Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 19 Feb 1970, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2:00 P.M. LOCAL TIME ‘ i FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1970‘ TERMS: Cash or certified‘ cheque (cheque made payable to the Treasurer of Ontario) plus $200.00 Performance Bond to guarantee that work will be‘ completed in accordance with D.H.O. regulations. NOTICE: A permit is required to move a building along. ac- ross, or over a Provincial High~ way and/or .3 Municipal Road or Street. Persons who may be interested in purchasing these buildings for the purpose of moving them intact or in sec- tions, to another location. must obtain information regarding permits from the District Office noted below and from Munici- palities concerned PRIOR TO THE SALE. For further information please contact the Auctioneer: Mr. C. Prentice. describes: Pot Party Paul's freaked out Rod‘s glue stiffed Gerry's on high Dick's just flipped Jack's all gone Betty's turned on. Drummer’s really beatin' Guitarists 've all gone mad. Lights go out, music turned off Even/body‘s quiet for the night. But here is how the younger generation sees itself: HIPPIES. GREASERS AND BROWNERS What would you rather beâ€" a hippie or a greaser? A hip- pie is a fun-loving person Who loves everything. and does lots of things and has fun. A greaser is a person who looks for trouble. starts fights. robs stores and succeeds in get- ting into trouble. Trouble is their favorite pastime. Hippies love everything except greasers. u“. an“ poem Bring Your Family or Friends to any of these Fine Eating Places for Excellent Food and Supreme Service KEEP THIS GUIDE FOR REFERENCE Mr. C. Prentice. Markham, Ontario. Telephone: 640-3686 Department: of Highways Right-ol-Way Office. Central Region. Downsview, Ontario. Telephone: 248-3625 One and one half storey. five room, frame house, and a frame tool shed, being lot 22. RP. 2386. Township of Markham, County of York. located the first street] east of Highway 11, running south from No. 7 high- way. Known as: 30 Church St.. Langstaff, Ontario. Sale to be held on the property at: ,WW...munmmmmmxvgxwxmwmwm,m We offer you excellent ser- vice. an Austrian chef and weekend music entertainment VW.V.‘I.V\;V\IV.VV‘JVV\JIVV.V.\I.v.v.v.v.v.w,v.vw AUCTION SALE OF BUILDING FOR. REMOVAL OR. DEMOLITION Property Sale T-02560 Max & Anita Wiedeman 183 YONGE ST. S.. AURORA Call 727-9561 Keele St. 8: No. 7 HWD' 889-6030 CONTINENTAL Dining Room & Lounge FULLY LICENSED WEDDING & BANQUET FACILITIES Accommodation up to 200 Enjoy a. leisurely visit with friends over our delicious food, served in a continental atmosphere DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, ONTARIO 7 Proprietors Max & Anita Wie Graystone Tavern VILLA NOVA RESTAURANT CANADIAN CUISINE ONTARIO and “‘”'“ off . ac- IHigh. Eve'rybody‘s quiet for the Road mght. ay be But here is how the younger these generation sees itself: le of HIPPIES, GREASERS AND , sec- BROWNERS I am a grease)". Why? I‘m not a hippie. I'm not a straight. Hippies are dozie.they‘re dense. they bug me. They're running around giving the peace sign. That‘s so stupid. They‘re al- ways lying around on sidewalks, Greasers Cowboy boots and bicycle chains, Leather jackets and shaggy manes. Bottles of beer and whiskey Most of the older generation would rather see the old fash~ ions. But jazz and Tin Pan A1- ley are dying. They blame it on rock and youth. They are afraid of what the following poem desczjbes: The older generation does not understand the younger generation. The young are con- demned by the music they 11's- ten to, and the clothes they wear. THE GENERATION GAP By Blair Jordan, Danny Grays- ton, Don Mon-den, Lynda Wood- house. Gord Houston, Jo-Anne Wolfreys, Dave MaxwelL The right wine makes a fine meal perfect. Enjoy our cuisine, quality ser- vice and warm decor . . . The RICHMOND INN MOTOR HOTEL Pot Party Paul's freaked out Rod's glue stiffed Gerry's on high Dick’s just flipped Jack's all gone Betty's turned on. Drummer‘s really beatin' Guitarists 've all gone mad. Lights go Out, music turned in jars. 69 Yonge St. S. Richmond Hill 884-1101 Plenty of Free Parking Dining Room & Lounge Fully Licensed by the Liquor Licence Act and Canadian Cuisine FOR RESERVATIONS Don Head Secondary School DON HEADLINES YONGE ST. NORTH RICHMOND HILL Licensed Under Liquor Licence Act Internationally Known 884-4278 TAVERN own Nobody understands. A Browner works in a world of his own. They may even come to school in a snit. They try to get on the good side of the teachers. They‘ll snitch on what is done wrong. They want to be known as brains. They do their homework and a little more work. They won't both- er with girls or sports. He al- ways'wants a pat on the head. People There are people. and there are people who greaser. In my eyes some hippies are intelligent. Just because they wear blue jeans. beads and bright colors, it doesn't mean they take drugs. For example. a salesman tries to sell a product made from an- other manuufacturer. and a hippie manufactures his own product: beads. portraits. cloth- es and sells his way of living. Hippies Hippies work in their own way. drunks. I Let‘s forget this poem and go? t to lunch‘ ‘ Hippies promote love where1 ‘ we see war. The opposite of a A Whitchurch Township man greaser is a person who lives in Richmond Hill Provincial for love and peace. .Lopg halr¢Court last week admitted does not make a hlpple andibreaking into the Galaxy Res- short hair does not make altaumnt in the Richmond greaser. _ _ ' [Heights Centre. was” “flu DIVERSIFIED MENU With the added feature of ‘Classical Italian’ Dishes prepared upon reservation Where You Dine In A Congenial Atmosphere LICENSED UNDER THE \’\ LIQUOR LICENCE ACT The people who are People reach out to the people who are not; people who do not respond. Beards and hair. Beads and colors. Peaceful man War is no good Users of drugs All things nice Groovin‘ in a world of his are people. and there are people who are not people; So they say Yonge St. - 1 Mile North of Richmond Hill 884-1370 Brylcreem is their way of life Hell raisers and a bunch of SUMMIT VIEW GARDENS TAVERN POP'S TAVERN 194 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL and STEAKS Are A Feature At For Information s 884-2752 The case should be a warning to the public that there can be serious consequences if one is caught carrying items which have the potential to be used as weapons. Judge Russell Pearse warned John Stewart of 30 Morley Avenue, to abstain from pos- sessing or carrying any weapon because he could now face a maximum fine of $500 or six months in jail, or both. Stewart had a rolled up and folded strip of lead roofing and a butcher knife in his car. He parked October 18 on Edward Street off Elgin Mills Road East at the entrance to the new Reynolds Aluminum plant. He was asleep in the back seat with the motor running when police checked the car. The front door had been pried open and the glass crack- ed. Bailey had a tire iron with him. A loaded 303 rifle magazine was found in the glove compart- ment of Bailey‘s car and the rifle itself was in the trunk. Bailey said he had the rifle when out prospecting in August. The police could testify that the rifle had been ‘in the trunk a long time, because of the dirt on it, he said. A young married Toronto man. aged 21. was convicted in Richmond Hill Caurt last week of possessing an offensive wea- pon, a lead bar, dangerous to the public peace. He was fined $100 and costs and put on pro- bation for a year. son going in and out of the doorway and called police. Stewart denied the charge, but was convicted after a trial. Believing there was a warrant out for Stewart, they took him to the station and conducted a routine search of the car. The butcher knife and lead bar were found before a check showed there was really no warrant for Stewart’s arrest. :, Crown Attorney Kingsley Wi- Ijesinha proceeded in the case ‘by indictment, rather than by summary conviction. He said this was regular Crown policy ‘in case there might be an ap- peal, and not because the of- lfence was considered to be an unusually serious one. 1 Judge Pearse at first had no evidence a judge had ordered King not to drive, and refused to convict or accept King's guilty plea. The Crown Attor- :ney was able to provide a copy of the judge's order suspending gKing. Heights Centre. Found on the night of Feb- Brian Bailey, 30. of South ruary 6 at the rear of the Rich- Road. Lake Wilcox, will be back mond Inn, a man woke up in court February 23 to be sen‘ in the Richmond Hill Police tenced. Station without his wallet. The court was told Bailey was He admitted to the judge caught at 2:27 am February 9 February 9 that he had been inside the restaurant. An alert drunk in a public place and citizen noticed a suspicious per- fined $20 and $3.80 costs. Stewart told the court he was out that night because he’d left home after an argument with his wife. He had the lead bar because he had worked as a roofer and this was the material he used. The knife was in the car. having been left there after being used to strip some wires during the installation of a rear radio speaker. The lead strip was folded up into an offensive looking bar one evening when a man was suspiciously prowling around the car in a hospital parking lot where Mrs. Stewart was visit- ing, Stewart said. Whitchurch Twp. Man Richmond Hill BurglarI Caught by Vaughan Township Police on Maple Avenue in Maple February 9 at 4:32 pm, Frank King, 48, of RR2, Wood- bridge was in Richmond Hill Provincial Court charged with driving while his license was suspended. Convicted last year of im- paired driving, King was order- ed by the court not to driVe anywhere in Canada for two years. This made his offence a criminal matter and more ser- ious than if his suspension had come automatically under the Highway Traffic Act and effec- tive only in Ontario. Caught At Shopping Centre Judge Pearse then accepted the guilty plea and jailed King for 30 days. The suspension of King's driving privileges was also extended six months. Refusing a breathalyzer test} New Year‘s Day cost a Richmond Hill man 3100 and $22.80 costs in court last week. An impaired driving charge was dumped by the Crown after a conviction was obtained on the first charge. William Tucker, 52. of 112 Yonge Street North, miscon- ceived his rights and refused to blow more than once into the breathalyzer, the court was told. INCOME TAX PREPARATION JOHN’S TAX SERVICE 416-225-1608 Reasonable Rates Pensonable Service 5th Year The first blow was not of suf-‘ ficient amount to provide a‘ reading and so he hadn’t taken‘ the test as required. ‘ Tif¢$f0ߢ Champion 4"sz Nylon If you want a dependable tire, at a price that doesn't thin out your wallet, the Firestone Champion Nylon is your kind of tire. Here’s what you get. Full 4-ply Nylon construction for strength that stands up to rough-road punishment â€" and the stresses of hot summer driving. Bladed tread, designed for good traction on wet or dry roads. And a full road hazard guarantee honoured by 60,000 Firestone Dealers and Stores in Canada and the USA. The low price includes fast installation. Check the chart for your size, and see us today! NEWS Na outside financing Deal direct with H3587 DIVE WA/VT / T NOW? CHARGE ml Richmond Heights Centre Battery Operated Power C ugf Sczssors $249 ’ ' 1 Windshield , Washer A nti -Freeze 69‘Eergauon 6~Vâ€"52E THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, Feb. 19, 1970 9‘ Richmond Hill 8.25-14 7.75-15 7.75-14 8.25-15 6.50-13 SIZE 8-V-8 8 884-4401 BLACKWALL WALLET-SAVER PRICE $13.77 15.77 17.77 15.77 17.77 STORES Driving Gloves $133 WHITEWALL WALLET-SAVER PRICE $15.77 19.77 19.77 17.77 17.77

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy