Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 30 Nov 1977, C5

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§5 Wieners é Sausages flamxzfizfiwzfimmmmzfizfiawzfiazfiat;xxxmwwmmmwmxmmmwazfimmamzs For any living room‘ and dining room (or dining area regardless of‘size) FOR ANY LIVING ROOM For any living room 8. ad- joining hallwa regardless of size. ($24.50K Any living room dining room and hall (or dining area regardless of size) PRIDE OF CANADA â€" REGULAR OR ALL BEEF Did you know that MP is not just a butcher shop with its hundreds of f f E."r$.i,°ve;.°§2d”§§5i$3.? A&P IS MANY SHOPS IN ONE! COUCH ’27" CHAIR '11!so LOVE SEAT MATCHING COUCH & CHAIR ONLY ‘355" Excellent For Braising Cu! from Canada Grade "A" Beef! room‘ and $ lining area ) I940 ELLESMERE RD. UNIT No. I SCARBOROUGH Huron (AVOID ms Rug") APPOINTI YES! WE SELL & INSTALL BROADLODM WHOLESALE IO THE PUBLIC SAVE UP TO 50%-60°’a~70% COME AND VISIT OUR WAREHOUSE ANoa-(HOOSE FROM 10005 0F YARDS 0F CARPET ACCOLADE EXPERTS IN TINTING, DEODORIZING & CARPET GUARDING 1-Ib vac pa: THE COMPLETE CARPET PEOPLE “89¢ Bologna G ROOM 8. ad- $ rdless 78¢ Cooked Meats 99¢ A8P is a Fresh Beef Shop! $3750 MAVLE lEAF. SIJCED â€" I VARIETIES. I101 VAC MC MAPLE LUFI SLICED, REGU GAILIC, YHICK SllCED4 |"=-=| Broadloom Cleaning Specialists APPOINTMENT NOW LIQUID DETERGENT Zd-fl-oz plastic ht! SNOPSVS â€" COLE SLAW OR Potato Saladwgg} EBEktail Wieners 6'09"; PKG OF 3â€"701 "(65 salamiv§:%.w°z<'wb1.69 Corned Beef 99¢ MAME LEAF Cocktail sausages 89}? [absters “692.99 MCOUAIDE BRAND Beef Pies 8W49¢ Three Star â€" Pink or Lemon RIO MUSHROOMS Recommended to C01. James MacLeod, a native of Richmond Hill, for the North West Mounted Police, Fury joined the company being formed at the New Fort in Toronto. It was composed of 84 men with arms and ammunition and 76 horses, and left in the spring of 1879 for the FACIAL TISSUE Mcw94¢ Tourtiere Pies 1.1â€"9 A8P is a slmp for Christmas Party Items! ' Cu! from Canada Grade "A" Beef! Boneless Roasts BLADE lb 08 SHORT RIB or __ SHOULDER 42.9” l0-fl-oltin ¢ )0; SCOTTIESâ€"WHITE, YELLOW, PINK 200 sheets loosieets 02350 PIECES AND STEMS ALL IEEF yesterdays by mary dawson 1401 CONYAINEI MAPLE LEAF GOLDEN SKllLET, FROIEN, HONEY DIPPED Chicken $13: Ibl.48 YAILLEFIR E-Ol PKG Never numbering more than 500 the North West Police taught the’ Indians to respect the “red coats“ and to observe the laws of The Indians were ranged along the heights surrounding the fort and their sharpshooters sent bullets whizzing into anything that moved and through the police tents. The plains often trembled as herds of buffalo which were still quite plentiful on the plains. stampeded. There they found the Indians on the Warpath â€" the Blackfeet and Crowfoot under Poundâ€" maker and the Crees and American Sioux under Sitting Bull. The company travelled by ship to Duluth and then by train through the United States to Bismark, North Dakota, and by boat to Benton, Montana, arriving at Fort Walsh, north of the border. June 27. territories to enforce law and order. CgRIIBEAN [61 lo 70 COUNT) Shrimp '7 ' “6.99 IN BRINE NOW IN RICHMOND HILL... and FUN FURS OPENING SPEC/Al PHONE 59¢ 10220 "A" YONGE STREET & RICHMOND COTTAGE CHEESE IN Foam Custom Cut to Order _ and Upholstering Supplies LARGE SELECTION OF UPHOLSTERY FABRICS Burdens â€" Creamed UPHOLSTERY VELVETS PAULA'S MILL OUTLET ALL COLOURS - 54" WIDE $2.00 (CHARGEX ACCEPTED) In 1882. the first year of construction of the CPR‘ Fury was promoted to sergeant and was sent to Regina (then without a single house) to keep law and order among the construction crews. The police lived in rude shacks at first while they built the first barracks there. The next year he was in Calgary (originally Fort MacLeod), then a trading post on the Elbow River, which had only a few rude shacks inhabited by half breeds. While stationed there he arrested an lndian, Red Dried Meat. in a Blackfoot camp of several hundreds. The Indian was found guilty of horse stealing and sen- tenced to six years in Stony Mountain Penitentiary. During the years imâ€" mediately following, the the land. as they travelled from fort to fort which were located 500 miles apart. 883-4533 TUES. -THURS. 10A.M. -6 P.M. Fri. 10 AM. - 8 RM. Sat, 10 A.M. - 5 RM Hundreds of gallons were sold under these permits. When the police investigated complaints they would be shown the permit and the not quite empty two-gallon keg. Howevexfif it coulfl be proven that the trader Lieutenant-Governor Royal had softened this legislation by allowing the sale of four percent beer. and Governor Dewdrey had introduced the permit system. which allowed anyone who could secure the signature of a clergyman or magistrate to buy and sell liquor not exceeding two gallons in quantity. In drawing up the constitution of the territories Hon. Alexander Mackenzie had inserted a clause prohibiting the sale of strong drinks. mounted police were kept busy trying to stamp out the trade in liquor which sold at 25 cents a drink or $5 a bottle. ,It is easier for me sometimes to do a good turn for a stranger than to agree to run an errand for someone I live or work with in a close relationâ€" ship. What do you answer in your house? Particularly, when doing an errand means changing plans already forming in the mind so that you are fighting back feelings of annoyance. what do you say? Deep trust comes from loving acts Next week. some recollections . by the sergeant of the North West Rebellion. How many times through the years have I said this to one of my family members? If I had tried to keep track. I would be lost in the counting. “I don't want to. but I will." The railway had more than 7,000 men in its employ and was more than three months in arrears in payments of wages, which led to strikes and demon- strations. “Well. Indofi‘t want'to but I will." “Hey, do you want to do me a favour?" “What‘s that?" “On your way home would you stop in and do some shopping for me?" Several months were spent in keeping order in CPR construction camps in the Rockies. had exceeded that limit, he was subject to a fine of $200 or six months at hard labor. From the churches ByREV. ERNIE JOHNS They pointed to ms Thornhill Baptist Church example in laying down “Hey. do you want to do his life for his friends, and heafavour'?" even his enemies, and “What‘s that?" they said. “so we ought to "On your way home love also“. THE LIBERAL. Wednesday, November 30. 1977 â€"- C-5 It is easy because kind and loving acts lead to the deepest trust and to creative goodwill bet- ween persons. It is hard. Jesus said so. 1Matt: 11:30), but it is easy. too. Christian love, then, includes keeping to a given standard. Doing things for others cannot depend on how I feel about it. Whether I feel happy today or sad. generous or mean, must not stop a loving action. My feelings must not dictate the action. Agape love is doing what one knows to be the right thing, no matter how one feels about it. Mrs. McLean Was one of 200 applicants for the job. Margaret McLean, information officer of York County Board of Education for the past eight years, is moving to the Peel Board of Education in the same capacity, January 1. A reporter at The Liberal for nine years, before joining the York indlovmg acts lead to the The Pee] board offices ieepest trust and to are located at Highways :reative goodwill betâ€" 10 and 5 (Dundas) in ween persons. Mississauga. Seniors busy in December Information officer leaves York board Mrs. McLean. who received $18,000 with the York board, will get approximately $21,000 with Peel. She said that, while with York, she had tried to write her news releases in a way that would let people who hadn‘t been at the meetings, know what had transpired, and to let them know “what their education dollars were buying." A resident of Concord, Mrs. McLean has seven children, all of whom are now grown up and away from home. “I hope I've done that,” she said. She said 'the new system had 148 schools, compared with 90 in the York system, and the job, itself, tended to be “quite fluid’i She also felt the York board didn‘t always appreciate the role of the information officer to the fullest. board in its inception year. she said she was leaving because she didn't think it was good to stay too long in one place. “As I told them at Peel, ‘if any of you have been married, you‘ll know what I mean,’ " Mrs. McLean said. She said that. after a certain length of time on a job. one didn't have the same sort of impact.

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