12 THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, July 13, 1967 We personally handle all sales bills and advertisingâ€" Joscelyn, Laughlin, Franklin, Tucker & McBride Chartered Accountants 31 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill. Ont. 884-4474-5 112 Geneva Street St. Catharines. Ont. - 684-1177 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT LEONARD R. ROSENBERG Bank of Nova Scotia Building Aurora Telephone 884-7110 PHONE Licensed Auctioneer York & Ontario Counties 36 Years Experience VOLKSWAGEN SALES 8. SERVICE W. & P. MOTORS lTD. I78 YONGE ST. N. Richmond Hill L. E. Clark & Associates PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 54531/2 YONGE STREET 225-47 01 cor. Windhurst Gate & Bayview (1 block south Bayview Plaza) H. D. Melsness, D.C. A Complete Transmission Service Automatic Specialists Transmission Ltd. 177YONGEST.N. INCHMONDIHLL 889-6662 8830 lYonge SL. Richvale 889-1251 SPECIALIZING IN PUREBRED CATTLE, FARM STOCK. FURNITURE AND IMPLEMENTS Alvin S. Farmer PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTORY FIND THE SERVICE YOU NEED FOR HOME OR BUSINESS Thomas S. Summers, D.C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC 80 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill Arthur G. Broad Jeff ’3 81111000 Service Automobiles 889-7701-2 Accountants Auto Transmussuon Authorized Service PEUGEOT NE 886-5311 GORMLEY, ONT. Auctioneer Chiropractic 21 Bedford Park Ave Richmond Hill 884-4251 By Appointment By Appointment Phone 884-1075 884-6011 Mister X-RAY 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: Contractors INDUSTRIAL - COMMERCIAL ’ RESIDENTIAL THORNHILL \â€"â€"'â€" \Barrow Insurance l Serwces ltd. HELEN SIMPSON LYNETT Helen Simpson Flowers METRO WIDE DELIVERY 884-1812 15 884-1551 Motor Vehicle Finance Service DOWNSVIEW BOOKKEEPING SERVICE Member - Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 Town Inn TAKE-OUT SERVICE 32 Yonge Street South Dr. J. M. Dryer DENTIST Open Evenings 78 YONGE ST. S.. RICHMOND HILL 884-1462 884-1136 RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE Donald E. Barnett 145 Sheppard Ave. E. 223-9838 Chinese Food We Deliver Toronto & Surrounding Districts SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS Suite Fire. Auto and Liability Lenok Machine Shop 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 889-1974 STEAMFITTING WELDING Corner Agency Limited Bookeeping Service TORONTO 12, ONT. Ph. 485-1145 Fire. Auto and Liability Engineering Insurance - Mortgages Rear 47 Yonge St. S Aurora. Ontario 2518 YONGE ST. (at St. Clements) 812 889-1812 AT ALL HOURS RICE’S FLOWERS Electrical Electrical “Flowers For All Occasions" Insurance Flowers Dental 2. Lowrie Building Yonge Street N. Phones 884-1137 889-4710 884-1219 Toronto Ernie Brock & Son B.A. LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor and Notary Public. 15 Yonge St. North \Richmond Hill, Ontario. ‘884-7891 ‘220 Bay Street, Suite 701 kToronto 1, Ontario. 1366-9411. T. C. Newman, Q.C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR Suite 2 Lowrie Building 15 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Every Thursday Afternoon 884-7561 Toronto Officeâ€"â€" 7 Queen St. E. Suite 151 Phone 363-5877 884-4413 889-7052 80 Richmond St. W. Suite 402 Toronto 1. Ontario 366-3156 James H. Timmins Parker & Pearson For Particulars Call 889-6849 - 244-6573 (formerly York Office Supplies) 16 Yonge Street North RICHMOND HILL 884-4231 889-5729 Furniture. Office Supplies. COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Furniture. Office Supplies, Social Stationery, Typewriter and Adder Sales and Rentals. Barrister, Solicitor & Notary Public Barristers, Solicitors 8.: Notary Public 116 YONGE STREET NORTH RICHMOND HILL 884-5701 884-1115 884-1116 NATION-WIDE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. LOWEST RATES AND TERMS FAST SERVICE STUART P. PARKER, Q.C JAMES H. PEARSON ROBERT G. PARKER Norman A. Todd Plaxton & Mann H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. Edward D. Hill Office Supplies Lawlor, LeClaire & Bannon Roy V. ,Bick Insurance Ltd. BARRISTER-SOLICITORS 59 Yonge Street N., Richmond Hill, Ontario l5 YONGE ST. NORTH Richmond Hill, Ontario Office 884-1780 Residence 884-1863 By Appointment 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 J. Rabinowitch Kirby Brock Maple, Ont. Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen St. E. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public 65 Yonge St. S. Richmond Hill 884-5829 Richmond Inn Block Insurance THORNHILL 889-3165 Richmond Hill 50 Yonge St. N. 884-4494 (Continued) Res. 884-21 17 635-6158 Legal LTD. 363-3959 BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT “Checked†Electronically GUESSWORK ELIMINATED Pyle Piano Sales 43 Yonge St. N. (Legion Court) C.C.M & Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884.1213 Local Bus Service Daily Richmond Hill Toronto Service Chartered Coaches Information: 889- RUMBLE TRANSPORT Sporting Goods TUNED 6‘ REPAIRED Coach Lines Ltd. Repairs to Edbro Hoists and other makes, power takeoffs, winches and truck bodies WINTER GARDEN Coaches for all Occasions FOR INFORMATION Telephone 833-5351 Richvale Equipment Service Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop P.C.V. Class A. C. and H. DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL TO TORONTO Local and Long Distance Hauling 4901A Yonge St. Willowdale 221-3485 George T. Yates. OLS Res. 24 Denver Cres.. Willowdale aint-Wallpapel Transportation Langdon's 9114 Yonge St. Richvale . W. Kitchen, GD. 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Optometrists Trailways Of Canada Ltd. FREE DELIVERY INTERIORS LTD. Ontario Land Surveyors 7 MAPLE AVENUE RICHVALE 839-1059 Yates & Yates By Appointment Surveyors Trucking Pianos 884-3614 884-3962 884-1013 364-2625 889-6342 889-7585 Why The i Christian Science Monitor . recommends you read = your local newspaper Telephone 884-1432 Office hours by appointment Telephone: 889-4351 Dr. W. Allan Ripley STOUFFVILLE: Mr. and Mrs Bruce McKay. Stouffville, be- came the parents of the town’s first new baby of Canada's sec- ond century July 2 at 8 am in Scarboro General Hospital. Theilr daughter, Catherine Flor- ence, weighed six pounds. five ounces. Right behind them were Mr. and Mrs. Murray Stewart, also of Stouffvi‘lle, whose son was born in the same ‘hospital at 2.30 pm and weighed ‘five pounds, 101/5 ounces. THORNHILL Veterinary Clinic VETERINARY SURGEON Your local newspaper is a wide-range newspaper with many features. lts emphasis is on local news. it also reports the major national and inter- national news. THE MONITOR COMPLEMEHTS YOUR lOGAL 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 world-wide staff of correspondentsâ€" some of them rank among the world's finest. And the Monitor's incisive, provocative edi- torials are followedvjust 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 Monitor; see _how it will take you above the average newspaper reader. Just ï¬ll out the coupon below. 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 $ (U .S. funds). E] 1 YEAR $24 [3 6 months $12 I] 3 months $6 Name Sheet Stat. 8119 Yonge Street, THORN HILL Our managers and mortgage officers have. the knowledge and experience and can help you design the best mortgage plan to meet y0ur needs with payments to fit your income. Veterinary 121 YONGE ST. N RICHMOND HILL No bonuses or hidden charges CUSTOM TAILORED MORTGAGE LOANS Office 147 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill VICTORIA AND GREY TRUST FAST SERVICE M. N. FOYLE.. MANAGER ZIP Code WITH A BACKGROUND OF 78 YEARS OF MORTGAGE LOANING PBlGA The wing-like steering appar- atus of a boy's bike resulted in 21 Concord father flying off the handle and landing in Magis- trate's Court last week on a charge of assaulting his 14-year- old neighbor. ' Mr. Pante, who was nearby at is service station, came out then and struck him. the boy Isaid. Father Flies Off Handle After Youthful Altercation 0n Bikes Charged was Ted Pante 15 Lawrie Road. who Gary Dollery, 1 King High Drive, testified had hit him and kicked him twice in the seat following an incident in Concord May 24. The boy said he and a com- panion had been riding their bikes on the shoulder of the road and had passed Mr. Pante's two children riding on their machines. However. in passing, the tip of the com- plainant's extra-wide handlebars had touched the other boy's bike, the witness said. -dent at Boyd Conservation Area Woodbridge. who was charged with spreading false news, was remanded until September 28I for trial. The charge arose from an inci-I last June when Vaughan Town- ship Police and a band of vol- unteer searchers spent several hours searching the area aner receiving a call from a dis- traught couple that their 2%- year-old daughter was missing. The call later turned out to be a hoax. **** The Pante boy then started In another hearing. Mrs. Kim- yelling at him, and so he held lin‘s son, Randy Kimlin. 18, of his bike and told him to take RR 2. Woodbridge. pleaded back what he had been saying, guilty to a reduced charge of Dollery said. He said the boy theft under $50 from an initial was about 11 and the girl 7. charge of theft over $50. In his testimony. Mr. Pante said Doilery had knocked his daughter into the ditch, and then had taken off his shoe and had chased after his son. He admitted hitting the complain- ant, but said he had had trouble with him before and that D01- lery had “made it tough†for his children. Mrs. Pame, wife of the ac- cused. also said theré had been previous trouble with the com- plainant. Magistrate Russell Pearse said he felt other forms of restraint couLd be used. regardless of the “feeling of a father fo'r his children." He said bhere were always two sides to a story, but an as- 884-1107 889-1308 sault had been established Mr. Pante was given a sus- pended sentence and ordered to post a $200 bond to keep the peace for six months. Mrs. Evelyn Kimlin, RR 2. Woodbridge. who was charged with spreading false news, was remanded until September 28 for trial. The youth admitted taking two rolls of copper tubing, silver solder. a slide rule. an eme'ry cloth and assorted Ihand Another theft from General Freezer, this time of a set of tools, brought a conviction for theft under $50 against James Hammond, 19, of Newmarket. Hammond, Who took the tools last January ï¬rom an em- ployee of the firm. also was re- manded until July 20. BRADFORD: Flood conditions in the Alliston, Holland Marsh and King Township regions‘ were reported worse last week than Hurricane Hazel's after- math in 1954. Abnormal rainâ€" fall have put some market gar- deners out of business while others are helplessly watching their crops rotting in the waterlogged fields. When Hur- ricane Hazel hit in 1954 most of the crops had been har- :"THE LIBERAL" onvclopu 884-4361 Richmond Hill PHONE 884-1105 books Printers and Publishers since 1878 NEWS Pu! your printed personal labels on all oasy-io-loso Slams such as slalionory, cheques, cameras, ons, You'll findalhousand use: for (has: gumflmd labels packod in a handy plulic I rousubla box. 500 Labels $L75 ORDER NOW AT (Continued from Page ‘2) Another “grounds for divorce†Parliament might consider when it reconvenes, is cases where a husband finds his wife has been cheating on him when he comes home early and catches her putting margarine in her butter tarts! The Ontario Government’s driver-examiners and inspectors have announced they will “work to rule" until they get higher salaries. This news. and our traffic accident record, makes one wonder just what they HAVE been working to. Sex education in theschools is now being advoâ€" cated for kindergarten level . . . while we’d say the greatest need is for sex education at teacher level. In these days of sex-similarity, they need SOME help to know which sex they are teaching. Russ Jackson, quarterback of the Ottawa Rough Riders, has got himself a $30,000 contract for playing this year. Jackson is a full-time teacher of mathematics and also appears to be pretty good at the figures for his spare time. The War Of The Week - With Moishe Tshombe and Joseph Mobuto both claiming control of the Congo and giving their vers- ions of the atrocities the other is up to, it’s difficult to separate the Congolese from the Congoâ€"lies. See where the Gideon Society held its 56th annual convention at the Royal York last week . . . should be some sort of a joke here about the kind of a guy who‘d take a Bible to a Gideon Convention. streams of multi-colored water gushed upward and cascaded back into the pool. The jets sparkled and glowed. I thought of precious jewels. The lighting effects make wonderful magic. At the pool edge I saw a man take his socks off. Someone grabbed one and threw it into the pool. I watched him rolling his pant legs up to go after it. How deep was it anyway? It was a relief to note that the water level merely reached the top of his ankle. It was all a big joke.» Rambling Around A woman paraded back and forth wearing a full length placard back and front. Her name was signed at the bottom and oh, what she said. It read: “Woman brought sin into the world etc.†"Traitor," I muttered under my breath. According to her, women must wear longer dresses, be more modest, be more unobstrusive. The woman beamed as cur- ious male onlookers stared. She seemed to be enjoy- ing their attention. Evidently the only way to attract men is not with mini-skirts and short dresses. There are women who will go to even greater length to get it. The band was playing. There is really nothing like a band to whip up the holiday spirit. A cannon boomed at intervals. The way was cleared for sold- iers from the Queen’s Own. The young men were strikingly attired and their march was an exercise in precision. I watched their skilful performance with mixed feelings of admiration and sadness. '1’ felt this way about the other uniformed men. the Toronto Scottish and Irish in their charming kilts. the soldier, sailor and airman who mingled with the crowd. Perhaps, I shouldn’t have said it but it slipped out anyway. “Cannon fodder." Does all the pomp, parade, pageantry and regalia ever really stop a person from knowing the truth? The real drama awaits to be unfolded elsewhere, at home, abroad, by some nation on some soi_l. Yes, Toronto was very gay Dominion Day in Nathan Phillips’ Square. I witnessed the amalgam of nations on this square which represents the great cosmopolitan city of Toronto. The latest report said 100,000 came to celebrate, to examine the exhibits placed there by hopeful artists or to sit waiting for the fireworks to begin -.....J - Vâ€. ‘0.-- Being somewhat of a traditionalist, I wasn’t too impressed with the exhibits on the square as art. I laughed outright at some of them. I puzzled over others. I experienced admiration for s0me and revulsion at others. But was it art? Art is a word used very loosely today . . . like love. The Archer has to be seen to be appreciated. It has a beautiful bronze color. Somebody said, “It looks like a big chicken without a head.†However the Archer was not out of place under the shadow of the new city hall. I felt sure that those embracing curves would acknowledge the presence of an over- grown chick without a head. IS IT ART? When it comes to art, the late Controller Orliffe was a traditionalist. ' He looked for meaning in things. He wanted to experience feelings of beauty in the things he saw. He admired the exhibits for their uniqueness, their daring and their interesting qualities but he couldn’t bring himself to say that they represented art to him. There were a number of objects which were distortions of the real thing. I thought the maker of one a very good tinsmith and the maker of another a fine glassblower. A headless bronze statue of a woman made me wonder why the artist omitted the head. Take the face away or hide it and you are not reminded of her intelligence, only of her usefulâ€" ness. Now why should anyone want to deny a wom- an’s intelligence? _- ...-. ‘l 1- an Vv‘A-ov-nv' . I saw the controversial exhibits sculptured in iron. They were agonizing. There was the dead Christ, a male nude hanging from a scaffold, and still another figure depicting a hopeless agony. I was saddened by it. It had meaning, plenty of it and it pointed straight at you. The well worn cliche still applies. “Man’s Inhumanity To Man.†A smart alec from the crowd put a lighted cigar- ette in the half-open mouth of the hanging nude. This was the point when Controller Orliffe made his appearance. He snatched the cigarette from the statue and ground it under his feet. There was a great deal of significance in this act. It was not only the desire to keep the square clean, it was a mark of respect given to the subject and to the work of another. These two are the acts that create friendly meetings. 1|! 1 ‘b‘v . .. -.-v--_-. I felt sorry for the artist who created the large, red globe with an opening like the missing wedge of an apple. He would have done well to put a sec- urity guard around it. Wait until he looks into that yawning slit and views the garbage thrown into it by a careless public. .__ .. “101-0 .1. Just the same, I thought Nathan Phillips’ Square a great place for a large gathering of people. It has a future. It can’t help but flourish under the watch- ful eyes and benevolent shadow of the new city hall. v The Flip Side (Continued from Page 2)