VOL. XXX. "In Essentials, Unity; in Non-Essentials, Liberty; in all things, Charity." _ RICHMOND HILL, ONT., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1.907 [Single copies, jets} No 13 '3" 9 ,.Z .,' H “ oily: gum: IS PUDLISUEI' EVERY BHURSDAY lv’fORNING AT'I‘lIE LIBERAL PRINTING & PUBLISHING HOUSE RICHMOND condom. I‘. F. McMAHON, Emma a Pnornxmon BUSINES. CARDS. . m... 09.. _ H. W. ‘AIIIIER’S‘IIN, ll) (3 In ti Ht. Cor. Carlton and Youge Sts , Toronto \‘b'ill he ii. Richmond Hill on \Vcd- nosdny of ouch u'uok. Ofï¬ce, next door north of Stand- ard Brink. OIIi-m. IIoursâ€"â€"3.30 a. m. to 5 p. m. e‘flmrlsxary JOHN R. CAMPBELL, VETERINARY SURGEON, 'i‘hornhill. Gills by telephone from Richmond Hill charged to me. J. H. SANDERSGII'. VETERINARY SURGEON RICHMOND HILL calls by d:Ly and night promptly at- tended to. .A Fm .1, II. P: entice. Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Yo 1; duo.“ sold on oonsigumsut General sales was eta nromptly uncalled to at reasonault rakes Rdsnlonce Uniouville G R (Inkling, Newton Brook,a.gentf0r the cbsxs J K McEIven “lesion Sitiglfou a; NicEwen, J T Suigeon, M190 . I - 1 n ‘ ' Liz's-mast] \Iu trousers Ior the County of York. 8.3.0.1 uncullsJ to on shortesbnotivennd 8. ren- smunle rates Pncronage solicited I). G. BLOEIGEI, Li-snse Auctioneer for theCounty of Yor‘: re- .pomfilly solicits your patronage and friendly ndusuce sales :LtbP'ldsd on the shortest. notice 5111 nt- rsusonabemtes. P. ().n.dd..ross King . “#964 WRI “BROS, Undornnkors & Embalmers. RICHMOND HILL & THORNHILL A large stock of Funcrul Furnishing kept at. both places I I Plamst Instruction in Piano-playing and . Them-y Pupil of A. S. Vogt, Mus. Doc. (Piano), and J. ll. Anger, F. R. (P. 0. (Theory). DR. s. .I. Bovn‘ RICHMOND IIILL, ONTARIO Having a complete X-rny and static electricity apparatus, I am ableJo locate foreign bodies in the body, and examine fractures of bonus. Also to treat. NERvoUs DISEASES, (Tnuomc RHEUMATISM, Monmn Gnow'rus. such as Cillh't‘l‘S. etc. Being n. graduate of Mom-field‘s Eye Hospital, England, I um prepared to examine the interior of the vycs for disease, and test. for glasses. If a patient should require glasses I order them for him. Nose and throat work a» specialty. Oï¬ice convenient to the Metropoliâ€" tan and C. N. 0. Railway stations. If Money to Loan. .mm mohair T Hangman LENNI‘X Barristers suul solirltm's. Money to loan on land andchattel mortgages“ lowost rates Auroraomceâ€"Remo\ ed to nbe‘ old post. omen one door west. of the entrance to trim Ontario Bunk Newman-Ref ou‘iI-eâ€"‘I'hree doors south of the p m: nlliue (i A HINTS. 81 V Manon: New market Danton, Dunn & Boultbee l"..-.rrislers, Solirlors. Etc. NATIONAL TRUST (SHAM BEIIS 20 KING ST. E., TORONTO, Canada. FRANK DEXToN, K. (I. llgunmz'r L. Dr‘s): W. MULUCK Burnout Phono Muin (Ill. Hulock, Lee, Milliken & Clark BursisLoxs. Solicitors, Etc. DOMINION BANK CHAMBERS, \V. Cox-nor Kingdz Yongc Streets, TORONTO. Private and Trust Funds to loan at lowest current rates. S. G G 8 LindseyJi C A G J.“ Lawrence W Ridout Wadsworth Lindsey. Lawrence £2 W adswor‘th. Barristers, Solicitors. Notaries, M. Home Life Building (formerly Free hold Loan Bldg), loz. Adelaide &. Victoria SL9“ Toronto. J. M. LAING Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Richmond Hill Oflicc. south-oust rur- nor of Lorne Bldg., every Thursday afternoon. Phone Main 2984 Toronto Oï¬ice, 36 Toronto strevt. MONEY TO LoAN AT LOWEST RATES. WILLIAM 600K BARms’rrzn, SoLECITou, NOTARY, ETC. _, Toronto Ofï¬oo, 33 Richmond St. “Fest, \Vosloy Buildings. Richmond Hill Ofï¬ce, Stundnrd Bank Building, every Suturduv after- [100". Maple, Thursday uftornuon. Money to 1mm at. Five Per Cent (57;) JAS. N E‘NTON ISSUERMARRIAGE LICENSES, :‘Elsfï¬-IN Ruins; MI: - IfEEFY. NOIDX RY PUBLIC. CnMEXSEXOREk in run HIGH COURT OF jUS’I‘ICE, &c. Issuenof Marriage Licenses. RICHMOND HILL POST OFFICE. Iiiâ€"A NIEHoLLS NOTARY PUBLIC Commissioner, Convoyoncer, etc. Insurance, and Real Estate lssuvr of Marriage Licenses. Richinonc. Hill I. EDWAIID FRANCIS NOTARY PUBLIC CORIM'ISSI UNER, CONVE‘.’ A NCER. ETC. AGENCY ROYAL AND BRITISH AMERICA ASS. COS. REAL ESTATE, ETC. THORNHILL THE PALMER HOUSE Every accommodation for the. travelling public. Good rooms for Commercial Travellers. Attentive floney to loan, at ï¬ve per cent. stablemfln- Interess on ï¬rst mortgageâ€"â€"f.u-m properl 3‘. Apply 45 t-f THE LIBERAL OFFICE. Harry ‘VV right PROPRIETOR. ' "'nsmu W. Curry, K. C., Opens Campaign HIS PLATFORM PURITY I A Successful Meeting a / The first. gun in tho Libm-ul c-un- paign in East York was fired by the cundidnte. Mr. J. \V. (Furry, K. (L. who mldi rssrd a gathering in the new Anglican mission church, Ashdule are. on Saturday. Mr. Curry scored a. vcry (locitlvd Surncsx. Although among those prosont Were a numbcr of the supporteI-snf the. opposite party, ho. fore Mr. Curry concluded his speech the men-ting was entirely with him. This preliminary success that nugurs wall for the future was no doubt due to the strong attribute he took in re- gurd to purity in elections. If he ‘coulll not be returan by an honest vote he did not wish to be returned at :1â€. “If,†he snid,"it comes to my knowledge that there has been corrup- tion on my behalf and I am electod,l there neod be no election petition, be- cause I will resign.†lie also strongly urged the necessity for the revision of the proI-vduro in the administration in civil law, and the making of some-t body responsible for procedure in . criminal cases. Referring to Mr. Starr’s report dealing with the. lice-n- siug law, Mr. Curry condemned gov- ernment by commissmn as showing on unforgivuble weakness on the part of those whom the people had placed in power and an inability to perform their functions. Mr. J. F. Ross, Chairman 01 the local Reform Association, was in the choir. and in opening the pIoceedings I said he was sure that, in Mr. Curryi they would find the right man to rep- I resent a progressive district. Mr. J. \V. Curry in opening his ud- ‘ l dress, said that, although he was proud I to stund in the position ofa candidate, he wished it. to be undcrstood that the position had sonth him and not he the position. At the some time he must admit that ln- was glad to have been given the opportunity. because he was sinccrrly (tedious to be of scr- \‘ico to the- riding and to the Province. He. believed that, the yours he held spent in the svrviye of the people as Crown Attorney had given him vulâ€" unhle expel ieuce which would enable him to be of sorvico to the community. He was one of those who belicved that. if the VUlCl‘ of the people spoke with untramnwllod honesty it \vns as near the voice of nut ure and of God as they could get it. It. was his intention to treat tho electors whom he desired to represent. with norfoct honosty. He had sen k‘Il the connnunity to the best of his ability. He knew that in the pnst ho bud murle mistakes, and he was not going to promise (but in thc future he Would not make others. but whatever he did would be done in what he Considered the best inteiests of them all. There were [many things that. re- quired attention. ll. Was in his mind that the laws bore more hardly on one class in the community than they did on another. He did not believe Ihut the wealth of Canada was not to \be given to those who bud made it. He belieVed (but a share should be- long to those without, Whom the great. deévelopement they saw could not have taken place. In oI-dcr that the necL-sszu y rhungr might be mode in the laws it was requisite _thaLt they should have in the Lc-gislature men who had had no opportunity of ascer- taining the vital needs of the people. (Applauso.) Ho had not come there for the purpose of laying down any platform for the Liberal port-I, but so far asthe Liberal party woul curry out. those ideas which he believed to be right he was with it heart and soul, There were things which ought to be done, and if the party to which he be- longed Would not do them. then he: would strive to hove them done by {hell-opponents. (Cheers) The duty ofu representative of any constituen- cy is to act in the interests of the poo- ple. If legislation of a useful kind were brought. in by a party in opposi- tion to his own the representative ought to have courage enough to 1 stand up and say that it was good and help in working out the details. Such I a man who made the interests of the. people his first object, would have us ' much honoriu his seat in the ranks of the Opposition as he would if he were Premier. Proceeding. Mr. Curry said no doubt they would have a gentleman fiom the other side seeking their suffrages. So far as he knew, their present rep- resentative was without reproach. \Vhat he wanted themzto do, how'evvr I most. \vnstusee that every man went to tho polls, that every man should excr- ri-w. the grout, heritage of the fran- chise, no matter for whom he voted. No bad \vorn no man‘s collar, and did notiIm-ud todo so. llr did not. in- tent to bring any campaign fund fI om outside into tho rlding. and he would be prepared lo let any mun know what. his expenses Wore at. any time. Each pill'ly had been charged with corruption and he hnd no doubt that I-zu-h haul been pretty nearly equally ' lmt them, however. In Liber» guilty. .115 My to keep clean their skirts and My to ole-2m their own house before I they found fault with their neighbors. ' Hc (lid not want the- vote, of the Inqu who folt (but ho was entitled to be paid lllUnt'y for it. because if he were t'll‘ClE‘d by bought vote-s he should rep- resentnot the constituency, but the. mun who had piovided the money. and sooner or later he would be called upon to deliver tho goods. That, was a position in which ho did not propose to be placed. Speaking of civil sorvico reform. Mr. ('urrysnid it was one of the things thatought to come. Because a. man supported him and he was :1 supporter of a Government that bud good gifts to give he had no more right. to give those positions away to his friends than he. had to give away the timber, the minerals and lands of the. Prov- ince. Those positions belonged to the people, and they should be ï¬lled by those best competent to serve the peo- ple. without regard for party uï¬ilia- tions. The country should not. be gov- erned by commissions. Acommission was something to hide behind. A Government should be strong enough and manly enough to do right, and then thI-y would need no commissions to tell them what. was right. Ameudmentfor the civil law was another matter to which Mr. Curry drew attention. There was no more need for two-thirds of the existing procedure, he said, than there was for :5. horse to have two tails. III the udmin'strution of the crim- inul luw alsot ere was need for re- form. The rich man seldom suffered any hardship. IL was the mun with few friends and who had to Work with his two hands fora living that suffered He knew whereof he spoke, and he had long thought, particularly in the city of Toronto. that there ought tobe somebody absolutely re- Spunslllle for the issue of crimiunl plo- cedureuguinst the individual. They had also to deal ,with the question of great combinations, which rrnlly were In form of legalisz lubhery. The trodes unions Could do much, and he wished it to he understood that so long us the trade unions acted proper- ly they bud his support. As he had advised those young Woan in the telephone strike, he ndvised all trade unions not to put, lbeumelves in the wrong, and with the danger staring him in the face of being called 11 Social- ist, he would suv that no man ever could have. gathered woullh but for the existence of the community. In a recent I-I-port it had been rocommen~ (led that. the licensing law should be placed under the control of :I. commiss- ion. HIs judgment was absolutely against that. Those who were placed in power by the people. should have the courage and strength. the honesty and the ability to udministvl' ull the departments fairly, and in so for as they failed in that regard the peo- ple should withold their confidence. Speaking with regard to the recent. cbaLngein the lemle-Isbip of the Lib- eral p.u-ty in Ontario, Mr. Curry said that it would have. been I). demand greater than the Liberle party ought to have made to ask Hon. Goo. P. Graham not to accept a position in the Dominion Government. The Hon. A. G. MaCKny had been selected as louder, and he was plt‘puX'f’Ll to follow him in those things in which his judgment said he was Iight. IIe re- served to himself the right to oppose Mr. Muciiny in everything in which his indgment said he was wrcng. and in such a. case he should place himself in the hands of the electors. Addxesscs were alsogiven by Messrs. A. J. Reynolds, F. W. Lyondeund \V. I‘-‘. Summerhnyrs, the latte-r urging nll electors to take. immediate steps to see that their names were on the rug- l:IK‘I‘. â€"-â€"â€"oooâ€"â€"â€" Trial (lutmrh treatments on» being mniled out free, on It‘qllr’sl. by Dr. Shoop, Racine, \‘Vis. These tests are. proving to the pvoplvâ€"without a. pen- nv's costâ€"the great vuluc of this scien- tific prescription known to dI-uggists everywhere us Dr. Shoop’s (’Htarrh Remvdy. Sold by \V. A. Sanderson. _â€"â€"â€".o Edgeley. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. “Watson of 1's- lnidgo. visited friends here and at “‘oodbridge on Sunday and Monday. The Rev. Philip Jones will pl'l‘m'h :x sermon to the Chosen Friends on Sun- d:l)‘.ternoon, October 6. Come and heir him. Mr. A. Eggs and Miss Locke \isiL~ cl Toronto friends on Sunday. Scarlet fever has broken out in our V , ‘ nei hborbond. Only one case. so far. a r. and Mrs. J. G. McDonald and. l children of Maple, visited friends here on Sunday. ' 'l‘hc Eanrth League held an ico cremn social on Tuea ay evening. All lmd a good time. Mr. and Mrs. W. Road visited on Saturday and Sunday with friends git, Kettlcby. Mr. Ernie Brown of the T. Eaton- Co.. Toronto. visited over Sunday at his home here. . Mr. Norlmm \Villiams and a friend Iof Toronto, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. M. Boyton. Mrs. Jackson and Corn. visited To- ronto Junction friends on Saturday. \Vc are pleased to see Mr. Archie Browuloe’s smilin countenance in our midst again. e has left, the rail- : road und is going to the form. We are going to lose Mn, Thos. ,Johuston. He hus leased a farm on ' Victoria Square. M “The Blood ls'l‘ho Life.†. ,' Science has never gone beyond an above simple statement of scripture. But It. has illuminated that statement and‘ given It a. meaning ever broadening with the Increasing breadth of knowledge. When the blood is "bad" or impure 18 Is not alone the body which suffer: through disease. The brain ls also, - ny an evil deed or lmpm‘e',‘ ctly traced to tho F ul lm urob e e Iedlc l i Pierce’s Go e .u i s d thereb curing, pimples. blotches. eruptlons and; other cutaneous aflectlons, as eczema. fetter, or salt-rheum, hives and other manlfestatlons of lmpure blood. 6) © O O © 0 ‘ In the cure of scrofulons swellings, on» lsrged glands, open eating ulcers, or: old sores, the “ Golden Medical Discovery "has performed the most marvelous cures. 13. cases of old sores, or open eating ulcers, It is well to apply to the open sores .Dr. Plerce’s All-Healing Salve, which posv sesses wonderful healing potency when used as an applicatlon to the sores In con- junction wlth the use of “Golden Medical Discovery" as a. blood cleansing consti- tutional treatment. If your drugglst don‘t. happen to have the “All-Healing Salve " In stock, you can easily procure It by incloslng ï¬fty-four cents In postage stamps to Dr. R. V. Pierce. 663 Main St, Buffalo, N. Y., and It will come to you by return: post. Most drugglsts keep It as well as the "Golden Medical Dlscovery.‘ © © © © (9 ' @ Ir You can’t. afford to accept any mediclna of mUmm/m. composition as a. substitum for “Golden Medical Discovery," which 13 a medicine or KNOWN COMPOSITION, having a. complete llst of Ingredients In plain English on its bottlswrapper, the name being attested as correct under oath. Dr. Plerce’a Pleasant Pellets regulars and lnvlgonte stomach. liver and lnwell. AGENT FOR . , London and lLancashire Ass. 00. The London Mute :ual and British ‘Amerianire Ins. Cos. and DEERIN G Farm Implements l ! l I i l GMSS RICHMOND HILL