Let's deal with the first ques- of nine streams, the Etobicoke, tion - “What is it?" The map Mimico, Humber, Don, Rouge. above pictures a big area. sim- Duffin. Highland, Petticoat and ilar in shape to the Continental Carruthers. In that area nearly United States. It Stretches one-tenth of the population of roughly fifty five ‘miles from Canada resides - demonstrating east to west and thirty five that the conservation authority miles from north to south. is a meaningful thing in the That's the area over which the lives of many people. Met-1'9.T°r?l‘f‘2 P339. 3.??‘1‘1392' Many Municipalities That's the area over which the Metro Toronto and Region Con- servation Authority has control. That, a rapid calculation will reveal. is well over a [hous- and square miles. servuuuu nuululuy "no euuuvn That, a rapid calculation will' Twenty three municipalities reveal. is well over a thous_ have all or part of their areas - within these watersheds. Besides and square mllcs' ‘Metro Toronto, there are Rich- Halel W3! RCSDOnSiblc mond Hill and its neighbouring Its purpose? The best way to townships - Markham, Vaughan. answer that is to go back to King and Whitchurch. Other Hurricane Hazel, which caused municipalities are the townships loss of life and terrific damage of Adjala. Albion, Caledon," in October. 1954. Even in that Chinguacousy, Mono, Pickering, day the need for conservation of Toronto Gore, Toronto. Ux- natural resources had become bridge. Then there are the; abundantly evident. If southernvillages of Bolton, Caledon Ontario wasn’t to become a East. Markham. Pickering, great waste-land. the loss of Stouflville and Woodbridge and soil and water through unbal-lthe towns of Ajax and Bramp- anced run-offs had to be stop- ton. ped- Hazel emphasxzed the need‘! Who pays for all this - and T0 consewauonv Prevenuon 9f who runs it? These twenty three flows had to be addEd-VSO. {ntmunicipalities appoint fifty- 1957, mse heads in the OntaHOItwo members to the Authority. goverhment established the Me- Those outside Metro appoint U‘OPOhtaR Toronto (and Region one-half of the members. based Conservation {\UthOTEtY- It was on their population. There are an {amalgamation of four Au- four statutory and five func- montlesv three 05 )“thh had tionai advisory boards which are been §Smbu5h9d PI‘IOI‘ t0 the responsible for the detailed formation of Metro. It is one Of work of the Authority. There 28 Similar Authorities in the is an executive committee, province. All of these authori- which is made up of the chair- ties are concerned with the con~ man of the Authority, Dr. G. servation ocf natural resources - Ross Lord, 13. Eng“ head of the water, soil. forests, Iish and Deparmem of Mechanical Eh- wildlife, plus recreation areas gineerihg of the University of and PFOPEIIUBS 0f hiStW‘iC inter‘ Toronto, the vice-chairman, Al- es‘: in the“ “midst derman W. C. Davidson. Q. C.. n was a thfrd for Diane Rose- ar of Port Credit, by a quar- dlap over Norval's Fran Beck- r . Sam Snider of Unionville, nner of his fifth feature race Despite considerable and consistent publicity the It includes specialists in agri- culture, forestry, fish and wild- purpose and operations of Metropolitan Toronto and . - . . . . ‘lf , e h , 1 rm and Region Conservation Authority remain somewhat of autistic??? oyperiéonénfre d1: mystery to many people in this area. What is it? What‘rected by Mr. Kenneth G-i does it do? Who started it? Who runs it? What doesiHiggS’ 13- 501’" R-P-F- The Province of Ontario pays it cost? These questions are asked more frequently' . . ’f‘ft et fth otof conSIdermg the tens and tens of thousands of words‘ 3111 $6319; nincfudinge tï¬espup which have been printed about the Authority, than‘chase and development of re- one would imagine. ‘creation areas, fifty per cent! for administration and generall ne stock car championship ture from the second to the 18th 5 clinched and another boxled lap before Snider took over. to a two-man dispute af-‘Craig Hill of London, third 31- Saturday night’s racing nt‘most all the way, caught Robin- ecrest Speedway. son just as they crossed the tty Carcone of Weston sew- finish line and the two wound up her third title in a row up in a dead heat for second. en she finished third in the Dave Stephenson of Richmond ies’ race. She has 160 points, Hill was fourth finisher and has out of reach of Willowdale’sfa 106-99 lead over Robinson in Cressweil and her 140. withia fight for fifth spot. Snider’s st one more point-scoringdZ points on the night moved ght left. Saturday‘s feuture'him out of a tie for third with ’ " “ ‘“'7‘-â€"--â€"A ull‘l'n Jar-k Cook. the men’s division, was, nev- 'the1ess, eliminated. The de- sion will be made this Satur- ly between Mac Bound of Scar- )ro (159 points) and George (mans of Mllllken (152). Bound defending titlist and Symons 18 been second for the past vo years. Doug Robinson of art Credit had led the fea- The area under the local Alb thorities jurisdiction is com- prised, es the map accompany- ing this article shows, of the Watershed: or drainage basins {en's Decision Saturday ractical For Survival- Popular For Playtime 7 Rules Governing Rabid Animals r (arcanef w_es_t_on' Tightened By York Health Unit ear Of “Great Ontario Desert" Now Fast Dminishing ins Title Third Time Not so many years ago fears were being expressed â€" and with ap- parent reason â€"- that many parts of Ontario were on their way to becom- ing a great desert. Pessimists declared â€"â€" and produced facts to back their claims â€" that dropping water tables,accelerated by man’s destruc- tion of trees and soil and other natural resources, would bring that result within a century. Hurricane Hazel, with its winds and floods, demonstrated that Ontarians, with their self-created loss of natural cover and protective agents, were placing themselves in danger from flood as well as from water shortage. Far-seeing fnen stepped into the picture and the work of con~ servation authorities was speeded up. The map above shows the area cov- ered by one of those groups â€" the Metropolitan Toronto and Region Con- m? is an executive committee,‘ Ol'l'm'hich is made up of the chair-‘ 3011"man of the Authority, Dr. G. 35 ' Ross Lord. P. Eng, head of the and Department of Mechanical En- '835 gineering of the University of “Br-Toronto, the vice-chairman, A1- ‘derman W. C. Davidson, Q. C.. Au- and the chairmen of the nine om-‘advisory boards. Altogether, the iny- Authority has a permanent thefyear-round staff of 75, which sins‘is augmented in the summer. ture from the second to me 10'.†--~-~~~ r _ 7 lap before Snider took over. 501114 418335 t0 Cheek 9n Possible cases. Fortunately there has Craig Hill of London, third al-‘rables. Will have an Immediate not been one case of the dread most all the way, caught Robin- affect on Dog Control Officer virus. The health unit’s ‘stitch- ameS Ryan's husmess at Duf-‘in-time-saves-nine' policy has ‘ t a the crossed theJ _ . son Jus S y dferm and CaFerlle Rd., Vau-Jbeen well received by :citizens finish line and the two woun _ . . up in a dead heat for second. ghan Twp. Five new steel ken- and municipal admlmstmtom Dave Stephenson of Richmond mils, which_lend themselves to Mr. Ryan spent two years Hill was fourth finisher and has proper sterlllzatlon, W111 be in- working With rabid animals at Robinson in stalled in a temporary building the Connaught Medical Research t. Snider’s SeParflte from the imlitollm‘llng Laboratories Veterinary Section, 12 points on the night movedikennels. and a. 96W. _specially at Dufferln Street and Steeles him out of a tie for third with‘constructed buxldmg 15 to be Avenue. Richmond Hill’s Jack Cooknerected at the start of the new Meanwhile, dog owners are ml..." mm, “and 141.135, lyear. reminded that if and when an n - --- u- 713", u._nl,‘;_.‘_1 Lu..- a human than: nrfl uavc unpy .......... Hill was fourth finisher and has a 106-99 lead over Robinson in a fight for fifth spot. Snider’s 12 points on the night moved him out of a tie for third with Richmond Hill's Jack Cook. They now stand 141-135. With an earlier start. George Rueffer of Port Credit could have been a strong contender for jalopy honors. He won his fourth race in a row Saturday, his fifth in six starts this sea- son. Ed Bell of Oshawa put this championship away a couple of weeks ago. , m-.. "Fans wiï¬ be giw chance to see the w Saturday when the : “em assault will be feature. 1 be given another see the cracks this hen the fifth wreck L will be an added lung in mc- * - - . ______ _,- s , Lands and Forests. the De- ber River at woocioridge, auu Iv . . le' ‘ggrtment of Agriculture, the the Etobieoke Creek at Bramp- Elgegesvgiziiegfsng S [Department 0‘. Mumdpal Af'iton' glactiofi. During 1959-60 attenâ€" numcjpalmes fan's’ the O-ntz-mo water Resour-lpopular With Public dance totalled almost 125,000. f their areas ces OommiSSion and the De-1 Three new conservation areas Last yea“ 92,000 visitors was heds. Besides partment of Commerce and De- were opened in the period of nearly triple the 1959 ï¬gure. “‘6, 3" R‘Fh‘ VEIOPment- 1959 and 1960; Glen Haf_fy.tLast year‘s Authority-sponsored ne‘ghbmmng Flood Control Programs Black Creek and Humber Trafls-ipioneer Festival attracted im. Vaughanvi By 1970, if everything goes‘Conslderable improvements 10,000, lamb“ Other 'according to plan. the AuthoritylhaVe been “flaw in Other Sim" Some two and a quarter niil- he t°.‘,vm‘h‘ps.will have constructed 15 mul- liar areas. Albion Hills, Boydellion dollars were budSEted 501' , ’n' P?Ie‘1°""tiple<purpose dams and reser- Heart Lake, Greenwood, G0111960, with the purchase and {0’ Plc‘ermg' voirs to control floods. increase creek Claremmt and. BOlton"development of conservation ar- °r°nt°' Ux‘ summer flow, provide emergen- These include everything fromleas claiming just about $1 mil- hawks“ wkk‘. rre are the . - d lkes for both fisli-i- ' i 1 and i vater ources and create re man 1113 e a .lion while flood 00mm Dn' .Calefion gea‘ition likes. A total of 7,450 mg and SWimming» batthUSeS water conservation took a shadeI Pickermé'v'acres of vulnerable flood plains and washrooms. re-desisned less than $900,000. Operations Odbnd'ge and land will be acquired and deâ€" roads and Parking a1‘935- ï¬eld and maintenance required $273, and Bramp' veloped as natural recreation‘and target archery courses and 000 and expenditures on his- areas. Channel improvements public picnic areas. torical sites some $673000. In-l‘a 11 this ' and will complement the reservoir The success of the conserâ€" formation and education took twenty threesystem and bring about a more vation areas is indicated by the $21,770.78 and reforestation I tpoint fifty- economic utilization of available‘fact that whereas four years ago and land use needs $18,659.00. l ' he Authcrity.‘reservoir capacities. the Authority owned less than or this hefty total the 011-, em) appoint Estimated cost of the pro-[1,000 acres. today it has in ex- tario government contributed ’mbers- based gram is $34,000,000 - a big sum cess of 4.000 acres. In 1957 $1,009,188.61 while_t_he parthl- s n- There are but an economical one when ap- some 100,000 persons made use pating muniCipalities came t d five func- plied against the cost of phen-‘ocf the areas. Last year this fi- through with 51.004.935.45 Con‘l rdS Which are omena like Hurricane Hazel “ï¬gure was more than 800,000. servation revenue amounted to i the detailed the day-to-day and year-to-yearlYoung and old find pleasure and some 592,000. '1 horitY- There loss by erosion and other causes relaxation. They fish and swim, That's some of the story lof i committeeï¬which pauperize the land and picnic and hike, bone up on his- the Authority. In brief._ provm- I 0f the Chair-lnatural wealth of the area. tory and ski in winter. cial lands are being subJected to 2 WHY. Dr- G. In the past two and one-halfiFarmers Benefit controlled development With ai -. head of theyears considerable progress has Farmers in the region benefit. view to getting the most out of I EChBDical 1311- been made in flood control and The Authority provides assisâ€" the natural resources. to beau-i University of water conservation. Six welrs tance for the establishment of tify the country and, through] Chairman, Al- have been completed in the tile drains and grassed water- the increasing floods of tour-l Vidson. Q. C.. Lower Humber and two at We“- ways are encouraged. An auâ€" ists advertise ontario here and . i. of the nine ton. The West Branch of the thority sponsored tree-replace- abroad. There is no question: ltogether. the Don River at York Mills has merit program aids the soil and that the Authority, itself a hold. 2 swsisn oncn :___.:..-i:.m anrl nrno‘racdvfll [ta wuu‘uuuau uxâ€"uâ€"u wu‘nâ€"n-n _ V __v V" : Cookberected at the "start of the new Meanwhile, dog owners are 5. 13/8811 . reminded that if and when an George The health unit's ruling thatlanlmal bites a human, they are it could‘isolatlon‘ eases must be handledllegally and morally responsible mtender by qualified personnel is pre- for reporting the incident either won his dlcatedbn the knowledge that’to the control officer or police :aturday, there Is no medical means‘so that steps can be taken with- this sea- whereby it can be revealed in-lout loss of time. By doing so, put this stantly whether a dog. at the say authorities, they will pro- couple time it bites anyone in the lncu-lteet _ not only the life of the batlng stage of rabies. Under‘bitten but possibly of their own another.the new set-pp._ during the is-lfamily members as well, if the -' - - - r A 4.-..1.‘ k- «Add fnr than: ï¬Ã©olation Period Lengthened quguneuthpefmmfl .Ia PIC-inn Acyuxpaanb .............. V verbmu Gate 011 6 now edge that to the control officer or one ‘ “m†“WW“â€6 . there is no medical means‘so that steps can be takenpwithJ“‘EW‘T‘DE‘Wr this week gives fun members br°ught 1“ labels whereby it can be revealed imiout 1055 of time_ By doing so iparticulars of courses. from Canada Packers products ' which are being saved in order stantly whether a dog, at the say authorities. they will pro-' Classes may have as few as time it bites anyone in the incu-Itect‘not only the life of the‘ten students this year. the high to Procure a coffee urn for the hating stage of rabies. Under‘bitten but possibly of their own school board has ruled providing commumty hall- More are still lthe new set-up. during the iS-‘family members as well, if the that there is an average of flf~ Headw- olationperiod. if the animal has dog should be rabid, for there‘teen across the board. Thus Refreshments were served by. ‘rabies, symptoms will show.‘is no guarantee that the animal heavily attended classes will hostesses Mrs. H. Barber, Mrs. 'whereupon the bitten person can‘will reserve his fangs and tem- help to compensate for the G. Brands and Mrs. E. Empring- lstart protective treatment welliper for strangers only. ilightly attended ones. ham. 1â€"! The recent ruling by the Yorkiwlthin the ‘safe' period. County Health Unit, that dogs Thirty-eight Cases which have bitten humans and‘ In the past seven weeks, Mr. broken the skin must be isolaied Ryan has handled 38 biting LL,_- I.-- Lvuau “may... V r -_ or ,, rected by Mr. Kenneth G.‘ Higgs, B. Sara, R.P.F. The Province of Ontario pays fifty per cent of the cost of all schemes, including the pur-‘ chase and development of re- creation areas, fifty per cent for administration and general conservation purposes, and sev- enty five per cent for prellmw inary engineering studies. The balance is split up among the‘ municipalities in the Author- ity‘s area. Incidentally. there is close co-ordination between the Authority and the Department of Lands and Forests, the De- partment of Agriculture, the ‘Department of Municipal Af- fairs, the Ontario Water Resour- ces Commission and the De- partment of Commerce and De- velopment. ces Commission and the De- - . ‘ Three new conservation areas Bafgméggtï¬ Commerce and De' were opened in the period of e p ' 1959 and 1960; Glen Haffy, Flood Control Progresscs ‘Black Creek and Humber Trails. By 1970. if everything goes Considerable improvements according to plan. the Authorityihave been effected in other sim- » - - .- 7,“. n . _ . . n . . AH-ï¬nn um: and uuu 1.“ch up Ant“. -.-._ _V_-,_ seen channel improvement-s 5&1 the sc‘einrevry.’ Too, during 1960, a flood-retardation dam has some 300 pond owners were been constructed on the uppergiven enamel-ins assistance among the‘ At the same time, engineer- he Author- ing studies have been initiated 11y. there is on flood control measures for between thelthe Lower Highland Creek, Duf- Department fin Creek at Stouffville, Hum- 5ts, the De-‘ber River at Woodlbridge, and ilture, thehhe Etobicoke Creek at Bramp- mlciDHJ Af-.ton. -w ....- u..- cases. Fortunately there has not been one case of the dread virus. The health unit’s ‘stitchâ€" in-time-saves-nine' policy has been well received by :citizens and municipal administrators Mr. Ryan spent two years working with rabid animals at the Connaugh_t_Med_ica1 Research .5.; reaches of Black Creek. Fifty- Feeding is overcoming slope er-l Members of local municipallr DrfAj‘. Binnington amended six homes vulnerable to flood osion and strip cropping has councils are active in Conser-l1ast week's annual Emmanue] in the Lower Highland Creek been demonstrated. During vation Authority affairs. Deputy College Alumni Association in have been replaced by an atâ€"i1959-60, some 168,000 trees have Reeve Jesse Bryson of Vaughan Toronto, tra-otive park, complete with been planted in the conserve-ITownship is chairman of the Mn and Mrs. wubur 3mm- roads, parking lots, concessionition areas and 700,000 on pri-‘reforestration and land use ad- well and Mark attended the buildings and pavilions. A vit-,vate lands. Extensive fish man-.visory board. Deputy Reeve funeral of Mrs. Bmmweuvs um ally important flood warning agement programs, hatcherylG. Henderson of Woodbridge )5 ole at Welland last week system has been extended and‘development, rearing ponds andlchairman of the flood and p01- Mr and Mrs Stanley Boyn_ ‘new structures constructed on a‘stream surveys are high on the‘lution control advisory board ton Miss Dorothy Jackson Ind number of rivers. The Claire-‘agenda. And since 1959, a full- and Mayor James Haggart ofiDm'mld Boynton spent sunda ville dam will be co-ordinated time naturalist has been em- Richmond Hill is vice-chairmanaft moon with Mrs Scott Reiï¬ with the C.N.R. byâ€"pass in crossâ€"lployed. In the 1959-60 period of the same board. an; famu at Osï¬awa y ,ing the West Branch of the1100,000 hikers used conserva- ' Sunda {Iisitor Mth'Mr a d lH-umber River__ ition area trails. Another valu- M H y C 115 d d f' :1 l - ' l - ble educational phase of Au- rs' awey O at an am 1y At the same time, engmecr a . . were: Mrs. C. McMullen and ing studies have been initiatedith°Flty Work ‘3 SChOOI conser' Mrs Johnston of Newmarket. {on flood control measures for‘t’atwn t9“? anr‘: Egggnfghxgï¬ ' ’ Mriand Mrs. George Dalley of the Lower Highland Creek, Duf- 0 acquam m0 wmowdale, Mrs. Lorne Hodg. l - - ‘Mother Nature. fin Creek at Stouffvxlle Hum- , n h,†a M . v . P- eel. Villa 0 son, Toronto, Mlss Cathy Glenn, k n 1» w (in-widen: aim Many See 1,9.“ ._ g“. Thornhill. Mrs. Barry Collard Farmers in the region benefit. The Authority provides assis~ tance for the establishment of tile drains and grassed water- ways He encouraged. An au- thority sponsored tree-replace- ment program_aids ‘the soil and servation Authority â€" which is putting into effect one of the continent’s greatest and most effective flood control and conservation schemes and, in the process, providing natural “breathing spaces†for an area housing nearly a tenth of Canada’s population. The achievements of the Authority are described in the following article, together with its long-term plans for the future. The region shown includes the watersheds or drainage basins of nine streams and takes in twenty-three municipalities, including thirteen townships, six villages, three towns and Metropolitan Toronto. In the map the shaded portions indicate conservation areas and the solid black areas show flood-plain lands. The tree symbols indicate Authority forests. Scale of the map is seven miles to each inch and a quarter. Night Courses Named To Start On Oct. 3rd Registration for night courses to be run during the winter un- der the sponsorship of the York Central District High School Board will take place at Rich- mond Hill High School â€" only school in the district in which a night school will be run this year â€" on September 28th. says Principal Wright Morrow, who will be in charge. Classes start on October 3rd. Courses this year will be Girls’ Physical Education. Type- writing. Basic English for New Canadians, Mlllinery. Advanced and Beginners‘ Dressmaking, Advanced and Beginners’ Con- versational French. Advanced and Beginners’ Oil Painting. Metal Work. Fees for all groups are $10, except Oil Painting which is $15 and Basic English for New Canadians, which is $5. An ad- vertisement appearing in this newspaper this week gives full particulars of courses. auu idllu um: ucuua gnu, ....... or this hefty total the 011-: KENNETH macs tario government contributed One of the men largely re. $1,009,188.61 while the partici- sponsible for the functioning of pating municipalities came the Metropolitan Toronto and‘ through with $1,054,965.45. Con- Region Conservation Authority, servation revenue amounted to is Kenneth Higgs, Director of, some 592,000. Operations, pictured here. A That's some of the story of graduate or the Faculty of For-1 the Authority. In brief, prOVin- estry, University of Toronto, in‘ cial lands are being subjected to 1952, he had considerable sum-‘ controlled development with amer experience from 1948 to view to getting the mast out of 1952 in summer work in the the natural resources. to beau- field of conservation. He then tify the country and, through became Field Officer for the the increasing floods of tour- Humber Valley Conservation ists advertise Ontario here and Authority and, in 1957, became abroad. There is no question Senior Field Officer for an that the Authority, itself a bold. amalgamated group of authori- imaginative and progressive ties. In January, 1960, he tack: project, will pay off handsom- over the duties of his present elv. most - Director of Operations. .1 Roll call was an article made from one yard of material made up to sell, and included tea towels, aprons. place-mats. children's colouring-aprons, cushion, hosiery clothes-line. The sale came to $9. The September meeting of The September meeting of the Sr. Women's Institute was the W.M.S. was held on Wed- held on Tuesday of last week nesday afternoon of last week at the home of Mrs. Harry Bar- at the home of Mrs. Heber Mc- her, with a large attendance.lCague. Richmond Hill. who took The theme’ of the meeting wasucharge of the worship service. “Home Economics and Health". assisted by Mrs. L. Mumberson, convened by Mrs. Reid Brum- Mrs. A. Binnington and Mrs. P. well. Bennett. Mrs. H. Aereman gave Roll call was an article made an account 0f the ltlldy book from one yard of material made Cards were Signed ‘50 be sent up to selL and included tea to absent members who are shut- tnwnl: nnrnns. nlaeeomats. ms. Sr. Women's Institute Mrs. J. McArthur of the Rich- mond Hill Cancer Society show- ed two ï¬lms on the work of the Cancer Society. VICTORIA SQUARE NEWS R. R. 2 Gormley - Telephone Gormley 5421 CORRESPONDENT: MRS. W. SANDLE W.M.S. Members are reminded of the W.M.S. Rally of York Presby- terlal to be held September 21 from 9:45 am. to 3:30 pm. in the Brown's Corners United Church. Tea was served by Mrs. McCague. Girl Guides The ï¬rst meeting of the lst Gormley Girl Guide Company was held on September 14 in the Melville United Church. Be- cause Glenda Moses has moved to Aurora. Marilyn Stacey has been chosen to be Seconder of the Oriole Patrol. There Is still room in the company for girls 11,-to 16 years of age. Contact Mrs. P. Ru‘mney at Gormley 5437, if interested. Church News 0h Sept. 24. the service at Victoria Square has been with- drawn so that everyone may at- tend the anniversary services being held at the Headford Un- ited Church. Guest speakers will be the Rev. Wesley Morris of the Bethesda United Church, Don Mills. and Mr. Francis Cook of Goodwood United Church. Sun- day School will be held as usual at 10 am. Sunday School Meeting The service on Sunday morn- ing was in charge of Mr. Robin Wood, student minister. his last service at Victoria Square be- fore returning to Victoria Univ- ersity. Toronto. for his secand year in an Honour Arts Course. We wish him every success in his studies. The Superintendent of the Sunday, School, Mr. Percy Ben- nett, has called a meeting at his home of all the teachers and officers for Sept. 22, at 8 pm. lC.G.I.T. The C.G.I.T. for the Victoria Square charge will meet on Sept. 25 at 7:15 pm. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Patterson. Th-ls meeting will be in the form of a corn roast. Leaders: Misses Betty Patterson and Judy Hord. ‘Cancer Meeting A Cancer Work meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Cecil Nichols on Sept. 28 at 2 pm. with all the ladies asked to help make cancer dressings. Neighbourth Notes 7 Birthday greetings to David Houck Jr.. ï¬ve year: old on Sept. 22: to Mr. Harry router, 78 years old on Sept. 26. . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Frisby‘ (Lois Taun) will be celebrating their ï¬rst wedding anniversary on Sept, 24. Mr. and Mrs. David Hammersley (Mary Slberry) their ï¬rst on Sept. 24, and Mr. and Mrs. John McCague their 13th on Sept. 25. Mrs. Denton Brumwell and her twin daughters, Sherri and Shelly have arrived home from Newmarket Hospital. Mrs. Wm. Trussell of Van- couver flew home last week to be with her mother, Mrs. Rob~ ert Beatty, who Is ill in the Toronto East General Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Lawson Mum- berson attended the anniver- sary services at the New Low- ell United Church on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fraser Smith of Hockley Valley had dinner recently with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mortson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilson, Johnny and Larry of Isllngton had dinner on Friday evening of last week with Mr. and Mrs. John Empringham. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Brum- well and Mark attended the funeral of Mrs. Brumwell’s un- cle at Welland last week. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Boyn- ton, Miss Dorothy Jackson and Donald Boynton spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Scotty Reid and family at Oshawa. Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Collard and family were: Mrs. C. McMullen, and Mrs. Johnston of Newmarket. Mr. and Mrs. George Dalley of Willowdale, Mrs. Lorne Hodg- son, Toronto, Mlss Cathy Glenn, Thornhill, Mrs. Barry Collard and children of King. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Bennett had Sunday evening dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Harry West at Newmarket and later attended the anniversary services at the Temperanceville United Church. The Council of the Town of Richmond Hill is seeking the voluntary services of an Emergency Organization Liaison Officer. The individual chosen for the position will be expected to take a staff course at Newmarket, starting on September 26 and continuing to Decem- ber 12, each Tuesday evening from 8 to 10 pm. He will be required to maintain touch with the Emergency Measures Organization and to assist the Town Clerk in local EMO activities. He should also be ready to assist in recruiting volunteers for EMO work and to assist in the organization of local training courses. He will be required to act in all respects as a local co-ordinator of the Emergency Measures Or- ganization. APPLICATIONS SHOULD BE SENT TO: THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ont, ThursdagLSeptember 21, 1961 17 Your old chesterï¬eld suite completely recovered and re-built. 5 Year Guarantee. Come in and see your suite re-covered and rebuilt at our factory. We also carry a line of popular priced furniture. FOR FREE ESTIMATES CALL 53 Yonge St. South The misery of a hot water heater t h a t 1e t s y o u down, just when you need it most, dis- appears overnight when you get the new “fast recovery†electric water heater. This nem‘two-element water heater has a 1000-watt bottom element which builds up a generous reserve of piping hot water. The 3000-watt top element takes over automatically to keep a plentiful supply of hot water “on tap†at times of heavy use. 56 YongeSt. N. Richmond Hill Hydro-Electric Comm. Ask us how you can enjoy this efï¬ciency and economy on low Hydro flat rates. TU. 4-5776 MURRAY UPHOLSTERY Chairman SAM COOK RE-COVERED RE-BUILT of running out of hot water.. if you’re afraid RUSSELL LYNETI‘, TOWN CLERK, RICHMOND HILL RICHMOND HILL Superintendent VERNE SNIDER TU. 4-3511