Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 14 Jan 1960, p. 18

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U CAN CHARGE CAN CHARGE HIT AUSTIN 1948-51 A40 1952-54 A40 MORRIS VAUXHALL 1957-58 . VOLKSWAGEN . . . HILLMAN 1949-54 . 1955-56 1957-58 0N EXTRAâ€"llFE, NEW-BAR llUAllTY MOW-MASTER NEED A NEW MUFFLER? Driv: in to Canadian Tire for your free safety check. When the car i: on the hoist, you are the judgeâ€" you duida whether your old muffler is still serviceableâ€"or needs replacing. FOR GREATER SERVICE LIFE from your new muffler, specify Mote-Master. Bigger lavings, too, at Canadian Tireâ€"and Instuliation ll FAST, F-A-S-T! Superior design and construc- tion for better performance, greater safety and so quiet operation. Guaranteué‘blow-out proof. - GKEVROLET PONTIAG PLYMOUTH STUDEBAKER FORD THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario. Thursday, January 14, 1960 Speédy Drive-in Service 50% on “new-car” quality (1) SAVE TIME (2) SAVE MONEY (3) SAVE 1955-57 1949-52 Minor 1953-55 Minor 1956-59 “1000” 1956-59 “1000” 1949-54 Oxford 1955-59 Oxford GOMPARE YOUR SAVINGS! Cur, Make, Year and Modelâ€" Clamps, each 25c 1949-54 1955-56 1951-54, but 1955-53, fi-cyl. (most) (most) and Dodge, 1 é-tyl. (mos!) 1949-53 1954-58, d-cyl. (mos!) Champion, 1947-54 (most) TUrner 4-1196 CAN .CHARGE â€" CAN CHARGE 1949-58, (most) (most) "DO-IT- YOU RSELF" SALE PRICE 6.40 6.86 6.60 5.15 11.50 Bracket for tail pipe Installed extra where needed 4:50 5.50 5.50 6:40 7.20 O O 7.35 on Longer Service Life MUFFLER INSTALLED SALE PRICE CAN CHARGE CAN CHARGE FREE \ ’1' MUFFLER SAFETY CHECK 10.10 17.50 $8.00 $9.15 $8.00 $9.35 $9.61 $8.00 $9.15 $7.90 7.40 6.55 8.80 8.25 9.15 9.95 AV. 5-4501 MUFFLER and TAIL PIPE INSTALLED $122.10 $13.25 $12.30 $13.50 $13.71 $11.75 $13.45 $11.60 10.70 10.65 13.10 11.20 12.10 12.12 12.85 11.48 10.95 11.95 14.05 13.28 CAN CHARGE CAI‘ r: A note from Mrs. Robert Giles of Richmond Hill, formerly of this neighbourhood, brought us rather sad news recently. She writes that her brother-in-law, Rev. Edward J. Whan, died quite unexpectedly on December 28. Mr. Whan, who was the husband of the former Lillian Doner,‘ sis- ter of Mrs. Giles and Mrs. Geo. Clayton Sr., had been in hospital with virus pneumonia. The day before Christmas, Mrs_ Whan went to the hospital to take her husband home, but while she was there he took a stroke and died a few days later. Mr. Whan was a Baptist minister who had served in Toronto. Peterboro, Barrie, Fonthill and several other places during his forty years in the min- istry. Last September he and Mrs. Whan moved to Fonthill when he retired. Besides his wife he is survived by three daughters and two sons. one of whom is the Rev. Lloyd Whan of Georgetown. There was a note from Jim and Gladys McQuay in the mail the other day. They are enjoying their California trip in spite of heavy snow and car trouble en route. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Clark Jr, aré back from their southern states honeymoon and living tempor< arily in the Waltons’ home on Don Mills Road while Mr. and Mrs. Walton are sunning themselves in Florida. At the last Communion service in Brown‘s Corners church there was also a reception of new mem- bers. It was interesting to note that of those who were received one couple transferred from the Not long ago a Toronto paper noted that farm properties in this area had been sold. Among the sales were the 87-acre Heintz- man farm at the south-west cor- ner of Don Mills Road and No, 7 Highway (the former Nelson Boy- ington property); the north 103 acres of the Leitch estate at the northwest corner of Leslie Street and No. 7 Highway, and the 50- acre Whalen farm on the east side of Bayview just north of No. 7. It appears that real estate is being gathered in again. Neighbourhood Notes CAN CHARGE The chief difficulty in execu- ting an out-turn is caused by the player unwinding the handle of the rock during the backswing. Thus when the forward swing begins the arm and wrist have turned outward (away from the body) as far as the muscles per- mit. The handle has therefore ceased turning when the stone hits the ice and only by bending the elbow can the player force the wrist to give the handle a last-second wrench. With such a benevolently naive introduction to the royal and ancient pastime is it any wonder that a mental block occurs when an out-turn shot is called for? Physically, this turn for a right- hander should be easier to mani- pulate, particularly for play diâ€" rected to the right [hand side of the ice. In such cases the curler in the hack is swinging away from rather than across the body. For some strong reason many curlers favor the in-turn when asked for a particular shot be- cause they feel more confident of their ability to get results with it. The cause of this prejudice can often be traced back to their first appearance on the ice. Us- ually. when a newly-initiated member is introduced to his skip as a very, very green curler. his lordship makes a careful note to give his new lead nothing but in- turns for the first 30 games. (Canada's is covering the This is another Ken Watson On Curling “Muscle Malady" Cause Of Out-Turn Problems There are two cures for this Does your car need a MUFFLER or BRAKE JOB? lack of cash is no obstacle, because at CANADIAN TIRE you “CAN CHARGE" it. Your personalized “CAN CHARGE" plate is just like cash at any of the I75 CANADIAN TIRE STORES across Canada. Your “CAN CHARGE" is good for all merchancIése-and car repairs at any time . c . No down payment, nothing to pay for 30 days. No need to come in. Phone "CAN CHARGE" AVenue 5-450I "CAN CHARGE" is the quick easy way to shop at CANADIAN TIRE. Slant stone to the left at the stance position ‘3 By Ken Watson Ianada's “Mr. Curling”, Ken Watson of Winnipeg, ring the Canadian curling scene for “The Liberal”, another in a series of 20 articles.) CORRESPONDENT: Mrs. E. G. LEAF II. R. 2 Gormley â€"- Phone AXminstet 3-6188 BUTTONVILLE NEWS CAN CHARGE CAN CHARGE The home is gone, but the house remains unsold, Mr. Wil- son had a purchaser for it but the deal fell through a few days be- fore the sale. At present Mr. Wil- son is living with members of his family near Oakville. There must be a fever which affects people who attend auction sales â€"â€" either that or the local citizens haven’t yet heard of “tight money.” On Saturday of last week â€" the day Mr. B. K. Wilson's house- hold goods went under the auc- tioneer’s hammer â€" the weather was cold but the crowds were early and plentiful, and from the very first the bidding was fan- tastic. A framed print of an English landscape with the purchase price of $1.98 marked on the back brought over $5.00; a bronze horse that can be bought at any knick-knack shop for $3 or $4 went for well over $10.; an elec- tric stove (in excellent condition it is true) but which should not cost more than $250 on the retail market) brought more than $250. Electrical gadgets in some cases went very reasonably, but mostly people paid nearly as much as the same article would cost new, or more. Furniture and lamps were snapped up, and in an afternoon’s time a home which had taken a lifetime to assemble was disper- sed. Total sales were approxim- ately $2,500.00. Dutch Reformed churcn in Hol- land; a second transfer was from the Church of Scotland; a third from the Church of England in Great Britain; a fourth from the Danish Lutheran church; a fifth from the Presbyterian Church of Canada, and the remainder were either United Church transfers or by profession of faith. Miss Netta Spaans. a n_urse in- tern at the Toronto Western Hos- pital. is vacationing in Florida at present. High Bidding at Auction Sale --Concentrate on a straigfit Iarm and the back of the hand showing as the stone is released. --Convince yourself with fre- quent practice that this is a nat- ural turn and chagrin will change to pleasure when you see your out-turns on the broom. Place the thumb in the upper side of the handle with the fore- finger underneath. See that the three remaining fingers act only as :a cradle for holding the han- dle during the swing. With the thumb and .index finger guiding the turning handle there is less chance of unwinding the wrist too early. Remember these points: --Try not to rotate the wrist more than a one-eighth turn dur- ing the backszwing so that the handle is pointing straight back at the start of the down-swing. A quick look at today's illusâ€" tration reveals the handle of the stone slanted to the left at the stance position. This is sbme- times referred to as a cross-han- dle and offers an answer to the prayers of those afflicted with out-turnitus. ‘ muscular malady. First is to start the backswing with the handle pointing Straight back then con- centrate on pulling the stone back without turning the wrist. As only a small percentage of curlers succeed in this method effectively, let's look at the al- tern'ative. SOMETHING WANTED? LIBERAL C'.ASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS PHONE TU. 4-1105 CAN CHARGE CAN CAN CHARGE 5-year Guarantee 1‘er FREE H2353) INSURANCE more positive S-T-O-P! Super-lastic Hiway-Byway is rated top choice for load weather driving, with the Natural Rubber Tread for all your driving, 12- months in the year. Originally developed as a super-traction snow-mud tire, the engineers built in longer mileage and removed that last trace of annoying whine you heard from other snow tires, Sm,- "Jab-I ROAD HAZARD INSUREbIPLLE The only "Year- 'round" Tire with uuu nunner and durable Courtaulds Tenasco Cord body will pull you through deep snow. slush and sticky mud. Be safety-set all Winter long with a set of Snow Travel on your rear wheels â€" Priced away below the market. 670 15 2 4. ‘ll :5; . With Class "A" Trade-in SAVE ON OTHER suzss . .With Class “A” Trude-in -600/16 710/15 10.95 13.45 4 750/14 12.95 800/14 13.95 RUBBER TREAD 1,48 " I 5: Get mama this Winler E glilET RIDING nexl Summer flATURAL Engineered for Canadian 77‘ roads, temperatures and driving conditions . . . ‘ --with 50% heavier TYREX Viscose Cord than “New-Gar” enuinment--. CAN CHARGE I. l v > i, L; _ | figs! ,1. “1“” :3 " __â€"â€"â€"_â€" n t, . | ‘ M. :nkle-deep in mud. The power-grip of rubber tread gives greater G-0 and 'e S-T-O-P! Super-Lastic Hiway-Byway is mice for bad weather driving, with the oer Tread for all your driving, 12- monlhs Originally developed as a super-traction re, the engineers built in longer mileage l flan! Incl 1.....__ _r last trace of annoying'whine snow tires. Save safely! 25 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill I TUrner 4-1196 E CAN CHARGE E â€" Super-Las against blow-01 normal hazards Customer pays Against defecis in work- manship and materials Bargain in Winter Driving Safely! equipment. . . CAN CHARGE NOTE: Add 50: to above prices for insfallafion 5-YEAR GUARANTEE This winter ride worry-free at the lowest pos- sible cost â€" Canadian Tire’s Wholesale Dis- eount savings remove the price barrier to safe driving. “Snow-Travel” with its deep-biting. self-cleaning traction treads of rugged Polymer Cold Rubber and durable Courtaulds Tenasco Cord body will pull you through deep snow. slush and sticky mud. Be safety-set all Winter long with a set of Snow Travel on your rear wheels â€" Priced away below the market. SNOW TRAVEL DCIA'TI tic Passenger ltS, accidents, which make only for ser- CAN CHARGE 900/14 600/16 550/15 670/15 710/15 750/14 750/15 800-820/!! 800/14 850/14 g Similar Savings .n Whitewalls. Add 5m: 550-590/15 SIZE CAN CHARGE Regular Lisf Pricn 24.85 31.65 25.15 28.65 25.15 31.30 33.55. 28.65 31.30 33:55. 21.55 Tubeless and for Installation Discount Price with Class "A" Trada-in 15.95 16.95 17.95 19.95 13.75 22.95 15.95 20.95 22.95 25.95â€" 16.95 CAN Cf

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