Quality Printing BILL DING says: BOWDEN LUMBER Co. AV. 5-4921 - 'I‘U. 4-11 Evenings: Craig Bowden TU. 4-1668 (Home Improvement Division) Stop 23 Yonge St. Richvale and a courteous representative will call WWW “The Liberal†TU. 4-1105 OF ALL KINDS 20 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL TU. 4-4291 ROBT. J. CRAIGIE GIVE A GIFT ('ER'I‘I FH'A'I‘E Minor Repairs Softset Finish‘ a 8-Hour Service No Extra Charge Jonsult 198 YONGE ST. N., TU. 4-4411 'I‘U. 4-1121 5L SHIRT SERELQ'IE EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT â€"â€" Euchre. Legion Hall. Carrville Road West, 8.15 pm. tfc39 JUNE 20 â€"- Wednesday. ’l‘es- ton United Church Strawberry Festival. Supper served from 5 to 8 pm. Salad plate and straw- berries. Adults $1.50 and child- ren 75c. c2w49 BINGO every wgdpesday even- ing at 7.45 p.m. at t: Legion Branch 375 JUNE 16 â€" School picni union. Memc Sports 3 DJ Ladies bring and desserts Road JUNE 16 â€" Saturday. G.A. TEA. Don't forget the annual G.A. afternoon tea in Wrixon Hall from 3-5 o‘clock. Baking - Candy - Tea. Everyone -wel- come. c1w50 Hall from 3-5 o'clock Baking "JUNE 23 â€" Saturdav. Closing Candy - Tea- Everyone "VEI' School Reunion. Come one. come. Clwoo come all to the grand closing reunion of our 87 year old H ‘school (Mount Lebanonl, on JUNE 17 -' sunda‘v’ leston‘sehool grounds. Games for United Church Sunday School‘ . Anniversary Services. 11.15‘y0un.g and. 01‘.’ at 2 p'm' Wiles a.m. Rev. Martin Jenkinson and‘provme p'cmc “We? at 530' Teston Sundav School choir. RefreShments'. Evcnmg 9mm" 7.30 pm’ Rev-"Gordon Winch lamment. Budding being sold. ‘and the Silverthorn United CIWSO ‘Church Choir. c2w49 1.. ,y * a: **** JUNE 20 â€" Wednesday. 2 to 4:30 pm. York Central Hospital Auxiliary, ’l‘hornhill Branch. garden tea at the home of Mrs. John Sumner and Mrs. Stuari Parker. Sumner Lane and John Streets, Thornhill. Admission 50c. (‘1W50 JUNE 20 â€" 1 picnic lunch 31 home of Mrs. E cession 3. King v Ul uAILECI 16 â€" Saturday. Vollnre . picnic and annual rte-Fmted N Memorial Hall. Vellore. 99' 3 pm. Supper 5 pm. bring salads. cold meats JUNE 22 COMING EVENTS 12:30. Kingcrafts at “Cedarbrook.†Eric White. Con- g. c1w50 al the Canadian 375. Carrville LIMITED PAMPER POP c2w49 tfc48 JUNE 21 â€" Thursday. 8.15 pm. The United Nations Assoc- iation. York Branch, Richmond Hill Public Library. Wright Street. Establishment of schol- arship for high school students and plans for sponsoring overâ€" seas volunteers. Guest speaker. William McWhinney. Regional Secretary. Canadian Overseas Volunteers. All interested in United Nations welcome. Cof- fee. c1w50 JUNE 22 â€" Friday. 8.30 pm. King City Lions Club annual barn dance at Kingfield Farms. Sam McVannel's orchestra. JUNE 27 â€" Wednesday, Straw- berry Festival supper from 5-8 pm. at Carrville United Church hall, sponsored by the ladies of the U.C.W., assisted by ladies of the congregation. Adults $1.25. children 12 and under 75c, preschool free. c2w50 The May police report show- ed 16 accidents; 3 total of 165 summonses, for their own and other departments; 14 thefts; 6 arrests and summonses. and 9 convictions for theft; 5 break, entry and theft; 3 liquor seiz- -...v.‘, ...._ , ures; 3 cases of ma‘li-ci-ou‘s dam- age and 4 stolen cars recov- efed \,A\d‘. Administration and welfare accounts. totalling respectively $32,568.79 and $1,874.40, were approved for payment. Before the meeting adjourn- ed. Depulty-reeve Lavwson Mum- bex‘son objected to statements ‘by Councillor Charles Hooper that last year's annual report of the police department had cost $2,000. Wants An Explanation Rise In Police Costs PUB FATHER'S DAY Mr. Mumberson pointed out that there was no police report issued last year, and said that if he was speaking of the 1960 annual report of the department. Coun- cillor Hooper was “plucking a figure out of the air." The deputy reeve de- manded that Councillor Hooper present at next week's council meeting. some explanation of the rise in police costs from 70,000.00 in 1960, to over $94,000.00 this year. man Dan . outdoor man perfect gift _ fr er Dan . . . . 0" .or man. the at gift for your Dad is here! MEN'S WEAR c2w50 i An induction period for the [new teachers Joining Richmond Hill] staff this fall, who‘ve just graduated from teachers‘ legte, was held on Monday and Tuesday of last week. culmina- ting winh a coffee party arrangâ€" ed by the McCona‘ghy Home and School executive, ‘whevn Mrs. E. Burnfield. chairman of publicity; Mrs. Ray Weeks. wife for ‘62; Mrs. Eleanor Hurn. vice president, and Mrs. N. Cook, isocial con‘vener presided at the tea table. During the induction the new- ,est members of the teaching of Uhe newly elected president p Istaf‘f met school board mem- bers. Chairman Harold Sander- son and Trustees Mrs. Irene col-YWorrell. Mrs. Ruth Castle and Mr. Walter (Dick! Hutchinson, and bhe administrative staff. Several experienced teachers coming on staff were unable to attend as they are now serving with other school boards. his or room ( iod. Prim Irene Mr. H Intyre Herma pri‘nci; schools Mr. Gordon S. McIntyre, suélboarde the Richmond Hill Public Schools, expressed satisfaction witlh an enjoyment of, the busy two days the teachers spent re- "vewitng the curriculum in the various schools. Each new teacher spent time observing in erin‘tendent of education for'task schools and a by Mr the m the sc Mr. Waiters said the morning ban during the week would cost him about $1,000 profit a .year and added it was a serious ‘blow to an already diminished business. 1Con‘tin‘ued from Page 1) jams Sunday evening durinvg ‘bhe summer. But on High-ways 400 and 401 there are continâ€" ued tie-ups every weekend, the brief stated. No parking is allowed bet- Ween 7.30 and 8:30 a.m., Mon- day flhrowgh Saturday on the west side of Yonge Street. Lift Yonge Parking Ban: He was of the opinion signs were misleading to public. TOWN OF RICHMOND HILL BYâ€"LAW NUMBER 1052 A by-law regulating the hours of business for barbershops In the Town of Richmond Hill BE IT ENACTED by the Council of the Town of Rich- mond Hill: ‘place of business shall be closr 1. All places of business in the Town of Richmond Hill, carrying on business as a bar- bershop, shall be closed and remain closed on each Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday be- tween the hours of six o’clock in. the afternoon and ï¬ve o’clock in the forenoon of the next follow- ing day. and on each Thursday and Friday between the hour of nine o'clock in the evening and ï¬ve o'clock in the forenoon of the following day, and on each Saturday after the hour of six o'clock in the afternoon. 2. Notwithstanding the provis-' ions of paragraph 1. every such ed and remain closed on each Wednesday and until ï¬ve o'â€" clock in the morning of the next following day. vuu ............ .v . VIDCU Uu‘, _. line their objections and get down to specific points in- stead of generalities. He sug- gested their findings be pres- ented to the join-t meeting. Criticism of the businessmen for not giving the new system enough time was voiced by De- puty-reeve Tom Broadh-urst. He told the delegation the regulations were put in for their benefit and urged them to give it a fair trial. It is impos- sible to assess the situation in a few days. Mr. Broad‘hurst said. He informed the meeting that a majority of council were in favor of the regulations. Cost of the new system was borne largely b' the highways‘ departâ€" ‘mcnlt, he aid. Sees No Reason 1.» ulnnnn..nt 3. The provisions of paragraph 2 shall not apply to any Wed- nesday in a week in which there is a statutory holiday‘ 4. This byâ€"law shall take ef- fect on the 19th day of June. 1962, and shall be published in ‘The Liberal’ and the ‘Leader. 5. Any person convicted of a breach of the provisions of this byâ€"law shall forfeit and pay in the discretion of the convicting magistrate a penalty not ex- ceeding. exclusive of cests. the sum of $300.00 for each offence. to be recoverable under the Summary Convictions Act. PASSED at the Town of Richmond Hill this 11th day of June, 1962 Seen above are some of the 16 new teachers who will join the Richmond Hill Public School teaching staff this fall, along with members of the Richmond Hill School Board and administrative staff. Back row, left to right: Business Admin- istrator Kenneth Turton; principal of Beverley Acres, Grant Nighswander; principal of Crosby Heights, Eldon Gooding; principal of MacKillop, Robert Newman; chairman of board, Harold Sanderson; principal of McConaghy, Garnet MacDiar- mid; principal of Pleasantville, D. Rose; principal of Walter Scott, N. Davison: and superintendent of public schools, Gor- Est. 1946 93 Yongr St. 5.. Richmond Hill TU. 4-2791 Satisfaction Guaranteed Priceless when taken by the NOTICE W. J. HAGGART, Mayor BABY PICTURES LAGERQUIST STUDIO R. LY'NETT. Clerk are Welcome To New Teachers Of Richmond Hill Public Schools the the Mr. Waters said he travelled north and south on Yonge Sun- day night to see for himself What eflfect the lights had on keeping the traffic flow under control. He informed counci' the lights were doing an excel lent job. Councillor A1 White, chairman of the police committee. said he had spoken to Police Chief R. Robbins regarding the signs land assumed Mr. Waters the de- partment was attempting to fin- alize a standard procedure. Plan Joint Meeting Some of the signs read “no parking anytime†with the ar- row pointing towards the stores. Mr. Waters suggested it should read “no parking here to cor- net" "He also told council the 1y installed lights would care of the heavy Sunday \fic. " Mr. White said he realized [that some of the signs were not adequate but that ‘a start had to be made somewhere. A joint meeting between police and the department of highways will be arranged shortly to discuss the situation, Mr. White stated. Mayor James Halggart ad- vised the businessmen to out- line bheir objections and get down to specific points in- stead of generalities. He sug- gested their findings be pres- ented to the joint meeting. Criticism of tJhe businessmen for not giving ï¬he new system enough time was voiced by De- puty-reeve Tom Broad‘h-urs‘t. AI._ ru-u -v~~~ He told the delegation the regulations were put in for their benefit and urged them to give it a fair trial. It is impos- sible to assess the situation in a few days. Mr. Broad‘hurst said. He informed the meeting that Sees No Reason Councillor Mrs. Margaret South‘well said she could see no reason for the morning parking ban during the week and urged the police com- mittee to take a “second look†at the situation. She wondered if the depart- ment of highways was dictating to council. Mr. Waters said he hoped council would receive his re- marks as constructive criticism. “I ask you to make a further study to the benefit of the Yonge Street Richmond Hill merchants. rather than the de- partment of highways," he told them. ment No- date has been set for the joint meeting between the po- lice committee a-nd the depart- Mr. Waters spoke on behalf of Kay's Variety Store. La Can- tina Restaurant. Mary's Novelty Shop, Pat’s Variety. Three Coins Restaurant Town Inn Restaurant and Richmond Hill Dairy Bar. SCARBORO : Two new colleg- iates came before council for tentative approval last week. O'Sullivan C. 1. at a cost of 81.808.300 and the southwest collegiate in Birchcliff at a cost of 52.044.900. GREEN RIVER: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Davies recently celebrat- ed their diamond wedding an~ niversary. They were married in Liverpool in 1902 and have been residents of Green River for 20 years. They have two children. Mrs. Benson Draper. Green RiverF and Sydney, ‘chh- mond K111. new- take traf- his or her own particular cla-ss room during the induction per iod. Prior to the tea Trustees Mrslahead. for maximum efficiency. of Malpli Irene Worrell, Mrs. Castle and} Mr. Fowler told the potential Richvale Mr. Hultchison joined»Mr. Mc-lclassroom music teachers, Other I‘ntyre and Music Supervisor‘v‘There’s nothing I like better, followim Herman Fowler, as well as the‘as I walk down the corridor oleewmar m‘i‘noina‘lg nf hhp six nuhliclpaoh school to my next musictRiOh‘mOF “\u ..-.. - - Mr. Huitchison joined Mri MC-lclassroom music teachers, Other teachers come from the I‘ntyre and Music Supervisorv‘There’s nothing I like better, following areas. Miss Sinden. Herman Fowler, as well as thelas I walk down the corridor of Newmarket; Mrs. Vivian Berard principals of the six public each school to my next miisichiehmond Hill; Jim Smith, Ux- schools, in ountlining school class, than to hear the group‘brid‘ge: Miss Whetter, Mark- board-staff relationships; the hard at it. Don't wait for me, ham; Miss Hill, l-Ia'liburton; task of interpreting town'when the music period arrives, Miss Nixon, Manila: Miss Mar- sohools to the general public, but get your class sin-gin‘g right shall. Markham and Miss Mas- and a demonstration was given on schedule." Lon. Gormley. by Mr. Fowler as to the role One of the most interesting In concluding the induction the music supervisor fills in features of the get-acquainted Mr. McIntyre thanked the prin- the schools. social hour was the fact thatEcipals for the work done in lin- Mr. McIntyre advised the four of the new teachers were‘ing uip programs in their group, Richmond Hill Pu'bliclvhemselves former Richmond schools for the very successful ‘Schools no longer keep “D'ay"lHi-lll Public Sohool pupils. nam- review. V 29 YONG! ST. S. Mr. McIntyre advised the group, Richmond Hill Public Schools no longer keep "Day" ON LY [Fifi FOR YOUR FAMILY Ontario, Fresh YELLOW RIPE B STRAWBERRIES ROYAL Instant 4 pkgs. KENNEL CLUB NEW POST'S â€" 10 oz. pkg. Crispy Critters 3150mm: AYLMER FRUIT COCKTAIL SHORT RIB or BLADE MORLEY'S QUART BOX BLADE BONE REMOVED don McIntyre. Back row, left to right: Miss Marion Sinden and James Smith, Beverley Acres; Mrs. Elizabeth Samuel, Miss Anne Hill, David Pattenden and Miss Myra Whetters, Crosby Heights; Miss Shirley Barker and Miss Judith Nixon, MacKillop; Miss Christine Mason, McConaghy; Miss Barbara Rhodes, Pleasantville; Miss Anne Wardrope and Miss Lillian Marshall, Walter Scott. Absent when picture was taken, Miss Gwen Kennedy and Mrs. Vivian Berard, Beverley Acres School; Mrs. Phyllis Cannon, Crosby Heights. (Photo by Lagerquist) nicnlachIa-ss: books, bin instead make out" 919;" David Pattenden. Elizabeth 1duction per- weekly records, projecting their Samuel still a resident at Rich- ;sched‘ules as much as a year mon‘d Hill and Anne Wardrope Trustees Mrslahead, for maximum efficiency: of Maple and Shirley Barker of THE LIBERAL. Richmond Hill. Ontario. Thursday. June 14, 1962 pkg. 3 5c mszsc 45< In concluding the induction Mr. McIntyre thanked the prin- cipals for the work done in lin- ing up programs in their schools for the very successful review. “FRESH LY G ROUN D" MORLEY'S Coffee Toilet Tissue 2roupkg. BALLET SURGET â€" 12 oz. pkg. Ready Cut R. J. LUCAS “'Sliced or by the Piece" DEVON RINDLESS I lb. package SBSBhetti MO: CALIFORNIA, NEW BA€0N package 6 5c Potatoes 10"». 59c "Buy Two Get One FREE" 3 BRICKS 50c FRONTENAC ICE CREAM New car buyers decidingjon what options they need or camdo without usually never give a thought to one of the least ex- pensive but most useful aids'to driving they could have on their cars. This is known as Positive Traction Differential. It is _§ 3 special rear axle gear assembly that prevents spinning one wheel on ice or when it is clear ' of the road. It is so \effective that it‘ largely eliminates M.R.Bear the need for snow tires. which in actual fact are usually‘more lexpensive. Standard ditTeromial gearing transmits power from a single drive shaft to both rear wheels. In itself it is a complicated mec- hanism because it must have a variable capacity to turn one wheel faster than the other when the need arises, such as in rounding a curve. The outside wheel in a turn is moving flas- ter and the differential equal- izes the power drive to both wheels. This necessary quality he- comes a handicap on ice and rough roa‘ds however. With one wheel on ice and the other on dry pavement. for instance. all power is shifted to the wheel with least grip. causing it to spin. Positive Traction is an ad- ditional mechanism that doesn’t affect the variable action on curves but which prevents spin- ning by equalizing the pull on both wheels. Though Positive Traction im- proves handling of your car. at any time of year. it is naturally most useful in Winter driving. The time to install it however is when you buy your new car, so keep it high on the list as one of the most essential.and least expensive of optional equipment. An Option To End Wheel Spinning THE DODGE ONTARIO CAR CO. LTD. 5959 Yonge St. at Cummel' Willowdale I lb. bag . tins . 59c 23<