Ontario Community Newspapers

The Liberal, 10 Jan 1963, p. 3

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| Coming Events | New Charter JANUARY 14 â€" Monday, 8.30 pm. annual meeting 3f the Vic- toria Square Community Centre Board in the new hall. Election of trustees for 1963. c1w23 JANUARY 14 â€"â€" Monday at 8 p.111. Vellore Euchre Club 35th Anniversary Open Night and draw for quilt. Proceeds for hospital fund. Everybody welâ€" come. Admission 50c. Lunch provided. *1w28 JANUARY 18 â€" Friday, euchre 8.15 pm. at the new Victoria Square Community Hall. 18th Avenue, west of Don Mills Rd. c1w28 JANUARY 28 â€"- Monday. from} 2.30 to 5 pm. TEA AND MUSI-I CALE. featuring the University of Rochester 50-voicc Men's Glee Club, at Wrixon Hall, St. Mary's Anglican Church, Yonge‘ Street. Richmond Hill, under the auspices of the York Cen- tral Hospital Auxiliary. All proceeds to York County Hosâ€" pltals. c1w28 SUTTON : Plans for an eight- acre park at Jackson’s Point, including playground areas, landscaping and recreational fa- cilities were revealed at a re- cent meetlng of Sutton Public School Board. Annual Meeting 2 Firemen’s Lounge above Richmond Hill Fire Hall Milton Savage Jr. President RICHMOND HILL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY Richmond Hill Lions Hall MONDAY, JAN. 14 TUESDAY, JANUARY 22nd at 8 RM. CORNER YONGE & LEVENDALE RD. For Prompt Pickup Service CALL TU. 4-4411 in your SANITONE cleaned suit! Clothes don’t make the man . . . but they do help! Take the advice of leading clothing makers . . . keep the fresh new appearance of your clothes by having them deep-down cleaned the Sanitone way. Let our Sanitone service keep you looking you: best! Call on us, today! u--o. D. .4---).4_7.1_0-4 7__â€"â€"â€" I'm-1.1.0.0.1 -W-).o-h.0-0.0.v WORSTED-TEX ' ’Sanikone Dry Cleaninfl recommends New Charter I. O. D. E. Chapter Richmond Hi}! Candelabra and beautiful red roses decorated the tea table as a group of sixteen ladies met at the home of Mrs. Stephanie Barnes to nominate and elect officers for a charter chaptem I.O.D.E., in Richmond Hill.‘ Guests for the evening were ‘Mrs. McBean, municipal regeth and Mrs. Dorothy Adshead, re- gional organizer, both from Toronto. iTwo Refuse Offers ‘On Crosby Property hOfficers elected are lows. Proposed widening of Crosby Avenue in Richmond Hill has been temporarily stalled by the refusal of two property owners involved to accept the price for their land offered by Richmond Hill. council was told Monday 6’s SHIRT SE R2355 night Theodore and Frances Gural,‘ Toronto, turned down council’s ofier for .967 acres of land and1 demanded payment of $5,500. Michael Prokopetz refused an ofier of $100 for .022 acres of his property at 237 Crosby Ave. Mr. Prokopetz asked for pay- ment of $6,000 an acre or $132. Counnii feferred the letters containing the tWo refusals to the works committee. Tmovm‘ LIMITED :lhlumm as fol- Regent Mrs. Stephanie Barn- es; lst vice-regent Mrs. Mar- garet Founder; 2nd vice-regent Mrs. Dorothy Wood; secretary Mrs. Adah MacNaughton; treas- urer Mrs. Eleanor Sleeman; ed-ucational secretary Mrs. Irlma Ashworth; Echoes secretary Mrs. Eld-a McLeod; services secretary Mrs. B. Houston; Spandard Bearer Mrs. Margaret Weber; honorary regent Mrs. Dorothy Adshead. On February 4th, at 8 pm. the first meeting of the chapter will be held at the home of Mrs. A. MacNaughton, Tampico Road. 'lReappoint Yates,{ \Mrs. Paul Harris! j1T0 Library Post The bestowal ceremony will take place at I.0.D.E. Head- quarters in Toronto on Janu- ary 29th. Richmond Hill Separate School Board Wednesday night named its 1963 representatives on the Richmond Hill Library Board and the York Central lDistrict High School Board. Appointed to the high school board was George Yates. 53 Bedford Park Rd. It will be Mr. Yates’ second year on the board. Representing the board on the library board will be Mrs. Paul Harris, 77 Cartier Cr. Appointment of Mrs. Harris sparked a brief controversy when Vice-Chairman John Le- Claire attempted to nominate Don Gray, a member of the 1962 board, to the post. When Mr. LeClaire asked for deferment of the appointment to give him time to make a de- cision, he was opposed by the three new board members and incumbent Mrs. Margaret Glee- son. When Mr. LeClaire chairman Gordon Trussler a vote on the deferment, Gray's name was withdrawn. APPHDVHI TRUSTEE INVESIMEHI and Savings Corporation GUARANTEED INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES T TO 5 YEARS $100 OR MORE YORK TRUST EASY TO PURCHASE HEAD OFFICE 50 KING STREET WEST TORONTO, ONTARIO 368-172] and lost Mr. Okay $650,700 In Borrowings Till Taxes Paid Markham Township Council got off on the right foot at its first meeting Monday afternoon by approving the borrowing of $650,700. I~~_ -1: uv,.v W -. Most of the sum was a loan of $500,000 from the Canadian Im- perial Bank of Commerce to co- ver township expenditures until the first municipal taxes are col- llected. Council also approved the‘ borrowing of $104,000 on deben- tures for new watermains in Richvale and $46,750 on deben- tures for services in the D and B Industrial Subdivision on Green Lane. Approval of the loan of $500,- 000 means the clerk may bor- row to meet costs up to that figure without further council action. Clerk H. C. T. Crisp pre- dicted his borrowing would not approach that sum, but asked the township to set the ceiling [to avoid running low on funds. InterEét on the debentures will be five and a half pe_r‘c_er_1t. Approval of the ceiling of‘ $500,000 came only after a mo- tion setting a ceiling of $300,000 from Councillor Charles Hoo- ver was defeated. Mr. Hoover later asked Mr. Crisp to do his best to trim costs and avoid unnecessary borrowing from the bank. I Cost of books for the year I was $11,279.77. In 1961. the li- I ‘brary spent $13,446.74 on 5,211 ! lbooks. Ask For Water 0n Hillsview Dr. A request to Richmond Hill‘ from Markham Township for water to serve residents of Hillsview Drive, south of Rich- mond Hill, was referred to the works committee at Monday night's meeting of Richmond Hill Council. fif’l‘rhe request was included in a letter from Dusan Miklas, township engineer. In previous negotiations, Richmond Hill had agreed to supply Markham with 100,000 gallons of water per day on com- pletion of the McKay well. An increase in fines and in rentals for the library’s audi- torium were largely responsible for the board's receipts of $43,- 905.39 exceeding the budget of $43,064.90. Expenditures also exceeded the budget, $43,876.58 to $43,- 064.90. Richmond Hill Public Libra- ry Board finished 1962 with a balance of $28.81, according to a financial statement submitted to the board by Librarian Fred C. Israel Thursday night. Book Circulation Jumps” 22 Per Cent During '62 Increased receipts permitted increased expenditures for books and periodicals. A book collection report sub- mitted by Mr. Israel the addit- ion of 3,926 books to the libra- ry's collection for a total of 21,922. Mr. Israel estimated that anlfmm increase in the average cost of|1962 Skaters on Richmond Hill’s Mill Pond were treated to a little extra excitement Friday after- noon when a front-end loader which had been cleaning snow off the ice plunged through. Work- ers spent several hours pulling the loader out of the pond. According to Works Superintendent Otto Whalen, the ice was about a foot thick, but the loader apparently hit an air pocket. The load- er was successfully rescued and was back in operation early this week. (Photo by Barbour) ‘22)" gv/rismf Community Service’ $50.00 FULL CARD TO GO Trustee Not Qualified Gives In Resignation A Pine Grove resident ended what was probably the shortest political career in the history of Vaughan Township at the school board's inaugural meeting Mon- day night. '"v H v In a letter read to the board‘ by Secretary Norman Jackman, Malcolm D. Armstrong tendered his resignation. explaining that he was ineligible. Mr. Arm- strong ran fourth in the Decem- ‘ber elections. Under a reqent amendment to the School Act, a school trustee must be a Canadian citizen. Mr. Armstrong has been in Canada only for about a year and a half. Board Secretary J. Brown Retires After IO ’Years One of the original members of Richmond Hill's first plan, ning board has announced his retirement from the board. J. M. Brown, who has been‘ on the board since it was form- ed in March. 1952, and has been secretary-treasurer for the past eight years explained in a letter to Town Clerk Russell Lynett that “it is my definite feeling that someone else should take my place". _..‘, F_,._ , Mr. Brown's term expired January 1. His resignation was accepted with regret by council Monday night. Council also accepted the re- signations of Alan J. Smy’ch and Stanley Ransom from the parks board. The resignations were sub- mitted November 26. Both men nan and were defeated for coun- cil seats in last month’s elec- SCARBORO : Good Luck Con- struction Company is planning 450 apartment suites in three 14-story buildings immediately south of Scarboro’s Cedarbrae ‘secondary school. -tions books from $2.58 in 1961 to $2.90 in 1962 cost the library about $1,200. A breakdown of the library's collection shows 5,010 in the adult fiction category, 6,055 for adult non-fiction, 379 in the re- ference division and 10,478 books for boys and girls. Total registration increased from 8,969 in 1962 to 7,672 in 1961. There was also a jump from 2.836 in 1961 to 3,242 in new registration. Armstrong explained that Mr. Israel's figures pointed up the increasing need for as- sistance to the library from nearby municipalities. New re- gistration of adult non-residents increased from 20 per cent to 22.7 per cent of the total. Book circulation at the libra- ry increased about 22 per cent, from 217,554 in 1961 to an es- timated 267,000 in 1962. E'iiéfnétio'n of periodicals more than doubled. increasing from 533 in 1961 to 1.093 in Loader Takes Dip he wasn’t sure of his legal pos- ition in the matter but felt he would be acting against the in- tent of the law by remaining on the board. The four remaining members of the board must appoint a trustee to fill Mr. Armstrong’s shoes. Terry Goodwin, a trus- tee in 1962, finished sixth in the last election. ‘ In other business, the board renamed the only two returning trustees, Sam Kaiser and Mrs. Dorothy Robertson, as chairman and vice-chairman respectively. The board also appointed Mrs. R. M. Edwards and R. C. Fairfield to the Thornhill Lib- rary Board and Mrs. R. J. Hof- land to Board 29 YONG! 51'. S. Carnation RJ. LUCAS LEAN SLICED COOKED CHEESE SLICES KRAFT “ASSORTED” MITCHELL’S APPLE JUICE PARAMOUNT FANCY Salmon CHOICE AYLMER PEAS 2 20 oz TOMATOES NO. I U.S.A. CALIFORNIA NEW CABBAGE 19c $400 54 JACKPOT STARIING IIMI: â€" a mu. NUMBERS CALLE the Maple Library Evaporated Milk Rename Kirk And Golulding To Posts Members of Vaughan Town- ship’s Planning Board and Com- mittee of Adjustment stuck to the status quo at Monday night's inaugural meetings as they re- named the same chairman arid vice-chairman. Former Deputy-reeve R. A. Kirk was renamed chairman of the new planning board with D. B. Goulding remaining in the viceâ€"chairman’s seat. Other members of the 1963 planning board are H.C.H. Mill- er, B. P. Roberts, P. A. Deacon, Deputy-reeve Jesse Bryson, and Reeve A. H. Rutherford. Mr. Miller was renamed chairman of the Committee of Adjustment. Other members of the committee are W. E. Wind- sor and L. D. Pengally. 48 oz. tin 8 oz. pkg. THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, January 10, 1963 3 LB. 89c CELLO PKG. . tins 37C .tin 29C HEAD EXHAUST SYSTEM INSPECTION SPARE RIBS lb.49c Skyline Pqugiac-Buick FRESH MEATY LIMITED 9612 YO'NGE STREET” AV.5-5445 â€" TU.4-2864 SWEET PICKLED AYLMER CHOICE “HALVES” PEACHES Cottage Roll lb. 55: PICKUP & L/D TRUCKS, reg. $12.00 NOW $9.60 ALUMINIZED, regular $18.75 NOW $14.00 REGULAR QUALITY, reg. $17.25 NOW $11.75 ECONOMY QUALITY, reg. $14.25 NOW $9.95 DELUXE KRAFT DINNER 14oz.pkg.33c ROSE THREE FRUIT MARMALADE CALIFORNIA NO. I EALIFORNIA FANCY LETTUCE v 'large 24'sl9c TRAVEL SAFER GENUINE GM. MUFFLERS Specially Priced sâ€"nfififid TIME â€" 8 PM MUFFLERS 24 oz. jar 30 oz. tin 2 5C ins 41c jar 37C HEAD

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