Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 28 Oct 1965, p. 12

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1 81/3' YONGE STREET * “ 225-4701 Ibécelyn, Laughlin, Franklin, Tucker & McBride martered Accountants Z .31 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill, Ont. - 889-6562 " v 112 Geneva Street SE Catharines, Ont. - 684-1177 sink of Nova Scam Bullding ?" Aurora {elephone Aurora 727-9451 q'nAMERED ACCOUNTANT LEONARD R. ROSENBERG éPHILIP A. LIMPERT [Chartered Accountant {to South Taylor Mills Drive In Richmond Hlll, Ontario Telephone 884-1861 dhAnTERED ACCOUNTANT PHONE Wo personally handle all sales bills and advertisingâ€" 4” Licensed Auctioneer York & Ontario Counties T: 36 Years Experience Richmond Hill llJ 884-5235 Richmond H11] 1’ 727-9360 - Aurora E 78A Yonge St. 5., .VOIKSWAGEN l SALES & SERVICE‘ W.&P. MOTORS LTD. 178 YONGE ST. N. ‘ Richmond Hill F.I.A. PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Ralph I. Bishop 32 Yonge Street South liclous piping hot, Chinese 6 to take out. Home ‘very or pick-up. Heat tuning containers. Ask for special take-out ' menu. Fastâ€"Efficientâ€"Tasty PHONE: ‘ 884-1136 â€" 884-1137 a Complete Transmission 2 Service j,- Automatic Specialists v SPECIALIZING IN :PUREBRED CA'I'I‘LE, ,’, FARM STOCK, ' FURNITURE AND ' IMPLEMENTS Accountants Mister Transmission Ltd. i 177 YONGE ST. N. t. RICHMOND HILLâ€" L In 889-6662 .1 -1 . PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTORYâ€"| Alvin S. Farmer Afghans to Weimaraners L. E'. Clark Town Inn TAKE-OUT SERVICE Buying a dog or other pet? Whatever your preference. you should find just what you want through the PETS FOR SALE COLUMN See this directory in “THE LIBERAL" EVERY THURSDAY. Automobiles Chinese Food THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill Auctioneer NE 886-5311 GORMLEY, ONT. Auto Transmusswn 889-3591 H. D. M elsness, D.C. X-RAY cor. Windhurst Gate & Bayview (1 block south Bayview Plaza) Phone 884-1075 Peter R. Thomson 80 YONGE STREET S. RICHMOND HILL, ONT. RESIDENCE: 884-6507 OFFICE: 884-6011 Arthur G. Broad Serving Richmond Hill and Surrounding Areas 884-1812 HELEN SIMPSON LYNETT Helen Simpson Flowers METRO WIDE DELIVERY Dr. J. Perdicaris . Engineering Insurance - Mortgages Fire, Auto and Liability Motor Vehicle Finance Service Member - Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association Dr. J. M. Dryer DENTIST 21 Bedlord Park Ave.. Richmond Hill 884-4251 By Appointment TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 Hair Styling & Beauty Salons RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE CENTRE BAYVIEW PLAZA BEVERLEY ACRES PHONE OFFICE 884-3571 Chiropractic We Deliver Toronto & Surrounding Districts MEDICALâ€"DENTAL 13 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill Next to Woolworth: Ambulance SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS Hans Hofmann VAUGHANJHLL Ambulance 884-7111 '13 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 889-1974 Leno’s Machine Shop Phone 884-5892 2518 YONGE ST. (at St. Clements) TORONTO 12, ONT. Ph. 485-1145 Open Evenings 78 YONGE ST. S» RICHMOND HILL 884-1462 C orner A gency Limited By Appointment CONTINENTAL HAIR STYLIST Rear 47 Yonge St. S. Aux-on. Ontuio [812 889-1812 AT ALL HOURS STEAMFITTING WELDING RICE’S FLOWERS “Flowers For All Occasions” Phones Dental Insurance Flowers Ontario, Thursday, Oct. 28, 1965 Toronto Suite 2. Lo 15 Your Richmond Hill Ernie Brock 8. Son Barrow Insurance Services Ltd. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR Suite 2 Lowrie Building 15 Yonge St N., Richmond Hill Every Thursday Afternoon 884-1551 Toronto Officeâ€" 7 Queen St. 15.. Suite 151 Phone 363-5877 BARRISTERS - SOLlCITORS AND NOTARIES PUBLIC Floyd E. Corner. Q.C. Bernard R. Forzanx 47 Yonge Street South Aurora, Ontario BA. LLB. Barrister, Solicitor and Notary Public. 15 Yonge St. North Richmond Hill, Ontario. 884-7891 220 Bay Street. Suite 701 Toronto 1, Ontario. 366-9411. Barrister, Solicitor a: Notary Public 15 YONGE ST. NORTH Richmond Hill. Ontario Office 884-1780 Residence 884-1863 By Appointment BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC 65 Yonge St. S. Richmond Hill 884-5829 Richmond Theatre Block Res. 884-2117 Fire. Lawlor LeClaire & Bannon BARRISTERS-SOLICITORS 15 Yonge Street N.. Richmond Hill. Ontario 884-4413 80 Richmond St. W.. Suite 402 Toronto 1, Ontario 366-3156 COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 Parker & Pearson Floyd E. Corner Q.C. Norman A. Todd 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 James H‘ Edward D. Hill STUART P. PARKER, Q.C JAMES H. PEARSON ROBERT G. PARKER Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen St. E. 889-4955 Roy V. Biolâ€"c Kirby Brock Maple, Ont. Insurance Plaxton, Deane & Mann Telephone 727-9488-9 Barristers, Solicitors. etc. RICHMOND HILL THORNHILL Richmond Hill Office 15 Yonge Street N. 889-5144 884-5701 Thomhill Office 889-1197 . Newman, Q.C. . Rabinowitch (Continued) Auto and Llablllty Z. Lowrle Building Yonge Street N. Barrister, Notary Richmond Hill 50,Yonge St. N. THORNHILL 889-3165 Legal LTD. Solicitor. Public Timmins 363-3959 884-1219 884-1543 ilOffice Supplies Trumpet Tuition ROBERT OADES (formerly York Office Supplies)! 16 Yonge Street North) 3 RICHMOND HILL 884-4231 889-5729 Rentals. sales, 5 e r v 1 c e of office machines. B u s 1 n e s s supplies and social stationery | Optometrists 4 .â€"-â€" Beginners And Advanced H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. Expert Piano Tuner H. Naftolin, O.D. 294 Bayview Plaza Richmond Hill For appointment please call BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT and Technician “Checked” Electronically New Scientific Method GUESSWORK ELIMINATED Pianos Bought and Sold Pyle Piano Sales 43 Yonge St. N. (Legion Court) If no answer at C. H orvat, B.A., 0.D.‘ 15 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill . W. Kirchen, GD. 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill ‘for all kinds of LETTERING AND WINDOW DRESSING WITH RENTAL PROPS Call Anytime WINTER GARDEN INTERIORS LTD. Discount On All Call 884-1105 or 889-3316 day time only aint-Wallpaper h 9114 Yonge St. Richvale TRY KARSS SIGNS FREE DELIVERY By Appointment 889-1059 By Appointment 889-2942 Music 884-4641 884-4040 884-3962 Pianos 884-3614 884-6600 Signs Ontario Land Surveyors 4901A Yonge St., Willowdalo 221-3485 George T. Yates, OLS Res. 24 Denver Cres., Willowdale 445-3778 Authorized Factory Service for Rogers Majestic - Fleetwood McClary - Easy and Inglis Electric Appliance Repairs and Parts WERN’S TV REPAIR SERVICE Repairs and Sales of TV" and HiFi’s Guaranteed Work Reasonable Prices Sporting Goods C.C.M. 8: Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 Expert Repairs to TV - RADIO - HI FI - CAR RADIOS ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS AND PARTS NM 3 Coaches for all Occasions Local Bus Service Daily Richmond Hill Toronto Service Chartered Coaches Information: 889-; RUMBLE TRANSPORT Coach Lines Ltd. Essa-6274‘ 3853321 [ ALLENCOURT PLAZA {W Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop ! Custom Upholstery jChesterfields & Chairs Transportation Langdon's Yates & Yates DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL T0 TORONTO Local and Long Distance Hauling FOR INFORMATION Telephone 833-5351 Trailways Of Canada Ltd. 45 INDUSTRIAL RD. RICHMOND HILL TREND UPHOLSTERY Specialists In CUSTOM RE-UPHOLSTERING All Work Guaranteed Free Estimates Surveyors RICHMOND UPHOLSTERY Call 889-5866 Phone 884-5127 Television 884- 7903 44 Levendale Rd. Richmond Hill Upholstery Trucking KTH‘VSK 884-1013 364-2625 Class A, C, and H- ' l. RADIO SERVICE 889-3642 Office Telephone 147 Yonge St. N., 884-1432 Richmond Hill THE Challenge OF Rambling Around (Continued from Page 2) We have come a long way from the fanfare and hullabaloo of former election campaigns. Once there was not so much to compete for a public’s attention, and people turned up in droves to election meetings. It provided diversion and excitement for the men especially. There were always hot arguments going on around hot stoves in barbershops and pool rooms or wherever men congregate. Today we are remote and calmer. If we don’t like what the newspaper says, we put it down, or turn off a campaign speech on TV. Nothing must be allowed to disturb our complacency. As a history student, I’m aware of the price this country had to pay for responsible government. But you can't have a good responsible government without a responsible and informed citizenry. I’m beginning to realize what a discouraging business it is for any local candidate to be faced with this unhappy state of affairs. I can’t repair past neglect but I can go on from here. I can be interested in our local candidates. I can follow the moves of the Prime Minister and his cabinet in the papers. I can do the same with the Opposition Leader and his party. I can learn to evaluate and be fair in my judgments of all parties. If I can’t. then I’ll feel obliged to offer other solutions, which I certainly could not do unless I had further training and knowledge. r. W. Allan Ripley VETERINARY SURGEON w.-. .Vee.o,, Canada has her share of troubles, international, national and local, but so has every country in the world. We all sense that the world as we know it is in a state of flux and change. Did I, or you for that matter imagine that Canada was to escape her ancer share. So with my new insights in mind. I’m turning over a new leaf, if only to keep up with a changing world. I think at last I’m on the way to being an educated voter. They say intelligent training in the classroom enables the voter to make clearer discriminations in the political arena. If that is the case our future should look very bright indeed. Our schools and universities are full. Adult education is in vogue. The building industry can hardly keep up with the demand for new school buildings. Perhaps every school should have a parliamentary system in minia- ture. The Canadian Cancer Soc- iety and the National Cancer Institute of Canada. . . . These two organizations work closely with the Fed- eral and Provincial Depart- ments of Health and the treatment agencies; also with the Canadian Medical As- sociation. The Society and the Institute have a joint administrative office and one executive Vice-president and treasurer. Walter Pitman, a former history teacher at Langstaff Secondary School made a good start in this direction by inviting politicians to meet and address the students. Five general elections in eight years does seem a bit too much. But the issue still has to be faced. An election is here and there is no sense to hiding heads in the sand like the Ostrich. To do that will solve nothing. I end this little diatribe on a note of thanks- giving. I’m proud to be a Canadian and to live in such a rich and beautiful country as Canada and especially my own Province of Ontario. I would do her no honor if I refused to have any kind of voice in her destiny. For those who have defaulted, I only have this ’00 say, “Thank you for waking me up. You made me realize something very important. BAKER ELECTRONIC SERVICE I am also grateful to the good civil servants who run our government while party decisions are being made. I’m grateful to those clever and just men who are even now struggling to untangle the snarls in our country’s knitting basket. I am thankful to the local candidates who have the courage to place themselves before the public and say “Here I am, use me.” They are not letting Canada down. And from now on, neither will I. I’ll be in the polling booth on November 8. “There can be no democracy unless it is a. dy- namic democracy. When our people cease to partici- pateâ€"t0 have a place in the sunâ€"then all of us will wither in the darkness'of decadence. All of us will become mute, demoralized, lost souls.” â€" Saul D. Alinsky Veterinary AN R.E.T.A. MEMBER 'I’ R 0 II B I. E ? CALL BA. 1 - 0485 E ‘n“\“mmummmmuu1m\\\uuu \u1n\m1n1n1uu11umunmmmmuu1nuxmum\mmunum1m1mmmmmum\mmun“nmumnnumm““\uuuuummm\munumun“m\\\\\\\\\\1\\\\\\l\m\m j Chairman Lorne Wells said the commith hoped to have a concrete program to report by the end of this year and Mr. MacDonald reported that visits by grade 8 pupils to the secondary schools will be continued on a more uniform basis. Trustee Warren Bailie stressed the fact. that this is only guidance. not direction which should be made clear to all parents. some of whom seem to regard it as direction and are consequently resentful. d-llllllllllm“llllllllllllll\mllmllllll)lltlllllllllltlllllllllll“\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmlllllllllmtllllllllllllllllllllllllllll}ltll\l\llllll\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IlIll“llllllllllllllllttlllltttlllllllllllllll‘ ~b Miss Kinsella Heads Group Miss A. Kinsella. who is charge Secondary School, will head a curriculum held in Richmond Hill September 29. This meeting was attended by the atives of the teachers at Erades 7 and 8 in all elementary school inspectorates in the York Central High School District. with Superintendent S. G. Chapman and repres- entatives of the guidance staffs in the secondary schools. RICHMOND HILL i The committee is composed of two representatives of the guidance staffs of the secondary schools and one representative of the teachers of grades '7 and 8 classes from each of the elementary school inspectorates within the high school district. Purpose of the committee is to co-ordinate the guidance program in the senior grades of the elementary schools with that in the secondary schools, Vaughan Public School Board was told by Superintendent D. R. MacDonald Thursday evening of last week. Its immediate duty is to outline a series of lessons to be taught to grade 8 pupils before they are asked to make a choice of branches and programs in secondary schools. A further duty is to prepare information on the courses available in the secondary schools and to find means of communicating this information to parents, so there will be a greater understanding of the opportunities available. Mr. MacDonald reported that Peter Kurita. principal of the Kleinburg Public School. is Vaughan‘s representative on the committee. which has already held two meetings and is outlining the lessons for the grade 8 classes. He said he understood that later in the year. members of this committee will be available to speak at home and school and other meetings of parents to outline what courses the secondary schools offer To Co-ordinate Guidance Curriculum A Hamilton steel worker has complained to his union because his beard has been labeled a fire haz- ard. On us, beards have an opposite effect. Just looking at one of them makes us feel like taking a. bath. 9‘ P. Y D - SON. Manager i Part-time secretarial help has"l‘hor(r;hill; l?orothy iI-"bor been rovided for rinci als ofitwo 3Y5 at at es How u 3“ Epublicp schools :1 V:ughan‘one day at Jefferson: Mrs. Elle l . _ iArmstrong, two days at Ros Townsh1p to relieve them fromglawn; Mrs. Margaret Janna many of the routine duties one day at Ross Donn; Mrs. E which interfere with their ma~ eanor Wilkinson. one tiny jor functions. Two of the princu Powell Road and one day ipals receiving this help, told Langstaff. Vaughan Township P u bl i c Mrs. Joyce Boyd of Maple h School Board Tuesday night of accepted the position of suppl last week that the arrangements teacher co-ordinator, the f are proving quite satisfactory. nance committee reported. T L AL- (Continued from Page 2) gestion that Metro Police Chief MacKay be appointed “Snow Man” in charge of snowfall emergencies. So ,far, no one has come up with the argument that the police are quite experienced in “snow jobs". Vaughan Ty]: Principals Appreciate Part-Time Secretarie The “No Comment" Corner The enquiry into the financial! collapse of_tho Atlantic Acceptance Corporation reveals that the firm was lending adolescents the money to purchase guitars. "4...; .v.._-. “.5 ..... Vaughan Township P u blic} Mrs. Joyce Boyd of Maple I! School Board Tuesday night of accepted the position of suppl last week that the arrangements teacher co-ordinator. the f are proving quite satisfactorywnance committee reported. T Mrs. Eleanor Johnston is‘principals will report the spending two days a week a1lneeds to Mrs. Boyd. who in tur Kleinburg and one and a hall‘will contact the supply teacher days at Pine Grove; Mrs. Joyce saving the principal: the tim Boyd, one and a half days at necessary to make sever George Bailey; Mrs. Barbara phone calls. and also saving t Sones. one and a half days at supply teachers. from receivi Joseph A. Gibson: Mrs. Jean several calls on the same (in. Reid, one day at Concord; Mrs ‘or when already engaged 1 Brenda Gordon, two days atlteaching. Health Minister Judy LaMarsh says the Can- adian public has been confused into thinking current party scandals are serious. crime§ . . . A promotion on the recently released Lord Thomson biography says the book recounts his rise from a penny-pinching youthin _Toronto. . . . Reports on the FAME debacle say the co.-op- erative venture into meat packing resulted in a $2,500,000 loss and Ontario farmers are left holding the bag. . . Second Thoughts 1965 An investment that won’t let you down. Available at any branch of TORONTO-DOMINION m of the zuidance department. at Bayview committee on guidance set up at a meeting superintendents. inspectors and represent- Where geople make the difference ADA [NGS JDS Richmond Hi1

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