Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 10 Dec 1970, p. 14

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THE mcelyn, Laughlin,‘ Harper, Tory & Associates Chartered Accountants 31 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill. Ont. 884-4474-5 91 Geneva Street St. Catharines, Ont. - 684-1117 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 306 Bayview Plan Telephone 889-8275 Llama) n. ROSENBERG a; ASSOCIATES Chutered Accountant: Telephone 884-7110 :4 Yonge St. South Aurora. Ontario 889-6662 BY Competent Tradesman I Prices on request or by hour I R. 1’. (Bob) BOSS 130 Centre St. w. - 384.1735 Mister Transmission Ltd. 177 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL Brian H. Cowan PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Edith M. McCall ELECTROLOGIST Hours: I am. - 1 pm. & 4 pan. - 9 pm. STOUFFVILLE: No part of the increase of 8% percent in the wholesale cost of power from Ontario Hydro will be passed on to the local con- sumers, Manager Gerald Pegg has announced. The increase in wholesale costs is slated for January 1. TREES ABE OUR BUSINESS H. Van Dyke - Arborist Life Time Guarantee Automatic Specialists SAME DAY nnv CLEANING SERVICE... A Accountants Same Day Shirt Service IN BY 10 â€"OUT BY 5 MONDAY TO FRIDAY FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY 9724 Yonge St. South Phone Experts + Care = “Fabric Care Beyond Compare” Auto Transmission FibfiESSIONAL & BUSINESS DIRECTORY NEED AN EXPERT? CALL ONE OF THESE . . . Richmond Hill Tree Service & Forestry Co. Ltd. SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 884-1993 Leno’s Machine Shop CUSTOM WORK Electrolysis Engineering Carpentry IN BY 10 â€"OUT BY 5 MONDAY T0 SATURDAY 884-6663 STEAMFITTING WELDING Forestry 884-8771 884-77 7 4 LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, Dec. 10, 1970 [nun-nee - Mortgages Fire, Auto and Lllbilih Motor Vehicle Finance Service TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 Rear 47 Yonge St. 8. Aurora. Ontario Toronto 363-31 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 Barrow Insurance SerVIces Ltd. Ernie Brock 8: Son‘ 16 Yonge Street North RICHMOND HILL 884-4231 889-5729 Furniture, Office Suppliu, Social Stationery, Typewrifier and Adder Sales. Roy V. Bick Insurance Ltd. Office Supplies H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. Corner Agency Limited COMPLETE INSURANCI SERVICE Bus. 832-2621 or 832-2448 Rel. 831-1384 Fire, Auto and Liability 15 Yonge Street N. 884-1551 - 884-1219 Thornhill - 889-0242 Sporting Goods Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop C.C.M. a: Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen St. W. . W. Kirchen, GD. 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill Optometrists Insurance Kirby Brock Maple. Ont. 01mm Land Surveyor: Yates & Yates 4901A Yonge Street Willowdale By Appointment 884-3962 Surveyors 221-3485 363-3959 RUMBLE TRANSPORT BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT Belgian ART STUDIOS Bunny Snow’s P.C.V. Class A. C. and H. DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL TO TORONTO Local and Long Distance Hauling In The Mall, 250 Yonge St. N Richmond Heights Centre Richmond Hi“ uuummm“\mlxnwuummmmumnunmmumumummm Complete Antenna Service AGS and ROGERS MAJESTIC SALES and SERVICE Repairs to All Makes Call us about Rentals WWWWMNMNMW aint-Wallpaper VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES RICHMOND HILL BRANCH SERVING YORK COUNTY 884-4101 4 Yonge Street South NURSE-IN-CHARGE MISS JANE BOWMAN 9114 Yonge St. Richvale INTERIORS LTD. FREE DELIVERY WE'RE FLATTEREDA INDEED. BUT... Phone 884-6521 TV Repairs 889-1059 There's only one Welcome Wagon. Imitation, 'fls said. Is the finest of compliments. And as a much-imitated organi- zatlon. we're certainly flat- tered. But as many have learned. the "reasonable facsimile" too often falls short of "the real thing." So beware of substitutes. for there is no real subsh‘tub for the services of and tho benefits provided through Welcome Wagon. Mrs. Owen Trunk Richmond Hill - 884-4690 Trucking 884-1013 364-2625 (Continued from Page 2) are really excellent in my opinion. Her original designs and unusual glazes make them very func- tional as well as pleasing to look at. Her mugs as an example, are very comfortable to hold (a change from the usual you’ll admit) and nicely turned so that if you don’t want to hold them by the handle, your fingers do not slip on the contoured shape. neither do they burn if your mug contains hot coffee. Each is hand done and double glazed. Joyce is happy to do custom orders and create deSigns for each individual client as well as produce these things for wholesalers. Her tea and coffee sets are most attractive and her casserole dishes would grace the most elegant table well. All of Joyce's work is fired at 2300 degrees F. so lead is unnecessary in her glazes. (Lead is used as a catalyst in the glazing process of low fired glazes only. No danger of lead poisoning in Joyce’s creations). , , 1L- _-_-_AL1n-:“N Wm, ..... b "w--- "We, , Joyce’s decorative pieces are really something else. She lets herself go in this field and comes up with some extremely exciting designs. As I ment- tioned before, the desire to touch these objects is overpowering . . . the fungus-like texture on a bowl, the organic flowing lines on a vase or the smoothly curving surface of a planter. If you resist the urge to touch, certainly your eye rests on the piece and flows over and through it for more than a moment. Prestige clients such as de Boers, Shelagh’s, Seven Seas and Tradewinds use her orna- mental pieces to add finishing touches to their dis- plays. Her work is on view now at all these places as well as the Lampton Gallery and the gallery at Fairview Mall. Personally I think a gift of her work for Christmas would be fantastic. Highly distinctive in style, carefully handcrafted and wholly Canadian, her pieces range in price from $3.00; $35.00._ .- -. n 1 1,, ,_ri,:_L 1.1.- a-..“ J... Fingard Plan To Provide Jobs ls Being Considered By Ottawa More jobs for Canadians, job training for Canadians, more Canadian aid to underdeveloped countries and elimination of the need for cumbersome and often inadequate welfare programs in this country, are potentials of a plan pI‘eSented to Ottawa by David Fingard. Mr. Fingard is a well known Toronto industrialist who main- tains a home in Beaverton, on Lake Si-mcoe, where he breeds prize-winning Great Danes. He ‘has had .a long and successful business career, both in the United States and in Canada. Mr. Fingard's plan is so sim-‘ ;ple that it is a wonder that it has not been implemented long before this. With one worker in every 10 expected to be unem- ployed this winter, it is to be hoped that it will be developed quickly. - ‘ 1L, _._-. U-vv Fortunately I don’t have to resist the urge to touch any longer, I have my own original Joyce MacKay vase now in my living room and I can touch to my heart’s content. If only my children wouldn’t get so . . . oh well, I remember. Go ahead girls, touch it. This plan would see the gov- ernment take over unused fac- tory buildings and offer jobs and, if necessary, onâ€"the-job training to the unemployed. They would be hired at union wages and would manufacture those thin-gs most needed in un- developed coun’cries â€"â€"-consumer goods, prefabricated houses, machinery and equipment, which would then 1he donated to needy nations under Canada’s Foreign Aid program. n,,.,.:» Nothing so erodes a nation and its people as unemployment and economic inequities, Mr. Fingard noted in his presenta- tion. Of those who are unem- ployed, all but an insignificant‘ few would welcome work. When they cannot find a job they un- destandably grow critical of the ‘system which cannot meet rtheir needs and hopes. In such a cli- mate is born social unrest; in such a climate civil disturbances are generated; in such a climate could come the total breakdown of our ordered society, he in- sisted. It is a paradox that Canada, once the breadbasket of the world, and still potentially a great agricultural producer, last year became a net importer of foodstuffs. Yet, in that same year, two-thirds of the world’s Plaques Indicate 637 Ontario Historic Sites A, total of 637 plaques com- memorating Ontario’s past have been erected to date by the Tourism and Information De- partment, Tourism Minister James Auld said last week. The plaques. chosen on the advice of the Archaeological and Historic Sites Board of Ontario. represen “an economical and practical means of preserving a public knowledge of our past,” ‘Auld said. In The Spotlight -v.‘°~ ._W, , Author Stephen Leacock. Act- ress Marie Dressler, and Madel- eine de Roybon D'Allone. the province's first female land- owner, were among other famous person; for whom plaques have been erected. Eventually his department hopes to publish the results of background historical research completed on each plaque and this would be made available in text form to educational and other institutions. Colonel Robert Moodie, first casualty of the Rebellion of 1837 was the Subject of one of these markers erected on North Yonge Street in Richmond Hill. A population went to bed hungiy each night. And in that year hun- dreds of thousands of Canadians looked in vain for jobs. There is another vivid example of how the Fingard Plan could help Canadians and help mankind â€" by creating a massive food-proâ€" ducing industry on Canada’s fal- low acres. Mr. Fingard presented his plan to Labor Minister Bruce Mackasey, who approved it and sent it on for study by Minister of Manpower 'Otto Lang. In some ways it is similar to the sucessful j-ob corps launched in the USA. Let us hope that the Fingard Plan will receive fast action by the federal government and be implemented in time to relieve the distress of unemployed Can- adians during the winter months rand of the poor of the world within a few months. IfaCl'IUndlrc: IUV v-‘v- . m, mwONSNALIAmg NEW CHRISTMAS HOURS: . g; ’ Stores MONDAY TO FRIDAY Open a Flresmne Cm \/ ’2? / 8 am. to 9 pm. Budget Account ‘ RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE SATURDAYS 0, use you,” RICHMOND HILL â€" 33.1.4401 8 am to 6 pm- 600.000.0000...OOOOfiOGOOOOOOfiGGGOGGGG@6@®900900000000000000 Trac Honai res fbr FALCONSNALIA fidiébs, CHEVS, PLYMOUTHS- ,: actigrlaires for SF 95 .20 23:23 I“ I fl 43 7.75-‘4/7 7515 Can Ruptace F7B-IA/F7B-15 BLACKWALL Toronto-Centred Plan Reasonable But Needs Discretion â€" Builders Its comments on the report De auuweu LU yu‘wccu wuu reflect a Torontwriented point °f."i?“’v but be?ause 5° many PALGRAVE â€"â€" Four persons bulldmg companies use Toronto were killed and four others es- as a working centre. expressions of a less parochial nature are also voiced. caped when fire destroyed a brick house five miles north- west of Palgrave on November The Design for Development, Toronto-Centred Region, is a planning proposal which is in essence reasonable and gener- ally benificial to all Ontarians. This statement is contained in a submission to the Government of Ontario on its May 5 proposal by the Toronto Home Builders‘ Association, the largest local as- sociation of the National House Builders’ Association. It repres- ents some 525 building industry members in the Toronto area and has been active since 1921. The building and development'zs industry, the submission states. recognizes that the very est- ablishment of a plan is a for- ward step for, without one, there is no co-ordlina'tion. With a plan, regardless of how pre- K liminary it may be. some intitial ‘ co-ordination of planning effort g is at least underway. wl sh 011 The association is recommen-l ding one overall planning agency rather than regional agencies working on an unco- ordinated basis. Collaboration between all regional govern- ments on planning matters is ‘felt to be imperative to the suc- lcess of the plan. The association also recom- mends that the government ex- ercise discretion with respect to development projects which were in the final stages of plan- ning or ready to go when the Toronto Centred Plan was anâ€" nounced. It feels that in a num- ber of cases hardship will be legislated on many companies even though their development plans had previously been en- \couraged officialy. Trasportation is also a sub-‘ ject of concern to the associa- tion which recomends that the‘ transportation network planning be cognizant of existing and future development of all types so that a more realist and ser- ‘vicea‘ble transportation system would result. } 6 5013 BLACKWM Existing services as well asservicing being planned must be‘ considered and properly co-ord- inated with other forms of dev- elopment the builders maintain. to insure that ‘building land dev- elopment will be continued so that a sufficieng surplus of buildable land Will always be available. It believes this will minimize exploitation of build- ing lots by shortage of supply which increase housing costs un- necessarily. The association maintains that the astronomical increase in building land costs in the last few years has been the greatest factor in the spiralling housing costs. Through co-ordinated planning of lot development in the future, the association feels such a disastrous situation may be avoided in the future. such a disastrous situation may be avoided in the future. It is also feared that the three distinct zones will be considered as areas to be developed in- dependently and that one zone will be developed almost com- Pletely before the next is started. It is maintained that co-ordinated development of all zones should be encouraged to maintain a hamonious balance in the three areas. Areas now ready for development should _be allowed to proceed with The association also cautions that the processing system for the development of plans must be graded to keep pace with the new philosophy engendered in the plan. It urges the De- partment of Municipal Affairs to review the system which to- day marks as tedious and ex- pensive the process which must be undertaken for the develop- ment 'of new plans. It is also believed that suc- cessful implementation ‘of the plan depends on total and co-or- Firemen said three of those who escaped slid down bed sheets. One carried a two-year- old child. Firemen listed the dead as Kenneth Tavernor Sr.. 45. Tre- vor Hale. 10, Christ Hale, 4, and Mrs. Lorna Hale, 50. They said Valery Hale. 22 Sheila Hale 15, her brother Ross, 14, and Gerald Marinier, 2, escaped serious injury. Tottenham Fire brigade re- ceived the first call. Assistance was given by Palgrave and Allis- ton Brigades. The Eause has not been de- termdned. NEW CHRISTMAS HOURS: MONDAY T0 FRIDAY 8 am. to 9 pm. SATURDAYS 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. COMMERCIAL AND SKILL TRAINING COURSES FOR ADULTS Seneca College is offering a number of commercial and skill training courses for mature students (at least 19 years of age on the starting date of the course). Commercial Refresher. 16 weeks Clerk-Typist, 24 weeks Commercial Clerical, 40 weeks Commercial Stenographic, 40 weeks AT THE FINCH AVENUE CAMPUS (AT WOODBINE Blue-print reading, 8 weeks Electronics, Radio and TV Servicing, 48 weeks Machine Shop Practice, 40 weeks Dining Room Service, 10 weeks Lathe Operator, 12 weeks ALL COURSES ARE AVAILABLE For further information contact T1 Training Division, telephone 223-9E W. T. Newnham President no delay SHEPPARD AVENUE CAMPUS (AT YONGE STREET): SENECA COLLEGE TUDOR WINECRAFT OF APPLIED ARTS AND TECHNOLOGY 43 SHEPPARD AVENUE EAST WILLOWDALE 441, ONTARIO GOOD CHEE. THOUGHOUT L COMING YEARS COMMENCING JANUARY. 1971 WINEMAKING SUPPLIES Your gift this Christmas will REALLY brf' 420 Yonge St. 8., RR. 2, Aurora (at the extreme south end of town) Gamma:le 60 'IbwnZCounfry "5’55 ABLE IN THE DAY PROGRAM ONLY act The Registrar, Occupational 223-9661. ' when you give IN AURORA FROM Champions for .- FALCONgCHEVYII'; VALIANTS. dinating servicing in all aspects of deveIOpment i n c 111 d i ng schools, hospitals. power, Water. sani'tary facilities, etc. The value of a plan relies wholly on the ability to co‘ordinate a total development scheme. ‘ The builders also request that some areas not dealt with specifically in the original re- port be elaborated on. so there will be no doubt as to the mean- ing and intent once the plan is set in motion. Especia'fiy im- portant is the servicing of the land, the association believes. R. N. Garriock Chairman of the Board Fees: $ 48.00 $ 7200 $120.00 $120.00 AVENUE): $ 24.00 $144.00 $120.00 $ 30.00 $ 36.00 ILchWnL

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