Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 13 Dec 1900, p. 1

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“In Essentials, Unity,- z'iz Non-Essenlials, Libwt Von. 'XXIII. “6'1 3*.» . n “_ the guilt“? IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY IvIORNING-l . A“: {HE LIBERAL PRINTINGt PUBLlSHiNG HOUSE ' RICHMOND HILL, our. T. F. McMAHON. Em'l'or. J: Pnoriiinron l l BUSINESS CARDS. l ll ll ANGSTAFF. RICHIVIOND HILL. OFFICE "011.725 filo £0213“: GIoSpm bâ€"DR. L. LAWRASUN, Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ont. RICHMOND HILL. Office Hours: 8 to 10 a. in.; 12mm 2 ' p, m.; 7 to 9 p. to. dental. W'm. Rogers "Dentist, Room 12, 121 Victoria St. Toronto. Best fitting torth, also replilting, atl lowest prices. Good work. 1 DR. T. A. C Ull llllil, flentist, {Successor to Dr. Cecil Trotter) Dddfellow’s Bldg, Toronto, cor. Yonge and C(iilcge Sts., Toronto, VVill be in Richmond Hill every \Veducsduy. omcezâ€"rNext door south School. ‘13:. iii”. Cecil Eli-alter, 42.3 DENTIST. Cor. Bloo - and Sipadiiua Ave... Toronto. of Public l Telephone 3368 for appointment. .m . \ ' aluminum ' I J. T. MCElroy, VETERINARY SURGEON . â€"-ANDâ€" VETERINARY DENTIST, RICHMOND HILL, Guduato of the Ontario Veterinary College, with diploma. from the Ontario Veterinary Dental School. will visit Maple on Monday and Friday 0: each week. and Concord on Friduyi from I to 3 p. in. Gulls promptly uttendcd to Diseases of horses, cuttle and other domesticat. ed animals trnatof. by the latest and most upâ€" provod methods. F.J.GALLANUUGH, VETERINARY SURGEON, Thornhili. Calls by telephone from Richmond Hill charged to me. PALMER'HOUSE, RICHMO N D HILL, Rumorlelled. and 'l.‘Wl\' (‘ms of the must c run funds on Yuugo S'i'out. vci'v modern (-0“. chicn‘e. S:ini -2 i-cmm: {ui- comma-mull revellers. . ll'lt) lsh‘l‘l‘lndliiflx‘o for ri-li‘iiql or driving pa il2=.lii~'f.'cli<i<. or fliriiiers going. to or i‘eturni 4 I-‘-'lll moi-lief. Electric cilrs' pass the door. Livery in commotion. ERMS 6!.0') PER DAY. .9 of“ I’AIREEJLE. ., m; H -“tl‘i'i‘V-‘VSH‘V’E. ‘3 HULQA‘J shag REAPH iiioaocosiv aurora. Every i ‘ v c "1* 'l throu :lv‘nt. id cxml‘oitubic Ll, mg Money to lonu at is per cent. Telt'Thf‘l.U POE-i ' A. c. r. LAWRENCE, Bfil'TlStBI‘, Solicitor. rctcry. Eco. Suite 77 and '75 Freehold Loan Build- ings. cor. Adelaide and Victoria. Strcc 5:, Toronto. LIBERAL ()liicc. Richmond Hill on Sui umluys. 1W . {EC lid E 179‘ $7 .. ll'i I’U ELI (7,, annuisaicnnn IN T is HIGH COURT OF jUSTIL'E, (to. Issuer of It? arric re License l-Ifil I RICHPIIOND HILL POST OFFH‘E. KEN if)? {more}; 'arri'isacrs nasal Solicéiors. Moncv to loan on land and chattel mortgages at lowest mics. Aurora (-ificeâ€"llnnoved to the old post rflice. run-3 door “st of the entrance to the Ontario Fruyli. Newmnrket (itiice~'l‘hrce doors south of the past orifice. T.HEILBERT LEFNOX, (iv. STV.1\IUNG;\N, Aurora. Ncumm'ket COOK & tutu with Barristers, Solicitors, etc. I TORONTO OFFICE: No. 1, Adelaide St... East. Mr. Cock will be at Maple on Thursday afternoon of each wcc“. MONEY TO LOAN AT 0%. -, n £121,777“, 37:7 7 J - din-is, {is-{till «$3:- Buriislcrs, Soiicilors, dc 25 KING STDEmI‘ 'F‘T'l' -u‘ , tori mil-.71 kit-(\ka $96 TORONTO. Ens! Toronto Oflico, Mi. Grani's residence, \ioovli-rirlpn, cvcrv everii‘c. Thoruhiil,eccl. \Ve’ineeday from 101012. 77 7 ’\ r 1 r 7 if V77>;\777fl‘¥7‘ 7" JAE». l\i EV «’ i ON lS-SUER rumor-.35 LlC"i\'SES, ECEJGE’N Ltirrnrfis :‘mwucmmmwmum SALE Anni“, V .58 \i'eliiiigtou Place, Toronto. J. H. I’nrx'ricr. UDlOllVllle Eciiardt & Pi entice Licenseu‘Auctioneers for the County ol‘ York. Goods soul on consignment. General soles of atock.etc., promptly attended to or» reasonable runes. G.R,(:\oullling Newton Br‘:ck ent fortheubove. ' l 'ug C STOKES ‘ r) BLOUGE Stosz 1‘: Enough. Licence Auctioneers for the County of York re- Spoctfully solicit your patronage 11nd friendly nilucnm. suies attended on the shortest notice and ,1 reuaouabemtes. P.().:1duress King J. T. Suigeoii. J. R. McEwen, Maple. Weston. Saigon“ (it McEwcn, Licensed Auctiounerr. for the County of York. Sulcsuttendod to on shortest notice and at rea- son able votes Patronage solicited. .5. E). Reudmnm, Licensed Auctioneer for the County at York. Gent-ml sales of implements, Iurniturestauding timber. of”. intended on the shortest notice and nti‘ousonn‘olc rates. Putroncgr solicited. P. 0. address Maple E. strum. Linnusnd ,‘incti‘onoar for the Counties of York and Oulnrm. All sales of form Flock, dun, oh‘ tended to on the shortcut notice. and rcnsonulile rates. llIfIl‘l’Zanf‘ rm?! bailifi sales attended to. Residence Stoui‘fviile. Out WE'RIGHT BROS, Finley-Hikers 61' Embnimcrs, lllCHl'IOND HILL 8: THORNHIIL A. lurgc Slfil‘li of Funeral Furnishings kcpl at both places. 52552 “a: If"! EJEQQT f3 .. ‘1 "/39 a"; my, prawn?! $.31: ls tic-1:2 I’D; t3 “" 31-39 STREI'T ['AhT. EVEIINTU accommodation to guests. I’mnx‘d 31 i-crfiri l 3011, V. S.,‘ l 3.3;.3; - glorious autumn. 1 lln‘ I’iiiicu of \\ alcs lust August. Across the Ocean. MISS E. E. GREEN‘S ’I‘IVELFTH LETTER. Arrivin in a. strange city at. night ~onc is apt to \voiide-r whut the own day will bring forth. Now that I , come to think lhc mutter out I don’t know that Icould givc you any defin- ite idea of what. my first impressions of London were. One thing at least ' is certain, I never had experienced zip- 'pt‘OHClllllg such a City before, undl can’t say thiitl evm' want to again. The constant, rush and war of traffic from overhead uiid underground rail- ways, bosses, cubs, huiisonis, trams, curs, motors and the. thousands of people jostling cach othcr on the puvc- ments and streets, the happiness and misery, the riches and poverty, all mixed up together in a jumble, fairly stunned inc, and when 1 went down . to see the return of the City Imperial Volunteers from South Africa, my amazement can be better imagined than described. There certainly is no place for show and glitter like London, but I would no more think of making my permu- iicnt home here than I would try to cross thcAtlanticin a skiff. I shall try to give my readers the benefit of my wanderings. My entrance to the metropolis was on October 21. I left Old Dalby on the previous day, remaining in Notting- hum all night. I came “ up " to Lonâ€"I don, as the. Englishman would say, ul- lliough geographically it lies in the south-cast of England, but the idea. is that. London is the only city in the country, und consequently is the Mecca of all who live on or come to this little island. Uur route lay through a new district, and we enjoy- . ed the lwzullics of the fading leaf of it My fellow-ti-avellci-s included a lady refugee from Joliuiiiicsbcrg. and an Australian, while another bud just re: turned from Paris. and I who bud hitherw kept quiet thought. it too much of (1. good thing to hour strangers , praising the different countries they bud been in. \\'hcu my tum came I enlightened them on Unnudu, giving them u bit of my mind about that best of all lands, where Illltd spciitovcr fifteen years. They all wunicd to see , Toronto, of course, but when the ocean loomed up before them, they changed their minds uiid decided to live here, and we ported at Murylc- bone depot good friends. \‘v'heii l uiigiitcd I saw my uicccl who bud come IlUlll Shepherd‘s Bush to meet me, Once outside the station the ruin came down so gently that I thought Oh its not, worth while com- pluiniiig after fuii‘ly fine weather in the Midlands. but us I write this letter I rm reminded l have been in London overumonth and it bus ruined (luy‘ and night ever since I came. The. streets are swimming in mud and the air is choked with smoke and fog, and after you huve washed yourself six times u. day, you do it. again the seventh. The underground railway didn’tlook very tempting, but there was no alternative, so we stepped in, and such crowds of people rushing hither and thither one couldn’t. pos- sibly believe it was Sunqu for it. beat New York. The grimy darkness of the tunnels made us think of the. Iii- ferno, for to me it seemed quite hor» 1-ible. Iwas glud to get away from the din, and when I found myself at Monti-05c, sitting beside it cosy firm! and talking to my eldest brother, it? didn’t seem possible I hud come to‘ London, the city of which I had read ‘ , of others praised the-m for their brav- so much, dreamed and talked of, and where I was born. The next few days were spent in visiting uronnd Hammer-smith, includ- ing Rziveiiscourt ’ui'k, and the under- 3 ground electric ruilwuy, commonly , culch the two pciiiiy tube. ()ur ride; toukus from L'xbridgc Iload to Lhc‘I Bunk of England. You puy two pciice ‘ to any siution, drop your ticket in a slot, [illiL’ :1 lift to the platform down- ' stairs and bustle on the truiii; bang goes the gate, and you‘re off zit. once. , Ours are like the elevutcd ones in New Yorkâ€"smokers’ cui-riugc separate. Birch station is culled out uslhe cur pulls up, uiid if you want Chancery Luiic, 'liic Maible Arch, British Mu‘ scum, Bond Street, Oxford Circus, 01" Jill)‘ oi ihcse (lt‘lluls its very handy. ’l he pulls (If Iiu- station urc of white brick, and [he ubscncc of smoke from llu- Ililllis iiiukc it the cleanest under- ground ill ilm why. It was cpl-Led by A i'lll) in the Bank, Yll‘wlllg the shops and sights, Ikll‘llll‘ll :i juuiit 0111' ,b'aliliduy :il‘iviiiimii, dropping into St. l':ii..ii‘>~ i'uihmliul 1hr serucc, and fill- :lNlliilg up by standing on the stone laid lll fioiii of llzc L'uihcdrul in mem- Ul')‘ (II lllL‘ l-Hlli yuii' (if (Cum-ii \l(:â€" Lui'iu’s iI-igii. upd \i‘livrc >lu- publile ictuiiicd Ami» IL: (ind hi all ll.- blcs>.:ias - .‘Iul ll; r l': iniiziaizs h.: (1-,l”“' >- "I- .u‘i‘. J-l\l\l z,.,v' l;., ;__ .2 ,- ..": . \‘l; .«l 1‘ _.. ‘ . x V Ni . \ ‘ .. ~ ‘ 01'. Alfred Bowen, I“. T. Duvillc, \‘i'. J. : was running on time. ', lumi- plank hud beru stretched bcl ween boys just landing at Southampton per l the ss. Aurania. Our stand had been I chosen at Hyde. Park Corner to view I the procession, but imagiuc thcsur- prise and disgust of tens of thousands ' of people who had come from all parts ‘ to welcome the C‘. I. V’s. home. when ‘ a messenger on horse-buck rude . throu rh the crowds saying the steamer i was relayed by u fog, and the show was postponed till the following Mon- ‘ day. Nothingr dniintcd we proceeded ‘ to Liidgute Hill and Fleet Street, where the crowds were dcnsrsb, and when the news had become a byword, the loafers turned to the public houses ‘ and the streets wore in the hands of n howling mob who disgraced them- i sclvcs. I)l'lllll((‘nn(‘SS reigned on every i band, and it scenicd hardly safe to;l venture to the right or loft. and us the bosses had been tnkcn off their regu- lui' route we wandered to the Strand, vizi.Trufulgar Squai-e,Picadilly,Regent; St... and sighting the electric station we booked from Oxford Circus to the Bush. glad to have escaped without lllJlll'y. Being unxious to see a London crowd, I " took off “ alone on Monday, and found my way to Cheapside. I shull never Iorgct the throng as long as I live. Men and women, young and old, rich und poor, high and low, all in one solid block, and occasionally turned from side to side by the bm'scs of the Life Guards who bucked their animuls to the very utmost against pmiple’s heads or feet. The rour was dcufeiiing, and the pucking like spi‘ats in a net. Nearly all the windows had to be barricaded, and men climbed lamp posts and scaffolding only to be torn down by more fcrocions com- panions eager to see the sights. or by u policeman, who got roughly handled by the surging limb. and .I lead in the Referee that our success in Smith Africa was Bobs, and our failure to handle thc crowd in London was Bubbles, and that Inidgate Circus was presented in two acts: Number l.â€"taui-gc. , “ ll.â€"Slll';:91'y. It was no \‘VUIKIF'I' several sightseers were killed and nearly two thousand injured. I wuitcd until the soldiers came from St. Paul’s: and into. Cheap- side, and when they had passed the point I stood, I I‘(‘tlll‘ni‘d to the train and cscupcd llL’fUl'E'. the. crowds got fire. The cheering, laughing. noisy mob uctcd out of all reason. vct thousands cry, and I was much pleased to be in- troduced to one of the U. I. V’s. the next; week, when I was in Londou.‘ He spoke very nicely of several Can- udiuiis he had met at the front. and said they bud been heroes. and I was proud to hour that, us you allwcrc the day Toronto welcomed them as the best men from Puurdcberg. «I» Accidental Beat An inquest relative to the death of David W. Eyer, who was killed by a Metropolitan car on Friday morning, Doc. 7, was held in the Council Chum- bcr Monduy evening, Dec. 10, before coroner J. H. VVeslr-y of Ncwmarkct. Constable Brownlce culled out the names of the 15 jurymen einpaiicled, and illl answered to their names us fol- lows :â€"~M. Nuughtoii (forcimin), P. G. Suvuge, J. Palmer, H. A. Nicliolls, F, McCouughy, \V. Slicppiii-d,S.McBride, G. McDonald, J.H.Saiidci'son,R.Joycc, G. Kcrswill, J. Hall, T. Ludford, T. Trench. J. Gloss. Mr. J. \V. Moycs was present on be- hzilf of the Metropolitan Railway Com- puny. The witnesses, most of whom were on thccui' at the time of the accident, were iiiotormun Thus. Ryan. conduct Fciiiicll, John A. Gui-111.111, H. I). liar- iiiuii, Glciitou “'uitcs, Fred Iliivillc, H. J. Ulubinc, J. Iniics, It. Elliott, Geo. Thompson and Dr. Luiigsiail'. Thus. Ryuii, bring S\\'Ul‘ll, suid:â€"I was iimiorman on cur 31 on the morn- log of the accident in qiicstii n. I lcft i Ncwmurkct at 7.30, the usual hour and “'lu-ii reaching Lhc hill just south of Jefferson P. O. I (ilisvl'Yt-(l a horse and curt and two men . j on the cciitrc of Yoiigc bticet, ubout’ the bottom of the hill. The horse was , facing north, one mun was holdingr it by the bond, and tho Ulllt‘l' was stand- ing behind thc cart. I sluckeucd my car :1 Slllll‘l distance previous to reach» I lug: flu- sccnc of llll‘ accident as .\(llll(" llil' ruiis‘ fur :i Irmplii'aiy bridge llSl‘ll by tliusu putting biukcii simirs on tho sirr-i-l. l kin-w nothing of tho :lCL’l-c (li'lll until I heard the! cuiidiirtur's bell" to >101) uiul bulk up. Tho cur might haic been running 13 (ll‘ 2]) miles an hour pr: VllillS to rmicliiiig the bridge. illzil probably ll) lllllr’b :iii lllJlll‘ whcici ih- i’lf‘lll 'iL'-'lll'l‘/'ll. 'l'iiv- ii. r90 Was 21' I; fll‘lliflillrffl‘l:‘ ‘I\ U“ lite (1.1- l r'liwi‘lill._'. .- ui-l some sheep which crossed in front of the car. Alfred Bowen, conductor,was stand- . ing in the back vestibule of the car at the time, consequently did not see the party working on the road. Noticed a jar of the car, and looking out saw deceased lying probably 20 feet south- west of the cur. « With the exception of H. D. Hun man, the other witnesses practically gave similar evidence. and did not at- tribute uny carelessness to the motor" mun. l-Iarinuii said he hcurd the motormuii’s gong. and observed that the, horse wus frightened probably 100 feet before the collision occurred. He thought the car should have been stopped as he considered there was gieut danger. G'lcntnn VVuites said he was work~ ing on the street with deceased, put- ting stonc on the road, but could not. see Eycr, he (\Vuites) was holding the horse by the head. The general opinion seemed to be that the horse turned to the west, backed up und threw deceased against the passing car, from which he wus pitched a distance of 30 feet. Dr. R. L. Langstalf, who made, a. post mortem examination of the. body, said he found it deep scalp wound, the skull, femer and 5 ribs fractured, and the kidneys laceratcd. He considered that death was due to afracture of the skull rind laceration of the. brain. The verdict, which was signed by every juryniuii, was as follows :â€" “ \Ve find that. the lute David VV. Eyer came to his death by collision with u Mctropolitun cur on Friday morning, the 7th of December, 1900, and that his death was purely accident.- al, with no blame to beuttached to the men in charge of said car. We are further of the opinion that the. two old menâ€"namely, the deceased. David W. Eycr, and Glcnton \Vuitcs ~â€"-\‘701‘C‘ not capable of managing the horse.- which was the cause of the ac- cidciit." . Victoria. Square- The rifle club scored as follows at thcir lust practice i~ (ieo. Forester, jr . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 83 (l. P. Rcid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..73 l. McKenzie . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 W. R. Capcll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . 69 A. Quantz .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Miss Mary VVellmun has come home. to stay fora. few months with her parâ€" ents. Miss A. Hopper gave the choir a. splendid trout Friday lust. School Section No. 6 intend having an entertainment in the school-room the last school-day this year. Miss Bollu Thirsk spent Sunday lust at her own residence. Mr. Harry 0. Klinck spcnt Sunday with Mr. A. Jennings. o s. S. No. 4,'Mariiham. Report for November. JrJVâ€"Adn Hoover, Elsie Brillinger, III â€"- Maggie Cosgrove, chn. Wiiidrows, Charlie. \Villiams. Jr. IIIâ€"FosterHivkson,Ailic Ruiids. Sr. Jr. IIâ€"Ellu (losgrove, Clui'cnce Duner, loruBrillingcr. Tablets IIIâ€"Uhurlic Hoover, Gertie Nelson. Tablets IIâ€"Cluru Cosgrove, Rolph “'illiunis. Tablets Iâ€"Muggic Baker, Rolph Ba- ker, Herman Moi'tsoii. The old reliable remedy for 89mins, flinghnnn. Spiiuu, (“uan and all forum or Ilimrnl‘n. It ciircs ‘ without a blemzsh because it docs not blister. New. nun-gum, 02L, run. 10, ’93. 3,1 D153. .1. Kcnrl-lll Co. Dru <1 vâ€"l‘iill you r'n FE five 12le A rhmrdy {firing-ins. . ll‘lfLVu a (Int ii n:ilic>d. Italic I'll-mlch iii nailngilmt lime In ('uz‘h 0 fun? yi-cm‘ Ilnndirrr “am y...” / Kenlali's Illisf‘r. by Lain-1|! only Dora and llivn a iplylng ' your Spawn Cure. Ash-12 m I h’il'i' in a. l v.l l in: be Willi/nil Kendall‘s szrin ( liunanil a mist-3r In my stable. Vcry tn. viLN, A. ‘JLI'III‘S C Al'TlllEll. . Price 51. Six fn.‘ 95. A5 A llnlmen' for family use i: has no eqinl. Ask your llrllflg'lsl. far licndnil'n ' Fpnvln Cure, also “A Trculbâ€"e on the “one,” the buck (rec, or address DR. B. J. KENDALL (10., ENOSSURO FALLS. VT.

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