Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 16 May 1895, p. 1

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"73%. the Palmer House) Stoufiville Markham . Mt. Albert Woodoridge . Kleinbnrg .A (filetonu A Store 20x40 it With dwelling attached 24128 n. to rent in the Village of Unionville. In me Stole are show windows, 7 ft. square. 4 counters â€"1,;In.ss mp c )unbar. The buildings are two stories, with hxgh ceilings. Cellar underneath the huuse. SmreJmuse for feed and grain 201160 feet. Located between Wobbar’s hv tel and the past. office. she best business stand in the vi!- age. ‘Pussussiou can be given :36 onceA Amara. lsc,8th, 16th, and 22nd Richmond Hill ..... 9th and Nth Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, with diploma from the Ontario Veterinary Dental School, will visit Maple on Monday and Friday of each week, and Concord on Friday from 1 to 3 p. In. (Jails promptly attended to Diseases of horses. cattle and other domesticat- ed animals treated by the latest and most ap- proved methods. Reliable Gum Applications used when l-S‘Gec your Cheap Teeth of Robinson Apply to quouvilla RESIDENCE Glazwr, Grainm' and Paper- Hanger. 8 to 10 a. m..; and 6 to S p. m. W. HEW/ISON, Also dealer in Gmceries and other Staple Artie-lbs. Pnoes ngut. l’ucronaze Solicited. '2} EE LIBERAL J. T. McElroy, VETERINARY SURGEON A. L. SKE W. ROGERS, DENTIST, , ,' ‘ H “ @119 533111: m IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING THE LIBERAL PRINTINM PUBLISHING HOUSE RICHMOND HiLL, ONT. T. F. McMAHON. Store 65 Dwelling VOL. XVII. D R. LAN GSTAFF. W. J. WILSON, M. D., RICHMOND HILL, Ont. OFFICE HOURS WWW Addrsss A ROBINSON £.D.S. Aux-018.0112. A little east of Parkdale station, over W. Collins‘ store, corner at Queen and Northcote Avenue, “'nu-h-Nfiaker 6c Jeweller. 8&010a.m.; 6t08p.m. VETERINARY DENTIST, RICHMOND HILL, RICHMOND BUSINESS CARDS. T0 RENT. TORONTO VIF£&!Z@@ £19 per annum, in advance] HOUSE PAINTER, OFFECE HOURS Emma & Paomumon )ct. llbh, 1894 USED BY Dr. A. Robinson. wettriuary SURGEON DE NTIST‘ â€"-mnâ€"â€" ileum. aim. _.18th , . .Qflth ~ 14th ..28th JEN] .30th RICHMOND HILL SALEM E HIL L if Sunday. 215k 0! each month each month do ECKARDT la-Li required Every accommodation to guests. Board Der day Thisfiue hotel is fitted up with all the m‘nr‘ern appliances for health and comfort. Best brands of liquors and cigars. Sample rooms for com- mercial travellers. 'Bussos meet all trains. Rates $1.00 per day. Barristers, Solicitors, 860. Toronto Officeâ€"No.15 Toronto Street. Richmond Hill Office open every Saturday. Licensed Auctioneers for the County of York,re- Bpectfully solicit your patronage and friendly influence. sales attended on the shortest notice and a reasonabe rates. P‘ 0. address King Licensed Auctionser for the County of York Sales attended to on shortest. notice and at. tea.- sonablerates. Patronage solicited. Reuidenco Maple Licensed Auctioneers for the Countlea of York Ontario and Peel. Goods sold on consignment Generalaales 0 stock. em" promptly attended to at reasonable rates. Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York. General sales of implements, tumicIn-efimuding timber. etc., attended on the shortest notice and at reasonable rates. Patronage aolicited. P. 0. address Maple. MONEY T0 LOAN AT LOWEST CURRENT RATES Collections in City and Comm-v promptly attended to. Money to loan. J C STOKES THE PALMER HOUSE RICHMOND HILL. HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, &c. Issuer of Marriage Licenses. A G F LAWRENCE MISS c. HARRISON, DRESS - MAKER, RICHMOND HILL. A - CALL - SOLICITED. Mmggg .9 yummy, Toronto Officeâ€"34 Bank of Commerce Buildmgs, 19 King Street West. I'homhillOfficeâ€"PostOffice every Wed- nesday from [0 to :2 a. m. Unden‘lakers a: Embalmers, Funeral Fulnlsiiings Always on Hand SALEM ECKLBDT. Unmnvine. 1w. TEEFY. NOTARY PUBLIC, LAWRENCE & URMISTDN. 011 good Falm Propertv at low rates or interest. No. 1, Adelaide Street East, Tommo Telephone 9384 Mr. ’1‘. Berhert Lennox will be at Kelly's Hotel Richmond Hi1) everv Wednesday, for the trans- action of business. ROBINSON, LENNOX & MACLEOD COOKI MACDONALD &B RIGGS, Bloney to Loan 6.1}. S . LINDSEY E9 émmm @fifigfi wwm, BARBISTPBS, SOLICITORS AND NOTARIEB. LINDSEY & UNDSEY, RICHMOND HILL POST OFFICE. J. R. MILLER Pacific Buildings. 23 Scott St., Toronto. Barristers. Solicitors, &c. 158 xma STREET EAST. TORONTO Barristers, Solicitors. Notaries and Con veyan cars. WRIGHT BROS, Ecknrdt a: PI entice, Barristers, Solicitors. Notaries TORONTO AND AURORA. Stokes & Blougln. .l. D. Readman, COMMISSIONER IN THE J. 'l‘. saigeon, RICHMOND HILL, THURSDAY, MAY 16. 1895. $.43an JOHN KELLY. Pronhietor‘ “In Essentials, Unity; in Nonâ€"Essentials, Liberty ; in all tlziazgs, Charity." W S ORMISTON, L L B I}. .Y. B. DUNCAN LYON LIED 5E Y J. H. PRENTICE. Carmine. Money to Loan D BLOUGH Sir Richard used the qovernmvnt’sowu figures to prove that under the present high customs tarilf you are taxed $60,- 000,000 a. year, which includes the amount yuu annually pay into the treasury in customs duties and the tribute you pay into the pockets of the manufacturer where you are forced to purchase goods of domestic manufacture, protected by a duty ranging from 30 to 70 per cent. and upwards. Another week has come and gone and 1 have no doubt that many of you, those who have not been made too poor to use sugar in your tea nnd cofi'ee, have, during the week, had a. forcible illustration of the increased taxation reckless expendiâ€" ture of our public moneys has necessitat- ed. The fact is you paid more for your sugar this week than you did last, a fact every housekeeper in Canada must have realized. and there must be a reason for it. “The primary question to ask your- self,” Sir Richard says, Is “ how does my presert financial position and how do my present surroundings and my future pros- pects, compare with my position and sur- roundings of ten years ago? Am 1 going ahead. or am I drifting behind ‘I Could I realize as much to day for my farm as I could eight or ten years ago i ” This, Sir Richard says, is the starting point; satisfy yourself on these points one way or another, and then proceed to look for the reason to which may be at- tributed your plesent position, whether it has Improved or whether it has been rctrogade. in black and white by those who are working at Ottawa. to expose the in- justices of which you are the Willing and easy victims. The customs house oflicer does not enlighten you. nor does the vendor of the domestic goods you buy remmd you at the big slice he is taking Of course whisky received a. little shock, but it can stand it. They say the Minister of Finance does not use whisky (a prohibitiunist), so he, of course. will be indifferent as to how much duty is imposed on that much used and much abused commpdityi In connection with Foster I must not forget to tell you that to the amusement of some of his heartless and unsympa- thetic colleagues who in the past he has accused of looking too closely after their relatives, he has been caught working the same racket and not in homeopathic doses either. Of this you will hear more directly. Another case of a government utficial holding government moneys for years to the knowledge of the Minister of the de- partment has come to light and is to be investigated. In this case it is F. Hamel, assistant chief engineer of the Public Works department. Minister Ouimet. when asked about it before the public accounts committee, said it was only a trivtal offence, at which statement even John Haggart laughed outright. There 75 no love lost betwéen Haggart and Ouimot. The latter remembers the way Haggart followed up his (Ouimet’s) cousin, St. Louis, of Curran bridge scandal, until pulnical pressure called a truce. Returning to the House we find that the work of the past week reflects but little credit uan the government. They are making a desperate effort to win a lost. race; to remain Inst ground and to come in ahead on the home stretch. But they don’t own the winning horse this time and they cannot jockey the other fellows. Sir Richard Cartwright's criticism of Foster’s budget speech was one of the most complete and efl‘ectnal arraignments of the government’s policy that has ever been listened to in the House of Com- You do not appear to realize these facts nor the extent. to which you are be- ing rubbed under our iniquitous tarifl' until the facts are plainly laid before you Anyway, after all Minister Foster told you last session of his intended economy and retrenchment, his expenditure got ahead of him; hence the burden of tax- ation is increased to pay for his extrava- gance, and the interest we owe in Eng- land on the money we borrowed to pay for what is now called “ Foster’s Bridge in York.” Well we now find this immalculato one caught in a job that reflects anything than credit upon those responsible for it, the Fredericton bridge deal, and the ex- pose is nuts for the political giants in the Cabinet whom Foster has so often re- pruved for their boodling propensities when contrasting his clean record with their dirty state. mona Do you know that some of Foster’s colleagues in the Cabinet really enjoy seeing him “ getting it in the neck,” as the saying goes. He has always posed as such a saintly sort of cuss, a man who would roll up his silver coin in tissue paper, rather than carry it losely in his pocket, lest by wearing away of the precious metal the government might lose something by its depreciation, so honest was he. Our Ottawa Letter. out of you. You pay your money, but you never question how much a high pro- tective tarilf has added to the cost of the articles you purchase, whether at home or abroad. But what is this statement we read in the government press of the tip that the sugar rlfiners received that the duty was tn be increased. Then again we read of certain wholesale grocers having received a kind hint of what was coming. The Citizen, the government organ. on tho 6th inst., in referring to the wholesale grocers of Hamilton, says: “ Nearly all the wholesale grocers had received a hint that the duty on sugar Would be raised, and all had a large at \ck on hand." Now will any farmer or consumer of sugar say this is a fair deal. The duty was raised, as Minister Foster says, to raise more reVenue. The favored whole- sale men are warned to put in a. large atonk before the duties go into effect. Mrs. Elizabeth Line, one of our oldest residents, died at the rezidence of Mr. R. Watson. Fisherville, on Wednesday of last week, at the advanced age of eighty- eight yams. The funeral took place from her late residence m Maple to Sherwood burying ground on Friday. Sam; at those who have subscribed to the Mechanics’ Institute are wondering why it is not making more progress. Some of the books are already purchased, and it is hoped that the necessary num- ber of subscribers will soon be obtained so that evervfhinq will shortly be in run- ning order. The two year old child of Mr.and Mrs. J. Hadwen died on Tuesday morning. The parents have the sympathy of this community in their bereavement. Some people think thut. the correspond- ent is “ done up” this Lime. Nut 3 bit of it; he is always on [mud with the latest. news. Some Lima ago the correspondth to The Leader uskud where Sebastupol was. Last seen Sunday night swinging on a garden gate. H We noticed in the correspondence to The Leader that Teutonis building anew side walk. Authorities say it. is for the express accommodation of Mr. Cranefeet as he goes to band practice. Butter Milk George, from Creamery Tow“, paid a. call in upr hung“. Trouble in St. John's Ward over the pinnacle. Polics ought to investigate. Sebaatopol thinks a. stone one is needed. The result is that while on his large stock he has no increased duty to pay, he charges his farmer and other consuming customers the amount of the increased duty. The government gets no more revenue, although the consumer has to pay the increased rate to which the whole- sale man has advanced the price of the goods. The case is a clear me. No one but the government could give the hint. to the wholesale men. The Citizen puns it modestly when it says “ nearly all ” the wholesale men were given the tip. It would really be interesting to know where the distinction was drawu when the 20% ernmeut gave this valuable tip. It is hardly to be supposed that they would give a tip to their political enemies. Anyway it is for you to say whether or not the government, according to the statement of their own organ, has dealt aquarer with the farmer and other con- sumer's whose Vole they are now bidding for. Mr‘ M. Letscheiof the Deaf Park Re- corder, Was in town on Tuesday, calling on some of his friends. The cold wave which passed over this village, bringing Jack Frost. with it, was very busy on Sunday evening lash The pease and bafley and eafly garden stuff suffered cenmderably from his hands. Our local horsemen are seen speeding ou the madam-Sam. Clock with his favor- ite Flnssie T., N. Spiker and his Marion K.. T. Jones and his Lady Bell. Their enthusiasm was cousidurubty dampened by the appearance of Mr. Leek, of Mqu ham, With his Little MinnieKnight. Thé'pruprietur «(the boarding houseis busny engaged painting the parsonage with white-wash. Messrs. Bush and McCormack. of Maple, paid a visit to our town on Sun- day evening last. Mr. Jacob Riddell was busy planting shingle nails last week on Mr. Stung’a barn, near Edgely. V W'e regret “thin the correspondent to The Leader is so high in the world that he can’t notice the difi‘ereuce between a. roller and a bicycle. Mr. and Mrs. G. Smith were; visiting friends in Pickering 9n Sujday; Mr. M. Watson intends to erect a large barn on the 5th, near Lillie Avenue, S. Walker, of Testuu, has the mason work, and is busily at work. Sherwood Maple Monday, May 27th, 1895, All parties interested are hereby reques take notice and govern themselves gccordmgjyfi Richmond Hm, May 14th, 1855 MUNIGIPALITV 0F VAUGHAN Is an 1894 machine, and is practically the only >Warshing Machine in the market. The following is among scores of testi- monials relative to the Stong Washer: Kleinburg, August 29, 1894. The Washer purchased from you is tho quickâ€" est, cleanest and the easiest worked washer 1n the market. No washboards required. MR8. ED. Mcuv’mnmom I}. is the ln't‘est, simplest, hugs-egg?“- chine up to date, and no house should be without one. Richmond Hill. J. J. LUNAU. Agent, PRICES AT PARMEES' WAGGONS. Wheat, white, per bush... 0 86 Wheat, red. per bush . 0 83 Wheat, goose, per bush. . 0 83 Oats. per bush .. Peas, per bush Baflav, net bush . kaeysgxsr lb ..... Dressed ogs. per cwt. Geese, per lb ........ (thickens. per pair . Ducks. per pelt . . I . . Butter. in pound rolls. Eggs. fresh ............. Potatoes, 1» 1- bag Apples, per bbl Hay. clover Hay. timothy Straw, sheaf... qsquoooooomcooo 28338858838w58‘6 FITZ ERIN by Hodgeu, dam by Old Erin Chief; g. d. by Star Davis. American standard bred; g. g. d. by old imp. (T. B.) Lapidist. TERMSâ€"T0 insure. $8; single leap. S4. H. QUETI‘ON ST. GEORGE Oak Ridges, May 16th. 1895. Toronto Addressâ€"6'23 S adina Ave», near Har- bor St. The stung Washer MRS. WELLS, DENTIST, RICHARDSON HOUSE, MAPLE. PRICE,$5; Sold on approval DAVID HILL, Agent, We Sell Fibre Chamois. ANDREWS & BAILEY, THE FINEST TEA R IN THE \VOELD FROM THE TElliPLANT TO THE TEA C " Monsoon" Tea. is packed under the supervision ofthe Tea grmvcrs, and is a4vcrtiscd and sold b them a: a seam Ieofthe best quahties of Indian and eylon Teas. or that wagon they see that none bur. thc Vcl‘)’ fresh leaves go tnto Monsoon packages. That is why " Monsoom' the perfuct Tea. Can be sold at the same prize as inferiur tea. It iscfut up in sealed caddies of% 11)., x 1!). and 5 lbs . an sold m three flavours at 4°C.. 5°C. and 64c. If 'our grocer dm‘s not troop it. trll him to \vrhe In ST EL. HAYTER & CO.‘ H and :3 Front 5!, East, Toronto. THE COURT OF RI . ‘v- ".7... nu .. ssessment Rolls of the jiggvhship of VsALughga ‘r the year 1895, will be held at the Town Hall PUBLIC NOTICE ls! “’cdr.esday Each Month. IN ITS NATIVEiPUFUTV LD ST TEA ‘HE Nor. Trotting Sire , STONG, Woodbridge, Proprietor. THE PERFECT TEA Enruutu “markets. [Single copies, 3 cts. At 10 o'clock a. m JAS. M. LhquNCE, Clerk of Vaughan. lay 14th, 1895. 46-2 VISION for revising the e‘Tgyvnship of, Vaughan wwmmmswm U0000060 heggby requested to Markham. 050 060 0 15 010 050 175 750 1000 750 MAPLE No. 46 %&&n 0000 0 65 Cm 1 m1% 0003

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