Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 18 May 1967, p. 12

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CITY OF GLASS GARDEN_CENTRE 114 CROSBY AVE. RICHMOND HILL All Kinds Of BOX PLANTS and GERANIUMS 0 PEAT MOSS 0 PLANTS 0 FERTILIZER 0 TREES 0 SHRUBS ' ROSE BUSHES 0 BULBS 0 SEEDS . EVERGREENS 0 TOOLS 0 \‘INES 0 PLANT SOIL Phone 884-3933 Roses Our Specialty â€" Soil For All Different Plants A W QWMAA ,me 4 Immym This includes motorcycles too. Richmond Hill Police Chief R. P. Robbins, said a new amendment to the Highway Traffic Act, designed to cut down on noisy vehicles, which was passed last month. will be strictly enforced by the police. The amendment reads: “Every motor vehicle shall be equipped with a muffler in good working order and in constant operation to prevent excessive or unusual noise and excessive smoke, and no person shall use a muffler cutout. straight exhaust, gutted muffler, Hollywood muffler. by- pass, or similar device upon a motor vehicle. For the 1967 swimming sea- and benefit from the lessons. son Richmond Hill and District These consist of eight half-hour YWCA will again sponsor its classes, Monday, Tuesday, Wed- popular summer swim classes. nesday and Thursday on a two- These will be held mornings week basis with four sessions only with excellent instruction during June and July: (1) June in the comfortably-heated Cen- 5-15, (2) June 19-29, (3) July tennial Pool. The classes are 3-13, (4) July 17-27. designed for pre-school chil- A special bonus is offered! dren and ladies. Mothers may enjoy an extra Rates are reasonable and can be learned by calling the Y office at 884-4811. Registrations will be accepted at 25 Yonge Street North May 23 from 9 to 11 am and from 1:30 to 4 pm. and May 24 during the same hours and from 7 lto 9 pm in the evening. Pre-Schoolers These classes are from three years old to kindergarten age. The mother must accompany her child in the pool with a maximum of two children per mother, thus enabling the child to gain the utmost confidence Aim New law At "Loud" Drivers It could be a bad year for “loud” motorists. ‘Y' Summer Swim Classes 12 THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, May 18, 1967 RAISES wSAfBl/y‘ STOCK CAR Ann: “.50 Omani sor' an" a ram MOBILE RELAY SYSTEM... SPEEDWAY N97 HWY'lMllc E.of HWY. 400 YOUR PHONE . . . when you’re out? 15 YONGE ST. N. WHO ANSWERS at 15 Yonge St. North, Richmond Hill Antennae on a 110 ft. tower at 1120 ft. above sea level 3 miles north of King City Finest radio equipment serviced by Canadian Motorola O'KEEFE #5000? [ATE MOIEL THORNRICH SERVICES YOU UP . . . mornings? Let Thornrich Services Do It! â€" WITH A SMILE â€" WITH CARE â€" WITH DEPENDABILITY COVERING YORK COUNTY PEAT MOSS FERTILIZER SHRUBS WHO WAKES 24 HOUR SERVICE MOBILE BASE AND OPERATOR / kl/A/ u' f7;5fl//I’[ 884-2204 or 773-5692 PLANTS TREES ROSE BUSH] SEEDS TOOLS PLANT SOIL 884-3933 On ®he general rate, prop- erty owners will pay an addi- tional 1.56 mills, while the commercial levy will be up 1.99. .The county rate in both resi- dential and commercial areas is down .293 mills. $40 Tax Bump Sutton Village Homeowners Commercial ratepayers will pay an extra 5.54 mills on both the public and separate school levy, while secondary school taxes are up 2.5 mills. Property owners in Sutton Village will face a $40 tax in- crease this year. At a meeting of council last week, the residential rate was set at 81.9 mills, up 7.9 over last year, while the commer- cial rate was set at 88.9 mills, a jump of 9.03. School taxes account for a libtle more than five mills of the increase, with both public and separate school supporters being assessed the same. High school taxes are up 2.37 mills in the residential cate- gory. Will be received until May 31, 1967 for the supplying of police boots and overshoes for the Markham Township Police De- partment for the year 1967. Information may be obtained at the police station. Harvey N. Cox, Chief of Police. Township of Markham, RR 2, Germ-lay, Ontario. For deepend swimmers only, an exhilarating hour is provided from 10:30 to 11:30 am Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs- day during June and July. Books of eight tickets per series, for four series, are available, providing a possible 32 swims. A special bonus is offered! Mothers may enjoy an extra half-hour of relaxed swimming in the deep end of the pool when their children are not in the water. Babysitting will be provided for children who have had a lesson or are awaiting same. Ladies Classes are provided for be- ginners and seniors on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9:30 to 10:30 am. with eight lessons from June 6 to June 29. Baby- sitting is available on request. Splash TENDERS RICHMOND HILL At Pool ,, , Sport Spots. . . “I ended up back at Windsor, called my wife, and told her the happy news.” Bob later moved to Pittsburg, had a few hours of Christmas with his family, and remained there the rest of the year. It’s a great life but you have to keep your guitcase packed. “I enjoyed Pittsbui‘g,” he said. “I received a lot of icetime and things started clicking again.” Congratulations on a fine job to Coach Dan Madaleno and Manager Bob Kenoway â€"- and those parents who have faithfully driven the 4,000 miles for practices and games throughout the season. And now to more “in keeping” activities and the word is out that Richmond Hill] Minor Ball Assoc- iation will be getting into the swim when it opens on May 23, to be exact. “I got as far as the airport when I got word that I wouldn’t be going to Pittsburg for a few days because of a mix-up with Pete Goegan who was supposed to come up. And Bob, as has been written before, has had his share of frustrated stabs at the big time but he dggsn’t _1et it worry him too much anymore. Right now Bob is in Richmond Hill and home- hunting and plans to take life a little easy until the training grind starts again in the Fall. Then it’s back to Detroit . . . hopefully to stay this time. Now that we’ve added a winter’s touch to these May days we’ll keep on by adding a belated but necessary congratulatory nod in the direction of the Oak Ridges OMHA “D” Peewee Champions. There waé only one club then and there are six teams and three all-star teams and several house leagu_e_ teams: GoesAto Show how teams grow. The trophy won by the team is on display in Oak Ridges and they’re hoping it’ll be that way for the next “100 yeahs 791' so, Well, for awhile anyway. “When I heard I would be goihg to Pittsburg,” he said, “I told my wife to fly back to Richmond Hill and then join me in Pittsburg for Christmas. We would be able to have some kind of Christmas in the hotel.” Bob saw his wife off and headed for the airport and Pittsrburg. he states “You have to ride with them,” he “said. “The main thing is not to lose sight of what you want to do.” And a hurried note from Joe Loughran of the Thornhill Minor Hockey Association. The loop is holding a meeting at the Henderson Avenue Public School May 24. Starting time is 4:45 pm. Come on parents and make this meeting a real success. “I figured I would get the ticket,” he said, "and it happened. The worst part about going down is the way your home life gets upset. We had just settled in Windsor when I got the word.” The word came about 2'1 week before Christmas and what follows may give you some idea of the unceg‘fgintieg _of life in the hockey atmosphere. As to the future? “I’m sure I’m NHL calibre,” he states honestly, “and I hope to change things a bit next year and be up with the Red Wings to stay.” What about the draft and NHL expansion. “I don’t know much about that.” he said. “We’re all just waiting to see what happens. I I don’t know if they’ll protect me or not.” The team won the honors in Bradford by down- ing Belmont 2-1 to put the icing on a hockey cake which started three years ago when the club initi- ated proceedings. Bob would liké to‘stay in the NHL and with Detroit but the NHL is the big thing. _“Ifd play with anyone if I could stick up there,” (Continued from Page 11) rides on the buses again instead of by train or airâ€" plane. H. C. T. Crisp, Clerk. Tenders must be submitted on Township tender form which together with specifications and other information may be obtained at the Works Dept. Office. Buttonville. Sealed tenders plainly marked as to contents will be received by the Township Clerk until 12 noon on Monday, June 5th, 1967 for the following equipment: Lowest or any tender not necessarily ac- cepted. TENDER FOR EQUIPMENT . ONE ONE - Light Service Tractor complete with Cab and One-Way Reversible Snow Plow. ONE ONE - Industrial Type Tractor complete with Front End Loader and Backhoe. ONE ONE 2, Gormley, Ont Township of Markham TICKET TO THE MINORS STILL ABOUT HOCKEY 30” Single Roll Vibratory Roller 5 Ton Dump Truck with Body and Hoist. SOFTBALL BEGINS JUNIOR FOOTBALL TO THE FUTURE Ton Pickup Truck. Diaphragm Sludge Pump. D. Miklas, P.Eng., Township Engineer, RR. 2, Gormley, Ont In the 11 o‘clock draw, the competing rinks will be skipped by: Tom Mead, Balmy Beach, provincial winner: E. Holton, Boulevard; J. Dorsch, Waterloo, member of Canadian rink at Commonwealth Games and pro- vincial winner; J. Muir, Galt, provincial winner; D. Adams, Whitby; H. Brammar, Stouff- ville; C. Hyde, Belleville; C. Oke. Bowmanville: M. Freeman, Agincourt; R. Gillette, Kitchen- er, provincial winner, Jack Hick- man, West Toronto, provincial doubles; Don Gibson, Islington, US national winner; W. McChes- ney, Glebe Manor; Tom Park, St. Catharines, national winner; Dick Edney, Kingston, provin- cial winner; Don Beauipiwt, Nia- gara Falls, provincial and Can- adian champion. 1n the 9 am draw the rinks will be skipped by: Harry An- drews, Streetsville Eaton Gold Cup winner; Harry Mont, St. John’s; Jim Watkins, London Fairmont, provincial winner; Jack Beacom, Balm-y Beach, provincial and Eaton Gold Cup winner; John Morrison, Oshawa; Provincial winners. Canadian champions, US national winners, Canadian representatives at the Commonwealth Games. and win~ ners of the Eaton Gold Cup and the Oshawa Gold Cup, all of these will be in Richmond Hill June 17 to compete in the invi- tational trebles tournament. A full slate of 32 rinks has been filled, with only three local rinks competing. Homecoming Weekend Champion Lawn Bowlers In June 17 Tournament WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES WEDNESDAY ONLY! ; ,V READY FRIDAY ONLY! FROM SUNNYBROOK’S OWN SMOKE OVENS SATURDAY ONLY! GRADE “A” OVEN READY TURKEYS“ CANADA’S FINEST RED AND BLUE BRAND BEEF THURSDAY ONLY? BLADE AND SHORT RIB 5580 YONG! S'I'. SMOKED LEG No. l Sliced Kosher Style Cooked Marinated 8: Tenderized FRESH, CUT UP CHICKEN CORNED BEEF LEGS & BREASTS lb COOKED HAM BLADE STEAKS BLADE BONE REMOVED $0 YONGE 51'. Two locations 672 FINCI‘I AV At Finch Ave. In WiHOWdale Between Bayview 8: leslie “THE STORES THAT SAY THANK YOU THROUGH THEIR PRICES” YOUR CHOICE Lou Ross. Agincourt, provincial winner; G. McMillan. Oshawa, provincial and Canadian cham- pion; B. McFadden, Old Mill; John Henderson, Montreal, president Canadian Lawn Bowl- ing Council and chairman of Canada‘s participation in the Commonwealth Games; A. Pope, Port Credit, Jack Twining, Lea- side, provincial and Oshawa Gold Cup winner; A. Badly. Kitchener, 1966 Canadian cham- pion; W. A. Hall, Windsor, Windsor district winner. Two breakâ€"ins and robberies at two Richmond Hill apart- ment blocks last week had iden- tical patterns. The first occurred at the home of George Armstrong, 55 Traybom Cres., where the place was ransacked and six $1 bills, two Centennial sets of coins valued at $7, one silver dollar, a set of Masonic cufflinks and a pen and pencil set valued at $15, were taken. A similar set of cufflinks and $18 in American and Canadian currency, plus a King Edward dollar bill, were taken from the home of L. Brown, 28 Lav- erock Crescent Police said visible sign of place. Coin "Collectors" Rob Hill Suites .‘ILY! VN SMOKE OVENS , READY TO EAT >. 3 Whole or Half LB. there was no entry at either 99¢ “L49c I In spite of sub-normal tem-i ‘peratures, which still continue, ‘we know that the season for ‘boating, swimming and all water sports is not far in the future. This is the season when many unnecessary drownings occur because people are not familiar with the principles of water safety. ‘Y' Water Safety With this thought in mind. Richmond Hill YWCA, will in- struct in water safety May 24 by films and demonstrations all interested persons. One session will be held at 2 pm for mothers and preâ€"schoolers, one at 7 pm and another at 9 pm for school children and adults. They are open to the public and are an annual service of the "Y", whose members realize that learning to swim is important, water safety is more important. The films are colored, with sound. and of excellent quality. They include, “Teaching Johnny To Swim”, “Save A Life," ‘Re- suscltation From Drowning", (the mouvth-to-mouth method), and “I’m No Fool". Let us give your car the REGAL appearance it deserves, in our new Body shop with the most up to date drying equipment North of the City. It costs you no more to have quality work done by experienced men, "All Fully Licensed", who are specialists on Body Repairs and Painting. We Use Solder 884-8187 Service Cars Avalable ALL WEEK HAS MOVED TO 89 NEWKIRK ROAD (corner of Markham Road) RICHMOND HILL COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE Regal Auto Body Ltd Marinated 8: Tenderized Round Bone i°“é"é“"‘”c’EEK'KK 79c SUNNYBROOK’S OWN MADE FRESH DAILY FARMER SA USA GE Classes To Be Held May 24 YORK CENTRAL HOSPITAL 672 FlNCI-I AVE. (c/o York Central Hospital, Richmond Hill) STEAKS lb. Memorial Fund NO PHONE ORDERS PLEASE or 290 lb. lbs. for 59¢|

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