14 THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, July 2, 1959 4.2101 We have clients for all types of Real Est ready cash. ' Photo Co-op Listings. lst and 2nd Mortgages Arranged 24 Elizabeth St. N. Richmond Hill Specializing in Purebred Cattle. Farm Stock. Furniture and Implements For All Your Hardware & Paint Needs from GEO. McMURRICH SONS LIMITED Free Delivery Richmond Hill [Umer 4â€"1312 We personally handle all sale bills and advertising. Phone Gormley 531] Gormley. Ont. "fl" PEAT â€" ' TOPSOIL & SPECIALLY MIXED SANDY LOAM SPECIAL PRICE FOR LARGE QUANTITIES Our rates are reasonable RICHMOND HILL HARDWARE Quality guaranteed We also have cultured nursery sod LAY-IT-YOURSELF OR WE WILL LANDSCAPE FOR YOU -â€" JUST GIVE US A CALL. Elgin Mills Loam and Sod Co. AV. 5-1514 Johnny Longo Real Es’gatg ltd. ALVIN S. FARMER RICH Property Wanted 3] ionge St. N. â€" Northern Building Phone AV. 5-5301 or Mr. Stefan. TU. 4-3349. Richmond Hill YORK AND ONTARIO COUNTIES 36 YEARS EXPERIENCE BLACK HERBERT R. BUTT Licensed Auctionee: for 24 YONGE ST. S. Dependable Associated With Service Telephone of Real Estate with 4 Wellington St. E. Toronto Toronto EMpire 2-3456 TU. 4-2101 Warden William Hodgson and areas from ï¬re. members of the York County' One of the highlights at the Council with their guests held end of the tour was the annual their annual inspection tour of log sawing contest with Zone York County Forest, Vivian on Foreman Cliff Hollidge acting as June 18. referee and declaring Sheldon The tour through the Forest Walker of East Gwillimbury followed an inspection by the Township Council as_champion. York County Council Enjoys Tour And Annual Forest Inspection The tour through the Forest followed an inspection by the council of York Manor Home for the Aged, Newmarket, in the morning and dinner at Cedar Beach Park, Musselman’s Lake, presided over by Chairmen of the County Reforestation Committee Wilfred Aitcheson. Speaking at the dinner, Mr. J. A. Brodie, Chief of the Timber Division of the Department of Lands and Forests. told the ga- thering that York County Forest now contains an area of some 3600 acres. I had almost forgotten how children feel while they are waiting for Christmas to happen. That is until I realized that Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip had set foot on Canadian soil and I would soon be giving the royal tour a once-over. In my hot little hand I clutched my accreditation card with a reasonable facsimile of my mug stamped with the seal 0f approval. I knew it Would be there, but wondered if it would look like a picture of one of the ten most wanted persons. The smile is a likeness, so I guess I’ll be able to get through all those'security guards when the tour reaches Ottawa and I join other press people and photographers covering this National event. I h0pe I have better luck this time, when once again I come close to royalty, than I had on that far-away day. As I entrained for the trip from Calgary, Alberta, to Field, B.C., I was trying to stifle the evidence that I was coming down with a “gold id by head.†Before we reach- ed our destination my eyes were running like a mountain brook and my nose beamed like a tail light. Our chaper- one told me I wouldn’t be allowed to meet 'the prince unless I shook my cold. Deadline was only twenty-four hours away. - Somehow she conceived a torturous cure. It was sniffing straight rye whiskey! I had never tasted any spiritous liquor and between what I considered a hor- rible taste and the agony of dragging half a cup of booze up my nostrils, my desire to show off my courtesy before a future monarch was just about dampened forever. The cure. drastic as it was, worked and I was in ï¬ne fettle to see the idol at that time of all single females in Britain and her possessions, walk up to the chalet through the sun-drenched woods that surrounded the lake. Since the County and the De- partment entered into an agree- ment in 1924, expenditures by the Department in managing the property to the end of March 1957 amounted to $185,000. The estimatedvalue of present stand- ing stumpage is, $450,000, indi- cating an excess of assets over costs of some $256,000. Mr. Bro- die commended the foresight of municipality officials in the ear- lier days in'acquiring waste land for resforestation & management. He pointed out-that the planta- tions were now putting on their greatest increment during the period of the present rotation and estimated that by 1969 present stands would have a value of ap- proximater $915,000. The forest contains both natural woodlands and reforestations and during the past 35 years the Department has planted somewhat over four-and- one-half-million young trees. The quiver of excitement I experienced when I opened the envelope and found this bit of identiï¬cation enclosed, reminded me of the swoony feeling of years ago, when I was told I had been chosen as one of three young girls to be present when H.R.H. the Prince of Wales visited Emerald Lake in the heart of the Cana- dian Rockies. I was a teenager but mature for my years, due no doubt to four years of war when I had been beaued to parties, far too adult for my tender years. by army friends of an older brother. Unlike the present tour, I did not have to produce proof of age and I'am sure our chaperone hadn’t an inkling of how young I was. If I saw him coming up my driveway right at this moment as he looked then, I would probably double up in a ï¬t of laughter. I would undoubtedly consider it a masquerade getup. But in those early post war days, his attire was considered very .smart. He had insisted on walking from the train stop at Field to Emerald Lake and had accordingly donned his walking outï¬t. This con- sisted of plus fours that hung almost to his ankles like a pair of potato sacks over heavy kneeâ€"high woolen stock- ings. They used to call the type of coat he wore a Nor- folk jacket. It was very tweedy and belted in the back. The prince was a small person, not much taller than we three girls who had been chosen to meet him. That is possibly why the cap he wore looked like a dinner plate and came well down around his ears. Never mind how it looked, I just wanted to die, die, die, for my heart almost pounded out of my body when he handed me a memento of the then happiest day of my life. It was a long red box handsomely embossed with the Real Coat of Arms in rich gold leaf. Inside were 200 cigarettes also mono- grammed in gold with his personal crest, a fancy, ï¬li- greed E.P. I kept them for years tied up with a pink satin ribbon and the silk cord from my autographed dance program. Zone Forester W. T. Managhan conducted the tour through sev- eral of the forest properties des- cribing the history and growth of typical reforestations and pres- ent reduction of various forest products, saw logs, pulpwood and poles. The local Superintendent. John Caston with other members of the department staff gave a practical demonstration of the ï¬re ï¬ghting equipment used in pro- ,tecting plantations and woocflot When the tobacco had all fallen out of the cigarettes and there was alking in my own household plus two young heirs, I reluctantly threw the box and its contents away. Now I wonder what souvenir I shall keep for years as a reminder of this 1959 visit to Canada of his neice, Queen Elizabeth and the king in her life (if only her consort to her subjects), Prince Philip. 3v DOROTHV BARKER ? Open House At Maryland Pool Norm Sufrin. manager of the Maryland Gardens swimming pool at the 400 and number 7 high- ways, just south of the 400 Drive- In Theatre in Vaughan Township, dropped in to “TheLiberal†on Thursday to say that the swim- ming pool is having an “Open Day,†Thursday, July 2nd, for all children 15 years and under living in. Vaughan Township. For that one day they will be admit- ted free of charge. The Maryland Gardens pool is the biggest in Canada, being 300 yards long and 110 yards wide and covers 8 acres with water. It is a completely ï¬ltered pool and is supervised by as many as 17 life guards, depending on the size of the swimming crowd. There is a diving tower, station- ary raft â€" as well as a special area for young children, complete with floats and rubber dinghies. There' is just one stipulation: piease leave your goggles and snorkles at home, for safety mea- sures â€"- also the family dog. With 350 picnic tables in the 265 acre park surrounding the pool. refreshment booths and a large restaurant, change rooms and’ washrooms available_ the whole family can spend a happy day at the Maryland Pool. AND DICKSON’S HILL : Local public SWIMMING POOL school children will be attending the Summitview Public School in : fun spot, for an Stouffville this fall while their o~ ournnrm 5719251 seam 0:319 {my new school is being completed. ‘ 7' “Yours For Safety" 0.P.P. Booklet W. H. Clark, Commissioner of Ontario Provincial Police, has written a special message for the booklet addressed to the public who will be reading it, stating "The Ontario Provincial Police Force is one of the largest and ï¬nest in the world. and one of which you, as a resident of On- tario. can be justly proud. . . . It is hoped that this publication will introduce the force and its functions to residents of Ontario, and to our many visitors, so that mutual understanding and res- pect will result in this Province becoming an even better place in which to live." Deputy Commissioner James Bartlett has instructed E. Hand. District'lnspector of the Ontario Provincial Police to distribute copies _o_f _tiie new pamphlet “Yours fdr Safety." in this dis trict. ' Copies may be obtained in ï¬lm ited quantity at “The Liberal" office. or from the Bond Lake detachment of the OPP. or from any OPP headquarters in Ontar- io. They are free for the asking. “Mute No Longer" South Peel and York Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society have a strange and rewarding story to tell about a man who could not speak and managed to commun- icate with a Cancer Society v 1- unteer by writing with his ha ds in the sand outside his lowly dwelling. “Through the nurse at the Dun- lop Building." stated Grace Shunk, Publicity Convener for South Peel. “Mrs. F. Emmerton, Past President and Mrs. C. Pat- chett, Welfare convenor, learned some eighteen months ago that a man of about 60 years of age had had an operation which had de- prived him of his speech. The la- dies visited him, found that he was living alone and in very 'poor circumstances. His money had been spent on doctors and he had not spoken for a yearAand a half. Using his hands and a stick, he printed in a pile of-sand the words that told the volunteers his story. They ordered an elec- tro larynx which cost $200. About a month later. they returned to see how he was getting along. To their utter amazement he told them “I went to Toronto". He had gone to the city every day and had been taught how to speak again. He is now gainfully employed again. Of foreign ex- traction, he is able to speak and write only limited English. And your contribution to the Canadian Cancer Society may have helped to give this man a new start in life. Sanitary Contractor Drains Cleaned & Repaired C. STUNDEN RICHMOND mu. m. 4-1245 THURS. FRI. July 2, 3 . T0 CATCH A THIEF Color Cary Grant Grace Kelly WE’RE N0 ANGELS Humphrey Bogart Septic Tanks Pumped SAT., MON. July 4, 6 HOLLYWOOD 0R BUST Martin & Lewis Color 67 Yonge St. North Nearly New Clothes for the entire family TU. 4-3341 TUES., WED. July 7, 8 MAN IN THE GREY FLANNEL SUIT THURS. FRI. July 9, 10 SWIMMING POOL NOW OPEN FOR THE SEASON INCLUDING SUNDAYS FUN SPOT FOR ALL TH EATR E ENCORE UP PERISCOPB TANK FORCE Victor Mature Cinemascope Cartoon (Adult) Gregory Peck Jennifer Jones LAFAYETTE ESCARDRILLE Tab Hunter Cartoon Color James Garner WESTBOUND Randolph Scott Cartoon Cartoon Color II 1 es d. v fig" ‘ . . Super-Lusï¬c on yaur ear NO“ NO INCREAng IN TIRE PRICEE ‘mmmmummummmmmmmmmmmuummmmmmmmmmmmmmm WWWWWWW 640/15 670/ 1 5 TYREX’ Sanity â€" 0N mun cAn 325/16 560/15 590/15 710/15 750/14 760/15 800/14 800/15 850/14 Simiiur Savings on 0"“ Sizes - Including Tubeless and Whitewafl: WWNMMG mumbl- SUPER-LASTIC O-Level TYREX’ only at Canadian Tin? 20.90 24.95 25.00 26.25 27.50 31.30 30.25 34.20 34.45 36.60 37.65 Mfrs! LIE? 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