Pupils Mrs. Garson At Dance Recital Wrixon Hall, St. Mary’s Angli- can Church, was ï¬lled to capac- ity last Friday evening when Mrs. Sylvia Garson of Richmond Hill presented her pupils in a “Dance Display". From beginning to end youngsters from the tender age of tour years and upwards, showed excellent training and under- standing of the dance. "Getting to Know You" was lbly sung and danced by Brian Toogood, Mary Clarke, Cather- ine Walsh, Cheryl King and Pen- by Howard. Tiny Gayle Buchan, Barbara St. Arnaud and Robin Lindsay were sweet as Chinese Coolies. “Candy Store Fantasy†which concluded the ï¬rst half of the performance featured Arlene Haggart as the ‘Little Girl’. Sus- an Broadhurst as the waitress, and Leslie Nichols. Shelley Scott, Michelle Bulova, Darryl Simmons, Gwln Urquhart and Brenda Rob- inson as lcecream cones. Joy Castello and Sandra Bry showed ï¬ne rhythm as licorice sticks, while 'Carien Meyer represented a banana split. Nancy Welch. Donna Jones. Su- san Coles, Lynda Burton and Brian Toogood were candy canes. This production number display- ad a ï¬ne variety of ballet. tap, acrobatic and toe dancing z‘long with baton twirling. A delightful number was ‘South of the Bor- der" with Lorilee Davies, Mari- anne Derrick, Vicky Scott, Mere- dith Scott, Sandra King. and Sus- In Kirkpatrick. Paddy Bull, who tapped on stairs, Joanne Jay, in “Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend". Cathy Woloshyn. Ian Sorbie. Betty Sat- chel. Barbara Chappell, Verna Seifert, Norma Beauchamp. Bren- da Bradshaw and Sharon Lang were prominent in solo dances. Oustanding was “Steam Heat†sung and danced by Marion March, Cathy Woloshyn, Miriam Faulkner and Barbara Severin. The show ended with a rousing grand ï¬nale and presentations were made by the pupils to Mrs. Garson who is to be highly com- mended for such an enjoyable performance; also to Miss Ruth Garson, A.D.C.M. who accompan- ied the dancers so beautifully. The costumes and lighting were very effective and an enjoyable evening was had by all. 14 THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, June 18, 1959 Nearly New Clothes for the entire family TU. 4-3341 28 Industrial Rd. TUrner For Prompt Courteous Service Call PLUMBING 67 Yonge St. North Applications will be received for position of ENCORE MOVING York County Health Unit Write to â€" Medical Oï¬icer of Health, York County Health Unit, 64 Bayview Avenue, NEWMARKET, Ontario. PACKING lIl The June meeting of the W. MS. was held on Wednesday af- tern on of last week at the home of Mrs. H. Deverell, Headford, with a good attendance. The members from Headford conduct- ed the worship period, and the hostess had again invited Mrs. Williams of Willowdale to sing, which was very much enjoyed by all. A short skit, “The rain will Stop," depicting the trials of a missionary in Alaska. was given by Mrs. H. Acreman, Mrs. . Joyce and Mrs. H. McCague, which proved very interesting. This June being the 62nd an- niversary of the Victoria Square W.M.S. ,the thoughts of everyone .went back to the early conditions the group had to contend with. I‘he minutes from the Supply Sec- retary reports of 30 years ago were read. Several visitors were present. Mrs. John Clelland of Australia, gave a few interesting facts on her home. Everyone was happy to hear that Rev. A. F. Binnington is greatly improved in health and that Miss Olive Glover is now home. Dainty refreshments were ser- ved at the close by the hostess and her committee. Mission Band Graduation And Picnic On Saturday afternoon, because of the cold and windy weather, the Mission Band had to have its graduation exercises and picnic in the Sunday School room instead of at the home of the leader, Mrs. A. Orr. as had been originally planned for. The mothers of the children and several of the W.M. S. members were also present. The meeting opened with words of welcome by Mrs. A. Orr, and the children sang several chor- uses, accompanied at the piano by Mrs. R. Cowie. The worship per- iod was conducted by Mrs. S. Boynton, the past leader. Mrs. F. McRoberts read the Scripture Lesson. The graduation exercises were led by Mrs. S. Boynton, with each of the graduates, Barbara Empringham, Cathy Sanderson, Debbie Kirkpatrick, Debbie Kon- ing. and Ronald Orr. taking part, and all of the other Mission Band members singing the response. Each graduate was presented with a gift from the leader for their help given while they were members of the Mission Band. The girls graduated to the Ex- plorers and were welcomed into the Explorer group by one of the leaders, Mrs. Percy Bennett. Cathy Sanderson took up the Offering and it was dedicated by the president of the W.M.S., Mrs. 11. D. McCague. Mrs. A. Orr con- ducted several games for the chil- dren which were very much en- joyed by all; she also had two games for the mothers. Refresh- ments were served at the close including ice cream. Before the children left for home, a peanut- scramble was held outside. Sunday School_Annive1;sa_1-y _ The annual Sunday School An- niversary service was held on Sunday, with the superintendent. Mr. Percy Bennett, in charge of the service. Donald Boynton led the responsive reading, while Wayne Mortson read the Scrip- ture Lesson. Mrs. A. Orr was the soloist, she sang, “Bless This House," which was very much en- joyed. The children and their teachers sat at the front of the church. The guest speaker was Rev. J. Morris, of the Aurora Uni- t-d Church, who gave an illustrat- ed sermon for the children, which CORRESPONDENT: MRS. W. SANDLE, Victoria Square VICTORIA SQUARE NEWS LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING DAILY SERVICE TORONTO AND AREA AV. 5-5101 TUrner 4-2613 STORAGE T‘ proved very interesting for the adults as well as for the children. Home and School The Gormiey Home and School held its final meeting of the sea- son on Tuesday evening of last week in the Senior room of 5.8. No. 7. It was a business meeting and plans were made for the an- nual school picnic, which is to be held on Thursday, June 25 at the “Méples,†whicï¬'is situated be- tween Goodwood and Uxbridge, It is for supper. The races will be held at 4 pm. Baseball On Tues. evening of last week the boys on the Victoria Square softball team played host to the boys on the Vellore team with the Victoria Square team being the winner; then on Thursday evâ€" ening of last week the Richvale team was the visiting team and they won over Victoria Square. On Thursday :vening, June 18, the Victoria Square team plays at Vellore, and on Tuesday evening, June 23, our team plays at Oak Ridges. Good luck, boys! Church News Mr. Allan McIntosh will be in charge of the church service at Victoria Square on Sunday, June let at 11.30 am. Everyone wel- come. The main topic of the day last Week was “Oh, the heat." However, during the weekend it was a different story, “Oh, how cold it is." w513:1:le School will be held at 10 a.m. Neighbourhood Notes Birthday greetings to Cheryl Cochrane who was fourteen years old oh June 15; to Miss Vera Ni- chols for June 19; to Mrs. D. Hilts for June 19; to Mrs. D. Gee for June 21; to Don Nichols who will be sixteen years old on June 22; to Mrs. Cecil Nichols for June 22; to Sammy Snider for June 22; to Ross Barker who will be one year old on June 22; to Lloyd Canning for June 23; to Mrs. Clarence Steckley for June 24. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Angus Valliere who on June 1" will be celebrating their fifty- second Wedding anniversary; to Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Nichols who on June 20 will be celebrat- ing their fifty-second wedding an- niversary; to Mr. and Mrs. Heber McCague who on June 20 will be celebrating their thirty-first wed- ding anniversary: to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Empringham who on June 20 will be celebrating their seven- teenth wedding anniversary; to Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hoadley who on June 21 will be celebrating their twelfth wedding anniver- sary; to Mr.‘ and Mrs. Donald Matthews who on June 3rd cele- brated their twelfth wedding an- niversary. wivï¬â€˜Ã©fjdhn Clelland, of Willow- dale, formerly of Australia, spent Wednesday of last week with Miss Grace Boynton. Mrs. Philip Rumney and baby son returned home from the New- market Hospital on Thursday of last week. On Thursday vening of last .week, Mrs. Jim Barker, Mrs. Har- ry Barber Sr., Mrs. Harry Barber Jr., Mrs. Garnet Francy, and Mrs. Lloyd Canning attended 3 Stanley demonstration at the home of Mrs. Neil Brown, Ninth Line South, Stouffville. _ ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Herb Sanderson, of Richmond Hill, called on Mr. and Mrs. Rolph Boynton, on Sat- urday evenjng. , 1-,“--- ..u u . ._._â€"._,. ang‘raiulations to our College friends who have been very suc- cessful in passigg__t_heir_1:gc‘ent ex- ams, namely: Lillian Nichols at the Toronto Bible College; George Collard at Queen’s Uni- versity, Kingston; Denton Brum- well at O.A.C., Guelph; Ronald ee at University of Toronto; nd David Boynton at O.A.C., Guelph. Miss June Collard spent the weekend with several teachers from the Agincourt Collegiate at a cottage near Madoc. Cheryl, Cathy, and Jerry Col- lard spent Sunday with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Har- vey Collard. n,,,L-___ Congratulations to Barbara Empringham who has successfully passed her grade 3 piano exam- inations held recently at the To- ronto Conservatory of Music. Barbara is a pupil of Mrs. S. English. Miss Jean Rumney has return- ed home after spending the past three weeks with her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. N. Wood and family at Bethany, near Peterbor- ough. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Boynton, David and Donald called on Mr. I‘ and Mrs. Jim Boynton and family Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bennett and Ricky of,Richmond Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Nigh, Mrs. F. Walk- er and Freddie had dinner Sat- urday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Barker and Ross. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Johnston and Sharon of Nashville called on Mr. and Mrs. W. Orr on Sunday after- noon. Mrs. Percy Bennett was the guest speaker at the Heise Hill Brethren in Christ Church Sun- day School on Sunday morning. She was there in the interest of the Markham Township Sunday School Association. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lyons, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McGhee, of Aurora, were visitors at the church service on Sunday morn- ing. They had dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Percy Bennett, later they had supper with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nichols. Mr. Percy Bennett will be tak- ing part in the Conference of United Church men at Canadian Keswick, from June 18 to June 20. This is the Canadian Confer- ence of United Church men for the whole of Canada. The many friends of Miss Olive Glover are pleased to hear that she was able to return home from t? ~ hospital on Wednesday of last week after spending the past six and a half months there with a broken hip. Everyone hopes that she will continue to improve. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Steckley called on Mr. and Mrs. Donald Steckley at Willowdale on Sun- day evening. By Mona Robertson We tried our handts) at a new job last weekend â€" and we real- ize now we should just stick to our shorthand notebook and type- writer and forget all about being a wallpaper-hanger-upper for a full time career. But it w:‘s fun. We’ve had an ambition, for We’ve had an ambition, for some years now, to relieve the plainness of our strictly oil-paint- ed walls by initiating the one- wall-hung-with-paper decorator style at our house. So we bought two double rolls (four singles that is) with a very dainty pattern of airy golden hanging baskets, fill- ed With delicate flowers and lacy ferns and leaves on a pink back- ground. (Really not the pattern to. a beginner. perhaps). We found out that wall, with one window one double roll plus foot strip â€" to allow “a. We began setting up for the wallpapering job â€" which, until the moment when we began to mix the paste we had thought would be done “in a breeze" â€"â€" at about 7.30 pm.. Saturday even- ing. Earlier that same day we had used a roller and repainted the ceiling of the room and three of the walls with pale pink oil paint. Needless to say we were slighty ‘bushed’ by then â€" and felt a slight apprehension towards the project when we extended the dining room table to its full length, placed a six foot board on top, and, on the advice of friend husband, who was working on another project in the den, liber- ally spread old newspapers over the surface. Just then, the children, who were enjoying the oncoming ex- citement so much they forgot to watch television, let out a cry of glee and said, “Here’s grand- ma and grandpa and Auntie Mi- Wéll from there on in. I had lots of helpers â€"- and believe me I needed them. mi," surE enohgh their car had just pulled into the drivewzgy1 In my eagerness to get started on my own tick I had forgotten such a job needed proper tools, but with Mimi’s advice I impro- vised â€"â€" using a sponge for a paste-brush, (and lucky for me, W£en Waféer pail Stop in and test-drive the value-packed Dodge ...the luxurious and spirited De Soto...or a sleek, strapping new Dodge Iruck today! a 9x8 foot in it, takes another 8 for match- 59 Yonge St. South and the wall paper) commandeer ed father’s new flat clothes brusl for brushing the paper down afte hanging it. I found out that the pile o newspapers was essential too, be lieve me, for when. one applie the paste liberally, “but not to thickly,†the paste goes welllove the edges of the strip. the edges of the strip. I had read the directions two wee;s earlier, when I bought the wallpaper, but until my sisterâ€"in- law reminded me, I forgot about the plumbâ€"line. Now the plumb- line, in case any of you gals are going to copy this feat of mine (for the first time too) is one of the most important steps in hang- ing wallpaper. Get that first strip on straight, and you are away to the races, except for about half a dozen other details you have to remember. A thumb tack, piece of string. and a weight to hold the string straight down (we discovered a glass flower holder makes a good one) is placed about 20 inches out from the corner . . . as the plumb line hangs straight down the wall, you mark a line on the wall from ceiling to floor with a pencil. Then you begin to cut out strips of paper, making sure to cut on the “match†line each time. so your pattern will come out per- fectly . . . and it did. I found that first strip - and the last one, too â€"â€" the trickiest part of the job, for there is quite a bit of trimming away to do, when you are not taking the paper “around the corner." As for the window area, well that’s another little bit of fun’. . . following the old song that goes, “When father papâ€" VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES RICHMOND HILL . BRANCH MISS E. Woodbyrne Richmond Hill Hall PHONE TU ’1 [ed . 4-4101 the pile of 1tial too, be- one applies 'but not too es well over Municipal w-=-4::aaï¬,a.MM ered the bedroom†. . . and here we found the paper was stuck to the window, but that was alright, you just cut out the paper around the window frame afber, since you had to carry your pattern evenly top and bottom of the Window. Same thing for light switches and wall plugs â€" I was lucky there, my husband removed the cov- ers for me first. It took me four and a half hours to cover that wall, with time out somewhere along the line for a cup of tea â€"-â€" but be- lieve me. the results are enchant- ing â€" so next weekend I‘m start- ing on another room . . . bet I do that next one in “a breeze.†TIME: 7.30 pm. to 9 pm. Schomberg Richmond Hill King City Markham Mount Albert Newmarket Ballantrae Unionville Keswick Thornhill Sutton Aurora Woodbridge Nobleton Community Hall 50 Yonge Street North Masonic Hall Veteran’s Hall Community Hall 64 Bayview Avenue Ballantrae School Veteran’s Hall United Church United Church Health Unit Health Unit Woodbridge Arena W. I. Hall Oak Ridges/Lake Wilcox Oak Ridges Legion Hall Pefferlaw Stouifville Community Hall Health Unit DISTRICT Free Polio Vuccne elinics KM “AI. Richmond Hill Will be provided by physicians of YORK COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY In cooperation with York County Health Unit We have clients for all types of Real Estate with ready cash. Photo Co-op Listings. lst and 2nd Mortgages Arranged Johnny Longo Real Est_a_t_¢ Ltd. If you want the toughest, best-looking truck for your kind of job, put a new ’59 Sweptline Dodge to work for you. And you can expect your jobs to be a whale of a lot easier! Big, new, luxuryâ€"styled cabs are comfort-designed. Clutch pedals are hydrau- lically actuated for much easier operation. Brake and clutch pedals are suspended to give you more footroom. We’ll be happy to help you select the Dodge truck for your job _ A" tL‘ uvnrv JV.- â€"-__-, , â€" om this banaéome Irew Sweptlirie all the way up to 49,000-lb. max. G.V.W. Power Giants. See them now! LOCATION Property Wanted 31 Yonge St. N. â€" Northern Building Phone AV 5-5301 or Mr. Stefl’an. TU. 4-3349. Richmond Hill TUrner 4-2091 Monday, 22 June, 1959 Monday, 22 June, 1959 Tuesday, 23 June, 1959 Tuesday. 23 June, 1959 Wednes, 24 June, 1959 Wednes, 24 June, 1959 Thursday, 25 June, 1959 Thursday, 25 June, 1959 Monday, 29 June, 1959 Monday, 29 June, 1959 Tuesday, 30 June, 1959 Tuesday, 30 June, 1959 Thursday, 2 July, 1959 Thursday, 2 July, 1959 Monday, 6 July, 1959 Tuesday, 7 July, 1959 Wednesday, 8 July, 1959 DATE