Delicious piping hot. Chinese food to take out. Home delivery or pick-up. Heat retaining containers. Ask for our special take-out menu. Fastâ€"Efficientâ€"Tasty VOLKSWAGEN SALES & SERVICE W.& P. MOTORS LTD. I78 YONGE ST. N. Richmond Hill PHONE We personally handle all sales bills and advertisingâ€" A Complete Transmission Service Automatic Specialists Telephone 884-1861 Licensed Auctioneer York & Ontario Counties 36 Years Experience SPECIALIZING IN PUREBRED CATTLE, FARM STOCK. FURNITURE AND 3 IMPLEMENTS ‘ 81 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill, Ont. - 889-6562 884-4474 112 Geneva Street St. Catharines, Ont. - 684-1177 Bank of Nova Scotla Building Aurora Transmission Ltd. 177YONGEST.N. RICHMOND HILL 889-6662 Joscelyn, Laughlin, Franklin, Tucker & McBride 12 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT LEONARD R. ROSENBERG 448 South Taylor Mills Drive Richmond Hill Ontario L. E. Clark & Associates PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 545336 YONGE STREET 225-4701 Cabinetmakers 884-1136 Town Inn TAKE-OUT SERVICE 32 Yonge Street South Custom Furniture Refinishing - Remodelling Alterations H. POTZAUF 884-2203 130 Rosevlew Avenue Richmond Hill. Ontario Telephone Aurora 727-9451 Alvin S. Farmer Chinese Food Rosetown Cabinetmakers Chartered Accountants PHILIP A. LIMPERT Chartered Accountant Auto Transmnssnon PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTORY I' Wlhdow On The Past Automobiles 889-359] NE 886-5311 GORMLEY, ONT. Accountants Auctioneer THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill. Ontario. Thursday. Dec. 29. 1966 Mister PHONE 884-1137 FIND THE SERVICE YOU NEED FOR I HELEN SIMPSON LYNETT I Helen Simpson Flowers METRO WIDE DELIVERY Ernie Brock 8. Son Comer Agency Limited Insurance - Mortgages Fire, Auto and Liability Motor Vehicle Finance Service 884-1812 TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 X-RAY cor. Windhurst Gate 8: Bayview (1 block south Bayview Plaza) Phone 884-1075 I Chiropractic H. D. Melsness, D.C. Member - Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association NATION-WIDE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. LOWEST RATES AND TERMS FAST SERVICE For Particulars Call 889-6849 - 244-6573 80 YONGE STREET S. RICHMOND HILL, ONT. Peter R. Thomson RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE We Deliver Toronto & Surrounding Districts Aï¬hur G. Broad E. A. McDonough Dr. J. M. Dryer DENTIST Open Evenings 78 YONGE ST. S.. RICHMOND HILL THORNHILL Village Plaza (ground floor) Tel. 889-2644 (at St. Clements) TORONTO 12, ONT. Ph. 485-1145 SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS Leno’s Machine Shop 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL Rear 47 Yonge St. S. Aurora. Ontario RESIDENCE: 884-6507 OFFICE: 884-6011 LTD. Kirby Brock Maple, Ont. Engineering 2518 YONGE ST. 21 Bedford Park Ave. Richmond Hill 884-4251 By Appointment 7598 Yonge Street 812 889-1812 AT ALL HOURS RICE’S FLOWERS Insurance “Flowers For All Occasions" Phones STEAMFITTING WELDING By Appointment Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 Flowers 889-1974 Dental 635-6158 884-1462 Lawlor LeClaire & Bannon BARRISTER-SOLICITORS 59 Yonge Street N.. Richmond Hill, Ontario 884-4413 889-7052 80 Richmond St. WA Suite 402 Toronto 1. Ontario 366-3156 BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC B.A. 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 & Notary Public James H. Barristers, Solicitors & Notary Public 116 YONGE STREET NORTH RICHMOND HILL 884-5701 THORNHILL OFFICE 889-5144 BARRISTERS - SOLICITORS AND NOTARIES PUBLIC Floyd E. Corner, Q.C. Bernard R. Forgang 47 Yonge Street South Toronto Ofï¬ceâ€" 7 Queen St. E. Suite 151 Phone 363-5877 Suite 2 Lowrie Building 15 Yonge St. N., Richmond Hill Every Thursday Afternoon 884-7561 17 Queen St. E. Toronto 362 Barrow. Insurance SerVIces Ltd. 884-1551 Parker & Pearson. I'. C. Newman, Q.C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR STUART P. PARKER, Q.C JAMES H. PEARSON ROBERT G. PARKER Plaxton & Mann Norman A. Todd CONTINENTAL HAIR STYLIST 13 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill Next to Woolworth: J. Rabinowitch Hair Styling & Beauty Salons Floyd E. Corner Q.C. 15 YONGE ST. NORTH Richmond Hill. Ontario Office 884-1780 Residence 884-1863 By Appointment Hans H ofmann Edward D. Hill Fire. Auto and Liability Suite 2, Lowrie Building 15 Yonge Street N. Phone 884-5892 65 Yonge St. S. Richmond Hill 884-5829 Richmond Inn Black Res. 884-2117 Telephone 727-9488-9 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 Barrister. Notary Complete Insurance Service Roy V. Bick THORNHILL 889-3165 Aurora, Ontario Richmond Hill 50 Yonge St. N. 8844494 Insurance (Continued) Legal Solicitor, Public Timmins 363-3959 884-1219 RUMBLE TRANSPORT? Furniture. Office Supplies. Social Stationery. Typewriter and Adder Sales and Rentals. A. W. Kirchen, 0D. 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill HOME OR BUSINESS [Office Supplies (formerly York Ofï¬ce Supplies) 16 Yonge Street North Ontario Land Surveyors 4901A Yonge St., Willowdale 221-3485 George T. Yates, OLS Res. 24 Denver Cres., Willowdale DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL TO TORONTO Local and Long Distance Hauling BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT C.C.M. & Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 P.C.V. Class A. C. and H Sporting Goods H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. WINTER GARDEN Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop Optometrists aim-Wallpaper Yates & Yates 9114 Yonge St. Richvale' FREE DELIVERY INTERIORS LTD. 889-1059 RICHMOND HILL 884-4231 889~5729 Surveyors By Appointment Trucking 884-1013 364-2625 884-3962 MW““I“l“l\l\ll|\llll\lllllllll““an|llllllllllllll““I“!“llllllullllll MORGAN DAVIS 8 8 9 - 4 8 4 6 m“umum111l\\\\\\mmmummmuuumnummunummmmuun umluumml\\u\1mnm“mummmmmmu1\uul\\m\1\\\\\\u milllmllllllllllllllllllllllllll“11mm“ll“““1“ll\l\llllllllll“l\lll\lllll ‘ ............. _. ..... Mr. Seager took a great pride was rented for far Lin this fence and inspected it itime and is nov {often to make sure that the Thornhill Park, 4 veterlnary boulders were In place. An OF-‘servation Pond a derly man, he carried a hammer bank Subdivision ‘and nails when walking around Footnotes _;his property in case anythingi, Burned downs Dr. W. Allan Ripley needed attention and he had a 2 A crown grai special recipe for the palnt used Soules in 1805 VETERINARY SURGEON to keep his building gleamingr3 Built by John Office {11hite.i There seems to 147 Yon 1: St. N. Indoors at a desk made for division of Lot 31, 31????" Richrfmnd 11111 him by J0_hn Edey. he kept care- Vaughan u ntil Daily Richmond Hill Toronto Service Chartered Coaches Information: 889- I Transportation THORNHILL Veterinary Clinic VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES RICHMOND HILL Richmond Hill Municipal Hall SERVING YORK COUNTY Office hours by appointment Langdonk Coach Lines Ltd Coaches for all Occasions Wilson-Niblett Motors ltd. AUTO BODY SHOP 355 Yonge Street N. - Richmond Hill - 889-5435 Simply drive in for a Let us remove dents and scratches and refinish your car in good time FOR WINTER Trailways Of Canada Ltd. 889-6192 FOR IN FORMATION MODERN HEATED . . . Rumble Transport COURTESY CARS AVAILABLE THINK Telephone: 889-4851 BRANCH NURSE-IN-CHARGE MISS JEAN LOGGIE BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE v. o. N. 8119 Yonge Street, PRINTING! WAREHOUSE STORAGE Local Bus Service THORNHILL 884-4101 94 NEWKIRK ROAD 884-1013 - Richmond Hill Telephone 833-5351 COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL HOUSEHOLD TO ALL OUR SERVICE CUSTOMERS Service Ind Parts hours: Mon. to Fri. â€" 8 am. to 5.30 p.211. Saturday â€" 8 mm. to 4.30 pm. THE BEST COSTS NO MORE 889-7585 Toronto On December 13, Brownies of the 13th. Richmond Hill Pack ended this years activities with a rousing Christmas Party. Carols were sung and there was a varied assortment of goodies to eat. One of the pack‘s holiday good turns was a donation to the Hospital for Sick Children. Another important occasion for the 13th was the flying up ceremony held November 29. Four members flew up to the to have had a knowledge of medicine. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Seager had a large family, Tom, Albert. Charles. Dick, Edward, Eliza Kate, Mary, and some who died in infancy. They attended St. Michael’s Colleg‘e and Loretta Abbey as boarders, and when one or another was taken ill, Mr. Seager was notified, and drove in to Toronto to bring the ailing child home to recover. When Charlie Seager married, Mr. was Seager built a house for the young couple be-1 After Edward Seager bought the farm in 1847 he began to isell frontages.Robe1t West built the attractive clapboard cottage still standing on Yonge {Street in 1849 and in the same year the Thornhill Presbyter- ians moved their building to a ’lo‘. next door. An old map shows that by about 1860 there were four or five houses on Centre Street near Yonge, five houses on Yonge Street and two buildings probably a store and carriage works on the northwest corner of what is now the busi- est intersection in the village. to Keep ms building gleaming'3. Built by John Edey. white. There seems to have been no Indoors, at a desk made for division of Lot 31, Concession 1, him by John Edey. he kept care- Vaughan u ntil 1816 when ful records of farm yields and Daniel Sou‘les sold “30 rods expenditures, and wrote pre- coming at the northeast angle scriptions for friends and neigh-lof the lot" to William Wright' bors who consulted him about one of the owners of the mill in aches and pains, as he seems the Willow, for £5: to have had a knowledge of After Edward Seager bOUEht medicine, the farm in 1847 he began to For many years the congrega- tion of St. Luke's held basket picnics in Seager’s grove at the west end of the farm where iron swings had been set up. This beauty spot was reached by a lane running from Yonge to Bathurst Street and partly bordâ€" ered by a fence built of stones gathered from the fields. (3!. Miss Jane Seager recalls that in her grandfather’s time one room in the house, known as [he Bishop's room. was reserved for his use when he visited the parish. and for the priest who came out from St. Basil’s. To- ronto, to take services. Like his wife, Edward Seager became a Roman Catholic, and was a founding member of St. Luke's Roman Catholic Church ways had a pan of cold milk brought in to quench their thirst. (Continued from Page 2l mixed farming â€" wheat. barley. oats and dairy cattle. When the Seagers first moved to this farm Indian trappers were still using an old trail across their land to carry their skins to Toronto. Often they came to the door and young Mrs. Seager who was a bit nervous of these visitors al- RICHMOND HILL 13th 16th Guide Company free estimate BROWNIES 364-2625 GUIDE AND BROWNIE NOTES The girls were Heather Morby, A. Ingrid Linderman. Michelle Glanzmann and Sharon Gilpin. A winter theme was used in this ceremony, the girls were red wings trimmed with tinsel and snow flakes. The decor inâ€" cluded a snowman and sled. and appropriate tunes were sung to the tinkle of bells. Christmas corsages were presented to the mothers. Newly appointed District Commissioner for Richmond Hill Central Mrs. J. Inglis pre- sented the girls with their Brownie Wings. PINDER BROS. LTDJ STEEL LINTELS | BEAMS ‘ These houses still stand slightly north of the former Presbyterian Church. The third house in the hollow was oc~ cupied by Peter Huff, a clever German shoemaker adept at making copper toed boots, and fixing all manner of things. Charlie and Dick eventually sold the east half to McMahon and Cumberland. realtors. The land was rented for farming for some time and is now the site of Thornhill Park, Oakbank Con~ servation Pond, and the Thorn- bank Subdivision. hind his own, but the bride did not care for country living and it was only occupied for about a year. After being used for storage for some time it was moved and joined to the back of the older house. Edward Seager‘s sons inherit- the farm. Tom. the oldest. who was a bachelor lived with Albert and his family in the big house. on the west 100 acres, which later passed to Albert‘s son Ed- ward. Ed. Seager retired about 18 years ago after selling his farm to Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Madden. He and his three sisters Mrs. M. Pickett, Miss Minnie, and Miss Jane Seager live in the village. Charlie and Dick Seager shared the east 100 acres and lived in two houses on Yonge Street. built for them by their father. 884-4361 Richmond Hill Hall’s Domestic Fuel Oil and Burner Service Just Call! STEEL FABRICATING Burned down some years ago A crown grant for Daniel SouIes in 1805 Built by John Edey. There seems to have been no We're on the job, to keep you supplied with convenient heating oil. Prompt, metered de- livery. Kept in Stock Portable Crane Service To Custom Specifications 2 Otonobee BA. 1-3344 At training, this process of staff and volunteers talking together continues and the assignment of volunteers to projects depends on mutual consulta- tion. The pre-assignment training lasts five weeks, and attempts to enhance a person’s ability to work with other people, and to develop his knowledge of how he can be most useful to a community. How do you urge a community to examine its problems without imposing your view of what the problem is? How do you enter a community and explain your presence? How much do you lead a community, and how do you deal with established agencies? These are some of the questions discussed in train- ing. There you are folks, I give you the Company of Young Canadians. Whether you like it or not is beside the point. It's more important to under- stand it. If there is an in the district I ha I would be glad to ‘ volunteers for the ‘ services at low pay THE SELECTION AND TRAINING OF A VOLUNTEER A volunteer is invited to training on the basis of a written application form, letters of reference, tests and conversations with people associated with the Company. The first training program was held at Antigonish, Nova Scotia, and the second at Memramok, New Brunswick. Further training proâ€" grams will be held next spring and summer. The Company is looking for people who are mature, tough, flexible, ready to learn, and capable of caring about other people. Besides these personal qualities, volunteers must have a capacity for work- ing effectively in groups. By October 1966, the Company had a hundred volunteers on projects or in training. Volunteers normally work for a two year period and in a large measure choose their own assignments. There are no age limitations, though most volunteers are norm- ally over 18. They may be single, married, male or female. While there are no educational require- ments, they are seeking people with the kind of varied experiences which will be useful in the field. These projects are not easy to define, because volunteers do not usually go into a community with a specific job function. Their technique is to listen and learn, to work on problems which people in a community think are important. A "project†then is volunteers and people; the results of a project are difficult to predict. , Company volunteers work in projects which contribute to social, economic and community devel- opment. Projects may be suggested by anyone, individual, a group of people, a government agency, a social welfare organization, citizens’ group, com- pany staff or volunteers. Each proposal is studied by the regional staff, and examined by a projects committee of the provisional council. Once a pro- ject has been approved, volunteers-in-training‘ select, in consultation with the staff, the project in which they are most interested. Company projects are diverse. Some of the things the volunteers are doing now include, living and working in an Indian community, assisting with housing problems in a low-rental housing programme, meeting juvenile delinquents in a training institute, working on the problems of elderly people. examining the possibility of community development in “non- poverty†areas, developing out-of-school educational opportunities with young people and exploring the scope for community action and self-help in low- income urban areas. The Company will support projects which will hopefully alleviate causes of problems and it will not simply bandage a symptom. The volunteers in the Company will choose their own assignments in consultation with the staff. The Company council and its staff will support its volunteers, but will not identify itself with any issue in which volunteers might become involved. The volunteer should be the primary decision maker in the Company of Young Canadians. . The project should ailiow the volunteer a max- imum degree of freedom in deciding his own .tech- niques and-in using his initiative and independence. communities. They will assist other people in artic- ulating their problems and working on them. Where projects conform to the spirit and criteria of the Company, there will be no hesitation on the Comp- any’s part in seeking volunteers, whether the pro- ject is submitted by a governmental department, a private group or any other community organization. If the boys continue to let their hair grow longer will the next generation be singing: I Want A Girl Just Like The Girl That Married Dear Old Mum? . . . But, somehow. we can‘t help feeling 1t wojuld be much, much higher still if someone else had been shown in THAT wine party kickoff-purchase pic- ture! . Question Of The Year â€"â€" Rambling Around the year Japah got its reve‘r’Igewfdlr Hirosiiï¬ig. :â€" with Hondas. The Oak Ridges Arena Fund is passing the $10.000-mark at year-end, with much, much more pledged but bgaring outsidginterest until required. A recent picture in the “Liberal†of Councillor Lois Hancey reminded us of her suggestion that council grow Centennial beards â€"- and our follow- ing belief that they already HAD beards -â€"- by their election posters. However, Mrs. Hancey didn't have a beard in her “Liberal" picture and guess it’s a case of: Do they, or don't they? Only their printer knows for sure. (Continued from Page 2) look, fellas. you’re supposed to be investigating the price spread â€"- not spreading the price investigation. Among Prime Minister Pearson's set-hacks for the year was losing that; $8 on the Grey Cup game. . . . But the game was, in a way, a. triumph for Ottawa when the CBC gave English precedence over French in the TV subtitles. WHO CAN BE VOLUNTEERS FOR CYC 1966 {will probably also go down in history as The Flip Side HOW PROJECTS ARE SET UP wt 1 have a few am glad to give out. It for the armed servi< low pay, I wonder? (Continued from Page 2) However, Mrs. Hancey didn‘t have Liberal" picture and guess it‘s a or don't they? Only their printer adventurous would-be volunteer e a few application forms which It‘s not too hard to get. sic-es. but for the social '3 Phone 889-4571.