All Work Guaranteed Forty Years Experience City of Toronto License Edgar Avenue â€"â€" Richvale P. O Box 14 Liberal Office, flichmond Hili MAPLE Dentist Office: Trench Block, two doors north ‘ of Bank of Commerce Hours: 9 am. to 5:30 pm. Telephone 32 Office hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 6 to 8 p.m., and by appointment. Office: Centre and Church Streets., Richmond Hill Phone 24. Bank of Commerce Building Thornhill, Ont. Office Hours: 10-12 a.m. 2-5 p.m. 7-9 pm. Phone, Residence 14-12 Office 100 w(ISisreases of women and children) Office hours: 1-3'p.m. Phone 100‘ wa ER LIGHTING, FIXTURES, ALTERATIONS North Yon ge St DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFFâ€" Office hours: 8-10 am. & 6-8 p.m. DR. LILLIAN c. LANGSTAFFâ€" MAPLE Dr. W. Salem Caldwell AUCTIONEERS J. H. Prentice, 415 Balliol Sh, K. G. Prentice, Milliken. Toronto, Hyland 0834 We are prepared to conduct sales of every description. Farms and farm stock sales a specialty. Farms bought and sold on commission. All sales at- tended to on shortest notice, and con- ducted by the most approved methods. 806 Indian Road, Toronto Telephone JUnction 4944 Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York Farm Sales, Furniture Sales, Land Sales, promptly attended to. Over 20 years experience at Toronto Repositary FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Richmond Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE MAPLE Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York Sales attended to on shortest notice and at reasonable rates. Patronage solicited ‘01. LV. From the Toronto Conservatory of Music, will accept a. number of pupils '11: Piano, Organ and Theory. Richmond Hill â€" Tuesday & Friday MRS. MYLKS All Classes of Electrical Work ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Teacher of Violin at the Toronto Conservatory of Music Class and Private Lessons RICHMOND HILLâ€"Wednesdays VIOLIN LESSONS William Buck Dr. M. J. Quigley DENTIST J. T. Saigeon & Son Prentice & Prentice Telephone 80 FRIDAY FROM 5:30 P. M. Telephoneâ€"Maple 3 Dr. L. R. M arwood Bank of Commerce Building (M.0.H.. Vaughanâ€"Coroner) Office Hours 9-10 am. 12-2 & 6-8 p.m. 7 7 and by appointment Charles Brothers J. A. HOLMES BUSINESS Wright & Tay{qr Dr. J. P. Wilson The Liberal is recognized as one of the Newest Home Papers in the Province of Ontario. Eight to twelve pages, all home print, it carries all the news of the entire district and our circulation is in- creasing every weekâ€"Subscribe to-day. Adelmo M elecci Drs. Langstaff Dr. W. Finlay DENTIST Afternoon: Thursday, Saturday Dr. L. R. Bell at your own hom'e. Professional And Business Directory MUSICAL THORNHILL MEDICAL Officé Hours TORONTO OFFICE, 100 ADELAIDE ST. W. PHONE ADELAIDE 3608 OFFICE HOURS Mornings: Tuesday, Saturday $1.50 PER YEAR Edward Laxton, B. A BARRIS TER and SOLICIT OR wishes to announce that he has opened an office at 40 Yonge Street, Richmond Hill, where he will conduct the prictice of law. (Telephone 133) Richmond Hill ONTARIO PHONE 3. Maple, Ontario -- Telephone 232 i Fire, Life, Casualty, Plate Glass, etc \ . Motor Cars 3 Specialty LUMBER, LATH. ’éHINGLEs ASHPHALT ROOFING, GYPDOC. Telephone 27 BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill Every THURSDAY AFTERNOON 93 Yonge Street Immediately North of Masonic Hall Phone 8 â€" Rihcmond Hill Toronto Office â€" 18 Toronto Street Phone ELgin 1887 ' Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Richmond Hill â€" Ontario Office over Davies Dry Good Store Maple Every daturday MAPLE nOTEL PLUMBING AND TINSMITHING Thornhill, Ontario Hot Water Heating and General Repairs Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Officeâ€"711 Dominion Bank Building southwest corner of King and Yonge Streets, Toronto. W. B. Milliken, K. C. Herb. A. Clark Henry E. Redman W. P. Mulock Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Room 503 Northern Ontario Bldg. Cor. Adelaide and Bay Sts., Toronto. William Douglas, KC, Donald Douglas Manning Arcade formerly of Wm. Cook, Cook & Delany Barrister! Soliciyor .&Â¥ Nogry Public Barrisetrs and Solicitors Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Bales, B. AL, Percy Biggs AD. 0177 Toronto AD. 0178 1315 Bank of Hamilton Building Yonge Street â€" Toronto 1207 Northern Building 330 Bay Street â€" ' Telephone â€"â€" ADelai‘ Wil§0n N. Robinson Money to loan. Barristers. Solicitors, Notaries Telephone ADelaide 2108 Offices: 85 Richmond St. W., Toronto Naughton Block, Aurora Solicitors for: .Aurora, Richmond Hill, King, Whichurch, Markham and North Gwillimbury. Walter S. Jenkins. Res. Phone Hill 5048. J. Harry Naughton. Res. Elgin Mills Res. Phone 12-2 Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Wm. Cook, K. C. F. Gordon Cook, B. A., LL.B. 1 Toronto Office: 816 Federal Bldg., 85 Dichmond St. West Thursday forenoon. Maple, Thursday afternoon. Woodbridge, Saturday afternoon. SHEPPARD & GILL LUMBER co. INSURANCE McGuire, Boles & Co. Douglas, Douglas & Robinson N aughton & Jenkins William Cook & Cook 1711 Star Building, 80 King Street, West,» Toronto Phone: ELgin 4879 A. Cameron Macnaughton BARRISTER Insurance Exclusively Arthur F. White Personal Claims Service Phone 41 Unionville, Box 29 BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. 2135 Yonge Street Toronto HYLAND 1898 and 1900 MAPLEâ€"EVERY TUESDAY . C. HENDERSON Money to loan at Current Rate Mulock, Milliken, Clark & Redman Evening: Monday, Thursday T. C. Newman Standard Bank BuiIEiBEI Thomas Delany Harold J. Kirby ‘ Campbell Line C. H. BYAM \, Dealers in â€" _Toronto ADelaide 4140 RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO. THURSDAY, MAY 19th. 1933 majoritv of those who are idle prefer the cities and workless relief. Unâ€" less substantial wages are available they choose to live at public expense. The response to the invitation has been disappointing. The first quota for six cities was fixed at 25.000. In the first week only 2,607 apnlications were received. Evidently the great Food, shelter, and a small weekly‘.‘ wage are the inducements offered by‘ the United States government to un- employed single men who will enlist for work in forestry camps. These camps have been set up for the pur- pose of building roads and fences- through national forests, cutting down scrub, and for reforestation. It was expected that work would be created in this way for several hun- dred thousands of those now being sustained on public relief. _ i I Some people are making such thorough preparations for rainy days that thev aren’t enjoying today’s sun- shine. The richest man in the world is hei who can wake up at two o’clock in! the morning and go right back to} sleep again. A In history 1932 will be known as the "Par when debtors let the cred- itors do their worrying. Far too many persons have the un- happy faculty of finding out things that are none of their business. A number of Ontario towns and cities have established municipal Woodpiles so that transients can show their willingness to work. The drifter who thinks the world owes him a liv- ing has a chance to prove himself as a collector. A scientist has discovered a cure for laziness. Someone is always takâ€" ing the joy out of life. A Danish critic declares that movies are only fit for the entertainment of nit-Wits. Either the movies 01' the critics are rotten in Denmark. Tavistock has set its tax rate 2 1-2 mills lower than last year, and there has not been a word of protest. Rate- payers are queer that way. James McCormick was in charge of the marriage licenses bureau in New York and now goes to jail because he did not enter in his income tax paper the fact that he had received $229,000 in fees. He says it entirely slipped his memory. Sitting- in jail for a spell will give James a chance to make affew needed repairs to his remem- bering apparatus. A woman in Chicago had 85,000 stuck in between the pages of old books. and her husband sold the lot to a junk dealer for ten cents. We were just wondering what those folk find to talk about now when they sit down to the eveninn‘ meal. Norman Thomas who ran as a so- cialist candidate against President Roosevelt, had his hen house robbed the other night. Some politicians are afraid to have the chickens come home to roost, but not so with Thomas. He would welcome them. The Regina Leader Post nuts it this way: “If all the legislative bodies in Canada were cut in two the chances are that the work would be done better and faster and at much less expense to the people. But have the neople enough gumption to demand it?†A number of mysterious fires ocâ€" curred in Midland during- the past few weeks. Two families were forced to flee from their homes in night attire in the early morning hours. The firmen were called to eight fires within two days. On a chicken farm near Orillia is a chicken which can only walk up- side down. It was hatched on the farm of A. Lang. Normal in every way excep‘t that its' legs project from its back. Mr. Lang says it is one of the most lively chicks on his farm. Meet vour friends at the Fair next Wednesday. Beeton is celebrating on June 3, the King’s birthday, with ’norse racing, softball and horseshoe pitching con- tests. Midland police have ordered all dogs confined or tied up from May 1 to September 15, according to the town by-law. All roads lead to Richmond Hill on the twenty-fourth. Nottawasaga Township staged a tworweeks’ drive for 1932 taxes and collected $2,000 cash in that time. Owen Sound‘s population according to the assessor’s roll, is now 12,894, an increase of 91 over the figure a year ago. Tottenham Council has refused a deputation‘s request to oil the streets this year. Tottenham has reduced the salaries of all village officials by ten per cent, except the constable. An economist has been defined as a man who knows everything and can’t do anything. Meaford will enforce the dog by- law and may appoint a dog-catcher to assist the police. General News and Views Jacobâ€"“I dreamed last night that I had invented a new “we of break- fast food, and- was sampling it when †- Janiceâ€"“Yes, yes, go on." Jacobâ€"“I woke and found a corner of the mattress gone." And now as these “Glimpses†come to a close, I hope those who have read them have enjoyed them as much as I have in gathering and writing them down. One thing I regret and that is that I did not take notes: when oppor- tunity presented itself and older ones related to me in vouthful days the stories of the pioneer settlement and church histor". If everv little com- munity only had its history in print how interesting it would be to give Wife_â€"“Why “didn’t you ask to dinner ?†And during this century what has been the outcome of all this 8.8. work? The church has been sus- tained for the 8.8. is the nursery of the church, the neio'hborhood made better and all those who attended have been blessed while manv from old Vicâ€" toria Square have gone forth carry- ing with them the truths learned from those good men and women who instilled the principles of Truth and Right into the young minds and hearts. LHusbandâ€"“I met Bolton in the City to-day and the poor fellow was very despondent. He said he was perfectly Willing to die. Then the married people’s class is almost as large or even larger, for all ages attend the 8.8. The young ladies class and teen age classes are also large While the primary is not small except in stature. So at presâ€" ent there must be an attendance of one hundred or over which is O. K. for a country SS. in these days. These glimpses of the past, the his- tory of Victoria Square 8.8. for a century, a century of great hopes and expectations, that have largely been fulfilledâ€"a century of great changes" in transportation, in art and science, in medicineâ€"in education and in re- ligious training that has kept pace with the changed order, for the “old order changeth, giving place to the new.†The same old story, yet ever new is taught and with good‘resul‘ts. Of Victoria Square 8.8. it has often been remarked by competent visitors that nowhere have they seen, outside of cities or towns and even in those centres, a larger class of young men. That is quite true for almost twenty- five or more was the enrolment at one time. This class “The. Star Workers†has had many excellent teachersâ€"Geo. Brown, Geo. Love, Dr. Downey, Dr. Thomas, Wm. Frisby, Geo. Gee, Ross Klinck, Joseph Brown and now Rev. Wm. Haig‘. As an added feature of The Good-Will Subgcrintion campaign which The Liberal has inaugur- ated, we W711 give with every re- ceipt for payments of a yearly subscription, new or renewal, a coupon good for one insertion of a classified “ad†good any time in 1933. GLIMPSES OF THE PAST CLASSIFIED “A D†FREE Victoria Square S. S. from 1832 FISHER NO-DRAFT VENTILATION ul- Fisher No-Draft Ventilation, the sensational and exclusive new feature that contributes so much to the motorist’s well- being. Strikingly original, too, Oldsmobile leads the style parade for 1933 with a Six and Straight Eight worthy of carrying on a time-honored reputation for trustworthiness. Oldsmobile is planned for those who want a new type of car â€"-one that does all things wellâ€"one that is priced to the times. New models await your inspection. See themâ€"soon ! FIRST in all things modern, Oldsmobile naturally offers Fisher No-Draft Ventilation. the sensational and anlncivn plus smart style and dependability (By E. J. Hitchcock) him to the public on occasions such as this. Your Hardwax‘eRequirements I hae been aproached to put these “Glimpses†into book form and may doÂ¥sp some day. > GOOd Used Coal Oil Stove for Sale I just hope and pray that old Vic- toria Square may continue to prosper in all ways and that this little his- tory“may be useful in time to come. The End. (SUCCESSOR TO C. N. COOPER) We Give Prompt Delivery I Per 100â€"Leghorns, white and brown, $9.95; Barred Rocks and Reds, $10.95; White Rocks and Wyandottes, 811.95. Deposit dollar per hundred, balance arrival. 100 per cent live deliery. Free catalogue. BRAY CHICKS come from flocks 5 years under Government Hatchery ap- proval, and for 7 years from settings of bloodtested stock only. W9 carry a complete line of general hardwareâ€" everything to keep you in your garden and in fix- ing up your lawn and home surroundings. CONVEYANCING See the Washing Machine, one of che Grand Prize Awards in the Liberal “Good-Will†contest, now on display in our window. OFFICE TELEPHONE 87 RESIDENCE TELEPHONE 11M Yes Oldsmobile has 80 Clayburn Ave. ' St. Catharines. Branch Hatchery at 8 Botsford St., Newmarket Phone 426 The season is getting 011, COMMISSIONER FOR TAKING AFFIDAVITS REAL ESTATE AND ALL LINES OF INSURANCE FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, PLATE GLASS, ETC. . Trowell, Hardware J. R. HERRINGTON NO TIME LIKE THE PRESENT FOR BUYING CHICKS BRAY CHICK HATCHERY RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO =O=O An nnexcelled printing service D available to this district at The Ub- eral Job Printing Department. (it plant is equipped to take care i your every requirements in the llr of printed matter. “If it’s printing we do it." We assure you that you will find the quality, service and price right. Em ï¬Lime, Cement, Tile Full Line of FUEL ALSO YARDS AT BURR’S MILL 0=0=0=0=° Phone 188 Jones Coal Co. ESTATES MANAGED PRINTING SERVICE 93 YONGE STREET 50 CHURCH STREET Phone 93 No. 45 O-BB