COMING UP â€" Sometime to- wards the latter part of Septemâ€" ber or early October there will be an "over-night". A bus will take us on a tour to see the beautiful changing colors of that time of year. Following a day of touring, we will stop overnight in Huntsville. Posâ€" sible there might even be a "harvest dance“ for us to at- tend. Then home on the Sun- day. This ls still in the form- ative stages but will let you know more about it at a later date. it a i: t ,“We‘re off to Belleville in a bus, in a bus". Excuse the par- ody but this is just a way to Here was an evening just begin- ning. What a load of laughs! The sandman was creeping up on us and we sure wanted to be up early to attend the “pancake breakfast†to be served at the fair grounds. Holy cow â€"â€" what on earth is that noise this early .in the morning? Wouldn‘t you know it? Some of the bands couldn‘t sleep so they were just making sure that the rest of us got up as early as they. The darn birds have only just gotten up. Oh well â€"â€" we can go to the coffee shop and get some break- fast (coffee) and greet the new day cheerfully. “FORE†â€"- Have heard ru- mors of a district golf tourna- ment in Peneumg this Satur- day. Seems Branch 375 has some ardent golfers. Best of luck. fellas! SOCIAL EVENING â€"â€" Lately our Friday social evenings are getting under way a little late in the evening. A lot of hard work goes into making these evenings possible for Your pleasure. The group playing this past week was the Vertones from Nobleton. They are great. Come on out some Friday ev- ening and join in the fun. It would be a show of confidence for Bob Dickson and George Diceman. They really sweat it out on your behalf. “We're off to Belleville in a bus, in a bus". Excuse the par- ody but this is just a way to tell you about the fine time we all had at the highland games and band competitions at Ux- bridge and Belleville June 26. The weather was the winner. A bus load took off from Legion Court at 1230 hours last Sat- urday. Cross country up to Newmarket to pick up any late arrivals then off and running again. We had a fine pilot in Ron Claidon: George Diceman was the perfect navigator. No Saturday July 10 seems to be a date for reunions. The Col- ]ier clan is having a big family reunion on this date. The San- ders family will be attending a big do at Shelbourne at the same time. ,Sounds like a lively weekend all round. luck to one and all! SOCIAL EVENING â€"â€" Lately our Friday social evenings are getting under way a little late in the evening. A lot of hard work goes into making these evenings possible for Your pleasure. The group playing this past week was the Vertones from Nobleton. They are great. Come on out some Friday evâ€" ening and join in the fun. It would be a show of confidence for Bob Dickson and George Diceman. They really sweat it out. on your behalf. “FORE†-â€" Have heard ru- mors of a district golf tourna- ment in Penetang this Satur- day. Seems Branch 375 has some ardent golfers. Best of luck. fellas! COMING UP â€" Sometime to- wards the latter part of Septemâ€" Best of‘ joyed the show these boys put on. Just great! Now we are arriving at our destination ~â€" Quinte Hotel. What a hassle to get the rooms straightened out. Everything is now under con- trol. Word has gone round that there is to be a parade. This we surely must watch. We can eat later. Just in time. Here they come. What a show! Kilts of eVery color swinging in rhythm to the pipes. Cheers for one and all but the finest were the laddies from New- market. Now to go and fill the inner man or woman as the case may be. After dinner it was up to the rooms again to tidy for the dance. What a bash! The place was packed and no one really got time to sit down. Good dance music and wonderful company. The even- ing passed quickly and the dance was over. We all had so many things to talk over; re- calling other dances that we had been to; remembering old friends. Then back to the hotel. Here was an evening just begin- ning. CHILDREN‘S P I C N I C â€"- This comes off Saturday‘ at Bruce's Mill. Loads of prizes. plenty of food. good compan- ions and fun. Do hope you got your Youngsters' names down. HAPPY BIRTHDAY GREET- INGS -â€" To any of our friends and members of the branch who are celebrating this week. This brings to mind my friend "Cochise". May you all cele- brate many more of the same. The Frank Murphys are float- ing around somewhere in that part of the country. Should they all meet, it seems like a good old ball could be got going. The Sam Wiscombs have tak- en up residence in that lovely province. The Neil Jarvies are in Evan- geline country for the holidays and will spend some time visit- ing friends down there. This just about sums up the way “it.†has been happening lately. John Cunningham comes over to visit the Bill McNeillies â€"â€" arrives on a Monday night and Mrs. McNeillie takes off for the “Olde Countrye" the next night. Gather that the two bachelors are having a ball. COMINGS AND GOINGS â€"-â€" DAVE! Jonas FISH &CHIPS PHONE: 884-9291 189 YONGE STREET NORTH [1201133 (NOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK) Newmarket Pipe Band Second At Uxbridge Your legion Reports 11.3 30 am. to 8 pm The bus is ready to take off for the fairgrounds. On the as- sumption of first come, first served, we took off. Seems as if everybody had the same idea. A last minute to relax and then the bands take off for some practice sessions. The sus- pense is beginning to mount. We return to the hotel for the last time; pack our gear and once more return to the fair- grounds. The sun is hot and Of course there were a few ‘tunes from the pipes. These pipers never tire; even when we go into a restaurant every- body there â€" the patrons. the manager and the help all en- joyed the show these boys put on. Just great! Now We are arriving at our destination ~â€" Quinte Hotel. What a hassle to get the rooms straightened out. Everything is now under con- trol. Word has gone round that l After grabbing a bite to eat we took off once again for the wild environs of Belleville. What a ball on the way there. We had taken on some live entertainment in the form of three pipers; namely Bob Duns- more, Don Baines and Ed Rus- sell. Of course Ed brought along his melodion. Music was the keynote for the rest of the trip. Just give Bob a mike and he surely can make time pass swiftly. He outdid Jolson. Don was no slouch either. Some of the old favorites we could all sing; then the boys sang the songs they know so well of Scotland; then the melodion provided music for listening or humming. Reached Uxbridge just in time to get a vantage point and see and hear the pipe band competitions. This is ,always a stirring sight (especially if you're a true Scot). Our chosen band (426 Newmarket) came in second on this one. way we were going to get lost Lovely scenery all the way. ’ fresh ,flavour! Branch 375, Royal Canadian Legion By Chris Ratchford â€" 884-5280 NEWMARKET ~â€" Del Zotto Homes has made a 10-acre park site in the Bayview Hills Sub- division area available to the town and has promised to grade and seed it. No parkland in the subdivision was included in the transfer from East Gwillimbury to Newmarket in January. NEWMARKET â€"â€" Grace Baptist Church raised $2,600 in a re- cent walkathon for missions. This will help John and Wendy Ibbotson of Willowdale Baptist Church, who served as youth directors in the rlocal church for a year to equip themselves for mission work in Angola Africa“ By the way congratulations to Jack Seeward for being our mystery winner Friday evening. Speaking of the evening, did you ever see such a chorus line in your life? See you all agairi next week â€"- the good Lord willing. ’ TO THE MEMBERS OF 426 PIPE BAND â€"- This series of competitions is over; you can relax for just a little while â€"â€" then you take off on the big tour overseas. We wish to ex- tend our sincere best wishes for the success of the tour and for a safe journey there and home again. Cheers! It is all over; the trophies have been passed out; there is many a damp eye in the stands. Many a broken heart among the competitors. No one has a clue to what a judge is looking for. Somewhere. some time, the crew from Branch 426 will win all the marbles and a more de- serving bunch there just isn‘t. 'The bands are forming up in the infield. The band compe- titions are about to start. The judge (from RMC Kingston) has taken his place of vantage and the massed bands move for- ward. Gosh one would think all these bands had been play- ing together for years instead of the ï¬rst time. The “games†are officially opened and underway. High- land dancing, Scottish dancers and all the while in the back- ground the sound of the pipe bands. The stirring sound of the march or the keening of the latment â€" it all is spell binding. the place is jammed. But no one is going to mix a thing. They sometimes need a station wagon. But they don't need one badly encugh to spend $4,000 on SOmething so big it comes wiih its own echo. The Volkswagen Squarebcck Sedan ‘5 in a class by itself. It's sort of halfway between a sedan and a stotiOn wagon. ‘ It was designed for people who are sort of half way between a sedan and a station wagon. People who have better things to carry n car payments. York County Board of Educa- tion will seek changes in legis- lation regarding the education of the trainable retarded. After considerable discussion, trustees agreed June 21 to pet- ition the Department of Educa- tion. asking that the retarded, who must now leave board-op- erated schools at 18. be allowed to remain in the schools until they are 21. 3 It mentions. too, that legisla- tive grants payable to boards of education operating schools for the trainable retarded make no distinction between the cost of providing a program in a secondary school or in a school for the trainable retarded. The law permits a student who has completed grade 8 to continue in secondary schools for seven years. After that, he must pay fees. Trustees supporting the mo- tion pointed out that a stu- dent in a secondary school is entitled by law to remain there until he is 21. while dissenting trustees argued that the cost of educating trainable retarded is much more as there are fewer pupils per teacher in schools for the retarded than there are in other schools. Sheltered workshops are fin- anced jointly by the Depart- ment of Social and Family Services, parents and the local associations foathe mentally re- tarded, with the department and the parents each paying The brief pointed out that under the Public Schools Act a person has the right to attend a public school “unless he has attained the age of 21 years." It also stated that children en- rolled in Schools for the train- able retarded achieve readiness for sheltered workshop at varying ages between 18 and 21. It also asks for permission to purchase training in a sheltered workshop from the Association for the Mentally Retarded on a fee basis with cost not to ex- ceed the maximum payable for secondary school pupils, and asks that education grants be amended to reimburse the board for fees paid to the sheltered workshops. The board was asked to en- dorse a brief to be presented to Education Minister Robert Wel- ch requesting that the right to attend a school to the age of 21 be extended to trainable re- tarded children. Trustees Want Schoo For Retarded To 21 Hadfield Raises Strong Objections ThGVQlkswogen Squarebock§gdon Who needs it? 178 YONGE STREET NORTHI’RQCHMOND HILL/889.7701 Also because it's a Volkswagen, it gets around 27 miles to a gallon of gas. And gets into tight parking space easily. ' And because it's a Volkswagen, underneath all that cargo area is what makes the car go: on air-cooled engine. 50 up front, where most car makers put the engine, you can put another couple of suitcases. Fold dov'm the Volkswagen Square. back's rear seat and you've got 42 cubic feet of space in the back. (Half the size of an average station wagon, but twice the size of an average sedan.) W. & P. Motors Limited Peo Ie who like this idea but the way it looks. Since it was formed more than two years ago. he con. tinued, the board had been suc- cessful in making people under- stand that education dollars cannot be diverted to recrea- tion, that recreation must be financed from other sources. At the same time the school boards have been broadening their ed- ucation services. Prior to for- mation of the county boards, schools for the trainable re- tarded were administered by the local associations in co~ operation with the province. Soon, said Mr. Hadfield, boards will be asked to in- clude education of the blind, deaf, mute and crippled in the general system of education at the local level. He conceded that some re- tardates might benefit from staying in the local school be- yond the age of 18, but argued that it would be a mistake to compel the schools to keep all retarded children in a sheltered environment up to ‘21. Markham Trustee Jack MacKay also wondered whether this was the time to incur such increased costs, particularly when the retarded already seem to be receiving adequate care "We provide health and den- tal education in our schools. Should we also provide doctors and dentists?" he asked. $35 per month and the associat- ions paying the balance of the costs. There is some revenue lfrom work contracts and the ‘sale of goods produced. The trainees are paid a small wage for their work. Support for the brief was far from unanimous. New- market Trustee Jack Had- field objected strenuously to the “diverting of educa- tion funds" to What. is, he insisted. a form of man- power training or occupa- tional therapy. The decision he said. was an emotional one, that the training available in a sheltered work- shop is related more to ap- prenticeship than to education, and should therefore be sup. ported by other departments of government. The board is constantly un- der fire to restrict spending to education, but at the same time it is asked to be “all things to all people." said Mr. Hadfield, ad- ding, “This could be the death of us." One hundred and two per- sons enjoyed the parish picnic held last Sunday at Cedar Glen Conference Centre, Bolton. The threatening rain held off until the return journey. The day was hot and extremely humid and so most took the oppor- tunity of using the pool after the races and games. The married couples held a swimming' party July 2 at the home of Les and Angela Eliott, St. Mark’s C’hapel, Oak Ridges. One couple from St. Paul’s Un- ited also joined in the fun. Those not swimming enjoyed table tennis and euchre. Bar- The service at St. John's An- glican Church Sunday will be a celebration of Holy Communion at 10:30 am. The 8am services on the ï¬rst, 1hird and fifth Sundays have been discontiniu- ed for the summer. “How can we discriminate?" she asked. “We can't continue in the workshops under the present setup. Trustee Merna Colbourne, also of Markham. objected. in- sisting that it has been only since the inception of county boards that retarded children have come into the school sys- tem. Church News RICHMOND HILL T. V. Authorized Dealer â€" Zenith, RCA & Electrohome 28 Levendale Rd. â€" South Block Richmond Heights Shopping Centre ELGIN MILLS - JEFFERSON SPECIAL PRICE REDUCTION ON ALL COLOR AND BLACK & WHTE TELEVISIONS STEREOS 8. RADIOS Because the big problems with big station wagonspre oil the bignesses that come with them. ' Like big‘gos bills. And big repair bills. And big insurance bills. And who needs that? offhe time, instead ofa big station wagon some of the time. So when you think about it, maybe what you need is a small station wagOn all (All the room is iucked away inside, no? tacked onto the outside.) EXCISE TAX REMOVED CORRESPONDENT. LEONARD LOMAS Telephone 884-3000 People whqwgnt room on the Insude; not on the outsude. 884-7456 to provide the least for those that need the most." She also objected to the dis- cussion of costs. pointing out that the board 'had previously agreed in principle to the res- olution and that the present discussion was merely to ap- prove the Wording of the brief to be‘forwarded to the authorit‘ xes. becued hamburgers as well as a surprise birthday cake for Jean Lomas featured the re- freshment period. Neighborhood Notes The Jefferson Scouts and Cubs finished their season‘s activities with a camp at Earl Rowe Park on the weekend of June 18-20. The Scouts went up Thursday evening and pitched the tents in readiness for the arrival of 17 Cubs and two Scouts, Mike Carson and Leslie Sayers on Friday. Also attend- ing were Scoutmaster Jeffrey Walker and Cubmaster Peter Hughey as well as Harry 0‘ Donnell, Guy Olmstead, Brian Winje and Bob Sayers. A church parade was held Sunday morning and plenty of swimming, hiking and camp- fires were enjoyed by the boys. whose appetites were satisfied by Bob Sayers as cook. to whom a special thanks is extended. THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill. Ontario, Thursday, July 8, 1971 l Richmond Heights Centre LIBERAL CLASSIFIEDS-Get Results-8844105 OUR REGULAR PRICE 1.00 ONE SIlE FITS All. PANTYHOSE Reg. 79¢ I I a o o a o I 9 PIECE PLASTIC SALAD Reg. 3.59 DELUXE BABY SEAT............ RUBBER PLANT AND PLANTER . . . . . . . . . . 17 0:. SCOPE MOUTHWASH . . . . . . . APPROX. 24" x 42" POLYESTER SHAG RUG. . . . . Reg. 39¢ CHILD’S 6-7 'I'HONGS . . . . . . . . . . ON SALE: ‘ JULY 7°8'9°1O After you've read this paper and digested the home town news. you're ready for the world. For that, you need a second newspaper. with first~hand coverage of national and world affairs. The Christian Science Monitor. Why the Monitor? Twenty-six correspondents around the globe. Nine reporters watching Washington. Pulitzer Prize winning news coverage. Award winning features. And. according to an independent poll of 1800 news- papermen, the "most fair" reporting in the US. For fresh insight into your world, send us the coupon Please send me the Monitor tor the introductory term of 4 months for $10.00. If I am not satished. you will refund the bal- ance of my subscription. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR? [j Check/money order enclosed. 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