Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 10 Oct 1963, p. 3

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OCTOBEI 18â€"Friday' at 8:15 p‘m'? Eudlre. the beginning of a series, in the Victoria Square Community Hall. c1w15 4: ax 1: * OCTOBER 19 â€" Saturday. Our Lady Queen of the World Third Annual Fall Bazaar and Even- ing Midway. Raffles and door Prizes. 1.30-5.30 pm. and 7.30- 12. See advertisement page 17. -n...1 R OCTOBER 23 -â€"- Wednesday, Turkey Dinner, at Carrville United Church Hall. Dinner is served from 5 pm. to 8 pm. Menu: Turkey with all the trim- mings. pie, beverage; adults 3150; children under 12 .75c; Dre-school children no charge. c2w15 tiii OCTOBER 25 â€"â€" Friday 8.30. The euchre series begins at Buttonville W.I. Hall. sponsor- ed by Buttonville W.I. Games Played alternate weeks until December 6. Refreshments.‘Ad; OCTOBER 26 â€"-r Thornhaven School, 317 St. East. Richmond Hill, bazaar, 1 pm. to 7 pm. craft, tea court, and other booths. mission 50 cents ANDERSON â€" In loving mem- ory of a dear husband, dad and grandpa. Bill Anderson, Who passed away October 14, 1962. What would I give to clasp his hand, ms happy face to see. To hear his voice and see his In memoriam smile, That meant so much to us‘ .â€" LBEHgi); Eéfiembered by wxfe Annie and family. *1w15 VALLIERE â€"- In loving mem- ory of our mother, Elizabeth Valliere. who was called home. October 8, 1930. A mother who gave us the best years of her life. Who cherished our secrets. our sorrows, our strife, Who taught us to love, and taught us to NW. Dear Mother in heaven, God bless you today. Your life was unselfish, for others you lived, Not for what you received but for what you could give, Memories are treasures no one can steal. Death is a heartache nothing can heal, Some may forget you now you are gone, But we shall remember no mat- ter how long. â€"â€" Lovingly remembered by family. clw15 WILLOWDALE : North York School Board's plans to purch- ase a $115,000 public school site on Drewry Avenue West were approved by councillors. 'Coming Events N0 BINGO WHEN“ OCT. 21 Richmond Hill Lions Hall WILSON - NIBLETT MOTORS YO-NGE 57. NORTH Richmond Hill PA.7-9453 AV.5-5435 1954 TO 1962 $9 95 INSTALLED ' CHEV & PONTIAC School. 317 Centre Hill, annual pm. Student and various c3w15 PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT Saturday. c1w15 ‘local Man Opens zifransmissionShop E Mufflers! Mufflers! 5 OCTOBER IS MUFFLER MONTH In Our Service Dept. During this period he attend- ed various automatic transmis- sion schools and received a certificate in Diesel engines. Mr. Brillinger has been a life-long resident of the area. He received his education at the Richmond Hill Public and High Schools. He was apprenticed by his father, Jack Brillinger, in body and fender work. He re- ceived his Class A licence in the fall of 1956 from the Pro- vincial Institute of Trades aft- er completing five years ap- prenticeships, two ten-week courses at the Institute, and at- taining honors in all examin- ations set by the Institute after completing a night course in the winter of 1958-59. BURNS â€" Harold and Susan (nee West-Gaul) a son. David George, born at York County Hospital, 7 lbs. 7 015. on Oc- tober 1, 1963. First grand- child for Mr. and Mrs. G. West-Gaul. Special thanks to Dr. James Langstaff. *1w15 A wellâ€"known local man, Bruce Brillinger, has announc- ed the opening DGXt TUGSday of his “TransmiSSion Shop" specializing in automobile transmissions at 177 Yonge Street North. He will be in partnership with Jerry Atkin. Mr. Brillinger has been a life-long resident of the area. He received his education at CARD 0F THANKS He has been in the employ of R. D. Little and Son for the past seven and a half years. Mr. Carl French, 26 Church Street South, wishes to thank his relatives and friends for their many cards, flowers and visits, during his recent stay in Toronto General Hospital. *1w15 Sincere thanks and appreci- ation to all neighbours and friends, who have been so kind during our recent bereavement in the loss of our Father. Mrs. Kay Wright and Mrs. Agnes McCullough c1w15 CARD 0F THANKS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TOWNSHIP OF NORTH YORK Lockjaw There are still cases of tetanus, or lockjaw, every year. Almost every one is unnecessary, says the Health League of Canada. Tetanus toxoid offers ex- cellent protection. Tetanus is a serious infection that often proves fatal. It is much too serious to take a chance - immunize now. CARL E. HILL, M.D., M.O.H‘ Save AI These Prices CHEV 8: G.M.C. Irucks 1/2 TO 2 TON $8 60 INSTALLED ' By Richmond Hill Public Library Board Triumph: by Philip Wylie, author of “Generation of Vip- ers" and “The Innocent Am- bassadors" among others, and coiner of the phrase “Momism”, weaves an intriguing tale of the last American survivors of a World War Three holocaust. What makes the story interest- ing is that the survivors, holed up hundreds of feet below a Connecticut mountain in a mil- lion-dollar fallout shelter are all races, Jewish, Japanese, Chinese, Negro. They have one thing is common . . . they are, alive through the unbelievablef fore sight of their weekend host who stocked the shelter with everything conceivable for their survival with the exception of the prescience to know how they will react to the awful devastation taking place above them or to being cooped up to- gether for what appears to be forever. As in his other works, Wylie takes apart modern soc- iety to show the symptoms he believes are leading to disas- ter. The Talent Scout: by Romain Gary. A bitineg different novel by the author of “A European Education” is based on one man's search for the devil. The setting is presumably a central American country and the dev- il's protagonist is its dictator, Jose Almayo, who plumbs the depths of evil to attract the devil. As the book jackets says, each page rings with the echoes of man’s craving for immortal- ity, expressed in the haunting final cry of “What is death? Nothing but a lack of talent." The Off-Islanders: by Nath- aniel Benchley. .. Son of fam- ed humorist Robert Benchley, the author takes a merry sub- ject . . . Russian submariners stranded on a sand bar off a Cape Cod resort town off-sea- son . . . mixes in some true town characters, stirs up sever- al colourful settings such as the‘ town pub and the dump, and comes up with a memorable Cold War story. Both sides are quite prepared to defend them- selves despite the divergence of weapons but neither are sure of the rules. Among the char- acters are the divorcee who helps straighten out a young ‘Russian sailor on differences between American film stars and fashion models, the town drunk who dons an Indian headdress to act as a spy and the sometime painter who em- erges as a sort of hero. A hap- PY. readable book. Household Ghosts: by James Kennaway, author of the high- ly rated .‘Tunes of Glory,” his first novel. Mr. Kennaway’s serious novel deals with a young married woman in the Scottish lowlands facing infidelity but caught up short by her past. ‘Mr. Kennaway has a wonderful way with dialogue and the sort of conversation between his characters is characteristic of his first novel and maybe even more so . . . crisp and witty yet so real it could be a thous- and intimate conversations in a thousand places. A fascinat- ‘ing book full of sympathy. WILLOWDALE : North York Traffic, Fire and Licensing Committee was hit by a barrage of parents protesting removal of four of seven stop signs from Empress Avenue. No conclus- ions were reached but the cit- izens were advised to choose a ismall committee and meet with the traffic co-or-dinator and other committee members. lS-eintember 27 MARKHAM : Land assessments on thousands of properties in the Guildwood Village, West Hill and Highland Creek areas of Scarborough have been hiked between 50 and 100 percent. People are unhappy. They may ;appeal within 14 days of last Have You Read These? Go - Ahead Given Mid-Town Sewers (Continued From Page 1) contact with a representative of the receiver, who stated that they would be interested only in a lease on a month to month basis or the outright sale of the lot. Councillor Thomas Murphy reported that the lot could be purchased for a very reasonable price, and if it were legal, it might be a good investment to use as a temporary parking lot until the proposed laneways are provided when it could be sold, probably at a profit. The judge was hearing div- orce petitions when a female complainant pleaded her case, citing as grounds that her hus- band was carele5s about his ap- pearance. “I’m afraid you’ll have to have a better reason than that,” the judge finally announced. “Well, it seems sufficient grounds to me,” the woman re- plied. “After all, he hasn’t made an appearance in over three years.” There’s nothing like a spark- lingly clean outfit to boost your spirits and get rid of those dull weather blues. We’re all judged on our appearance so make sure you’re at your best with clean clothes properly pressed. Our efficient cleaning service is as near as your telephone. El 8: 2 BEDROOMS 3 $105.00 Richvale Lions Accept Charter RENTAL OFFICE on PREMISES AV. 5 - 2303 How those Lions roared when the new club charter was presented to Richvale Lions Club Friday night at a charter night banquet attended by more than 200 Lions from as far distant as Willowdale and Schomberg. Gifts were received from Aurora, Humber Valley, King City, Maple, Nobleton, Newmarket, North York, Oak Ridges, Richmond Hill, Schomâ€" berg, Thornhill and Victoria Square clubs. Lions president John Bailey accepts the charter from Dr. Hugh MacKay (right) district zone chair- man‘ of Richmond Hill. 0 YEAR ROUND SWIMMING 0 ELEVATORS 0 BALCONIES 0 TV HOOKUP 0 INTERCOM 0 BROADLOOM HALLS 0 FREE PARKING m-o-o- I" " "=SHIRT SERVICE: CORNER YONGE ST. & LEVENDALE RD. MARKRIDGE APARTMENTS IN RICHMOND HILL CHOICE SUITES STILL AVAILABLE Richmond Hill For Prompt Pick-Up and Delivery Call ‘26 Years of Community Servicei $50.00 FULL CARD TO GO TU. 4-4411 Councillor Alex Campbell de- clared he was against the town speculating with public money. “If you can make money, you can lose it," he maintained. Councillor Walter Scudds stated, “You can‘t buy a lot for parking when you have already accepted in principle the plan- ning board‘s recommendation that no further parking lots be provided, but that laneways be built to open up the rear of commercial properties for par- king and servicing." Phil Barth DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE AND GRAPEFRUIT Tomatoes 2 20 tins 49¢ DEL MONTE SEASONED DRINK 2 48oztins 69¢ DEL MONTE STE WED MIX 'EM 0R MATCH 'EM DEL MONTE FANCY Green I '5 z BeansZ an? 39¢ Garden Peas 15 OZ. TIN CREAM STYLE Corn 15 oz. TIN Ontario Finest Fresh Grade A TURKEYS 19 ll!( 2- "D Fruit Cocktail 29 Yonge St. S. CAPONS 3395? 54 NUMBE§S -CA.L.LED ONTARIO GRADE A mm: 9 9¢ Big cannegl foods evenf m LMou‘ri ROUND-UP LB. 49¢ 18 LBS. & UP DEL MONTE FANCY No Tubesâ€"5 Year Guarantee ALUMINUM HEART SPEAKERS $629 Creates tubeless system to banish heat deterioration In The Mall Richmond Heights Centre 884-7362 Princess (Model T-405) Contemporary design in hand-rubbed oiled walnut. Low Level Fidelity. Balance Indicator. Automatic Gain Control. Let us demonstrate these Revolutionary Changes Regency Stowaway (Model T-345) 0 Copious storage space be: hind sliding door. 0 Oiled Walnut and Mahog- any cabinets. 0 Automatic Shut-ofl’. Richmond Hil Music Centre THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario. Thursday. October M FOR 10% DOWN $18 MONTHLY RED SEAL FANCY RED COHOE KELLOGG’S STOKELEY’S GOLDEN YELLOW Pumpkin 2 28 oz. tins 37¢ EMPEROR TABLE GRAPES NO. 1 ONTARIO SNOW WHITE Cauliflower Devon Rindless WING â€" T-BONE â€" SIRLOIN SALMON BANANAS I lb. pkg. 59¢ STEAKS LB. 75¢ OF CANADA $5549 PRINCESS LBS. 29¢ 10% DOWN $18 MONTHLY

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