Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 18 May 1967, p. 14

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l Automobiles We pei‘sonally handle all sales hills and advertisingâ€" I Accountants l Chinese Food PHONE CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT LEONARD R. ROSENBERG Bank of Nova Scotia Building Aurora VOLKSWAGEN SALES 8. SERVICE W.& P. MOTORS LTD. 178 YONGE ST. N. Richmond Hill 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 PHONE: 884-1136 â€" 884-1137 I Chiropractic 81 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill, Ont. 884-4474â€"5 112 Geneva Street St. Catharines. Ont. - 684-1177 J’osiéelyn, Laughlin, Franklin, Tucker Licensed Auctioneer York & Ontario Counties 36 Years Experience SPECIALIZING IN PUREBRED CATTLE, FARM STOCK, FURNITURE AND IMPLEMENTS X-RAY cor. Windhurst Gate & Bayvlew (1 block south Bayview Plaza) Phone 884-1075 H. D. M elsness, D.C. A Complete Transmission Service Automatic Specialists Transmission Ltd. 177YONGEST.N.. RICHMOND HILL 889-6662 L. E'. Clark & Associates PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 54531/2 YONGE STREET 225-4701 & McBride Chartered Accountants Alvin S. Farmer Arthur G. Broad Town Inn TAKE-OUT SERVICE 32 Yonge Street South Thomas 3. Summers, D.C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC 80 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTO‘RY FIND THE SERVICE YOU NEED FOR HOME OR BUSINESS Auto Transmission ’N E 886-5311 GORMLEY, ONT. 889-359] 21 Bedford Park Ave Richmond Hill Auctioneer Telephone 884-7110 By Appointment By Appointment THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, May 18, 1967 884-6011 Mister 884-4251 r . . Engineering Electrical Contractors WIRING - REPAIRS THORNHILL - 389' 884-1812 Insurance - Mortgages Fire. Auto and Liability Motor Vehicle Finance Service "HELEN SIMPSON LYNETT Helen Simpson Flowers METRO WIDE DELIVERY Toronto Ernie Brock & Son: TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 Member - Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association Barrow. Insurance Servuces Ltd. 884-1551 RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE For Particulars Call 889-6849 - 244-6573 We Deliver Toronto & Surrounding Districts Dr. J. M. Dryer COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE NATION-WIDE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. Corner Agency Limited SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS Leno’s Machine Shop 2518 YONGE ST. (at St. Clements) TORONTO 12, ONT. Ph. 485-1145 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 889-1974 Fire. Auto and Liability Suite 2, Lowrle Building 15 Yonge Street N. Roy V. Bick Insurance Ltd. Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen St. E. Rear 47 Yonge St. S. Aurora, Ontario 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 LOWEST RATES AND TERMS FAST SERVICE 812 889-1812 AT ALL HOURS DENTIST Open Evenings 78 YONGE ST. S" RICHMOND KILL Kirby Brock Maple, Ont. RICE’S FLOWERS STEAMFITTING WELDING “Flowers For All Occasions” Phones Insurance Electrical Flowers Dental Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 635-6158 884-1462 LTD. 363-3959 889-4710 884-1219 Toronto Officeâ€" 7 Queen St. E. Suite 151 Phone 363-5877 BARRISTER & SOLICITOR Suite 2 Lowrie Building 15 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Every Thursday Afternoon 884-7561 B.A. LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor and Notary Public. 15 Yonge St. North Richmond Hill, Ontario. 884-7891 220 Bay Street, Suite 701 Toronto 1, Ontario. 366-9411. 884-4413 889-7052 80 Richmond St. W. Suite 402 Toronto 1, Ontario 366-3156 BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC 65 Yonge St. S. Richmond Hill 884-5829 Richmond Inn Block IPaint-Wallpaper James H. Timmins Parker & Pearson Barrister, Solicitor & Notary Public Barristers, Solicitors 8: Notary Public 116 YONGE STREET NORTH RICHMOND HILL 884-5701 884-1115 884-1116 Nbrman A. Todd CONTINENTAL HAIR STYLIST 13 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill Next to Woolworths BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT Plaxton & Mann ’. C. Newman. QoC- STUART P. PARKER, Q.C. JAMES H. PEARSON ROBERT G. PARKER Richmond Hill 50 Yonge St. N. 884-4494 MASONRY & CONTRACTORS 0 PATIOS C WALLS 0 0 LANDSCAPING 0 All Kinds of Stone Work Hair Styling & Beauty Salons Lawlor, LeClaire & Bannon Hans H of mann BARRISTER-SOLICITORS 59 Yonge Street N., Richmond Hill, Ontario Edward D. Hill 15 YONGE ST. NORTH Richmond Hill, Ontario Office 884-1780 Residence 884-1863 By Appointment Phone 884-5892 JOHN STELTZ J . Rabinowitch WINTER GARDEN Phone 727-5940 9114 Yonge St. Richvale Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public INTERIORS LTD. FREE DELIVERY 889-1059 THORNHILL 889-3165 Masonry Res. 884~2117 legal “Office Supplies I Optometrists J. Y. LUCIC, (formerly York Office Supplies) 16 Yonge Street North RICHMOND HILL 884-4231 889-5729 Furniture, Office Supplies, Social Stationery, Typewriter and Adder Sales and Rentals. ‘ _______ ISporting Goods “Checked” Electronically GUESSWORK ELIMINATED Pyle Piano Sales 43 Yonge St. N. (Legion Court) I Transportation GLENN SAWYCH uumuumummnmmuuunmnnmmmuumnuuuummuuuum H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. Daily Richmond Hill Toronto Service Chartered Coaches Information: 889- TUNED 9 REPAIRED WWWMW Ontario Land Surveyors 4901A Yonge St., Willowdale 221-3485 George T. Yates, OLS Res. 24 Denver Cres., Willowdale Coach Lines Ltd. C.C.M & Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES RICHMOND HILL Coaches for all Occasions Music Teachers . W. Kitchen, CD. 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Richmond Hill Municipal Hall SERVING YORK COUNTY Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop PIANO THEORY MUSICIANS’ SCHOOLS 884-2310 Langdon's ACCORDION MUSICIANS’ SCHOOLS 884-2310 FOR INFORMATION Trailways Of Canada Ltd. Yates & Yates V. O. N. BRANCH NURSE-IN-CHARGE MISS JEAN LOGGIE 884-4101 Surveyors Local Bus Service By Appointment 884-3962 884-3614 Pianos Telephone 833-5351 889-7585 Telephone 884-1432 Dr. W. Allan Ripley Office hours by appointment RUMBLE TRANSPORT Offers 2nd &3rd Mtge $1,500 - $20,000, up to 15 yrs., low cost, fast courteous service. Come in. telephone or write today. Prompt Investment Corp. Ltd. 62 Richmond St W., Toronto 1, 366-9586 evgs. 239-4913 THORNHILL Veterinary Clinic The Helpful Col P.C.V. Class A. C. and H. DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL TO TORONTO Local and Long Distance Hauling VETERINARY SURGEON Office elephone 147 Yonge St. N. 4-1432 Richmond Hill Telephone: 889-4851 MODERN HEATED . . . Rumble Transport 889-6192 Branch Offices Vancouver . Edmonton - Winnipeg : London - Hamirtono Toronto - Ottawa - Montreal - Moncton - Halifax 8119 Yonge Street, THORNHILL Veterinary WAREHOUSE STORAGE Trucking 884-1013 364-2625 94 NEWKIRK ROAD 884-1013 - Richmond Hill Established 1871 COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL HOUSEHOLD STRONG'RELIABLE HOME I BUSINESS Richmond Hill â€" Barrow Insurance Services Ltd. 884-1551 Willowdale â€" N ei] G. McDonald Limited. 221-1611 Toronto Head Office - Kitchener, Ontario “‘BulI-Headed" Youth Gets Three {Months For Assault Conviction A youth. whose pre-sentence report described him as often flying into “blind pages" was sentenced to three months in jail when he appeared in Mag- istrate's Court last week. David Holmes, 16, of the House of Concord. had been convicted previously of assault occasioning bodily harm after a fight at the House March 2. Frost, who required doctor’s care, suffered a temporary loss of balance. The pre-sentence report on Holmes, prepared by Probation Officer Don Page, whose office is in the House of Concord, said the youth often flew into blind rages, especially when criticized. He also had the rep~ utation as a bully, the report said. Holmes punched and kicked fellow resident Richard Frost after the latter had accused him of stealing a coat. Mrs. F. Holmes of Toronto, mother of the defendant, said her son had always been "bull- The Christian Science Monitor One Norway Street Boston, Massachusetts, U.s.A. 02115 Please start my Monitor subscription for the period checked below. I enclose 3 (U3. funds). [I 1 YEAR $24 6 months 12 El 3 months $6 D $ street Name THE MONITOR COMPLEMENTS YOUR [OCAL PAPER We specialize in analyzing and inter- .preting’the important national and international news. Our intention is to bring the news into sharper focus. The Monitor has a worldwide staff of correspondentsâ€" some of them rank among the world's finest. And the Monitor’s incisive, provocative edi- torials are followed .Just as closely by the men on Capitol Hill as they are by, the intelligent, concerned adult on Main Street. WHY YOU SHOULD TRY THE MONITOR You probably know the Monitor's pro- fessional reputation as one of the world’s finest newspapers. Try the Moniton see ,how it will take you above the average newspaper reader. Just fill out the coupon below. Your local newspaper is a wide-range newspaper with many features. lls emphasis is on local news. It also reports the major national and inter. national news. Why The Christian Science Monitor recommends you read your local newspaper 364-2625 ZIP Code Assets Exceed $26,000,000 >PBISA headed” and hard to discipline. A widow. Mrs. Holmes said she often “gave him a good swat" when he was younger. Magistrate Russell Pearse said the attack on Frost was "dangerous and vicious“. "He may or may not recover," Mr. Pearse said. Dennis Allan. Vaughan Town- ship, who was convicted of theft under $50. was remanded until June 29 for a pre-sentence re- port. Allan was convicted of tak- ing a screw driver and some maps from the glove compart- ment of a car owned by Craig Lynn, 138 Lucas Street, Rich- mond Hill, April 29. The car had been parked in front of Langstaff Secondary School. NEWMARKET: Council last week named three men to its Committee of Adjustment: F. Crowe for one year; W. Noonan. two years; and Roy Keffer, three years. NEWS isrnow the second largest in the international organization. next to the U.S.A.. she reported. Women become so enmeshed in community activities that they fail to know regional, pro- vincial or national level inter- ests. Mrs. Orange pointed out. She noted that the Mount For. est Club with a scattered mem- bership of 28 women from Arthur, Walkerton and Mount Forest had managed to provide the International Federation of University Women with a pie sident and had also helped establish a fund for destitute European women. A visit to the isolated Thunder Bay Club brought about organization of three groups â€"â€" Atikokan, Ken~ era and Fort Francis. Mrs. Robert Orange of Sud- bury, recently nominated as president of the Canadian Fed- eration of University Women, was the guest of the York County Branch at its April 24 meeting. Mrs. Orange was in- troduced by Mrs. J. Van Den flock of Richmond Hill. The guest spoke on the func- tion of university â€" educated women and their organizations in Canadian life. 0f the 95,000 women universe ity graduates in Canada, only 12,000 belong to CFUW, whiqh Since Canada’s theme for 1967 is “Man and His World”, Mrs. Orange felt that women should take leadership in areas where they are most qualified and most suited. At the 1966 conference on the May 15, when the York Count status of women in Geneva she group celebrated its tent was impressed by the calibre of anniversary. Guest speaker we delegates from other countriesnbe Mrs‘ Robert Goudge, pa: particularly the underprivflegedlpresident of the Toronto Club Take Leadership Where Qualified Speaker Tells University Women (Continued from Page 2) Get a sales slip or receipt for everything you purchase abroad. Keep an accurate 11st of these items and pack them together in your luggage. _ It’s difficult to give definite rules for tipping but here is a yardstick. Never tip an airlines employee. Pay taxi-drivers 15% to 20% of the fare. Baggage porters 25c per bag. First class stateroom steward - $8.00 on a 7 to 9 crossing. Resort hotel chamber- maid - 25c a night per person. Unpretentious rest- aurants - 15% of the bill; fancy eating places - 20% of the cheque. On sightseeing buses, tip the guide a minimum of 25c; long tours require a, higher amount. If he is a good guide he deserves a good tip. In Europe there’s frequently a 10% to 20% service charge added to your hotel bills and restaur- ant checks. Additional tipping is required only for special services. TRAVEL LIGHT AND TRAVEL LIGHTHEARTED Rambling Around When flying, plan to wear your “heaviest” clothing and shoes. (The airlines don’t weigh you). Carry on board a small case â€" usually not weighed on foreign flights â€" containing items you may need on your flight; books, cosmetics, slippers (for overâ€" night flights), air sickness pills, etc. Don’t take too many clothes; instead plan your wardrobe to include the new fabrics which are truly drip dry. Remem- ber you’ll be bringing back more, than you left with. Be sure your name and home address is on your luggage; also, when possible, the name of the hotel you'll be staying in. It is smart to mark your lug- gage so you can quickly identify it in crowded term- inals. Particularly abroad, when you have only a smattering of the language, this can speed your way through the problems of entering a country. First select lightweight luggage of durable con- struction. Pack shoes and handbags at the bottom in plastic bags to prevent scratching. Roll up small articles and pack them in the toes of your shoes. Next pack your things that stand crushing â€"â€" nylon things, hosiery, sweaters, etc. On top go your suits. shirts. dresses, blouses, etc. ‘ The best plan is to put your cosmetics, toilet articles â€" all the bottles and jars â€" in a separate hand case. Include a change of clothes and your night things if you have the space. This is a great timesaver if you have any overnight stops on your itinerary. Relax and enjoy your trip. You’ve already done the work. You are also protected by property insur- ance against loss of personal possessions, and by personal accident insurance that will help pay medical and hospital costs should you meet with an accident. New incentives to promote industry in the North. (So they won’t have so much spare time.) Further diSclosure of information by federally incorporated companies. (Like, printing the loss statements, too.) ' ' Review of Federal jurisdiction in field of safety standards. (Dr. Mort Shulman’s got THEM worried, too!) (Continued from Page 2) Further measures to assist those moving from homes to obtain jobs. (A step-up in Army recruit- ing.) Strengthening of adult retraining program. (Wrapping it with more red tape?) Gradual closing of uneconomic coal mines in Nova Scotia while creating new jobs. (See N.S. advertisements under: Caretakers Wanted.) 7 VCommimity development programs, pdrticularly for Indians and Eskimos. (Something for them to do with their spare time.) [Further reform of Parliamentary procedures. (Shorter sessions and longer holidays.) MARKHAM PAVING Paved Driveway Specialists All Work Fully Guaranteed Nothing Down Budget Terms Call 884-1023 For Free Estimates The Flip Side Miss Edna Izzard, Richmond Hill, asked why women frOm less advanced countries (such as In- dia which has a woman prime minister) seem to be more pro- gressive than women from western countries. Mrs. Orange felt they were much more in» voived in their countries’ prob- lems and deeply committed to helping solve them. ones. A delegate from the Phil- ippines was one of three women Supreme Court judges. “How many women reach that level in Canada?” the speaker asked. The hope of this conference was that the delegates would re- turn to their own countries to establish committees to investi- gate the status of women so the United Nations could estimate where needs are greatest. In Canada this resulted in a Royal Commission to investigate the status of women. There will be an international council meeting in india soon after the Vancouver conference, which will consider whether the university women's organization should participate in solving the problems of India's 36,000,000 starving. At the last interna- tional meeting a Russian woman delegate commented that the problem of western women was to stay awake between three large meals daily. The speaker was thanked by Mrs. Francis Redelmeier of Richmond Hill. The final meeting of 1966-67 was the annual banquet at Highlands Golf Club in Aurora May 15, when the York County group celebrated its tenth anniversary. Guest speaker was be Mrs. Robert Goudge, past

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