8 “THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Wednesday, July 24, 1974 When Royal Orchard Public School Choir Thornhill wound up the season with a mas- querade party in June it was a veritable United Nations combined with a cross-section of historical and fictional characters that joined in the celebrations as parents observed and joined in the fun. Alice In Wonderland (Lisa (Continued from Page 1) a student must achieve 80 percent average on six courses. Successful students receive a cash award of $100 and a certificate from the Ontario government. In 1974 there were 135 Ontario Scholars in York County; in 1972 there were 114; in 1971 there were 90 and the year before 63. Calvin Harley of Thorn- Iea Secondary School, with 96.1 percent, received the highest total in the past five years. Finally 4 And A Half Years Later Federal Tax $43,221 as we progressed. we noticed a difference in our new teachers. Ail seemed to pay more atten- tion to us as individuals. and when we started taking home chocolate eclairs which were much better than we could buy at the store. your frustration soon Now. after learning what I have previously mentioned. a sense of pride in our accomp- lishments started to set in when our families and friends started to ask us to repair their toasters. irons and other electrical appli- ances. or have their clothes graduating Class UK 1:71,, Want. to say "Thanks" for picking us up and turning us in the right direction; without your individ- ual attention, we could have been failures, We shall never forget you. Don Headi d'mill\llllli‘llllllllllllll“ll\ll“llillllillliilllllllllllllllllll“\llllliillliiiliiillllli\\ll\lilllllllililiiilliil“mm“!lliliilll\liiiliillllilliillllllliliilllil\llilill“ill“ill“m“\llllll“ll\lll\lllll“ill“ill“\lliililll\l“\iiililllll“\lllliiililllill\llilliliillilllllllll“\\\l\l\\\l\\\l\\\\l\\\\\' Doug Macleod of Thorn- hill Secondary School, got the 1973 high of 94.7. while David Hinton, also of Thorn- hill Secondary, led the field in 1972 with 95.5. A total of 1,505 summer school students have re- gistered in York Region this year, compared with 1,450 last year. 2, 3 and 4, thornlea: advanc- ed chemistry, year 4: biology and calculus. year 5. There are also classes in driver education an enrich- ment course in music and two of English. mathematics Besides reinforcing credit courses from grades 9 to 12, the board offers the follow- ing new courses: machine shop, year 3. Huron Heights; advanced mathematics. year NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS In the Estate of Walter William Hannam All persons having claims against the Estate of WAL- TER WILLIAM HANNAM. late of the Toxm of Vaughan, who died on or about the 2nd day of May, 1974. are required to send a state- ment of their claims to the undersigned before the lst day of August. 1974, after which date the estate will be distributed, having re- gard only to the claims of which the undersigned shall then have notice. DATED at Toronto this Executor, by his solicitors WALSH AND WALSH, 85 Richmond Street West Toronto, Ontario, M5H 209. FERGUS PATRICK WALSH 4th day of Teachers may have their differences with school boards. and students may have their differences with teachers. but at Don Head Secondary School in Richmond Hill, Valedictorian Paul Donahoe found that the system was the difference be- tween success and failure. Tonight. we the graduates of Don Head. pass another mile- stone in our lives. some of us having completed our courses of study will enter into the regular working force of Canadian so- ciety. while the remainder of us in the graduating class. intend to further our education in community colleges and appren- ticeship programs. etc. While I could amplify to some extent on our future prospects. I believe tonight is a time that my fellow clasmates and I would like to look back over the past three years and recol- lect on what Don Head has meant to us. Most of us came from primary school, having been somewhat disillusioned with the pure aca- demics and the production line approach of the school system we were in. Although individual teachers had tried to help us to get on line. to say the least. most of us were very frustrated as we first entered Don Head. Of course. the fact that all of us boys had to take cooking as a pre-requisite course. did not help us lose this frustration. But as we progressed. we noticed a difference in our new teachers. Ail seemed to pay more atten- tion to us as individuals. and when we started taking home chocolate eclairs which were much better than we could buy Here is the full text of Donahoe's address: Don Head Meantâ€"Right Direction at Toronto this July, 1974. What Happened To Peter Pan? and reading for grade 8 students. The board also: approved new bus rates, representing a cost'increase of 15 per- cent, or $1,953,000. Rates vary from $41.25 to $45.75 per day for 66-pas- senger buses, and from $14 to $16 per day for kindergarten buses. Bus companies serving the board are: Travelways School Transit Limited, R o b e r t Walker Holdings Limited, Denis Casey Transportation Company an d Langdon’s Coach Lines Company. Agreed to a $3,000 feasibi- Sealed Tenders will be received until 3 p.m., LOCAL TIME WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1974, for supply and installation of tables, chairs, desks, etc. JACKPOT $500 Tender documents may be obtained from MARANI, ROUNTHWAITE & DICK ARCHI- TECTS; 1315 Yonge St., Toronto, Ontario. Telephone: 924-6221 A 10% Bid Bond, a 100% Performance Bond will be required as specified. A $100.00 deposit cheque is required for drawings and specifications. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Earlybirds 7:30 pm. St. Mary’s Parish Hall Yonge St. N. â€" Richmond Hill EVERY TUESDAY - 8 RM. FURNITURE SUPPLIES JULY 30 â€" 20 Regular Games 1 share the wealth - 1 pie plate YORK CENTRAL HOSPITAL Most of the adults in our audience tonight. have a flower garden and you probably recall the frustration you went through when planting your first flowers and trees, only to have them die. We, at Don Head. have learned to prepare a good garden, some of us may even make this our life's work. We learned to wire a house. re- pair furniture, construct build- ings. dry-clean our own clothes, make our own clothes and even operate a store. Our courses were such that if we specialized. we could make any of them our future endeavor. changed to a sense of achieve- ment. This probably more than anything else. was our ï¬rst in- dlcatlon that we could success- fully achleve what we started out to do. We then noticed that our academic studies were far more practical than what we had taken before. Our mathematics taught us how to buy a car and figure out our interest and prin- ciple payments on a loan we might have to take to buy a car. We also learned how to make out our own Income Tax; in other words, everything we were being taught in our aca- demic studies, whether it be English. science. mathematics. etc.. was greared to what we will encounter in the working world. But here again, our teachers, brought us along. not as a class. but as an individual. We started to have an identity. Contact: Ms. S. Fletcher 924-6221 ext. 53 Richmond Hill, Ontario MUST GO EVERY WEEK (opposite Canadian Tire) FUTURE IN SIGHT lity study on the construc- tion of a municipal recrea- tion complex on the site of Stouffville Secondary School, to be shared with the Town of Whitchurch-Stouffville. The project is an Olympic-sized saunas, rink and Approved the tender of Engineered Structures and Components in the amount of $122,250 for the supply and installation of 10 port- able classrooms. Only other tender was from Farquhar Construction Company Limited for $122,540. Ward) is flanked (left to right) by the Straw Man from the Wizard Of 02 (Jimmy Stever), a loyal Scot from the Battle of Culloden (Alan Gamblin), Little Red Riding Hood (Cheryl Martin), a Roman gladiator (Bill Sproull), and Napoleon (Gregory Hamlen). 52 NUMBERS Nite-Owls to include pool, plus library. cleaned. or buy some of our flowers and baked goods. As we approached the car driving age, a lot of us decided to take the Driver Education program which, in this school. is tops. And this we realized even more, when we applied for car insurance. only to find we were paying considerably less than our friends. I believe a real sense of ac- complishment set in when our friends asked us to fix their car bodies, engines, brakes. etc., or when we were being asked to wire their cottages. In other words, we were being respected for what we knew. In grade school, they were doing what we found difficult. now we were doing what they didn't know how to do. Of course, our three years at Don Head were not all workâ€" we had lots of fun through our sports program. and our prepar- ation for our Annual Open House. as well as various field trips to educational and inter- esting places. Five years ago. we. as a group, could have ended up as high school drop-outs. but thanks to the Ontario Department of Edu- cation. our local school board and our teachers. I feel that we, a a group, are probably better prepared to go out into the working world now. than any other group of students our own age. To the principal and staff of Don Head. I. on behalf of the graduating c1355 of 1974, want to say "Thanks" for picking us up and turning us in the right direction; without your individ- ual attention, we could have been failures, Dï¬cfl ma) (mu @8ng {NJ @mmgï¬dcatr likflfl 9mg @mmd] ' ï¬mï¬mggs (9310039 L'JLBLILIJQJ . m mgmgmmmcaw \‘ ‘ 1 @mï¬nï¬gn‘Q??? ’ BJGï¬ma Eyery month, opportunities are open for young men seeking a chance to earn money. “The Liberal†has a limited number of paper routes open . . . for young people who want to have a business of their own, to learn and accept the responsibilities in- volved in such an undertaking. No other part-time enterprise we know offers a young person such an opportunity for personal achievement. And the experience gained in managing a paper route will continue to be valuable through lifeâ€"whatever field they enter, they will find management looks for achievers. Like them. Liberal carriers learn the techniques of good business . . . they deliver, collect, keep books, sell. They learn other importantdessons . . . how to get along with people, the value of promptness and courtesy, how to earn money and use it wisely. Richmond Hill Hydro “THE LIBERAL" Home Paper of the District Since 1878 If you‘d like to earn money this month phone . . . Umï¬mflx (Mm ï¬ï¬‚ For further information on our Rental Plan, including Free Maintenance Service, phone 884-1105 FOR ONLY ELECTRIC WATER HEATER FREE SERVICE INCLUDED Fast recovery takes the “wait†out of water heating. Flameless-sc safe and clean. Needs no flue-can be installed anywhere. Available in sizes to suit your needs. Purchase plan available. and all with the economy of Electricity. Call now LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY RENT A NEW SUPER-FAST 40 GALLON UNIT 5147?"..- 52-3.? plus sales tax A MONTH your hydra 884-4466 Sale consists of Bar Equip- ment. Wine 8: Beermaking equipment 8: Supplies. Office Equipment. Electrical Home Appliances. Household Items. Baby Furniture. Toys. etc: i.e. Yeasts, additives. ingre- dients, flavours. books on the Art of Wine & Beer- making with all the why's & wherefores. bases, 12 gal. Demi Johns, cubitainers. rubber tubing. metal bottle fillers. syphon taps. wooden spigots. colanders. basters. wooden paddles. beer hy- drometers. floating thermo- meters, corks & caps of all kinds. champagne wires. stoppers, ice buckets, wine racks. labels, soda ash. beer mugs. bottle holders. cock- tail mixes. elderberries. John Bull malts. Geordie liquid 8: dry kits. Office Equipment: Gestetner Duplicating machine with ink 8: supplies (low reserve). single pedestal wooden desk. metal typewriter desk, elec- tric adding machine, office arm chair, office chair (wood) 1 Gram weigh scale (in 02s.). heat seal machine (pack-rite poly-jaw sealer. (poly bags 4-8 02.) Household Items: Judy dress- makers form (Junior size). end table, 9 drawar dresser. round mirror. B/W T.V. (not working) bathroom sink 8: taps, bathroom scale. easy chair, occasional chair. small lamp. kitchen table (arbo- rite). 4 kitchen chairs. fire- place screen. fire log grate. 12 lamps. V4 H.P. veloctric motor, set of poker chips in stand, large metal wardrobe. floor type metal medicine cabinet, stand ash tray. metal ice bucket, box mis- cellaneous serving dishes, Muscrat fur coat. Baby Furniture: Wooden baby swing. crib and matt- ress, baby carriage. 2 safety gates, baby seat. Appliances: Motiat range Fiesta counter top with power rack (low reserve) 1 Clairtone Stereo (low reser- ve) Inglis washing machine automatic. Miscellaneous: 45 Gal. wine barrel, bottles, T.V. tables. kettle water jug with tap, pole record holder. AUCTIONEERS COM- MENTS: All appliances 8: Gestetner may be inspected Monday or Tuesday before sale. Come early to Register. BUILDING SOLD. BUSI- NESS DISSOLVED. -TERMS CASH 60 GALLON UNIT AURORA. Ontario (just South of Storm Dru“) WEDNESDAY, JULY Slit 7:00 EM. DON’T DELAY IN PAYING YOUR LIBERAL CARRIER. 420 Yonte Street South. AUCTION SALE FOR TUDOR WINECRAFT AUCTIONEER CHARLIE DUNN 773-5952 REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE plus sales tax A MONTH