Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 28 Sep 1967, p. 14

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'Joscelyn, Laughlin, Franklin, Tucker CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT LEONARD R. ROSENBERG 31 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill. Ont. 884-4474-5 112 Geneva Street St. Catharines. Ont. - 684-1177 I Automobiles Bank of Novl Scotla Building Aurora Telephone 884-7110 We personally handle all sales bills and advertisingâ€" PHONE VOLKSWAGEN SALES 8: SERVICE W. & P. MOTORS LTD. 178 YONGE ST. N. Richmond Hill L. E. Clark & Associates PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 54531/2 YONGE STREET 225-4701 I Chiropractic Alvin S. Farmer Licensed Auctioneer York & Ontario Counties 36 Years’ Experience SPECIALIZING IN PUREBRED CATTLE, FARM STOCK. FURNITURE AND IMPLEMENTS cor. Windhurst Gate 5; Bayvlew (1 block south Bayview Plaza) Phone 884-1075 H. D. M elsness, D.C. X-RAY 'A Complete Transmission Service Automatic Specialists Transmission. Ltd. 177 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL 889-6662 Chartered Accountants DOWN SVIEW BOOKKEEPING SERVICE PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTORY 889-7701-2 Arthur G. Broad Donald E. Barnett, 145 Sheppard Ave. E. 223-9838 Auto Transmissmn Accountafls Chinese Food I 801 NE 886-5311 GORMLEY, ONT. Auctioneer Bookeeping Service 21 Redford Park Ave Richmond Hi1! 884-425 1 By Appointment & McBride Thomas Summers, D.C. DOCTOR OF 'HIROPRACTIC THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, Sept. 28, 1967 By Appointment nge Street South R‘Hmond Hill Mister 88145011 FIND THE SERVICE YOU NEED FOR HOME OR BUSINESS 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 tl Engineering INDUSTRIAL - COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL THORNHILL 884-1812 HELEN SIMPSON LYNETT Helen Simpson Flowers METRO WIDE DELIVERY F. A. A. D. Complete Janitorial Service Industrial 4; Commercial Member â€" Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association Toronto 363-: 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 32 Yonge Street South Town Inn ’ TAKE-OUT SERYICF-l ’BBEI'OW Insurance RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE Cleaning And Maintenance 884-8473 â€" 638-5728 We Deliver Toronto & Surrounding Districts Cleaning 5; Maintenance “Fresh As A Daisy” Dr. J. M. Dryer DENTIST Open Evenings 18 YONGE ST. S" RICHMOND HILL 884-1462 SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS TORONTO 12. ONT. Ph. 485-1145 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 884-1993 STEAMFITTING WELDING Roy V. Bick Insurance Ltd. Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen ‘St. E. Leno’s Machine Shop 2518 YONGE ST. (at St. Clements) 812 889-1812 AT ALL HOURS Electrical Contractors Window Cleaning RICE’S FLOWERS "Flowers For All Occasions" Phones Electrical Insurance Flowers Dental 363-3959 889-4710 884-1551 Ernie Brock & Son Insurance - Mortgages Fire, Auto and Liability Motor Vehicle Finance Service BARRISTER 8; SOLICITOR Suite 2 Low’rle Building 15 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Every Thursday Afternoon 884-7561 BA. LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor md Notary Public. 15 Yonge St. North Richmond Hill, Ontario. 884-7891 220 Bay Street, Suite 7 01 Toronto 1. Ontario. 366-9411. Toronto Office-â€" 7 Queen St. E. Suite 151 884-4413 889-7052 80 Richmond St. W. Suite 402 Toronto 1. Ontario 366-3156 Insurance Agency TELEPHONE 727 -9488-9 Rear 47 Yonge St. S. Aurora. Ontario Parker & Pearson For Particulars Cal] 889~6849 ~ - 244-6573 James H. Timmins Barrister, Solicitor 8» Notary Public 15 YONGE ST. NORTH Richmond Hill. Ontario Office 884-1780 Residence 884-1863 By Appointment COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 Barristers. Solicitors a; Notary Public 116 YONGE STREET NORTH RICHMOND HILL 884-5101 884-1115 884-1116 Life. Auto. Fire, Liability Complete Insurance Service Norman A. Todd STUART P. PARKER, Q.C JAMES H. PEARSON ROBERT G. PARKER NORM MUNRO NATION-WIDE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. LOWEST RATES AND. TERMS ' FAST SERVICE Fire. Auto and Liability Suite 2. Lowrie Building 15 Yonge Street N. Lawlor, LeClaire 8: Batman BARRISTER-SOLICITORS Plaxton & Mann C orner Agency Limited Services ltd. Edward D. Hill RESIDENCE 884-4874 OFFICE 741-1740 LTD. Kirby Brock Maple, Ont. 59 Young Street N., Richmond Hill, Ontario Barrister, Solicitor. Notary Public '. Newman, Q.C. Insurance THORNHILL 889-3165 Richmond Hill 50 Yonge St. N. 884-4494 Phone 363-5877 (Continued) 635-6158 Legal 884-1219 BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. NOTARY PUBLIC 65 Yonge St S. Richmond Hill 884-5829 Richmond In Black Res. 884-2117 IOffice Supplies Ruth Garson A.D.C.M Concert Artist - Teacher (Preparatory for Examinations) Piano - Voice - Theory Studio: 428 S. Fernleigh Circle Markham-Bayview Area Richmond Hill I Optometrists (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. A. W. Kitchen, O.D. BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. Local. and Long Distance Moving and Storage TUNED E? REPAIRED 43 Yonge St. N. (Legion Court) “Checked” Electronically GUESSWORK ELIMINATED Pyle Piano Sales WINTER GARDEN 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill J. Rabinowitch 9114 Yonge St. Richvale aim-Wallpaper 'ry THOMSON o let’s get together rder 'your van advance. 0 order too large or too small. oving is our specialty neighbourhood mover. e will save you time and money. INTERIORS LTD. FREE DELIVERY 889-1059 By Appointment Moving 889-6948 889-6271 your next move (Continued) 884-3962 Music 884-3614 Pianos legal your lSporting Goods Transpartation RUMBLE TRANSPORT Richmond Hill 8: District Unit 15 Yonge St. N. Local Services Rendered to Cancer Patients Dr. W. Allan Ripley Telephone 884-1432 8119 Yonge Street, THORNHILL Office hours by appointment Telephone: 889-4851 mmmum“ummmmmmmmuuumm‘uumuuuunuuuuuluu Ontario Land Surveyors 4901A Yonza Sh. Willowdale 221-3485 George T. Yates. OLS Res. 24 Denver Cresn Willowdale Coach Lines ltd. uumulmu\munumuummuummmuuumuunuummumumu C.C.M & Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 THORNHILL Veterinary Clinic Local Bus Service Daily Richmond Hill Toronto Service Chartered Coaches Information: 889- Local and Long Distance Hauling VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES RICHMOND HILL BRANCH Coaches for all Occasions FOR INFORMATION 884-4101 Richmond Hill Municipal Hall SERVING YORK COUNTY Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop VETERINARY SURGEON Office :lephone 147 Yonge St. N. 4-1432 Richmond Hill Langdon’s Yates & Yates P.C.V. Class A. C. and H. Trailways Of Canada Ltd. DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL TO TORONTO Drugs Dressings Home Visiting Nursing Services Housekeeping Service Home Nursing Services Diversional Programme Patient Transportation Lodge Accommodation For Further Information 884â€"4070 NURSE-lN-CHARGE MISS JEAN LOGGIE Surveyors CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY Veterinary Trucking 884-1013 364-2625 Telephone 833-5351 889-7585 4 That PC Convention --â€" A RetrbSfiéétive Rambling Around a-Immun“muuuuuuunmIummmlmlum\mummmuuummnmmummmmmlm mullllllllullllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllll111l“lllllll\llh\llll1llll1m111111111“llllllllll\llllllll““lllllllllllllll\\1ll“mlll“11111llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll“mum'! mon sense though and di- since Fulton led off to use platform. He had prolonged . Hopefully there will be a vided his alloted time eqâ€" other than his voice for ef- applause at his. introduction LEGITIMATE bye-election ually between French and feet yet he received less ap- but no supporter demonstra- in Colchester-Hants to prove Manitobese. plause than the docile Starr. tion at the conclusion. this contention, 8'“mull!\lllllllllllllllllllllllll“llllllllllllllllllll“\llllillllllm1“llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllll“illillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIll“llllllllllll“llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll-F As to the candidates' speeches and their effect on the delegates, a parallel that was expected dld not materialize. This being. that although George Hees drew as much if not more spontaneous and prolonged applause as any of his com- petitors this support was not in evidence when the ballots w e r e counted. George's comment that the (Continued from Page 2) I would hope that my teachers would do what they can to foster me a mature and cultivated appreciation of the arts . . . literature, music and painting. When I leave school, I will be able to draw a type of sustenance from this branch of education to promote my own well being. (Continued from Page 2) this so-called coming out process the mass media have far over-played the Quebec existence. “two-nations” controversey should not really be an is- sue drew as great an ovation as any comment made by any candidate. His approach was positive and sales-ori- ented. I have a right to expect my school to teach me to express myself clearly and effectively both orally and in the written word, for we live in a. world in which communication is of prime importance. And students . . . don’t hedge about this. This is your “Open Sesame” in the business of the world. Davie Fulton's speech was political though reasoned and his supporters were well rehearsed and quite impres- sive. Duff Roblin‘s speech was stylized and stereotyped and lacked any flair. He did speak much good com- mon sense though and d1- vided his alloted time eqâ€" ually between French and Manitobese. Above all I would want to understand my world, and I want to be familiarized with the basic concepts of mathematics and science, two branches of know- ledge that is coming very close to dominating our planet. I want a sound grounding at the high school level so that if I wish to study further I will be qual- ified to do so. Actually what have I been talking about? You guessed it the first time. Self-discipline. Socrates, the ancient Greek philosopher taught that self-discipline is the first virtue. If it applied then, how much more it applies today. It is up to the high school to show you how, but it‘s up, to you to make the application. I’d ad- vise you to buckle down now, and not wait until the Christmas or Easter exams. I want to play an honorable role in the adult world, so I expect some character training to rein- force the lessons received at home and church. I would expect that, if I have personal prob- lems that affect my school work I have a. right to look to the guidance department for help. What I really want the teacher to do is to help me to help myself. “All their do is carry the ball, if it wasn’t for the solid backing of the team, they wouldn’t get very far.” This is a lot to expect from school, but I’m sure if the teachers realize I am sincere they will do their best to help me. I would like to hear from those students who have plans :for making the most out of their high school years. It’s selfish to keep a really good phil- osophy to yourself. Send your ideas to this column. “Many people get the idea that a halfback or a fullback is the real hero on a football team,” said Doug Thompson, fullback on this year’s squad and captain of last year’s senior football team at Thom- hill Secondary. 7 Doug’s experience as a player and captain makes him come out strongly for a team effort. “Team work is a good idea because it creates a bond of fellowship between players and it makes for a lot of fun,” he said. A FOOTBALL TEAM IS NO PLACE FOR STARS He adds: “My idea of a good player is one who’s co-operative and unselfish . . . that is he puts the welfare of the team first. This he fails to do if he just goes into the game to horse around." One example of this closely knit effort occurred last year when Doug’s team was defeated by Rich- mond Hill. Bill MacVicar, now the vice-principal of Thornhill Secondary was then the coach. He de- Ic)ided to revamp his lineup and put in a new quarter- ack. The TSS football crew got rolling September 15 under Coaches Jim Gilchrist and Peter Peart. “That’s another thing to remember, a good player listens to his coach. Stars and loners on any team are sometimes responsible for losing a. game.” “It was a real game â€" and we won â€"â€" but only because we all worked to give our new quarterback the confidence he needed.” Outstanding players last year included Half- back Guy Wainwright of Richmond Hill, while Tom Ludlow was one of the best linesmen in the league. Richard Burton, the new captain of the senior team was also an outstanding player last year. According to Doug, everyone on the fodtball team is important. Each must be a dedicated player and not afraid of getting hurt. In other words. a game like football is a lot like life. It’s a kind of scrimmage where the only thing that really counts is loyalty, courage. good sports- manship and clear heads. If that is whathOt’oalI does for boys, I’m all for it. 7 LAMB THE MOVER LTD. 127 BIRCH AVE. - THORNHILL PHONE 889-4911-2-3 LOCAL OR LONG DISTANCE MOVING Contact Robert Stanfield's deep and resonant voice carried well and commanded fairly rapt attention in spite of his audience having been al- ready subjected to over 70 minutes of oration. His re- mark "would like to reverse the process and tell you of the type of party I’d like to LEAD" â€" drew a lengthy round of applause â€"- the im- plication being that here you had a leader! Humanity. compassion and decency are the keynotes of his philos- ophy. and he left the im- pression â€"â€" more than any other candidate -â€" that he was a Canadian first. all else being secondary. Mike Starr. the first of the lightweights to speak re- ceived courteous applause from those who were able to stay with him but In reading the bulk of what he had to say he did his image no good at all. Alvin Hamilton started and continued his chat with us for a full five minutes in French. He was the first since Fulton led off to use other than his voice for ef- fect yet he received less ap- plause than the docile Starr. Donald Fleming concen- trated his remarks on the "inept bungling administra- tion currently in power in Ottawa." His remarks. for the most part read, received less enthusiasm than his competitors who spoke pos- itively of a Tory adminis- tration. He also stressed unity in the party as well as 1n the country. His remarks in French were â€"â€" as A French-Canadian Hees supâ€" porter said â€" delivered most smoothly of all to those who spoke French. Senator Wallace McCutch- eon -â€" our Everett Dirksen ~ epitomizes the very best of Conservatism, but his de- livery was not as effective as his humour or his sin- cerity. He made a surpris- ingly good showing. Mr. Dlefenbaker appealed strenuously for a unlfied one-nation Canada â€" in both languages and only took five of the allotted 19 minutes given each candi- date. Unity was his theme and the record of events his platform. He had prolonged applause at his introduction but no supporte'r'demonstra? tion at the conclusion. (Continued from Page 2) UN representatives being quoted that THEY ex- pected to find no solid solution to world problems. . . . Well, that makes it unanimous. Another interesting quote came from the pres- ident of Quebec’s separatist RIN Party. Comment. ing‘ on their improved financial status and increas- ing supporters â€"â€" “When a ship is afloat, the rats want to get on.“ . . . Well, HE said it! One thing that bugs us about this two- language printing on packages is the apparent sus- pension of the law of averages. Why is it that when we go to read the directions -â€" and with a g0-5O chance ~ we always get the French side irst? Two of the parliamentary press corps were susâ€" pended last week for divulging a few of John Diefâ€" enbaker’s off-the-record remarks. But what we’d really like to know is what Dief really said when new-leader Robert Stanfield dropped into his office last week with a “HappyBirthday!” And on this topic, we see where France's cham- pagne producers are complaining about the word being used on Canadian champagne and are de- manding it be changed. . . . So there is ONE thing. at least, the French want Anglicized! And, on THIS subject: Have you seen that mystery show on TV? The SKOL commercial show- ing all the happy groups cavorting about and having a whale of a time after (presumably) SKOL-ins; it in; onV Toronto’s bone-dry, police-patrolled Centre 5 and. Question of The Week â€"- Was Hurricane Beulah really the biggest-ever hurricane to hit the States . . . or were they just saying that out of habit because it landed in Texas? CUSTOM TAILORED MORTGAGE LOANS 121 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL The Flip Side When you buy a new home the mortgage should be planned to make that home debt-free as soon as possible. WITH A 78 YEAR BACKGROUND OF MORTGAGE LOANING WE CAN TAILOR A MORTGAGE LOAN TO MEET YOUR NEEDS WITH PAY- MENTS TO FIT YOUR INCOME VICTORIA AND GREY TRUST 25 Offices in Ontario To Serve You FAST ‘ SERVICE N. FOYLE, MANAGER When the chief came to the podium 24 hours later to congratulate Mr. Stan- field on having been chasen the new Leader. he received a prolonged and thunderous applause which must have matched that of an audience twice the size when the Leafs have scored winning Roals in overtime. It was a very thrilling experience indeed. All in all it was a great convention. The part, played by human flesh was much more effective than were the machines. (The latter were imported!) Tories ev- erywhere can take great heed and comfort, in what one Toronto cabbie said of. Stanfield before the voting took place. This fellow. an admitted sympathizer. said. “if the working man in Nova Scotia will vote for him (Stanfield won 40 of 46 seats in a provicial election earl- ier this year). 50 will the working man in the. rest of Canada" â€" thus Stanfield has to be the Tories' best bet. 884-1107

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