Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 11 Jan 1968, p. 14

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Joscelyn, Laughlin, Franklin, Tucker & McBride 81 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill. Ont. 884-4474-5 112 Geneva Street St. Catharines, Ont. - 6844177 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT LEONARD R. ROSENBERG Bank of Novl Scotia Building Aurora Telephone 884-7110 We personally handle all snles bills and advertlslngâ€" 14 I Chiropractic PHONE Xâ€"RAY cor. Windhurst Gate 8.: Bayvlew (1 block south Bayview Plaza) Phone 884-1075 H. D. M elsness, D.C. L. E. Clark & Associates PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 54531fi; YONGE STREET 225-4701 Licensed Auctioneer York & Ontario Counties 36 Years’ Experience SPECIALIZING IN PUREBRED CATTLE, FARM STOCK, ‘ FURNITURE AND IMPLEMENTS I Chinese Food 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: A Complete Transmission Service Automatic Specialists Transmission. Ltd. 177 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL 889-6662 Transmission Service 2468 DUFFERIN ST. 181-0221 Automatic & Standard Transmission Specialists Chartered Accountants Noriown Thomas S. Summers, D.C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC 80 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill Alvin S. Farmer PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTORY FINDTHE SERVICE YOU NEED FOR HOME OR BUSINESS Arthur G. Broad 32 Yonge Street South Town Inn TAKE-OUT SERVICE 884-1136 Auto Transmission Accountants Auctioneer NE 886-5311 GORMLEY, ONT. 21 Bedford Park Ave. Richmond Hill 884-4251 By Appointment By Appointment THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, Jan. 11, 1968 884-6011 Mister 884-1137 Chinese'BARRISTER, SOLICITOR I Engineering 884-1812 HELEN SIMPSON LYNETT 1 Helen Simpson Flowers METRO WIDE DELIVERY Ernie Brock & Son Insurance - Mortgages Fire, Auto and Liability Motor Vehicle Finance Service Toronto 363-: 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 Member â€" Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 We Deliver Toronto & Surrounding Districts For Particulars Call 889-6849 - 244-6573 COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS Dr. J. M. Dryer DENTIST Open Evenings 78 YONGE ST. S" RICHMOND HILL 884-1462 (at St. Clements) TORONTO 12, ONT. Ph. 485-1145 N ATION-WIDE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. LOWEST RATES AND TERMS FAST SERVICE 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 884-1993 STEAMFITTING WELDING Leno’s Machine Shop Corner Agency Limited Roy V. Bick Insurance Ltd. J. Rabinowitch 2518 YONGE ST. .812 889-1812 AT ALL HOURS LTD. Kirby Brock Maple, Ont. Rear 47 Yonge St. S. Aurora, Ontario NOTARY PUBLIC 65 Yonge St. S. Richmond Hill 884-5829 Richmond Inn Block Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen St. E. RICE’S FLOWERS “Flowers For All Occasions” Phones Insurance Flowers Dental Res. 884-2117 635-6158 Legal 363-3959 Toronto Office- 7 Queen St. E. Suite 151 BA. 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 Suite 2 Lowrie Building 15 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Every Thursday Afternoon 884-7561 IOffice Supplies 884-4413 889-7052 80 Richmond St. W. Suite 402 Toronto 1, Ontario 366-3156 James H. Timmins Parker & Pearson Barrister, Solicitor a: Notary Public 15 YONGE ST. NORTH Richmond Hill, Ontario Office 884-1780 Residence 884-1863 By Appointment I Optometrists 116 YONGE STREET NORTH RICHMOND HILL 884-1115 884-1116 A. W. Kirchen, O.D. Norman A. Todd STUART P. PARKER, Q.C. JAMES H. PEARSON ROBERT G. PARKER ’. C. Newman, Q.C. Plaxton & Mann Lawlor, LeClaire & Barman BARRISTERS-SOLICITORS 59 Yonge Street N., Richmond Hill, Ontario Local and Long Distance Moving and Storage Edward D. Hill 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Barristers. Solicitors & Notary Public ry THOMSON Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public rder your advance 0 order too large or too small. oving is our specialty v I HUMDUN your neighbourhood mover. e will save you time and money. 11 your next move THORNHILL 889-3165 Phone 363-5877 Richmond Hill 50 Yonge St. N. 884-4494 By Appointment let’s get together Moving (Continued) 889-6948 889-6271 Legal 884-3962 van in lSporting Goods If No Answer Phone 884-1105 I Transportation BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT jRUMBLE TRANSPORT TUNED 6’ REPAIRED “Checked” Electronically GUESSWORK ELIMINATED Coach Lines Ltd. Telephone 884-1432 C.C.M 8: Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 Ontario Land Surveyors 4901A Yonge St., Willowdale 221-3485 George T. Yates, OLS Res. 24 Denver Cres., Willowdale Local Bus Service Daily Richmond Hill Toronto Service Chartered Coaches Information: 889-' Office hours by appointment Telephone: 889-4851 Pyle Piano Sales Coaches for all Occasions FOR INFORMATION THORNHILL Veterinary Clinic WINTER GARDEN Local and Long Distance Hauling 9114 Yonge St. Richvale Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop RR. 1, Mount Albert (Holt) Phone 473-6385 Langdon's aint-Wallpaper Yates & Yates Trailways Of Canada Ltd. fr. W. Allan Ripley VETERINARY SURGEON We Dismantle Pianos for Recreation Rooms FREE DELIVERY INTERIORS LTD. 889-1059 8119 Yonge Street, THORNHILL DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL T0 TORONTO Surveyors Veterinary Trucking Pianos Telephone 833-535 1 884-1013 364-2625 Class A. C. and H‘ Office 147 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill 889-7585 Richmond Hill & District Unit 15 Yonge St. N. Local Services Rendered to Cancer Patients The Christian Science Monitor One Norway Street Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 02115 Please start my Monitor substriplion for the period checked below. I enclose 5â€"015. funds). I] 1 YEAR 524 U 6 monll'ls $12 CI 3 monb‘ls $6 THE MONITOR OOMPLEMENTS YOUR lOCAL 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 stafl‘ 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 Monitor; see how it will take you above the average newspaper reader. Just fill out the coupon below. Street Nam Why The Christian Science Monitor recommends you read your local newspaper Your local newspaper is a wide-range newspaper with many features. Its emphasis is on local news. lt also :eports the major national and inter- national news. Hall’s Domestic Fuel Oil and Burner Service 884-4361 Richmond Hill Drugs Dressings Home Visiting Nursing Services Housekeeping Service Home Nursing Services Diversional Programme Patient Transportation Lodge Accommodation For Further Information 884-4070 Just Call! We’re on the job, to keep you supplied with convenient heating oil. Prompt, metered de- livery. CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY ZIP Code PBIGA (Continued from Page 2) Joe’s wife was a smart girl and she realized that she was living in the 20th century still doing the same things her maternal ancestors had done for thousands of years. It was just too much. She should have been happy. She lived for others and saw that her husband and children had the best food and clothes and most of the family money. Wistfully, she figured they would all make up for it on sainted Mother’s Day. But alas, Mother’s Day was only one day a year and sometimes they forgot. And poor Joe! He was a father of a growing family and the taxes were getting so high that he had to give up fishing, hunting and gaming at the local poolroom. He had to stop haranguing over the cracker barrel. Instead he had to go back to school and take courses so he could earn enough money to pay the taxes. In order to make it up and ease his torment, society decided to give him Father’s Day. It was a new idea and for a few years it worked just fine. But as the children became older. Father’s Day became as obsolete as the dodo. The commercial world made more out of it than he did. The odds were surely stacked against Mr. and Mrs. Joe. Joe had to work so much overtime at the office with his secretary that Mrs. Joe got green- eyed while peeling the potatoes for supper. She couldn’t let Joe give up his job so she took a night course at the high school instead. Mrs. Joe blamed everything on the house and naturally Joe was tired of paying all those taxes so instead of hating each other, they both hated the house. By this time, Mr. and Mrs. Joe were getting on â€"- their children were growing up at last and since they were one in hating the house. they dreamed of a tax free heaven; 3 place where there would be no snow to shovel, no garden to tend and no garbage to put out. Rambling Around They had time to think and Mrs. Joe came to the conclusion that it wasn’t Joe’s secretary at all -â€" it was the demands of the technological society that kept him from her in those crucial years and turned him into a tired old man, much, much too soon. They settled for an apartment on the fifth floor of a Metro high rise. Mrs. Joe found that she had too much time on her hands and Joe let the landlord worry about taxes. And Joe was tired of being master in name only â€" he once thought that all his troubles began with the emancipation of women. The price of the new convenience was that Joe was forced to engage in new ways of thinking whether he would or not. So he congratulated himself on seeing the light. Joe is what he always wanted to be â€"â€" a homebody with pipe and slippers and a television with which to buffer himself against the harsh workaday world. And Mrs. Joe is in her glory working at the local library. “PURPOSE” NOT A “PROBLEM” Our apologies to Thornhilil’s Doreen Bolton. Last week’s column describing this 15-year-old’s fine community effort as a Candy Striper. should have been headed “A Teenager With a Purpose", not "With a Problem”. ' Our only problem is that we don’t have enough responsible, dedicated young people like Doreen. I’AY OFF BILL$ WlTH ONE @LEAN WEE? Slap in or call. Get amt/aimed with our one-step bill cleaning se/vice. ASK Ready cash from GAC lnternational makes piled-up bills disappear fast. Sweep many monthly payments into one. -â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"R|CHMOND HILL 20 mm: Street. South . . . . . ‘ . ‘ . . V . . . F 25 Bloor Street, West 64 Vaughan Road IBIoor :l Yonge) 2290 Dundas Sheet, Wes! ........ 3034 Dantoth Avenue (A1 5:. cm 2645 Eglinton Aygnue, Ea§t_ 944A St. Clair Avenue. West . . . . . , . . (St. Clair al Dakwood) 2087 Yonge Street (2 Blocks below Eglinlon Ave.) 2907A Dundas Street, West. . . . . . . . ,Ph THE APARTMENT DWELLER, LOANS UP TO 55000 (iglfnién'fi sninley Road) ’(1 am West of Keel: St.) Opposite Shoppevs W0 TORONTO non! ol Iomrs) five” W.) EAIJ INTEHNMIUNAL FINANCE CORP. LTD ’Phone 834-4458 Phone 924-7731 Phone 532-4421 Phone 698-1161 Phone 534-8816 Phone 261-7276 Phone 531-4623 Phone 481-6836 Phone 757.3151 York Commercial College Offers Office Workers Diploma Courses Richmond Hill’s newest edu- cational establishment is the York Commercial College, which opened its doors January 2, at 15 Yonge Street North. The new business school is located on the second floor above the Bank of Montreal building and is registered by the Ontario Government under the Trades School Act. It is owned and operated by Jacob Loopuyt, a member of the As- sociate Chartered Institute of Secretaries of Incorporated Companies and Public Bodies. He has served on the teaching staff and as principal of one of the largest privately-owned business colleges in Canada. Unlike the large schools where class instruction is the order of the day, in the Rich- mond Hill school individual in- struction will be featured. No class will contain more than 20 students, and every student will be instructed individually. Mr. Loopuyt and his staff will be teaching full diploma courses as well as adult classes in the evening and Saturday mornings. Subjects include bookkeeping, typing, dicta- phone, Pitman shorthand and spelling. There will also be a special dictaphone course for those who are already compet- ent typists. For diplomas, students will be required to type at the rate of 60 words a minute with less than three errors in a 10 min- ute test, and take dictation in shorthand at the rate of 120 Words 3 minute with 85% ac- curacy. All modern aids. will be used in the teaching of all sub- jects. Shorthand dictation will‘ be supplied by tape with each student wearing earphones; rhythm typing will also be taught with each student typing at his or her own speed; and repetition of spelling will be given on tape. Mr. Loopuyt be- lieves in turning out a good product. and although starting small has accommodation for expansion as the demand arises. His two assistants_are well qualified, one is certificated and the other an honor graduate‘ of a Toronto school. Manual and electric typewriters will be available to students and the school's diplomas will he equiv- alent to the highest standards in Canada. Mr. Loopuyt is a native of Cape Town. Union of South Africa, and there was employed by the provincial auditor‘s of- fice as well as managing fruit farms. After four and a half American forces in Vietnam were last week taking steps to end increasing infiltrations into the south by the Viet Cong. . . . Yes, you could see how far these infiltrations have gone with the seizure on January 2 by Saigon Police of 130-odd American Army cars and trucks for not having 1968 licence plates. A ... - ‘- g (Continued from Page 2) Possibly one reason for the decreasing popular- ity of outdoor skating rinks is the growing trend to engagement only in sit-down sports . . . like where you sit down with your ice in a tall glass. Questions . . . Questions . . . The growing number of human organ trans- plants is raising all manner of legal and moral ques- tions; such as: Black in White becomes What? Which, eventually, should be buried where? And even such questions as raised in the Toronto papers: How would a Conservative react to the transplant of a Liberal brain? (The answer to this one is obvious: Conservatives ARE Liberals without brains.) But, in such an instance, pity the poor Protest- ant with a Roman Catholic brain that keeps trying to get him out of bed for 6 o’clock mass! Or the botherment of a bartender with the brain of an air stewardess that allows him to serve only tea - coffee - or milk! Rumble Transport MODERN HEATED . . . it’s iliike, more problems! 94 NEWKIRK ROAD 884-1013 - Richmond Hill 889-6192 - Toronto - 364-2625 WAREHOUSE STORAGE FRESH! GOOD TASTING! The Flip Side DARKAND LIGHT COMB MMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL HOUSEHOLD BAKED BY m”, years in the engineer corps serving in the Middle East and Europe. he returned to a fruit estate and then purchased and farmed his own SOD-acre farm on which he raised ostriches. At the same time he operated a curio factory \and produce broker's business. In February 1958 he and his family left South Africa seeking a better future for the three daughters. as well as for politi- cal reasons, and settled in Can- adal “Canada has been good to us." reports Mr. Loopuyt. but the measure of goodness was earned as the whole family has worked hard to become good Canadian citizens. Men Teachers Sponsor Series Of 6 Lectures Mr. Loopuyt studied account- ancy and worked for a firm of accountants before joining the teaching staff of I Toronto business school. Close to ’75 York County pub- lic school principals and teach- ers will be attending a series of six lectures on school super- vision and administration. spon- sored during January and Feb- ruary by District 22 of the Ontario Public School Men Teachers' Federation. The lecture series is being held at Walter Scott Public School, Richmond Hill and will be addressed by leaders in the field. Topic of the first lecture held January 9 was "Leadership Techniques" and speakers were Leonard G. Chellew, a Toronto Public School principal and Vernon Trott of the Ontario College of Education. "The Principal. the New Teacher and Teacher Evalua- tion” will be the subject of the January 16 address by W. H. Garton, area superintendent of Etobicoke Township. Subsequent lectures will be on school law. the duties of a principal. office routines and procedures, the principal‘s role in maintaining and raising teachers‘ standards and discl- pline and mental health. The $10 registration fee for the series is payable by the teachers and the balance of the cost is subsidized by the OPSMTF. Among those attend- ing are teachers from Richmond Hill, Vaughan and Markham Townships, Woodbridge. Aurora. Newmarket and Sutton.

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