrs. Smith said her group is made up of people who are trying to learn again how to express themselves verbally. "The members set their own topies and hold discussions. When I began this six months ago, I was skeptical, I would say now, though, that when I see them come to a point where they can express themâ€" }selvea freely and begin to work on solving the back home problems /m DON‘T DELAY.. .. â€"â€" ORDER TODAY j JOHN R. ELFORD & SONS LTD. 3000 BLOOR ST. W., ISLINGTON BE 1â€"3396 VALENTINE‘S DAY FEB. 14th that brought them there in the first place, it‘s encouraging. But it‘s not all sweetness and light." Ew OBMVEMEENOIME EPRTIEEET PPEA CCC ing and "social action". |in the direction of a centre, and She suggested that a chapter,m“d and train a director and volunâ€" if formed, should work in close asâ€" t°*"s for it." sociation with the Lakeshoreâ€"Etoâ€"| The CMHA _ operates under bicoke Social Planning Council, the paid grants from the United Apâ€" township‘s public health departâ€"| peal. As the directorship of a cenâ€" mient and other established agenâ€"‘tre is a paid position, presumably cies in the area. ‘lolm of the money would havre to The chairman of the meeting, be found locally. ‘ hum-émum- frst place was won .mfl‘p:l by Mrs, J. A. ‘Plaxton, with Mrs. L. F. Wells, vice; Mra C. b. I-m‘ Belvedere Bivd., 2nd; and . A. Primeau, lead, Mrs. R. J. Yott‘s rink won second prise with Mrs. Paul Davidson, Bemerâ€" g‘t‘o Drive, vice; Mrs, Ivan Dean, lingdon Bivd., .2nd; and Mrs. J, T. Ferguson, Millgarden Roat, lead.. Mrs. ‘Ted Davidson‘s rink B8rd, with Mrs, W. H. Slatâ€" cher, Aylesbury Road, vice; Mrs. W. F. McCartney, Wedgewood Road, 2nd; and Mrs, Arnold Henâ€" xy, Queen Mary‘s Drive, lead: A prize for the high one guine winner went to Mrs. A. A. J. Lewis, Abeline Drive, with Mrs. F. G. Glen, vice; Mrs, Erie Lund, Ashwood Crescent, 2nd, and Mrs. s Cooper, lead. In the second draw . two rinks tied for first place, Mrs. E. G. Giles‘ and Mrs. C. T. Noukes‘. When the scores were added, Mrs. Giles‘ rink came out on top. With Mrs. Giles, Westmount Park Road, were Mrs. S. J. Bright, Dixon Road; Mrs. Spence Carroll, and Mrs. C. W. Blake, Wedgewood Drive. In second place, on Mrs. Noakes‘ rink, were Mrs. F. J. Reeve, Wimbleton Rd.; Mrs. R. Crouchman, and Mrs, J. C. Halliâ€" gan, Edenbrook Hill. Mrs. H. W. Muter placed third, with her rink: Mrs. Clayton Doligan, St. Phillip‘s Road, Mrs. H. C. Brookbanks, and Mrs. M. F. Cox, Burnhamthorps Crescent. + _ Mrs. Fogden said if & chapter iof the CMHA is formed, the asâ€" {sociation Will give leadership, help The prize for high one game winner went to Mrs. George Schcll, Prince George Drive, skip; with Mrs. F, L. Elder, Cudworth Place, 3rd; Mrs. G. A. Hall, Wimbleton Road; 2nd; and Mrs. J, R. Welsh, Edgehill Road, lead. The social Loonvtnor was Mrs, W. G. Aird, Bloor St. W. ) Eight End Scored Playing in a Mixed Club Bon spiel at the Weston Curling Club, last Saturday night, Joe Ross scored an eightâ€"end. On his rink were Mrs. Davé Christie, vice; J. S. Murray, Wimbleton Road, 2nd; and Mrs. Ed Seedhouse, Edgehil! lRo:d, lead. Mrs. Chadwick, asked if & token start would be possible "to offer some encouragement to exâ€"méntal patients". Social Worker Patrick Bates from the New Toronto hospital said "I think it‘s dangerous to start before we determine what the needs numbers involved and the resources are. Would a centre atâ€" tract five, 10 or 50 people? It‘s important that if it gets going, it ‘doesn‘t let down."