Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 17 Jul 1930, p. 3

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'All Kinds of Boot and Shoe Repairing Neatly Done Good Workmanship. Prompt Service. Shop in Winterton’s Old Stand anAge Street Telephone_ 15§5. Alrlvti-fiéks insured for Public Liabil- ity and property damaged. Express and Long Distance Moving Sand and Gravel Delivered Dump Trucks for Hire By Hop}- or Contract Office hours: 9 to 11 a. m. 6 to 8 p. m., and by appointment. Ofice: Centre and Church Streets, Richmond Hill Phone 24. DRS. LANGSTAFF North Yonge St. - Richmond Hill DB. ROIIPH L. LANGSTAFFâ€" Oficn hours: 8:10 am. and 6: 8 p.m. DB. LILLIAN 0. LANGSTAFFâ€" (Diseases of women and childun/ 0H“ hours: 1: 3 p.m. DR. w. SALEM CALDWELL (M.O.H. Vaughan Coroner) Ofice Hours: 8-10 am. 122 & 6.8 p.m and by appointment MAPLE DR. CHARLES S. DUNNING J. T. SAIGEON ' MAPLE Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York Sales attended to on shortest notice and at reasonable rates. Patronage solicited -vlvuvv- -___. _- W! are pro and to conduct sales of every loluimiun. nuns and farm stock salon a inlty. Fume bought and sold on commis- on. All nlos attended to an shortest notice. md condunad by tho mmlt nonvoer methong THORNHI’IJIT’AND UNIONVILLE FUNERAL uRECTOR AND EMBALMERS New Limousine Ambulances Willowdale 69 HUdson 3679-W Stop 5, Yonge Street, Lansing JOHN T. ANDERSON Piano Tuner 85 Years' Practical Exoerience 378 Beresford AveN West Toronto Lyndhurst 2821 Telephone Glenn’s Drug Store, Rich- mond Hill, for appointment organ and Theory. Richmund Hill --â€" Tuesday & Friday HRS. MYLKS WILLIAM BUCK VIOLINIST Will open a studio in Richmond Hill, for further information apply to Adelmo Melecci, Phone 58-J [tom the Toronto Conservatory of Music will act-opt a number of pupils in Piano GENERAL CARTAGE by Truck WM. MCDONALD, FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Richmond Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at Telephone 62. CARTAGE AND EXPRESS Plowing and Garden Work Sand and Gravel. Concrete Work. OAK RIDGES omJfiéBfiT'ém; 2.5; 7.30-9 PRENTICE & PRENTICE AUCTIONEERS J. H. Prentice, 415 Balliol St., K. G. Prentice, Milliken. Toronto. Hnd.7134'1_w. INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR WORK DONE. Panel-hanger and Decorator. Workmanship Guaranteed. Estimates Free. This Year‘s Books On Hand Stop 2gfiYioinrge Street. VOL. LIII Poyntz Ave, Lansing Willowdale 140. Office hours: 12-115; 6-7.15 Capitol Bldg” Yonge St. Bud. 1133; Rand. @121. The Liberal is recognized as one 0’. the Newsiest Home Papers in the Province of Ontario. Eight to twelvl pages, all home print. it carries all the news of the entire district and our circulation is increasing every weekâ€"Subscribe to-daV. WILSON’S CARTAGE JOHN R. CAMPBELL 51.50 PER YEAR The Liberal is recognized WRIGHT & TAYLOR Boot and Shoe Repairer ADELMO MELEGCI SAND â€" GRAVEL From Maple Gravel Pit BERT HUMPHREY Veterinary Surgeon THORNHILL STONEHOUSE W. J. REID BUSINESS fiaféssional And Business Directory MUSICAL GEG. KIDD MEDICAL J. P. WILSON PHONE 4 MAPLE Phone 100 Thornhill, PHONE 3. OPTOMETRISTS 163-167 Yonge Street Elgin 4820 Opposite S We are the authorized dispensers of Orthogon Lenses. You get clear vision to the edge of your glass- es. Call or Phone for an appointment for an examin- ation. ‘ 1207 Northern Building 330 Bay Street' --- '. Telephone -â€"â€" Adelail Barristers, Solicitors. Etc. Officeâ€"711 Dominion Bank Building southwest corner of King and xonge Streets, Toronto. W. B. Millikan, K. C. Herb. A. Clark Henry E. Redman W. P. Mulock Manning Arcade, formerly of Wm Cook, Cook & Delany Barrister, Solicitor & Notary Public Money to loan. Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. Rooms 503 Northern Ontario Bldg.. cor. Adelaide and Bay Sts., Toronto., William Douglas, K.C, Donald Douglas, Wilson N. Robinson ] ' BARRISTER SOLICITOR. NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill Every THURSDAY AFTERNOON 0ffice:â€"-A. Mills Showrooms, East side of Yonge Street, Immediame south of Hill’s Garage | Phone Richmond Hill 125 Money to loan at current rates Toronto Office, 18 Toronto Street. Phone, ELGIN 1887 flD. 0177 MCGUIRE. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Telephone Adelaide 2108 0mm: 85 Richmond St. West. Tomato Naughton Block, Aurora Solicitors for: Aurora, Richmond -21]. Kin . Whitchurch, Markham and north Gwilimbury. Walter S. Jenkins. Res. Phone _Hill. 5048 .1. Harry Naughton, Res. Elkin Hills, Res. Phone 127.2 CAMPBELL LINE Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. RICHMOND HILL Office over Davies Dry Good Store Maple Every Saturday. MAPLE HOTEL MAPLE . Dentist Office: Trench Block, two doors north of Standard Bank. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. Telephone 32 MULOCK, MILLIKEN. CLARK & REDMAN F. E. LUKE, Opt. D. hi4 ORTHGGON Olfice Hours FRIDAY. 1.30 P.M. T0 8 P.M. W. E. LUKE, R. O. NAUGHTON & JENKINS Telephone 80 DOUGLAS, DOUGLAS & ’ ROBINSON L Cameron Macnaughton BARRISTER 1711 Star Building, 80 King Street, West, Toronto Phone: Elzin 4879. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. 2135 Yonge Street Toronto. HYLAND 1898 and 1900 MAPLEâ€"EVERY TUESDAY Standard Bank Building. Barristers. Solicitors, Etc. Hon. W.H. McGuire, Vincent C. MacDonald L.S.B. James A. Boles, BA. THORNHILL Bank of Commerce Building WILLIAM COOK & COOK THOMAS DELANY "WE; Cook, K. c. . Gordon Cook, B. A., HAROLD J. KIRBY Adelaide and Victoria Sta 7 Toronto A Barristers. Sqlidjgrs.AEtc T. C. NEWMAN Dr. M., J. QUIGLEY DR. L. R. BELL Dr. W. Finlay Telephoneâ€"Mame 3 DENTIST MACDONALD & HOLES â€"ANDâ€"â€" DENTIST ,reet Toronto Opposite Simpsons RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1930 Toronto Adelaide 4140 ONTARIO LL.B. AD. 0178 It was shortly after this merger that ' “‘55 “um “eaman’ OI Mr. Crerar was invited by Sir Robertibeen engaged as teaCher TBorden to join the war cabinet, a 1m?!“ of the PUbiic 8011‘“ :national duty which this Western far- VMISS 0' McQuarne Who h mer accepted. For over 18 months he Ml‘S- Graydon MCCutch worked faithfully and well under that dren of Whitby are visiw statesman; but in 1919 the break came MI'S- T. H. Keys and otht which sent Mr. Crerar back to Winniâ€" Mrs. J. T. Saigeon attel peg. He disagreed with his leader seau Tea in honor of Mis over the tariff policy of the Union in Toronto last Saturday. l The Grain Growers’ company, organ- Miss Morrison, sized in 1906, had been operating for . Mr. and Mr . H. B an r awa on one year, when, castmg‘ about for some S 1y 3 e y a two weeks motor trip to New York, young and .aggresswe figure to. pro‘ Boston, Adirondack Mounutains and mote the interest of the primary other places. producers, they lit upon Crerar and ’ w his first call to prominence brought MTS- Carl Barkemeyer and her daug“ him to the presidency of the organiz- hter Miss Ethel and Mr- Perry 000k, iationu This group was to play a role 0f MCKeesPOPt, are visiting at the of inconceivable importance in the home 0f MT- and MI‘S- H- C» BaileY- evolution of the West, and indeed in Mrs- D- Brown Will return with them ‘the whole economic development of.to Spend the Slimmer With her sons ‘Canada. Under his presidency the and her daughter. ‘Grain Growers made steady progress, The annual picnic of the Sabbath expanding their activities, marketlng‘school of the United Church will be ‘more and more of their produce yearlheld on Saturday at Elm park, Wooa_ after year, until it completely domln- bfidge_ Cars will be at the Church ated Western economics. Other pro- at 1 p_ m. to convey the children It \‘inces, inspired by the success of this is hoped that there will be a good at_ Manitoba organization, did likewise, ‘tendance. and eventually amalgamation followed. | nun 1-...â€" Ontarioâ€"born, of the sturdy yeoman ‘stock which is the pride of that 'bannâ€" t‘er province, Tom Crerar moved west With his parents at the age of five. That was in 1881, long before the gran ary of the world had begun to appreci- ate its own potentialities. Settling 60 miles from the nearest railway, young Crerar experienced all the pro- blems of pioneering and himself adâ€" vanced through every stage. His schooling was received at Portage la Prairie and Winnipeg. Early am.. bitions were directed towards schoolâ€" teaching; but later he engaged in lumbering and farming. His vicissi- tudes were many, and they were all part of the piece. He was successful as a farmer, but his survey of conditions around him informed him that many worthy farmâ€" ers who worked equally as hard as he did were not 50 successful; and he ap- plied himself to ascertaining the’cause and furnishing the remedy. Leadership in this development has been given by “Tom” Crerar, and it is a leadership all the more effective by ibeing' unsought. How intangible is 1the dividing line in the policies of the :Liberal Party and the Progressives is indisputably revealed in the record not :nnly of Mr. Crerar, but of that sub- stantial group which, appreciating the strength of unity, contributed the vig- or of their whole-hearted support of the Liberal government, as embodying all the elements of real advance. The alliance of the Liberals and Progress- ives was the natural development and the inevitable one, dictated by reason and by the necessity of firming the ranks of progress against the on- slaughts of the reactionaries, the “Lit- tle Canada” last ditchers. l The result of this happy union is the forthright legislation placed by the Mackenzie King government upon the Statute Books of the country. I Crerar is essentiallya Westerner, ‘hut just as the people of the West ‘have, by force of circumstances, come ;to appreciate the necessity of the “ex- ;traâ€"territorial” outlook, a necessity ;Which the character of their trading imposes on them, so is the horizon of the Minister of Railways unlimited by those considerations which a generat. ion ago, restricted the Canadian West to the Canadian West only, Exporters of their products to forty-five countâ€" ries of the world, the farmers of the Prairie Provinces have, like Falstaff, come to regard the world as their “oy- ster,” to be opened for their delectat- Ion. Summoned by two Prime Ministers {of Canada, within a period of twelve years, to membership in. their cabinets, the Hon. T. A. Crerar is Canada’s i11- ustration of the Shakesperian dictum that some men “have greatness thrust upon them.” Minister of Railways lin the present administration, Minister of Agriculture in the War Cabinet of Sir Robert Borden. Mr, Crerar'is a Lpolitical figure or more than ordinary ;character. Like Motherwell and Ste- iwart, his is the story of the country boy to whom the great open spaces of Western Canada bought clarity of Vis- ion, brought inspiration an'd the will to achieve big things. They ‘also de- veloped within him that sterling inte- grity with which his name and his ac_‘ tivities will always be associated. HON. T. A. CRERAR Minister of Railways Miss Ruth Reaman, of Concord has been engaged as teacher of the junior r00m of the Public School, to succeed Miss O. McQuarrie who has resigned. Mrs. Graydon McCutcheon and chil- dren of Whitby are visiting Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Keys and other friends. l The annual picnic of the Sabbath School of the United Church will be held on Saturday at Elm Park, W000- bridge. Cars will be at the church at 1 p. m. to convey the children. It is hoped that there will be a good at- tendance. Mrs. J. T. Saigeon attended a fI‘Tous- seau Tea in honor of Miss Eva Duffy, A delightful time was spent by a flange number of people at the picnic of the Women’s Institute, which was held at the Pines on Wednesday of last week. The afternoon was spent in games and contests which were in charge of Mrs. Watson and Miss Morâ€" rison. A splendid supper was served to the members and the visitors by the ladies at the close. 1 Liberalism and Progressâ€"the words are synonymous. The presence of Tom‘ Crerar in the Mackenzie King cabi'nehis the imprimature of the West upon policies which the West has al- ways advocated and which the West will continue to endorse. Mr. and Mrs. H. Bryan are away on a two weeks motor trip to New York, Boston, Adirondack Mounutains and other places. Mrs. J. Hansuld and children, of To- ronto, are spending a few days with Miss Morrison. Satisfied that the economics of the nation were in safe hands, Mr. Crerar resigned leadership of the Progress- ives and devoted himself once more to the Grain GrOWers. For seven years he continued to direct the destinies of that organization until in 1929, an- swering the summons of Mr. Macken- zie King, and in full agreement with Liberal policies, he entered the cabinet as Minister of Railways. This highly important post he fills with ability and sagacity. The organization of the Progressive Party followed, and returning to Par- iliament with a following of 65 memb- ‘ers in 1921, he was chosen as their leader. Dominion politics had under- ‘gone a great change, however. In- :stead of the high protectionists com- ing back to office under Mr. Meighen, another stalwart in his own cause had been installed in the person of the Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King. There was so much similarity in the policies of the Progressives and Liberals, that Mr. Crerar could not conscientiously exercise his right, as leader of the sec- and largest group in the House of Commons, to act as Opposition Leader. He found everything he himself was fighting for incorporated in the plat-- form of the Liberal Party; consequent- ly instead of fighting the Liberal gov- ernment, he supported it. government; for he is essentially a low tariff man. MAPLE ° is a remedy for the entire poultry family and Will save you E lots of dollars. Every bottle guaranteed. “ Get it nowâ€"a 16 oz. bottle $1.00 SOLD BY , " Thousands of hens are lost annually through contraction of 0 disease. One sick bird drinking at the water fountain can [I poison the entire flock before you discover the ailment. o Peerless Poultry Prescription used in the drinking water dai- ly kills the germs and prevents the further spreading of dis- ease. u RICHMOND HILL o:o:=o=o= 0=0=IO=01 ENQUIRE ABOUT ALBERTA COAL' Cement, Field Tile, Glazed Tile, Cedar Posts Lime and Builders Supplies Chicken Feed Poultry Supplies LANGSTAFF SUPPLY (30., Ltd. The MILL Large variety of all feeds. Left overs of several lines of flour and feeds going at specially low figures. ALL PRICES GOING DOWN A Car Load of Oats just unloaded; going at attractive prices DELIVERIESâ€"Tuesday and following Three Days Coal-WOOd-Coke NO CUSTOM GRINDING DURING WEEK of JULY 7 to 12 Roup, Coccidiois, *Canker, Chicken-Pox, Cholera, White Diarrhea W. G. FURLONGER, Manager Telephone Thornhill 1N Res. 82-W Kills Germs - Makes Hens Pay Peerless Poultry Prescription Frge Ffiqbwing F®n°filizers Dealer in Flour and Feed, Poultry Supplies, Etc PEERLESS POULTRY PRESCRIPTION J. F. BURR UNIONVILLE AND STOUFF‘VILLE. ONT‘ Stiver Brothers Those Diseases are Contagious IMES have changed! N o more wait- ing for fertilizer delivery! For your Fall Wheat we will carry C. I. L. Mixed Fertilizers in stock! Come 'in . . . get the facts about these improved, F tee Flowing Fertilizers that can’t clog in the drill! â€"In Liquid Formâ€" DISTRIBUTOR J. F. BURR PHONE ‘O=0l=°fl0=0=0 PRINTING SER VICE 'An unexcelled printing service is 8.1 Job Printing Department. Our plant is equipped to take care of your every requirements in the line of printed matter. “If it’s printing we do it.” We assure you that you will find the quality, serviée and price right. :r G. H. DUNCAN. Nights, Richmond Hill 80 Prompt Delivery 10mm Mill l39-M ONTARIO I! No. CIF 3D

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