C O A L Av. 5-3941 AV. 5-1081 3. The Debentures shall be dated the 80th day of September, 1960. are to bear interest at the rate of 614% per annum payable yearly on the 30th day of September each year and are to be re- payable in varying instal- ments of principal on the 30th day of September in each of the years 1961 to 1980 inclusive, the aggre- gate amounts of principal and interest payable in each year of the currency of the Debentures being approxi- mately equal, the Debentures to be in the denomination of $1,000 each. Take notice that The Board of Trustees of the R0. man Catholic Separate School for School Section Number 1 in the Township of Markham on Tuesday, September 6th, 1960, passed By-law Number 6 to author- ize the borrowing of money by the issue and sale of de- bentures of the said Board in the principal amount of $115,000. Dated at Thornhil]. Ontario September 6th, 1960 2. The amount to be bor- rowed is $115,000 and the security therefor shall be the Debentures which shall be a charge upon the school house properties and premises and on the real and personal pro- perty vested in the Board and upon the Separate School rates. 1. For the purpose of pro- viding an addition to St. Luke’s Separate School, Dud- ley Avenue, Thornhill. RICHMOND HILL Answering Servuce Only a doctor can diagnose and treat cancer. Your best chance for a cure is to seehim at the first sign of anything that might indicate cancer, says the Canadian Cancer Society. JONES {k 24 Hour Answering Service ‘ ï¬r Conï¬dential Secretarial work - if: Mimeographing & Duplicating TU. 4-3800 VAC! '03 THE WEEK: CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY Richmond Hill Unit NOTICE J. P. Loughran Secretary CALL For Your Convenience - - FOR 0011 Jamieson Says RATES ON REQUEST 15 YONGE ST. NORTH QDON JAMIESON NOW OPEN Mayor Tomlin said he felt this would be a difficult thlng to leg- islate against. Mrs. Southwell sald people are complaining be- cause dl tributors of hand bills walk all ver lawns, instead of using walks. Reeve Haggart said, “We could threaten “to take away their licences if they don't stop this practice.†Commends Little Theatre Group Its going to be easier to get into Bedford Park Avenue -â€" Councilior Bradstock's motion, seconded by Councillor Broad- hurst, that there be no parking within 50 feet of the Yonge St. entrance to Bedford Park met with unanimous approval of council. Councillor Mrs. Southwell ear- lier in the evening had stated the liquor store just north of Bedford Park was responsible for one of the worst traffic tie- ups on Yonge Street during shopping hours. Hand Bill Distributors iwï¬Ã©puty-reeve Tinker: “There is no bylaw, this is still under in- vestigation.†H (Continued from page 1) Reeve Haggart said he had to support the motion â€" since it was a better investment than the fan. Councillor Tom Broadhurst: “I will have to vote against this because the money is to come “I have been asked by several ratepayers what happened to the by-law re hand-bills", Councillor Mrs. Southwell stated. “I would like to compliment the Curtain Club on the garden party they put on last week," Councillor Howard Whillans not- ed. Reeve Haggart then comment- ed on the fact thét Miss Joan Fairfax’s contract had been drop- ped by the CBC. “She is one of my iavorite TV_starsâ€, he said. Clear The Tumofl Pomt “I will have to vote against this because the money is to come from No. 2 Account." Councillor Broadhurst’s was the only neg- ative vote. Rent Police â€" Also commenting on one of the 'star' guests, the mayor said he had attended school with Miss Phyllis Marshall. , Mr. J. Sanderson, Richvale smiles his thanks as he receives the keys to his brand new Renault Dauphine in the lucky draw sponsored by the Richmond Hill Civiten Club. Making the presenta- tion is Mr. Tom Pitt, Chairman of the Ticket Committee. AV. 5-2798 leeceiueé Jéqé .70 Wew Car LADY CHATTERLEY’S LOVER â€" “a1 obscene bookâ€"there’s something highly incongruous about a society that concerns itself over the harmful effects of comic books, but which in the name of freedom of expression advocates the uncontrolled sale of such a questionable book to anyone young or old who can afford the priceâ€. MARILYN MONROEâ€"“(511(2) makes more each week than Prime Minister Diefenbaker earns in a year by appealing to our baset instinctsâ€. Broadcasts Twice Each Hour 0n (LIKE-1310 The architect, Mr. Baker of Pentland and Baker, presented a suitably engraved silver trowel to Mr. Robert Wylie, Chairman of the Building Committee, who in turn passed it to Dr..Dorey. He then placed mortar on the stone. and as the masons completed the task of setting it, Dr. Dorey de- clared: “In the faith of’ Jesus Christ we place this stone in this wall; In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. Here may the true faith flourish, the fear of God, the love of the brethren. In this place may the voice of prayer con- tinually be heard, the voice of praise, and the invocation of thy most holy name, even the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, to whom be glory henceforth and forever. Amen." . Dr. Dorey spoke on a text from Philippians, “Ye Are A Colony Of Heavenâ€,_a verse in which Paul likens the church to a Roman Colony which is set forth in the midst of the world whither the Empire would come, a little cen- tre of Roman customs and standards of value, that from it there might go out into the community round about to possess it the ways of Rome. Mr. Tom Buéhan, Clerk of Session, ’set the box of doc- uments in the stone. Sf. Il/flal‘léew; Mnilecl (,l/LurcA The congregation of St. Matthew’s United Church met on Sunday afternoon last, two hundred strong, to set the date-stone in the wall of their new building at 333 Crosby Ave., in Richmond Hill. The stone was laid by the Very Rev. George Dorey, lately retired from the office of Sec- retary of the Home Mission Board of the church. Assisting him in the service were the Rev. Norman Pick. Chairman of York Presbytery, the Rev. Dr. J. C. Torrance, Secretary of Toronto Home Mission Council, the Rev. Chas. Higgin- son of Richmond Hill United Church, and the minister, the Rev. William Patterson. “v “Avon annbn An 0 +nv4â€" 'Pwnwl DL€Hnn€nna '“Vn Ann The ‘answering service, located at 15 Yonge North, is designed to take all types of messages for any type of business or individ- ual. to deliver those calls to the clients and, as often is the case, to act as intermediary between the client and the caller. To those who find it annoyingly easy to sleep through the alarm, the Annemahghan At A Stand Still During the service Dr. Torrance addressed the gathering, and re- viewed the history of the church’s life and progress from the begin- nings in 1956 to today. Ambulance Subsidy Met By Councils Many brought gxeétings at a Vaughan Township Coun~ cil, at its regular meeting Monday. agreed to pay $100 a month subsidy to the Mc- Brien Ambulance Service, commencing October 151:. Vaughan was infor d that Richmond Hill ha agreed to a §imilar subsidy. Under the agreement. Vaughan and Richmond Hill will pay the money to the York County Health Unit which will in turn turn the money over to the ambul- ance service. Vaughan and Richmond Hill will have complete say in the'policy of the service which will commence with one ambul- ance. Each of the three par- ties will have the right to withdraw from the agree- ment on'three months‘ not- ice. v eyd Jay. $ale-.S)lone .SJL Walféew; unitâ€! Clank Enjoying the proceedings are club members (left to right) Ivan Toutlol’f, Frank Sullivan, Ted Shaw, Ray Nugent, and Civitan President Horace Roberts. Mr. Sanderson’s lucky ticket was drawn from among .the many thous- ands tickets sold by club members. â€"- Photo by Lagerquist social cup of tea served in the‘ present temporary church follow- ing the service. Guests were present from neighbouring chur- ches, and from Toronto, Oshawa, Lindsay, Oakville, and Chatham and many other points. Those who signed the guest book are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Montgom- ery of Chatham; Dr. and Mrs. George Dorey, Toronto; Rev. R. Norman Pick, Markham; Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Haggart; Mr. Lou Wainwright; Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Sale; Rev‘. and Mrs. Fred C. Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. A. Gibson of Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Stephenson of Willowdale; Ar- thur and Annie Stong; Mr. and Mrs. S. Jude of Oshawa: Miss Margaret Patterson, Oshawa; Dr. and ‘Mrs. J. C. Torrance. Toron- to; Dr. J. I. Macleay of Toronto; Rev. Maurice Whidden, Willow- dale; Mr. Frank L. Huffman of Toronto: Mr. Clive Simpson of Willow-dale; Mr. Clare Terry of Willowhle; Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Toll, Toronto; Mrs. Mary Mercer. Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Southwell; Rev. R. H. and Mrs. Wylie, Queensway, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Storms; Rev. and Mrs. Chas. Higginson; Dr. and Mrs. J. P. Wilson; Mr. and Mrs.‘ I. D. .Ramer; Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Fry; Miss Susan Robinson; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith, Lind. say. Appoint Part-time Welfare Officer Councillor Mrs. Margaret Southwell, chairman of the personnel committee for the Town of Richmond Hill re- commended that Mr. Norman Lewis be hired as part-time Welfare Officer at a salary of $2,000 per annum plus a $200 car allowance and a mileage account at .8c per mile. There were eight appli- cagts for the position. Reeve James Haggart ask- ed that regular reports be made to council by the new Welfare officer. Less than one month ago aRichmond Hill Answering Ser- Rlchmond Hm businessman ap-ivice will, for a modest monthly preached Mr. and Mrs, Brock fee, telephone them awake at 3 Cook of 234 Essex Street with the specified time. suggestion they open a telephone ’ The answering service, which answering service. “Two weeks opened September 12, is a 24- later we were in business." said hour, 7-day-a-week service. So Mrs. Cook. “and ever since tho'tar, the majority of clients are enterprise has been Jumping ï¬ghtbusiness people, Mrs. Cook said. 810213. The results so far havefl‘They arrange with Bell Tele- exceeded expectations." To the’phone for an extension to our point indeed there already are switchboard. If the secretary is four full-time employees and out to lunch or away for some two Part-time staffers, includinglother reason, the calls come Mrs. COOk. ‘throuzh us and we clear the Stating he was still concerned with the T.T.C. contract and that he was bored with all he read of th; T.T.C. zoo, Reeve James Hag- gart said he felt it would be in order for the three municipali- ties of Richmond Hill, Vaughan and Markham to explore very carefully and see if it would be possible to set up their own hus line for the time when the pres- ent five-year contract runs out. and set up a transportation com- mission of their own. Local Transportation Commission Proposal Fails To Get Support The reeve's suggestion met with no support. Most council members seemed of the opinion it was (1) premature; (2) costly; (3) and that it is too far into the future to project a council now in office. “It may seem like a long time away," the reeve said, “but time is needed to go into detai‘.s." Mayor Ken Tomlin pointed out the new contract with the T.T.C. was Signed earlier this year, be- cause the Commission had done a Hopes that the annexation of parts of Vaughan by the Vil- lage of Woodbridge might be nearing finalization in the for- seeable future seem to have be- come stymied once again â€" this time because Vaughan refuses to be drawn into a controversy be- tween Woodbridge and Metro To- ronto Planning Board. To recapitulate briefly, the proposal is to annex about 2,880 acres of Vaughan Township to Woodbridge which now embraces an area of 641 acres and has a population of 2,245. Woodbridge would then pick up 361 residen- tial properties, including farms, and 16 commercial properties with a total combined assessment of some $1,180,000. Granted, of course, that the annexation boun- daries as suggested by Metro were adhered to. Woodbridge Council itself is divided as to the exact directions the village should, expand through annexation. Proposals have been brought forward and kicked about between Wood- bridge and Metro several times over, with no firm solution still in sight. Metro has now suggested that Vaughan submit a study showing what effect the annex- ation would have on the town- ship. But Vaughan takes the at- titude that nothing would be gained by this for the simple reason that there is no handy basis for comparison on which to go into such a study without a great deal of work, and even if such a study was worked out the findings could go out the window if Woodbridge decides on yet another annexation schemet While Vaughan Township of- ficials have made no definite statement observers conclude that until Metro Planning Board and Woodbridge come to a firm agreement as to the exact type of annexation that‘ will be best, Vaughan will not be drawn into the, crosé-fire. The Richmond Hill Recreation Committee once again has a per- manent chairman. Mr Grant Gibb was the unanimous choice of the committee at its Septem- ber meeting. He replaces W. “Ed†Butlin who agreed to fill the position temporarily when Mrs. Cicely Thompson, former chair- man, departed for England early this summer. Mr. Butlin is mov- ing to Thornhill. Mrs. Thomson reported that 150 out of 200 of the senior cit- izens group are interested in bowling. She said she is hope- ful that some means of tree transportation can be arranged to transport these senior citizens to Allencourt Bowling Alleys, Whose proprietor has indicated that the establishment will set aside one afternoon per week for the senior citizens free of charge. Grant Gibb Is New Chairman STOUFFVILLE â€" The congrega- tion of Christ Church, Anglican, hére, has opened its $30,000.00 building fund drive toward the construction of a new parish hall on 2% acres of land on Sunset Other committee members are Mrs. A. R. Phipps, secretary, A1 White, Bill Ruttle, and Mrs. Dor- othy Turner, while Recreational Director Mrs. Malcolm (Jean) Thomson, acts as treasurer. Dc- puty-reeve F. S. Tinker and Councillor J. Bradstock represâ€" ent the town council on the committee. NEWMARKET â€" Town council has heard a verbal application for approval of a plan to conâ€" struct a fuel oil depot within the toWn. Blvd jeflzpï¬one _/41 ‘udg ndwering good job in the past. Councillor Bradstock wondered how much local fare money goes into other T.T.C. accounts, whicn gave rise to a rally of wittlcisms, including remarks about the ‘cir- cus." Deputy-reeye Tinker said that despite criticism of some commissioners during the past few years, “The T. T. C. is run on sound principles. no matter what happens in the board room†Both the mayor and the depu- ty-reeve spoke with respect of Mr. Duncan, a former commis- sioner. Councillor Mrs. Southwell ad- ded that if such labels as “200†and “circus†were applicable they must put on quite a show down there, “but I wonder why they have gone back to collecting fares by passing around the fare box. I though that went out years ago. Surely they could come up with something better for their customers." - 'ud incumch The answering service, which opened September 12, is a 24- hour, 7â€"day-a-week service. So far, the majority of clients are business people, Mrs. Cook sald. "They arrange with Bell Tele- A secretarial service rounds out the business of the new establish- ment. Landing 3 hand in the tech- nical end is son Dennis, 21, who is a film technician with Bell Telephone. Daughter Patricia. 16, is also in there pitching. ‘ Mrs. Cook said that all the em- ployees are Richmond Hill cit- izens and that with the exception of Patricia, all the staff members are married women. The service is efficient and highly confiden- tial. And the public. Mrs. Cook said, are “just wonderful" to deal with. CALIFORNIA SALMON FLESH CANTALOPE CARNATION CHASE & SANBORN ELL-0 Jelly Powders Save 4c 3 ï¬gs-25¢, COFFEE JEWEL Grade "A" PULLET GRADE "A" POUND YORK BRAND LUNCHEON MEAT SILVER STREAM 29. Yonge St. S. RICHMOND HILL FRESH â€" 21/2 - 3% Average Evaporated Milk SHORTENING Pork 8: Beans NESTLE'S QUICK Prem or Kam MORLEY'S FOODLAND Size 45's CHICKENS ermce THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, September 22, 1960 3 ‘00†EACH EGGS i 198 Yonge Street N., Richmond Hill Typewriters - Adding Machines SALES - SERVICE - RENTALS 'your office machine speclallst' 88 Baker Ave.. Richmond Hill You are cordially invited to view the latest and largest display of ï¬ne FURNITURE in York County. NO OBLIGATION We carry these famous makes: -- KROEHLER - KAUFMAN - PEPLER - VILAS - DEILCRAFT - LANARK - KNECHTEL - LANE . SIMMONS - SLEEPMASTER - BRAEMORE - MARSHALL - MONARCH - STANDARD - LLOYD - GENDRON - KRUG - CHESLEY - GIBBARD - and many others. TU. 4-2922 (north of Municipal Bldg.) 85 Yonge St. POWELL FURNITURE 35c Day or Evenings TU. 4-1745 see portable models It ‘Wight’s Pharmnoy' H‘ SIMS Save 8: Save 6: YELLOW RIPE COPACO PURE PORK Save 2.‘ BANANAS I POUND TRAY SAUSAGE Save 5c 1 lb. ctn Save 6c 2V2 dozen tray Save 6c Ilb. Tin 5|! POUNDS All popular makes on hand , 1 lb. bag 69: 20 oz. tins Special Students’ Ram 12 oz. tin 27C FHIL. BARTH Tall Tins Parking in Rear. .tins 29c 'l‘Urner 4-4411 41c L27: