ï¬lUfllflUNU 1111414, UNLAKLU, lflUflDUrkl, I‘Inlh 11. 130') “"“uu ‘ “‘ “" V‘ ““" “’"“""" ““"â€â€œ “""’ " “" VV“ "‘ “"’ 3 AREA BIDINGS Larry Leduc Top Orator Larry Leduc, 14-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Leduc, Pine Grove. was declared top speaker in the provincial semi- finals of an oratory contest held at Bayview High School and contested by eight senior elementary students from the counties of York. Peel, Halton and Ontario. It was sponsored by Ontario School Trustees, and Ratepay- ers Association. and The On- tario Hydro. The winner learned the Eng- llsh language following his ar- rival in Canada from Belgium seven years ago. He is a grade VIII student at St. Margaret Mary’s Separate School, Pine Grove. Principal Named To St. Joseph's Separate School Larry, who will enter the Ontario finals April 15 in Tor- onto, has chosen as his subject, “My Dreams of the Future." A restdeni of Richmond Hill, Mr. Kehoe is married and has two children. ll\1\\\\\\\l\\\Rum“\l\\\\\\\\\l\\\\\\ll\\\\\\\\l\\\l\\\“\l\\\1\\\\\\l\\\l\\l\\l‘ 1 Former Resident ‘ Wins House Seat I Gordon Trussler. chairman of the board of trustees of the Richmond Hill Separate School Board, has announced the ap- pointment of Mr. Leon Kehoe as principal of the new St. Jo- seph Separate School. Mr. Kehoe was educated at 'I‘weed High School and later graduated from the Peterbor- ough Teachers‘ College. Prior to coming to Richmond Hill Leon Kehoe taught for two years in Belleville and for the past six years has been on the teaching staff of Our Lady Help of Christians School in Rich- mond Hill where he has taught the senior grades. nunuI\mumuuuumnmummlumumumuuumuuuuuummm A former Richmond Hill doctor was among those elected to the Ilouse of Commons in Monday’s vot. lng. Dr. William Howe was elected as the N.D.P. can- didate in Hamilton South (l e f e a t i n g Conservative Bobby McDonald. A strong advocate of medicare Dr. Howe practiced in Rich- mond Hill for a number of years. Represented by the for- mer Tiger-Cat football star, Hamilton South had been Tory since 1957. Dr. Howe was the N.D.P. candidate In the same riding last June. Liberals Celebrate Re-Election of John Addison Party stalwarts are seen with Mrs. John Addison, wife of the winning Liberal candidate in York North at last Mon- day’s victory celebration. A happy crowd of 500 jammed the Greystones Restaurant in Aurora to celebrate the re- PubLiZC Waughan Township Council ‘yCompIetes Varied Business Richmond Hill Results, Vaughan Township Council has recommended that sand used throughout the past win- ter on streets in Uplands Gar- dens subdivision be removed. Several complaints had been received from members of the community. Chairman of the township roads committee, and the road superintendent have been au- thorized to investigate ways of preventing the flooding of roads and adjoining properties in the vicinity of Yongehurst Road. In the proposed widening of Bathurst Street from Maple Road to Elgin Mills, council has been faced with the problem of acquiring a suitable road base material. Township engineer, K. Hopper, informed council it This is how the voting went election in Richmond Hill. P011 grary, 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 146 147 148 149 150 151 139 Arnold St. 140 81 Centre St. 141 19 Church St. 142 70 Markham Rd. 143 108 Lawrence Ave. 144 220 Ruggles Ave. 145 214 Lawrence Ave. 146 253 Zelda Cres. 147 253 Ashlar Rd. 148 313 Axminster Dr. 149 313 Skopit Rd. 150 235 N. Taylor Mills D12 151 243 McConvey Dr. 152 392 Marybay Cres. 153 362 Lynett Cres. 154 406 Becker Rd. 155 405 Centre St. 156 335 Osiris Dr. 157 Cartier Cres. 158 53 Rockport Cres. . 159 50 Sussex Dr. 160 38 Benfer Rd. 161 277 Elmwood Ave. 162 373 Palmer Ave. 163 326 Palmer Ave. 164 452 Palliser Cres. Poll No. 9 was an advance poll in Richmond Hill situated at 8 Yonge Street North 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 Number of eligible voters Totol vote cast . . . . . . . . . . 111‘, Out. of total vote, 7,170/8,819 - 813% Location 231 Mill St. '78 Starlight Cres. 273 Richmond St. 271 Iredale Cres. 108 Levendale Ave. 111 Libby Blvd. 95 Hunt Ave. 82 Mill St. Council's decision was to‘ seek the advice of the material and research branch of the De- partment of Highways after estimates have been received on the tests. would be advisable to use a cement soil base. Third and final reading was given to a bylaw setting the license fees for snack trucks operating in the township. First license to cost $100, and each additional one $50. Two readings were given to a bylaw which, when passed, will see the sum of $1,864.20 has been called uncollectable and will be treated as such. Council was informed that all means to collect this amount had failed. in Richmond Hill 8,819 . . . ‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7,170 Addison Hall Hooper O‘Brien 110 25 74 0 100 19 43 107 37 45 80 27 66 90 21 67 113 27 76 109 42 62 134 32 91 129 28 74 104 25 49 '74 15 78 142 41 77 87 44 61 86 36 60 80 35 47 98 66 40 73 51 30 93 74 31 112 60 49 )r. 132 50 59 130 87 37 130 81 69 107 45 48 87 ' 35 48 84 41 37 89 61 52 68 4O 45 94 41 83 126 40 40 123 43 58 139 67 73 165 74 76 y. ya .; pd c; :9 :3 b; c, c, b. h: ha to so no b: ca b: to <2 rd #3 h‘ »4 co as ea P‘ c: h: 3,570 1.487 1,951 61 78 in Monday's federal jug 26 :In Essentials Unity; In Non-Essentials Libertyjln All Things Charity" 68 election of Mr. Addison. Seen (left to right) are former provincial candidate Donald Plaxton. County President Sam Cook, Mrs. Addison and Campaign Manager Fred Hare. (Photo by Wainwright) RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1963 Walter Scott Choir Presents Concert The Walter Scott Public School choir added further lau- rels to its name when its mem- bers journeyed to the O’Keefe Centre last Saturday morning having been invited by Dr. Wil- liam McCauiey to sing at his young people’s concert which he arranges each month. This choir under John M.‘ Peace and with Mrs. Tom Jeans as accompanist, daily give up part of their lunch hour in order to have their practice sessions. The"end re-‘ Addison Carries Riéérug Large Majority A jubilant John Addison is surrounded by Young Liberals following his re-election in Mon- day’s federal election. A resident of King Township, Mr. Addison carried every municipality in York North riding. He was ï¬rst elected to the House of Commons last June. sult is a prize-winning choir polished to a high degree of excellence. Unfortunately the members‘ move on to high school and their term as senior choir mem- bers lasts only two to three years. To keep the ranks filled new trainees must be added from the grade six as soon as the Kiwanis Festival is over each year. The program opened with the orchestra under Dr. McCauley. He played his own composition WWI The Walter Scott choir then came on stage to sing the love- ly “Bonnie Doon" arranged by G. Roy Fenwick. The choir then sang “Solfeggio†by Robert Maxwell. The triple trio sang the negro spiritual “Let us Break Bread Together†arrang- ed by Harry Hill. “Quebec Lumber Camp" based on French Canadian folk songs. Dr. McCauley’s choir of York University then took the stage to sing “All Silent Now†by Reginald Redman, “Canadian Counting Song†by Wm. McCauley with the Walter Scott choir joining in the chor- Winners in the Charles Howitt Public School safety contest are pictured above (left to right): Karen Geiger, Ursula Eisenschmidt, Brian Walters and Susan Brown. If you’re wondering Why Karen Geiger, extreme left, is not displaying a safety poster it is because she was only entered in the essay section of the contest. The contest was sponsored by the York County Farm Safety Council and the Lanzstaff Young Women’s Institute. ' (Staff Photo.) Winners In Road Safety Contest @5511;th the Langstaff Young Women’s Institute. us. “Moon River†by Henry Mancini. The Lawrence Park Collegi-I ate choir conducted by Daw- son Woodburn sang “Rise up, My Love, My Fair One" by Dr. Healey Willan. “He’s Gone A- way’,’ arranged by Ron Nelson and “0 Dear, what can the Matter Be?†by Maurice Gar- diner. The three choirs joined in the grand finale the “Russian Easter Carol of the Trees" ar- ranged by Harvey Gaul. In the Globe and Mail on “HOME PAPER OF THE DISTRICT SINCE 1878" (Continued On Page 3) In populous York-Scarboro with over 600 polls Mr. Moreau scored 61,853 votes compared to 39,309 for McGee. N.D.P. Ed Phillips was third with 26,- 844 votes and Socred Alex Ford fourth with 984. Mr. Ford, a Scarboro school teacher wasthe Socred candidate in York North last June. In private life Mr. Moreau is a graduate engineer, while Mr. McGee is a former department store buyer. In York North Liberal John Addison swept to a convincing. win defeating his nearest opv' ponent Conservative Charles Hooper by 7,009 votes. Mr. Addison’s majority last June over Conservative C. A. Cath- ers was 842. In Monday’s votâ€" ing victor John Addison gar- nered a total of 21,397 votes to be followed by Mr. Hooper with 14,388 votes. N.D.P. can- didate Stanley Hall came third with 8,533, while Socred John ‘O‘Brien was a poor fourth with 316. The N.D.P. vote was up slightly from last June while the Social Credit vote was down. Both Messrs. Hall and O’Brien will lose their $200. de- posits. To save his deposit a candidate must secure at least half of the number of .votes of the winning candidate. A resident of King Township and a businessman Mr. Addison carried every municipality in the riding. The municipalities of Sutton, Georgina, Stouff- The three federal ridings serving York County will be represented in the 26th Parliament, which is expected to be called into session next month, by Liberals. The Liberals Monday swept the three ridings of York North, York-Scarboro and York Centre. The march back to the Liberal columns started last June when York North and York Centre both deserted the Conservatives. York-Scarboro returned to the Liberals Monday as Maurice Mor- eau sent Diefenbaker cabinet minister Frank Mc- Gee down to a decisive defeat. A loyal Diefen- baker supporter Mr. McGee had been appointed to the cabinet midway through the campaign. 8242 YONGE STREET THORNHILL AV. 5-1158 The three tidings had been Conservative since the Diefenbaker sweep in 1957. York-Scarboro and York Centre were Liberal from the time of their cre. ation in 1953 until 1957. York North was Liberal continuously from 1934 to 1957. This riding was first created in 1904. H. KEITH LTD. VOTING BY MUNICIPALITIES Addison Aurora 1732 Georgina 625 East Gwillimbury 1467 E. Gwillimbury Hts. 564 North Gwillimbury 988 King Township 2503 Markham Township 1173 Markham Village 916 Newmarket 1851 Richmond Hill 3570 Stouffville 767 Sutton 350 Vaughan Township 3210 Whitchurch Twnp. 1299 Hall 904 130 674 447 469 1016 376 252 698 1487 171 94 1213 575 Hoope 1196 494 1045 257 879 ' 1777 907 587 1252 1951 580 313 1815 1070 Advertising MORE MORE Results 21,397 See page 6. Col. 9 for Keith “Homes For Sale" ville, Aurora, Whitchurch and Markham Village all voted Con- servative last June but swung over to the Liberal columns this time. Mr. Addison's elec- tion was never in doubt as he led his three opponents from the very first returns. of the campaign there were two Conservative candidates. Independent Tory Dick Blue, a resident of Whitchurch Township. dropped out on March 13th. A life-long resi- dent of Markham Township and its present deputy-reeve Mr. ‘Hooper was the official Conser- vative candidate with full. back- ing from the riding executive and Prime Minister Diefenbak- ter. The Tory campaign had been torn by dissension from the start. For the early part WWI“lll“llllllllllullllllllllllllullllllll\llllllmllmllll““\\ll\\l\\l' This election marked tho third defeat for N.D.P. candl- date Stan Hall of East Gwil- limbury Heights a suburb of mmmum“uu“mum“mmmmnun“u“uu\m\\\\\\\l\\\\\lm Newmarket. Mr. Hall had previously run as the N.D.P. candidate in the 1959 provlno cial and the 1962 federal elec- tious. York North voters turn- ed out in force for Mon- day's federal election. A grand total of 80.05% of the eligible voters exercised their franchise. A total of 44,634 ballots were cast out of a final enumeration of 56,148. There were a total of 56,148 eligible voters in York North and 226 polls plus 10 advance polls. The voting turnout was heavy in the three big southern municipalities of Richmond (Continued On Page 3) L‘l J; AV. 5-1156 8,533 14,388 SOLD PER COPY 10¢ Hooper O'Brien 1196 19 494 6 1045 25 257 10 879 18 1777 51 907 14 587 2 1252 23 1951 61 580 5 313 3 1815 39 1070 31 316