V...‘ . tum, paeu Hotel property ten per cehttof purchase price as deposit at time of sale and balance in thirty days. To be sold subject to Reserve Bid For further particulars apply to The Trusts and Guarantee (Con Ltd. or CASE & WEBB, their Solicitors herein. 1 Souffler, 1 Root pulper 2 Wagon jacks 1 Buggy pole 1 Coal oil drum 2 5 gallon mik cans 1 Milk vat 1 Iron kettle Water barrels 2 Wagons 1 Set sloop sleighs, with flat rack ‘ 1 Rubber tired buggy 1 Buss sleigh 1 Hoosier wagon, nearly new 1 Hoosier wagon 2 Cutters 1 Steel tired buggy 2 Gravel boxes 1 Cream separator, Massey-Harris 1 Churn, Daisy 1 Butter bowl Quantity of pulleys Quantity of chains Shovels. rakes, hoes, forks, picks, crowbars,. Doubletrees, neckyokes, 3 Sets of 7 ft log bunks HARNESS 1 Deering and McCormick binder, new 1 M.-H. mower 1 M.-H. rake 1 Massey Harris cultivator 1 Massey-Harris disc harrow 2 Sets drag barrows -4 No. 3 Wilkinson walking plows 1 No. 12 Fleury wheel plow 1 Twin, New Century 1 Scuffler, 1 Root pulper 2 Wagon jacks 1 Coal oil drum 1 Milk vat 1 Jersey cow, 4 years '1 Jersey heifer, 5 months _ FOWL 25 Pullets, 5.0. Black Minorcas 12 Hens 1 Chestnut horse, 11 years 1 Chestnut mare, 6 years 1 Bay horse, 8 years '1 Chestnut horse 12 years ‘1 Black mare, 7 years THIS SALE IS FINAL AND WILI Set heavy harness. brass mounted Set teamster’s harness, brass mount- ed 1 Set single harness AUCTION SALE of Valuable Farm Stock, Implements Furniture and Hotel Property Will Be Sold By Public Auction. Save Ymrseï¬ at our expense Richmond Street Eifgiidsi: Richmond Hill Monday, January 9, at 12 o’clock At the DOMINION HOTEL Lakeside 5280 If you will have laundry ready when driver calls, you will asaist us in giving good service. If you only have driver call when phoned fori Call up as early as convenient to insure prompt attention. Phone Orders for Our Driver, Parcels may be left at Liberal Office, Telephone 9, Richmond Hill PAGE SIX Don’t try to do the heavy parts of the fam- ily wash. Let us help you. This new plant was designed and equipped for that very purpose and can give you as much or little help as you desire by means of ï¬ve differ- ent kinds of laundry serviceâ€"all moderate- ly priced. We use only soft water and pure soaps, etc. No marking, no starching, and each wash done separately. GET OUR PRICES ON ( [1C 31 [LN'l‘ \V f) 1%}: IT WILL PAY YOU Blocks Made To Order Or From Our Stock At Yards FURNITURE CATTLE at 12 o’clock sharp the following .- HORSES l1 Set Donv harnpsg We Call In Richmond Hill District WEDNESDA Y AND SA TU RDA Y CEMENT MIXERS FOR RENT TERMS: G. S. REAMAN '. SAIGEON, Auctioneer hat Eels, Cash A quantity of stove pipes Rugs and quantity of Linoleum Oak wardrobe A number small hardwood'tables 1 Buffet fumed finish 1 Sideboard, solid oak 2 Kitchen tablesZ Kitchen cupboards 'A number of bureaus A number of dressers Number of washstands A number of rocking chairs 5 Round Vitrolite, top tables 5 lunch Vitrolite-top tables 50 Metal and wood chairs :50 Plain oak finish chairs A number of odd chairs 4 Sets bells, chimes 12 open bells Several doors A quantity of timbers HAY and GRAIN A quantity of hay A quantity of oats A quantity of buckwheat FURNITURE, FIXTURES ETC 2 Pool or billiard tables 2 Show cases 6’ x 2’ x 5’ high, solid marble base 1 Show case small glass and wood 1 Player piano, Heintzman 1 Square piano, Heintzman 1 R011 top desk and heavy swivel chair oak 4 Plate glass mirrors, 3 ft by 3 ft 1 Plate glaSS mirror, 6 ft by 3 ft. 1 Set pony harness Robes, blankets, curry combs, brushes saddles, collars, extra bridles, stable a broom 1 Stewart clipping machine 175 Ossington Avenue, Toronto. VU BE POSTPON ED Richmond Hi1. water front d springs A 1 Bed couch lst Class Honorsâ€"John Wilson, Irene Routley, Nelda Davis, Arthur III Class Hâ€"Alfred Stong, Esther Johns, (Kenneth Frisby and Philip Graham equal,) Joe Roberts, Fred Shelley, (Violet Taylor, James Grain- ger and Beatrice Hillier equal,) Doro- thy Hopper and James Chambers equal). Pass~Wesley Baker, Mary O’Brien, Fred Collins, John Murphy, Mary Kirkland. II Class H.â€"(William Brown and Floyd Beemer, equal) Carrie Hayter, Marguerite Thompson, Howard Morr- is, John Henderson, (Cecil Mabley and Aileen Beynon equal), (Philip Jones and Laura Varley equal). III Class Honors â€" Jean Boddy, Mary Paterson, Mary Brillinger, Er- ma Clubine, Bartlett Smith, Dorothy Mason. Passâ€"Victor Stephenson, Stanley Moore, Velma Carson. Ed- ward Hearn, Greta Dinner, Betty Rumble, Eunice Jared, Mildred Rand, Graham Ellis equal. Report of Form I B I Class H.â€"Edward Arnold, (Metro Kozak and Frank Mathews equal) David Vanek, Daisy Dodd, Hugh Mc- Donald. II Class Honorsâ€"(May Plewman and Margaret Jefferys, equal) Margu- erite Manley, Dorothy Duncan, Morley Sanders, Bernice Healey. The Christmas exams, yield the foll- owing report of the various forms. The names appear in order of merit. These lists do not include the names of pupils who have failed. Attend- ance during December was very irregular and any pupils who Were abâ€" sent from three or more exams. have not been ranked but appear at the end of the list for their respective forms. Reports have been mailed to parents, who are requested to examine them, sign them, and return them by the pupils by Monday, January 9. Report of Form IA Christmas Examinations 1927 Class I, Honorsâ€"Olive Wilson, Bet-‘ ty Campbell, Edna Reaman, Mae ‘ Sheppard, Margaret Trench, Isobel! McLean, (Eleanor Drury and Noreen Haworth equal,) Ruth Odlum, Leonard Fish, Lola Jones. , ,, e," ___-.e.. "mg new“. a. mum“, n.a., Dy me Lanaman National Railways. This is taken I from the architect's drawing and indicates that the group when completed will form a ï¬tting Atlantic gateway to the Dominion. The terminal will be connected with the deep water pier at which Trans-Atlantic passengers will arrive and depart. This pier possesses the most modern facilities for dealing with passengers of all classes and special provision has been made fogfhe reception and comfort of new settlers. These latter will be able to proceed from ship to train under ;helter and in CO 011. s Richmond Hill High School Christmas Exam Results Canadian National Hotel and Terminal Most of the so called friends of earth Are like the flowers so sweet at birth, But they wither and fade as time goes by, There thoughts and love just merely die. When you climb up the ladder of fame, There’s nothing too good to say of your nam But just slip down to the bottom rung, The things they say, would get you hung. Ah friendship can’t thou not be true, No matter what we say or do. A friend in need is a friend indeed, Why'dost thou rumor and scandle heed Why art thou of such fickle build, That thou loseth strength perhaps'art killed1 Just because a lie, perhaps is told, 0r because on fame one loses hold. 0 for a friend true through life, One to help through our earthly strife. One that will last’for evermore, Till death comes knocking at the door. Then when this earthly life has past, And we have gohe to rest at last. Our friendship will remain to sooth, Perhaps a rugged path to smooth. For some one who was really true, For some one who’ll be feeling blue. Because they have, lost a friend so dear. One who was thro all things near, And they long tovbe united again at last, When earthly things from them have passed Form Two THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONT. FRIENDSHIP III Class Honorsâ€"Louise Lockhart, Robert Moore. Passâ€"Howard Atkin- son, Fred Greene, Egerton Young. Not Rankedâ€"Hilda Wright, Alan White. Mac Traviss. II Class Honorsâ€"Walter Steckley, Johnston Armstrong, Jacob Koning, Nora Johns. III Class H.â€"(A. Vanek, G. Paris é M. Sims, equal). (F. Braybon, A Duncan and W. Mason equal), (L Gohn, K. Morris; C. Price). Passâ€"E Waugh, A. Wheeler, H. Echlin, L McCague equal). II Class Honors â€" M. Reaman, F. Schiller, B. Collins. Passâ€"D. Frisâ€" by, R. Marshall, J. Hillier, M. Goode L. Yerex, C. DudleyY D. Woods. Not Rankedâ€"H. Baker, V'. McLean. . Form IV I Class H-G. Plewman, J. Reaman D. Anderson, 0. Carter. II Class H.â€"(K. Braybon and R Reaman, equal) M. Simpson, (Wm Smith and S. Battersby equa1,) J Watkins, M. Mackie. Form III A I Honorsâ€"James Kerswill. II Honorsâ€"James Langstaff, Mar- garet Plewman, Laverne Wright. III Honorsâ€"Donald Hick, Tom Coveyduck, Mona Woods, Peter Sav- age. Passâ€"Mary Hickey, Dorothy Hick, Vera Morris, Lucy Savage, Mar- garet Duncan, Helen Brillinger, Mabel ~Reaman, John McLean. Not Ranked â€"Constance Mortson, Iris Thompson, Agnes Robinson, Floyd Perkins. Form III B I II Class Honors â€" G. Valliere, N. Collins. ' 2nd Class Honorsâ€"Katie Kozak, Annie Elliott, William Noble, Lillian Harris, Ruby Jefferies, Winnie Gill- ings, Elizabeth Jefferys, Isobel Farr. 3rd Class Honorsâ€"Kathleen Burns, Allan Boddy, Jean Hall, George Rick- wood, Ralph James, Alma Pratt, Dai- sy Manley, Lloyd Vanderburg, Ray- ‘mond Bollons. Passâ€"Ralph Mackie, Marjorie Fear, Irene Burns, Roy Plewman, Norman Cook, Anna Phipps Norah Tew, Arthur Walker, Christena Anderson, Harold Clark, Willie Kendâ€" all, Morris Vanek, Agnes Burnett, Leslie Tarpley. Mathews . 1 have passed. ERNEST A. CULLEY Form V name, the Canadian Nat_i9_nal Railways. This is taken .AJ 7,!" z :- The new administrative building, which was thus occupied in a manner which efficiency experts say was uni' que, has several novel features. All partitions and private offices are built of movable steel, so that the layout can be changed on a moment’s notice, or if necessary, the whole building could be converted into a factory. To add to the comfort of General Motors Temployees, all drinking fountains in the building are Frigidaire-cooled, a boon in hot weather. This modern structure replaces the original office, formerly occupied by the McLaughlin Carriage Company, of which the corn- erstone was laid in 1901. I All through the night the strong- arm squads toiled and sweated, under the weird brightness of the largest “Neon†sign in the Dominion, whose letters, new blue, now red, stretch for 320 feet along the roof of General Motors’ new building, lighting up the streets for hundreds of yards around. When dawn put the lights to shame the move was well on the way, and when the officeâ€"workers entered their new premises for the first time it was not long before telephones were ring- ing and typewriters clicking in the swirl of business once more. After putting tags on their desks, packing all their papers and supplies securely in cartons and parcels, and even tying their cushions to their chairs, the staff checked out. The in- dividual’s only duty was to see person- ally to the transfer of his own tele- phone. Then, after efficiency had done its work, began an epic of sheer manual labor. Picked men from the factory, divided into squads under foremen who knew just What to do, be- ‘gan to take furniture from the old building. A fleet of trucks was wait- ing, to rush the equipment to the bare- ly-completed structure, where other men carried it in. l } Pressure of business made it im- ‘perative that the daily routine be in- _terrupted as little as possible by this colossal task. The end was achieved by creating a special organization which carried out the move with mili~ tary precision. “Orders of the Day†were issued in advance to every one of the six hundred office workers, and desk layouts for the new building posted so that every person would know where to go. A move supervis- or was appointed in every Department one of whose duties was, to see that each piece of furniture and equipment Was tagged with the exact location al- lotted for it in the new building. The actual move was delayed only until the minute the contractors saidâ€" “Ready.†And that is the story of one of the most remarkable “moving days†in the annals of business, an overnight Odyssey which marked the transfer of the office force of General Motors of Canada, with more than 27,500 pieces of furniture and equipment, into a huge new administrative building ‘ which has been rushed to completion in less than six months to house an ever-expanding staff. | Oshawa, 0nl., January 3â€".â€"\ small army of office workers finished their day’s work one night in the building where they and their predecessors had ‘toiled for more than a quarter of a ‘century. The next day the same small army took up their duties where they had left off, sat at the same desks used the same telephones â€"â€" but in a new building several blocks away. “MOVING DAY AT GENERAL MOTORS at Halifax Galoshes for men, women, and chil- dren, in different style: and heights They are the Goodrich Hi-Press rubb. ers. Try them and you will have no other. Men’s flannel work shirts, in gray good buy at $1 35. Heavy weight, extra fine quality, wool with a little cotton mixture, combination, at $4.25. Fleece Lined, in shirts and drawers 3 good quality at $1.00. Mercury No. 98 W011 with a liééi cotton mixture, combination, at $3.50 NORMAN J. GLASS COAL HODS, STUVE PIPES ELBOWS, ASH SIFTERS, STOVES THURSDAYVJANUARY 5, 1928 Heavva Cooper’s Hardware Opens on Januâ€" ary 4th, in each 0 f S H A W’s { TWELVE BUSINESS SCHOOLS in Phone93 Richmond Hillâ€"Ont. says you can't beat Wool- nough’s Harness come in and see it when in Toronto. BLANKETSâ€"RAIN COVERS ANI MITS The Richmond Hill Furnishing Store A. C. HENDERSON PLUMBING AND TINSMITHING Hot Water Heating and General Repairs THORNHILL. ONT. Toronto. Write for t Shaw, Registrar, Bay Toronto. Professional Graduate of Owen A. Smiley Studio. CONCERT EN TERTAINER AND TEACHER ADDRESS Boyle Studio J. J. CLEMENTS PAINTER AND DECORATOR [I‘hornhill â€" â€" â€" â€" â€" Ontario Geo McDonald VICTORIA SQUARE Telephone Stouffville 6116 Estimates Cheerfully Given Wall Paper Supplied if Desired PAINTER&DECORATOR H. FORSTER Estimaies Cheerfully Given For work anywhere in the district. Just received another shipmentof H. Woolnough Phone Elgin 6980 Cor. Queen and Ontario Streets Toronto. McClarey’s M iss_ Marguerite Boyle Elocutionist Thornhill MEN'S UNDERWEAR J. J. Deane Glass and Glazing etc. Government. Municipal and Corporation Bonds 6 Bought, Sold and "‘ Exdunged Telephone 54 E 1% All businesastricdy conï¬dentinl RUBBERS Phone Ring 33 Private Phone: 78 Woodbridge 0.0 Calendar. W.R. ' and Charles, St. style, from