‘1 By EVA HAWKINS ~le The members of the Hum- ‘é-ber Seniors (Kleinburg-Nash- v’Aville) November 24 held a (‘most successful Bake Sale. “raising a substantial amount "-"of money to be donated to ti-the Meals On Wheels pro« "Tject. For anyone unfamiliar ï¬'with this. it is a program of "hot meals delivered to the -' sick and shut-in at a minimal ""cost. The effort of the Hum- }‘ber Seniors is an excellent '-~one, helping those involved ‘3' in the program to help others. 4' On December 8 the Wood- *bridge Seniors are holding "their bazaar in the Wood- " bridge Arena. Our readers {'Will note the change in date Efrem the original one of De- "“cember 1. From the effort and planning that has gone 3‘ into this project, it will be Df'another bazaar, well worth ‘g‘the effort to attend. SQUARE l TRIPS The planned shopping ex- ‘chrsions to Square 1 have ": been plagued by confusion :from the beginning. There “are so many other activities _,going on in the area that it "has been almost impossible fato arrive at a date that might VI. suit the majority, particularbl ,‘since there are so many to be iconsidered. However. final ‘_2 plans are as follows: The 'i‘irst trip will be December 4 .rwith seniors from Richmond )Hill leaving approximately 1 rpm, from Maple 1:15 pm. a The afternoon will be spent and the new and exciting » Square 1 Plaza in Mississauga and after the seniors have .[l Every member of the rate- membérs hiad. otteode&_‘{l; ‘3 payer's association is asked Service to Patients Confer _, it? attend the next meeting on ence in Toronto and the Cen- had supper at the restaurant of their choice, they will .head downtown to see the rL‘hristmas Lights. And if ‘Weather permits, the tn‘p to the top of either the Toronto {Dominion Centre or the new SCommerce Court will be » offered. Arrival home should ‘ibe around 8 pm, possibly "later. All interested in this out- ing MUST call their own excursion representative im- mediately. It is impossible to 'charter buses when so mam! leave the decision to go along Kleinburg-Nashville Seniors Raise Meals-On-Wheels Funds Sandi Bourke, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Desmond Bourke of Gram Street. Maple will be married on December 22 to Jim Kirk of Toronto at St. Stephen's Ang- lican in 'Maple. Sandi was hosted to a miscellaneous shower by her fiancee's sis. ter, Sandy Kirk of Toronto. Sandi teaches at Lamberton Public in Downsview and her fellow teachers held a shower in her honor at the home of Laurel Pennycoolr. The bridesmaids held a shower for the bride at the home of Joan Vernon of Goodman Street, Maple. The other bridesmaids are Joan Earn- shaw of Maple and Brenda Hughes of Richmond Hill. A trousseau tea will be held later «by the bride’s mother. Neighborhood Notes v Mr. and Mrs. Tom Perry, who were married September 7 at St. Stephen’s Anglican Church in Maple with Rev. Dr. Ramsay Armitage offic- iating, are now living in Guelph where the groom is a student at the University of Guelph. The bride is the former Mary Elizabeth Bowden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Bowden, 21 Birch Avenue, Richvale, and the groom is the son of Mr. arid Mrs. William Perry of Dufferin §treet, Maple; Both are graduates of Langstaff Secondary ‘Schodl. All members asked to attend: 1. Ratification of Constitution 2. Motion to incorporate the Association 3. Elect Directors and Officers 4. New business Thursday, December 6, 8 PM St. Stephen's Anglican Church Hall KEELE ST., MAPLE )4 ‘? mm; MAPLE RATEPAYER'S ASSOCIATION Wed In Maple, live In Guelph MR. AND MRS. TOM PERRY A second trip to the same plaza will be taken December 6 (Thursday) with the Wood- bridge club almost filling a bus. The same program for the day will apply with pick- up at Woodbridge at 1 pm. The other clubs will be noti- fied of time if there are members wishing to go on Thursday. SCARBORO CENTRE There was some discussion of a third outing during the week of December 17. But since it is so close to Christ- mas Day, we have eliminated this trip. A third outing, this time to the Scarboro Town Centre, wlll be scheduled for the week of December 10, either December 11 or 12. We realize that this may con- flict with some other club dates. but we are trying to accommodate the majority of members from each of the five areas, including Maple, Kleinburg. Woodbridge. until the last day And we do hope that sen- iors from King City will feel free to call us if they are interested in our outings. There are several from Rich- mond Hill who enjoy going along with our seniors. Cer- tainly their company is en- joyed and appreciated when there are empty seats to be filled. For the numbers of local excursion representatives call Mrs. Louise Cooper at 832- 2408. Activities of the Maple Branch during the past two months were reported upon. There had been home visits to patients, while other pa- tients had been provided with transportation. Dona- tions had been received for the commemorative fund. During this period various members had attended the Service to Patients Confer- The business is important and everyone's attendance is needed. The agenda will in- clude ratification of the constitution, the election of officers, motion to incorpor- ate the association and any new business. A meeting of the cancer society was held on Novem- ber 21 at the home of Mrs. Jennie Cave. December 6 at the Anglican Church at 8 pm. WORKS IN A 3 DRAWER PETER SMITH York Home T.V. 806 Bayview Ave. (Plan) 889-1646 - 884-4165 Color TV from GET YOUR IGA 1 Continental Shoes had its third tie game with Mark Gammage scoring his first goal of the season and scor- ing for IGA was Elco Reaume. PEEWEE Superior Propane l Rival Appliances 0 Superior earned a shutout with Brent Ivens in the net. Scoring their goal was Fabio Allesondrini. Maple Farms 2, DHA 2 DHA‘s two goals were by Dave Plunket and Scott Wright. Scoring for Maple Farm were Ron Hay anti Brian Hasselfelt. BAN‘TAM Fred's Shell 6, Disposal 3 Scoring for Fred's Shell were Don Principe 2, Rob Fenton, Ray Toiuiainen, Rob Hudson and Albert Reaume. Barry Jansen, Steve Allen and Carmello Notaro were the scorers for Disposal. Lions 4, Contractors 3 Scoring for Lions were Bruce West with two, Curt Arnett and Dave Clendenan. Jim Rotz with two and Terry McGuire were the goal-get- ters for Disposal. WHO-WM or VAUGHAN: Parkers 3 European Delicatessen 1 European Delicatessen had one goal by John Golab and the marksmen for Parkers were Peter Morris with two and Peter Snowden with 1 in this November 24 House League game. Continental Shoes 1 ATOM Atom Parkers . . .- . . . . ‘ . . . Continental Shoes . . , IGA . , . . . . . . . . ‘ . . . . . European Delicatessen Bantam Lions . . . . ‘ . . . . . . Fred's Shell . . . . . . . . . Contractors . . ‘ . . “‘-V for Maple Arena, one or two mature persons required for part time work evenings and weekends. Interested persons should apply in person or by mail giving details of education and ex- perience to I Personnel Dept. i Town of Vaughan ' 2141 Major Mackenzie Drive, I ‘ Maple, Ontario. I If anyone ever requires information about the cancer society. the following mem- bers would be happy to offer information or assistance: Service to Patients â€" Mrs. Marjorie Brock â€" 832-1224; Transportation â€" Mrs. Muriel Roseâ€"8324443; Commemor- ation Fundâ€"Miss Patsy Mac- Lachlanâ€"832-1560. Plans are being drawntup for the campaign in April '74. Mrs. Fran Lippay has been appointed Campaign Chair- man and will also be in charge of the residential campaign, while Andy Snider will be in charge of the in- dustrial campaign. Here is a report on the happenings in Maple girls’ hockey. We have two groups, the OMHA on Sunday afternoons and the All-Stars on Fri- day nights. Any girls over 10, who is interested in playing hockey, call Don Tarling at 669-2682 or Art Hills at 832-1057 or turn out at the times mentioned. The Maple girls’ team plays Sharon on Friday night at 7 pm at Maple arena. MAPLE MINOR HOCKEY RESULTS By EVA HAWKINS Maple Girls Deadly This Year, 7 Win 3 Out Of 4 GIRLS’ HOCKEY The ’Mable girls _have plajred four‘ games. They won three and lost one. They have scored 21 goals with 4 goals against. tral District’s Annual Meeting in Brampton. STEAM CARPET LEAGUE STANDINGS for Woodbridge Arena - Starting rate 3.34/hr 25% OFF THE FINEST in Actually See The Dirt Removed! SNACK BAR ATTENDENTS ONE ARENA ATTENDENT Lustre Services M1 1M" has openings for Rival . i . . . . . . . . . . . i . . . , . . 3 Superior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 ATOM OMHA King City 1. Maple 5 This game was played in Maple. King City scored its only goal in the last period so the goalie nearly had a shutout. Scoring for Maple Disposal Peewee Maple Farm DHA . . . . ‘ . so the goalie nearly had a shutout. Scoring for Maple were Norm Mondolo (2), Mark Munshaw (2), and Brad Schanck. Assists were earned by Scott Usher, Danny Mun- shaw, Blair Ivens and Brad Schanck. Sharon 4, Maple 7 The Maple team played at Sharon on November 25. Sharon scored the first goal and Maple‘came back with three by the end of the first period. Sharon scored three more in the second period and Maple two more. This was a see-saw battle with Maple finally coming out on top. Mark Munshaw had a great game with four goals and one assist, Norm Mondolo had two goals and one assist. One goal and one assist were earned by Blair Ivens and one assist each went to Brad Schanck and Scott Usher. BANTAMS Maple 13, King City 0 Maple had two big scorers in this game with Stephen Sherman getting four goals and one assist and David Sutherland with four goals and one assist. Colin Mummery scored two, Rob Hudson one. Ste- phen Allen one with one assist, David Moore one with one assist. Stephen Lemoine had one assist. Dennis Lim- oges four assists. Jim Rotz one assist and Michael Fitz- gibbon two assists. Ladiesâ€"Top performer for the ladies’ league this week was June Wilson. She had the high single and the high triple of 648. Standings â€"- Poodles 19, Greyhounds 16, Spaniels 14, Collies 11, Beag- les 10, Labs 7. Danes 5, Ter- tiers Pioneerâ€"This week's stars were Walt Field with games of 220. 219 and 227 flat; Jim Spencer the single high with 253; Lorne Lloyd with a handicap had a 264 game. Chief Myers with a handicap had a 731 for a high triple. Team Standingâ€"Petebraib 36, Del Stillman 28, Jim Dar- lington 25, Earl Gooderham Bowling The Town of Vaughan is served by three public libraries, with the main one established in Maple in 1967 as a Canada ‘Centennial project. The two branch libraries are located in Kleinburg and Woodbridge. By EVA HAWKINS The campaign is over for this year and many thank- you's are due to the canvas- sers, team captains and all those who donated so generâ€" ously so the campaign was more than successful. Win- dow space was donated by some of the local merchants and the society would espe- cially like to thank John Perry's Pharmacy, La Riviera Coiffure and Ernie Brock Insurance. The financial report looks very encouraging, with the society surpassing its objec- tive this year by $360. The average per capita donation to the Arthritis Society is 15c. This year, Maple’s per capita donation was 61c. Here is a rundown of the At all three books on a variety of subjects and reference material are provided and other services are offered to the communities they serve. Fourteen children entered the poster contest this year and John Hayward Lown of Maple spent a good deal of time acting as judge for the contest. Anonymous donors supplied the $30 for prizes for the poster contest. SPECIAL MENTION Special mention should be made of the team captains. Besides doing their own can- vassing, they helped to con- vene the coffee party. fash- ion show tickets. magic show, industrial letters and the canvasser’s letters. We hope to have coin boxes in the area stores for the interven- ing period until the next campaign. Arthritis Society Campaign Goes $367 Beyond Objective Best Effort Ever Name . . . . . . Address City YOU HEAR BETTER. WITH FRONT FACING HEARING DOES AWAY WITH A LOT OF BACKGROUND NOISE AND LETS NEW HEARING AIDS FOR FREE INFORMATION SEND COUPON BELOW TO: UNIVERSAL HEARING AIDS 2 COLLEGE ST., TORONTO 101 SUITE 106 LONG BATTERY LIFE Vaughan libraries Serve Their Communities Well past few years: 1971â€"objec- ï¬veâ€"$700, goal $797; 1972â€" objective â€" $800, goal $771; 1973 â€"â€" objective â€"â€"â€" $800, goal â€"$1.167. Helping us over the top were the magic show, making $52 and the Fashion Show $42. The society would like to thank the community and the area industries for making the campaign very worth- while. SURF MARINE PIONEER CHAIN SAWS SALES & SERVICE 7 am to 9 pm Mon. to Fri. Saturday ’til 6 pm YONGE & LEVENDALE RICHMOND HILL EXTENDED BUSINESS HOURS TRY 889-4391 CLEANING CENTRES HAMMOND LOWREY and VISCOUNTâ€"HOME ORGANS DOG 3ï¬3w$9.25 FAMOUS MAKE ORGAN FRI-CHRISTMAS SPECIAL REGULARLY $699 WILD BIRD 50 lb. Bag $1.25 SEED IS lb. Bag $2.60 PLAY CAROlS â€" OH A HOME ORGAH THIS CHRISTMAS IT’S EUH â€" IT’S EASY â€" COME IN AND TRY OHE 5254 YONGE ST. (OPPOSITE wmow mm“) WILLOWDALE, 222-6517 THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, Nov. 29, 1973 MAPLE FARM SUPPLY LTD. SPECIAL s599 HAPPINESS IS . . . FEEDING OUR CANADIAN WILD BIRDS THIS WINTER SHUR-GAIN @ DOG FOOD TORONTO ORGAN CENTRES MAPLE 832-1561 BEAUTIFUL WALNUT FINISH MATCHING WALNUT BENCH INCLUDED TWO KEY BOARDS (EASIER TO PLAY THAN A PIANO) PEDAL NOTES FOR RICH FULL BASE (EASY TO PLAY) FIVE DIFFERENT VOICES BEAUTIFUL TONE EASY PLAY SELF INSTRUCTION BOOK INCLUDED Drop in and see us â€" Keele - Major Mackenzie Drive OUT OF TOWN ORDERS SHIPPED PROMPTLY LARGE DISPLAY OF ALLEN CHURCH ORGANS PURINA DOG CHOWS The above picture shows a corner of the Kleinburg' Public Library with two members of a class from the Mac- kenzie Senior Public School, located across the road, making a selection from the shelves. The library is overloaded with books and badly needs an expansion, according to Chief Librarian Boris Hrybinsky, and this may be seen above. TRY OUR OWN SPECIAL MIXTURE 0F WEST OF DUFFERIN ‘I‘I‘IO FINCH AVENUE WEST 661-2060 DOG 50 Lb. Bag MEAL BIRD FEEDERS Many Styles to choose from PRICE A Gift For All The Family 50 Lb. BAG BOLTON 832-2000 $9.15 $4.25 (Photo by Stuart's Studio) SHERWAY GARDENS 621-1871 5 7.90 50 Lb. Bag AND UP