Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 29 Jun 1933, p. 6

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Don’t delay any longer. If you are troubled with headaches, blurred im- ages, nervousness consult at .once. I63-167 Yonge Street Toronto Upstairs Opposite Simpsons Good Eyesight F0=0==10=0=n Erhe BECAUSE it is rich in vitamins, minerals and proâ€" teins. milk is .the ideal food for all. and an absolutely necessary food for children. Use it in preparing their desserts and other foods; serve a glass at every meal; give them warm milk at bedtime. MILK RICHMOND HILL, F. E. LUKE & SON Be sure of a Wholesome, Pure, Safe supply by get- ting yours daily from RICHMOND HILL DAIRY ALSO Lime, Cement, Tile Full Line of FUEL YARDS AT BURR’S MILL El; l0=0=0=0==§ Phone 188 ’Jones Coal C0. PAGE SIX Biggest Bargain in the District FOR ENERGY OPTOMETRISTS 5c. Phone 42 $1.50 per year Because an overwhelming majority of homes in this district “just can’t get along Without The Liberal,” this paper ranks high as a real Household Necessity. More than that, at the low subscription rate of $1.50 a year, or five cents a single copy, The Richmond Hill Liberal is a bargain. The Home Paper of the District for over Half a Century “ The Liberal ” (Some of these are bargains, some are not) will buy only one of these things: A package of chewing gum one cigar a loaf of bread a cup of coffee . . . . a candy bar . . . . a hamburger sandwich . . . . the tax on one and two-thirds checks ten minutes (more or less) at a movie . . . . three aspirins for a headache \----_ v -_ _ . . . .a pacfiééefif lifesavers . . . . almoâ€"st enough stamps to mail two letters. invested in a copy of The Liberal (3 cents when paid by the year) will do all of these: Keep you in touch with the happenings of York County . . . . bring you the messages and “pocketbook news” of leading stores and busi ess institutions, with opportunities of saving money tell you about your church, your school, your lodge, your club, your neighbors and friends, yourself . . . . give you a share in a home enterprise deyotedto the good of your community . . . . . rh'éké'fih‘bait of that comm'unity. V (No other bar- gains like it). Fifty-two weekly visits of The Liberal for less than 3 cents a week. Branded Beef Increases Branded beef sold in all Canada during the month of April totalled over two million pounds, an increase 5 of approximately 32,000 pounds a week as comfiared with March, and an increase of 50 per cent as comâ€"l pared with April, 1932. In Cheese Manufacture According to Dr. J. F. Booth of Ottawa, the cost of making cheese in 115 Ontario factories ranges from $1.85 per hundred pounds where the production amounts to 393,000 pounds to as high as $3.21 per hundred pounds Wide Cost Range Shown where duced. Cull Dairy Cows in Denmark Go to Happy Hunting Ground rl‘he slaughtering and burning of cull dairy cows is proceeding rapidly in Denmark. This has been cited as one practical method of reducing over-production and lowering proâ€" duction costs of milk. Also, it has been indicated, far too many Canadian dairy cows, having outlived their milk- producing‘usefulness, are shipped to market, instead of being consigned to the. soil from whence they came. Weekly Crop Report Agricultural representatives report that rain is badly needed in most sec- tions of the province. Meadows and :spring creps which looked very prom- iising‘ on June lst are not coming up to expectations due to the extremely hot weather in early June which was followed in some sections by very cool temperature and frost in some areas. Alfalfa is an exception and reports indicate a satisfactory ton- age from this crop will be secured. Eastern Ontario has reported pastures 'drying' up and milk production falling. Haying operations have bee general in all parts of the province during the past week. From Southern Ontario come reports that the drought serious- ‘ 1y hurt the strawberry crops. Essex Half of Canada's Berry Crop is Supplied by this Province Canada’s commercial production of strawberries for 1932 amounted to apâ€" proximately 20,600,000 quarts Onâ€" tario’s contribution to this total was estimated at 10,184,000 quarts, or close to fifty per cent. The commercial production of raspâ€" berries, for the same year, was es- tablished at 7,250,000 quarts, Ontario again supplying about half this total or approximately 3,317,000. only 47,000 pounds are pro- AND INFORMATION FOR THE BUSY FARMER Increases for instance, declares that its crop in all Canada will not average 30% of normal years. f April totalled Many fields of tobacco in Norfolk nds, an increase ghave had to be set over again owing 2,000 pounds a | to the combined damage of Wind, frost Worth More and sun Canadian Bacon Export During the first quarter of 1933, bacon importations into Great Britain were down some twenty per cent, ac- cording to the Statistics Branch. Can- ada and the Netherlands were the only countries to increase their contribu- tions to the bacon supplies. Care Will Save Money Farmers sustain enormous losses. each year, through careless methods of shipping livestock by train and truck. Experienced shippers recom- mend that all cattle be dehorned, that each class of stock be separated by partitions, that loadingâ€"chutes be used and that all spikes, and slivers, etc., be removed from cars and trucks. Raspberry Diseases Mosaic and leaf-curl are the two diseases largely responsible for the so-called running-out of raspberry plantations, according to Dr. C. H. Berkeley, in charge of the Labora- tory of Plant Pathology, of St. Cath- arines. “Experience,” he says, “based on experimental evidence, has also shown that the use of healthy certified stock in setting out new plantations is the only satisfactory way we have of checking running-out. Stock free from these diseases may now be pur- chased, and it is with disease-free stock, certified stock. that new plan- tations should be set. All certified stock must be sold in bundles of twenty-five canes, to which is at- tached the official government tag bearing the'name of the variety, cerâ€" tificate number and year of produc- tion. Permanent pastures are exten- sively grown on rolling lands. Canâ€" ada. blue grass, red top, Kentucky blue grass and white clover are use- ful for this purpose. The first men- tioned grass is of particular value where the soil tends to dry out in summer. The common mixture of red clover, alsike and timothy may be sown for hay and the timothy left down for a number of years. Alfalfa Crops Far Rolling Lands l is an excellent crop for hillsides and is to be desired over other crops where it will grow successfully. In order to receive a good stand of this permanent hay crop, 11ming may be THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO necessary on some soils. Oats, rye, wheat and corn are cropsl frequently grown With success on rollâ€" ing lands, but these crops are not as effective in controlling erosion as hay and pasture crops. If satisfactory crop yields are to be secured, farm manure must be applied at seasons when it can be ploughed under before any loss of fertility takes place. Fall and winter applications of manure (farm or commercial fertilizer) are not desirable except on level land because of the great loss of fertility which i runâ€"off Canada’s greatest individual indus- try. wheat growing, has developed almost entirely since Confederation. The present generation of Canadians are accustomed to speak of their cOun- try as the granary of the world, a phrase which would have been mean- ingless sixty years ago when Con- federation was brought about. Canadians must look with pride up- on the achievement in wheat produc- tion of the last half century. What it means to general business and to the transportation companies of the Dominion needs only be stated to be understood. Exports of wheat from Canada in the last two years, and these were only average crops, have brought into this D’ominion more than $175,000,000 annually. This money, coming into the possession of the far- mers, has been spent on the hundred and one articles which they need, thus stimulating the industrial cenâ€" tres remote from the grain fields and affecting, indirectly, eVery citizen of the Dominion. The bulk of Canada’s wheat crop is grown in the prairie provinces. Each harvest time the enormous task of transferring this crop from the fields to the consumers in distant countries is undertaken and accomplished. The farmer hauls his wheat to the country elevators, the original gatherer of the crop. There are about 2,500 country elevators in the wheat producing area. The wheat is there loaded into box- cars and is started eastward or west- ward, as the case may be, to seaboard. If it is ‘westward there is a long rail haul, over the Rockies to Vancouver or Prince Rupert, whence it is shipped to Europe through the Panama canal, or to the Far East. In 1924-25 the last crop year for which final figures are available, 23,900,000 bushels went through Pacific Ports. In subsequent years the movement has been greater. The greater part of the crop comes eastward in boxâ€"cars to Fort William and Port Arthur, where large terminal grain elevators are located. In 1924- 25, the figures are interesting because relatively they change very little from year to year, 159,000,000 bushels came east. All this wheat, whether east- bound or westbound, is inspected by Dominion government inspectors and is graded according to quality. The grading of the wheat in this quantity of itself is a monumental task, achieved first by this Dominion and followed by a few other wheat exporting countries. Without govern- ment grading the marketing of Canâ€" , ada’s export crop at a fair price would.1 l be impossible. The world’s market for wheat is Liverpool, England. Here come buy- ers and sellers and the custom, as in ancient times, is for the seller to show a sample of his wheat so that the buyer may see what he is purchasing. Obviously, when production reaches such proportions as it has in Canada this no longer can be done. The Canâ€" adian government solved the difficulty by establishing a grading system. Canadian wheat is graded under Well- defined regulations and any buyer in the world may buy the quality of wheat he desires by grade. The qual~ ity is guaranteed and in many years of experience foreign buyers have not yet complained. Having reached Fort William and Port Arthur, the mass movement of the crop is at an end. From these ' ports it breaks into a score of chan- nels all of them moving eastward to- wards the ocean. The grain fleets come to the head of the lakes for their cargoes. The wheat is loaded into these steamers and some of them sail to the Georgian Bay ports, others to Port McNicoll, still others \to Port Colborne, many to Buffalo, and a few lcome right through to Montreal. 4016 In the year taken, 24,000,000 bush-i els went to Georgian Bay ports to be carried by rail to Montreal for ocean shipment. Another 81,000,000 bushels went to Buffalo for shipment over United States railways to New York. The balance went through Port Mc- Nicoll and Port C‘olborne, to be re- shipped by lake or rail to Montreal. Thus the prairie crop converges on twO portsâ€"Montreal and New York. A small portion trickles further east, by rail to Halifax, St. John and Port- land. Of the total crop, 40,000,000 bushels were exported from Montreal, 75,000,000 bushels from New York, and 8,000,000 bushels from the other north Atlantic ports. WHEAT MARKET is liable to occur from spring A WEAK SPOT ; Have you a weak spot? Are yOu‘ sure that your body is sound in all its parts and that it is running smoothly? It might be expected that the average business man or woman would know as much about the state of his or her body as about business. We might expect the golf enthusiast to think as much about caring for his body as he does about looking- after his golf clubs. But do these people show such solicitude? Strange to say, the answer is that, in general, they do not. A machine is not expected to run unless given regular supervision and care. The human body, as a machine, cannot be expected to run smoothly and efficiently without regular super- vision. Systems do get out of order, and unless these are set right, the machine begins to wear out, gradually loses its efficiency, and finally gets beyond repair, worn out before its time due to lack of care. The degenerative diseases of middle life which cut short so many lives or at least lessen the years of health, develop slowly. From small begin- nings, there is a gradual wearing out of vital organs, not causing any noticeable change, or pain. or distress until the condition is well advanced. Because of the slow and insidious nature of these changes, they go un- checked unless they are discovered early and corrected by suitable meas- ures. no way of knowing that his heart or his arteries or his kidneys are under- going certain changes Which indicate that they are wearing out premature- ly. The only way in which such‘ changes can be detected before they have advanced far enough to cause ‘symptoms is by having the body per- iodically examined, at which time, the condition of the various organs is re- vealed when they are subjected to . certain tests. This is the strongest argument for the periodic health examination of adults. The individual, of himself, has The business man has his accounts audited at regular intervals. He is not satisfied with guesses as to the state of his finances; he wants to know the actual, condition of his afâ€" fairs. His health is of more imporâ€" tance to him and his business than anything else. It would appear then to be a reasonable suggestion that men and women should, at regular intervalsâ€"say once a yearâ€"have themselves examined by their family doctor, not because they are ill, but because they want to keep well. The periodic health examination is the best means which we have at our disposal to satisfy ourselves that our bodies are being kept in good working condition. Questions concerning Health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical As- sociation, 184 College Street, Toronto. will be answered personally by letter. Soum Connaught at Woodbridge, June 30th Willowdale at Edgeuy, July 4th Woodbridge at Emery, July 7th Edgeley at Connaught, July 11th Emery at Willowdale, July 14th Edgeley at Woodbridge, July 18th North Eversley at Vellore, July 6th Aurora at Maple, July 10th Vellore at Richmond Hill, July 13th Maple at Eversley, July 17th FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Clothes of Distinction Men and Young Men who appreciate the Value of clothes Hand Tailored to Your Measure and want Clothes of Distinction are assured of Satis- faction at Richmond Tailors. We have the Very Newest in Styles and Ma- terials and you will be surprised at the Moderate Cost of a Suit or Top Coat Hand Tailored to your measure. For anything in the line of clothes make sure you seg us. We appreciate your business and IT . -_ _-.‘vv WiLL PAY YOU. CLEANING GRANT FLEMING. ".0. m fieefllflm §¢Bwi1¢e- (fianahian mehiml Ayanriafiuu RICHMOND TAILORS J. A. Greene, RING AND PRESSING A SPECIALTY Goods Called For And Delivered THURSDAY, JUNE 29th, 1933 DOES JESUS CARE? Does Jesus care for such as I? Have I caused Him a tear or sigh? Will He ask me the reason Why I sinned? Does Jesus care if I sin, Or if I cannot victory Win? Just: now He’ll help me to begin To conquer sin. Will Jesus put the Faith in me The faith He had on Calvary, When nailed to the cursed tree For my sin? Yes, faith to me, my Lord will give, And help me true to Him to live; So all my life to Him I’ll give, To Fight Sin. by Candidate Arthur Robinson- Richmond Hill Maple, Om. OF THE C. I. L Plant Food ALL KINDS OF HARNESS AND HARNESS REPAIRS. COLLAR REPAIRING AND FITTING A SPECIALTY. Richmond Hill Editcd'by MUSâ€"KEEâ€"KEE $1.00 per bottle AUSTIN’S DRUG STORE The Complete Plant Food In 5 lb. Packetsâ€"45c. Vigoroâ€"The square meal for Plants For Shrubs. Lawns and Gardens In 5 lb. Cartonâ€"45c. 25 lb. Bagâ€"$1.65 Phone 10 For a Supply THE MODERN WAY. TO HOME BEAUTY Use Chimneys Built and Repaired R. R. No. l â€" Richmond Hill HARNESS 'lelephcne Maple 1063 (11/; miles North of Concord) Vigoro ISAAC BAKER ASSOCIATE SECRETARY PHONEYARD‘V may ,1 Tassvoeucei I IO : ANOQD.‘ 85‘J'<§ wemdy mew/2171601195!sz PLASTERING I4DLRAMER950N General Repairs Phone 46 {-14 RESIDENCE 49-“? Ontario P. FARR, R. R. No. 2 Ontario

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