$1.50 PER YEAR The Liberal is recognized as d the Newest Home Papers in Province of Ontario. Eight twelve pages, all home print, it carries all the news of the entire district and our circulation is cussing May. every weekâ€"Subscribe one the to in. .70!- LV. RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO. EDWARD LA Toronto Office, Phone ADelai OPEN MUSICAL Adelmo M elecci I-ic, will accept a number of pupils h Plano, Organ and Theory. Richmond Hill â€"- Tuesday & Friday MRS. MYLKS GEO. W. CROSS Piano Tuner Thirty Years Experience Formerly With Heintsman Company Leave Orders at Austin’s Drug Store Richmond Hill Barrister and Solicitor (Telephone 133) XTON, B. A. 100 Adelaide St. W. de 3608 RICHMOND HILL OFFICE. 40 YONGE ST. DAILY Cook & Gibson Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Wm. Cook, K. C. Ralph B. Gibson, K.C. mm the T°r°nt0 “us-“$017.01 Toronto Office: 912 Federal Bldg., 85 Richmond St. West Richmond Hill, Thursday forenoon Maple, Thursday afternoon Money to loan at Current Rate N aughton & Jenkins Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Telephone ADelaide 2108 Offices: 85 Richmond St. W., Toronto Naughton Block, Aurora Solicitors for: Aurora, =__â€"â€"__-â€"_â€"___â€"â€" North Gwillimbury. BUSINESS Wright & Taylor FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE “mend Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE AD. 0177 ‘ J. T. Saigeon & Son MAPLE Housed Auctioneer for the County of York .3. ti formerly of Wm. Cook, Cook & Delany “tended to on Shorten no ce Barrister, Solicitor .& Notary Public and at reasonablefates. Patronage solicited Prentice & Prentice AUCTIONEERS J. H. Prentice, 415 Balliol St., K. G. Prentice, Milliken. Toronto, Hyland 0834 Walter S. Jenkins. 5048. J. Harry Naughton. Res. Phone 12~2 McGuire, Boles & Co. Barriset'rs and Solicitor Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Bales, B. A.. Toronto 1315 Bank of Hamilton Building Yonge Street _ Thomas Dclany Manning Arcade 1207 Northern Building 330 Bay Street Telephone M ulock, M illiken, Clark .& Redman Barristers, Solicitors, etc. w. m prepared to comma" sales of Officeâ€"711 Dominion Bank Building "'7 description. Farms and farm flock sales a specialty. Farms bought .1! sold on commission. All sales at- bdod to on shortest notice, and con- “ by the most approved methods. MEDICAL Dr. R. A. Bigford (Successor to Dr. Caldwell) Office Hours 9-10 a.m. 12-2 & 6-8 p.m. and by appointment MAPLE Dr. L. R. M arwood Bank of Commerce Building Thornhill, Ont. Ofï¬ce i'Iours: 10-12 a.m. 2-5 p.m. 7-9 p.m. _ Phone, Residence 14-12 Office 100 Drs. Langstaff North Yonge St. Richmond Hill DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFFâ€" Ofï¬ce hours: 8-10 a.m. & 6â€"8 p.m. D3. LILLIAN C. LANGSTAFFâ€" es of women and children) Ofï¬ce hours: 1-3 p.m. Phone/100 Dr. J. P. Wilson Office hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 0 to 8 p.m., and by appointment. Olï¬ee: Centre and Church Streets., Richmond Hill Phone 24. Dr. R. C. Wade (Physician and Surgeon) , Office Hours 2-5 p.m.â€"7-9 p.m. Phone King 50 KING Dr. L. R. Bell Dentist Ofï¬ce: Trench Block, two doors north of Bank of Commerce Hours: 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Telephone 32 Telephone 80 Dr. M. J. Quigley . DENTIST THORNHILL Bank of Commerce Building â€" SAND â€" GRAVEL From Maple Gravel Pit GENERAL CARTAGE by Truck WM. McDONALD, Telephone 62. Thornhill, =0=0=0=0= “"‘Jones Coal Co. ‘ Full Line of FUEL a i ALSO Lime, Cement, Tile ‘ rho}; 188 YARDS AT BURR’S MILL 0H0 o=lo====o=o===3_ PHONE 3- Richmond Hill southwest corner of King and Yonge Streets, Toronto. W. B. Milliken, K. C. Herb. A. Clark Henry E. Redman W. P. Mulock A. Cameron Macnaughton BARRISTER 1711 Star Building, 80 King Street, West, Toronto Phone: ELgin 4879 Campbell Line Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Ontario Office over Davies Dry Good Store Maple Every daturday MAPLE nOTEL T. C. Newman BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill Every THURSDAY AFTERNOON 93 Yonge Street Immediately North of Masonic Hall Phone 87 Richmond Hill Toronto Office â€"â€" 18 Toronto Street Phone ELgin 1887 Harold J. Kirby BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. 2136 Yonge Street Toronto HYLAND 1898 and 1900 MAPLEâ€"EVERY TUESDAY Standard Bank Building. “mm INSURANCE LIFE, FIRE, . ACCIDENT, SICKNESS, PLATE GLASS, AUTOMOBILE, BURGLARY, GUARANTEE BONDS SPECIAL RATES T0 FARMERS ON ALL CARS TARIFF & NONTARIFF 00’s. A. G. SAVAGE Post Office Block Richmond Hill THE MILL FULL LINES SEED GRA IN VELVET BARLEY UNLOADING CAR DURHAM WHEAT ROYAL RICHMOND CHIC STARTER ROYAL RICHMOND GROWING MASH ROYAL RICHMOND LAYING MASH CALL AND DISCUSS YOUR FEED REQUIREMENTS Res. 82W Phones Mill 139 WE DELIVER Richmond Hill, King, Whichurch, Markham and Res. Phone Hill Res. Elgin Mills Percy Biggs AD. 0178 Toronto Toronto ADelaide 4140 GENERAL NEW FAIR DAY next Thursday. Invite your friends to spend Vic- toria Day with you in Richmond Hill. Householders and business men on Yonge Street are asked to co-operate by decorating their premises. Newmarket’s abode for transients has been closed for the summer. Dur- ing the past winter 835 transients were housed and 1416 meals supplied, at a cost of $94.12 for food and $18.00 for fuel. I An exchange remarks that if the present administration is allowed to carry on in Ontario for another five years with its work of extravagance and debt increases the province will have to go under the hammer. London, Eng. is again ahead of the world in providing parking “garages†for baby carriages for tenanlts of many-storied flats. The charge is fourpence a. Week. President Roosevelt has thrown his shoulder behind the drive for unem- ployment insurance legislation at the present session of Congress. The plan calls for a 5 per cent excise tax on the payrolls of all industrial em- proyers, calculated to establish a one billion dollar reserve for unemploy- ment insurance purposes. Ministers world has “lost its faith" but see the multitudes who are placing seed in the ground at this season of the year. may declare that the “Godless Russia’s" economic system which is poison to one group of visiâ€" tors and a herald of the millenium to another, will be examined at first- hand this summer by a group of Can- adian ministers. Leading clerical figures from all cities of Canada have already signified their intention to take part in the tour. “Let there be light.†Washington Irving’s immortal clas- sic, “Rip Van Winkle,†will come to the screen as a musical comedy with W. C. Fields as the star. And an- other company will film “Swiss Fam- ily Robinson" the account of a family wrecked on a tropical island and their ingenious methods of carrying on in One of last Saturday’s feature over the air was Robert L. Ripley, author of “Believe It or Not†cartoons broad- while the average country newspaper has a “reading life†of three hours to its credit. It is kept around the house for a week. That is some- the face of adversity. casting greetings to the “loneliest persons†on earth on Saturday next. Ripley uncovered the “loneliest persons†stationed in isolated parts of the world and dedicated his program to a lighthouse keeper at Point Hope, Alaska, 100 miles north of the Arctic Circle; a member of the Northwest Mounted Police stationed 600 miles from the North Pole and 1,000 miles north of Hudson Bay; Englishmen on the island of Tristan da Cunha, 1,514 miles from civilization; the loneliest man in Australia, located in the exact centre of “Down Under,†1,000 miles from civilization in any direction, and to Admiral Byrd at the South Pole. An “old-fashioned†man is one who remembers wistfully, when if he tOOk a girl to a church fair or a flower show and bought her a box of choco- lates or a bunch of violets, he was regarded as a prince of spenders. Few people realize the actual cov- erage of even the most modest week- ly newspaper. Not long ago an ad- vertising expert stated that careful research had ascertained that city newspapers are read, on an average for the space of twenty minutes, think for both subscriber and adver- tiser to think about. The old lady called her niece to her bedside. “Kate, I’m dying. When I go I want you to lay me out in my best black silk. But there’s no need of be- ing wasteful; I’ll be lying on my back so nobody will notice if you remove the back panel from it and make a dress for yourself.†“But aunty, that would be terrible! What on earth would people say if they saw you and Uncle John walking up the Golden Stairs with no back panel in. your dress? Everybody would stare!" “Don’t you worry about people star- lring at me, Kate. They’ll all be look- THURSDAY, MAY 17th. 1934 S AND VIEWS ing at your Uncle John.“ I buried him eau' without his pants." Listen, brides and grooms recent wedding in England the bishOp Glover, P. Lyons, C. Ellston, N. Bar-l performing the ceremony held up pro- ker, W. Trench, W. Clifford, H. H00p- ccedings for a short time while he or, C. Hall. whispered a little advice to the bride and groom as they stood at the altar rails It was meant for them only; but someone listened in (someone always does!) and this, in part, is what the bishop said: “Keep the gladness of this day ever fresh. It must be no failing memory, but an extending joy as your life together expands and deepens. Talk often of this gladness and of the early days when you first came to love each other Never let the routine of life, however busy, come to separate you from each other, nor even the routine of home~â€"â€"â€"-Sometimes a wife devotes her attention to the home and family, leaving out the husband until he feels like a mere lodger; sometimes a man becomes selfish and a tyrant in his home It needs time and thought to keep two hearts and two lives close in affection, eagerly felt, eager- ly shown." A preacher on looking up from his sermon was horrified to see his young son in the gallery pelting the congre- gation with paper “bullets.†Before he could get out a word of reproof, his young hopeful cried: “You ’tend to your preachin’, daddy; I’ll keep ’em awake." The “Summer time" affliction is a- gain bothering at least eleven of Onâ€" tario’s 28 cities but her rural popula- tion gees calmly on its way in the old accepted “standard†lines. Way Back inthe Liberal Files THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO From Our Issue of May 11th, 1899 The vital statistics for the Town- ship of Vaughan as registered at the Clerk’s office, Maple, for the month of April were as follows: Births 4; Marriages 4; Deaths 5. The 12th Battalion Band under the leadership of Mr. Querrie, Aurora, have been engaged to furnish music at the Agricultural Fair to be held here on the 24th of May. The High School observed Saturday as Arbor Day. Messrs. Johnston and Coombs dug twentyâ€"five maples in Mr Gibson’s bush. Mr. McNair hauled them home and Mr. Switzer sent a man to help plant them. The trees,‘ are a. nice looking lot and- are being well looked after. The Prize Lists of the Agricultural Society show a good bill of fare for their annual exhibition to be held on the Queen’s Birthday. The prizes in several classes are larger than ever before, and will no doubt draw to- gether a large number of competitors. Purses aggregating nearly $200 will be given in the speeding class, and al- ready a good number of horses are on the string. In the free-for-all trot or pace the purse is $70, and for the 3 minute race $50 will be divided. The sports of the day will commence with a football tournament at 11 a.m. A meeting of the Public Library Board was held at the Liberal office on Tuesday evening, one of the obâ€" jects being to receive the auditor’s report of the accounts of the Secretary for the year ending the 30th of April. The report showed the receipts for the year to be $311.35, expenditure $253.39 leaving a balance in the Treasurer's hands of $57.96. The librarian's re- port showed that 144 volumes of books had been purchased during the year, that there are now 2657 volumes in the library and that there were 3708 volumes issued during the year, also that the Reading Room is sup- plied with 4 daily papers, 14 weeklies, and 10 periodicals. Messrs. P. G. Savage, W. A. Sanderson and T. F. McMahon were re-elected chairman, treasurer and secretary respectively for the current year. The lacrosse season opened here last Saturday by a match between The Athletes of Toronto and the local team. The home team won an easy victory OVer the visitors although the former had to exert themselves in se- curing their honours. The referees and umpires gave every satisfaction, and harmony prevailed throughout the match. The result at the close show- ed 8 to O in favor of the Hill boys who played a very good combination game. Mr. W. Savage refereed the match and Messrs. J. Glass and W. Murray acted as umpires. The following are At u. G. Sims, B. Glover, J. Trivette, J.‘ PRINTING SERVICE An unexcelled printing service I available to this district at The Lib eral Job Printing Department. 0. plant is equipped to take care d your every requirements in the “I? of printed matter. “If it's print‘llt we do it.†We assure you that you will find the quality, service and price right. No. 46 the players on the respective sides. Torontoâ€"Giroux, Cameron, Dill, Papin Peniston McArthur, McDonald,l McLaughlin, Elliott, Moore, Scott, Travis. Richmond Hillâ€"A. Savage,l "Jo, FIRESIDE; PH 3 LOSCPHER’ By ALFRED BIGGS 1 True love asks nothing in return. 3 t it Wise men are at home anywhere. ‘ t t t The Village Council met on May 8th. The Reeve in the chair. Memï¬ bers present, Messrs. Hill, Innes, Pal-1 t met and_TrenCh' Accounts.were 01": Universal honesty would bankrupt dcred paid. Moved! by Mr. Hill, second. locksmithS ed by Mr. Trench that the clerk is! * hereby instructed to claim the pro-I Associate with those portion that this Municipality is en-i more than )‘011 know. 'titled to of the moneys arising from * * the rents of certain T011 houses on ‘Yonge Street under County By-law 726. Carried. Moved by Mr. Palmer, seconded by Mr. Hill that this council proceed to repair the Grand Stand in the Park _, and that the Agricultural Society be! asked to pay half the expense. Car-1 ’ ried. 5‘ . 4 w The council adjourned. M. Teffy, Clerk. An ounce of example is worth a ton of precept. ‘1 t t It who know S Fuss-mg over small matters destroys ability to tackle big ones. it it * Those who boast of many friends are generally advertising themselves. Business Schools Operate A Model Office And Employment Bureau at 1130 Bay Street, Toronto, and supply expert services of Grad- uates day by day to Ofï¬ce Man- agers who call for such assis- tance. The demand is keen for boys up to 18 who know Short- hand and Typewriting. Our register is open to such. No charge. Call or write to Miss ‘ Meegeson, Director, KI. 3165. A customer was in a local hardware; store. He coughed loudly to signify‘ his impatience. Finally he attracted a salesman’s attention. Customer (sharply) â€"â€" I want a mouse trap. A good one, and please be quick, for I want to catch a bus. Salesmanâ€"I regret, sir, that our mouse traps are not guaranteed to catch buses. " AN ECONOMY TIâ€"RI FOR l Genuine Heavy Duty Path-~ ï¬nders give you long, safe tire service at low cost. Path- ï¬nders on all four wheels keep trucks movingâ€"on any road. (room YOUNG’S SERVICE STATION i Spring and Summer Suits WE offer you remarkable value in your new spring and summer suit. Our clothes are all hand tailored to your measure from the world’s finest fabrics and will please the most exacting. A wide selection of materials to choose from and the latest range of styles. Satisfaction guar- anteed. This we offer you at a remarkable sav- ing, and prices which are within the reach of all. CLEANING AND PRESSING A SPECIALTY PROMPT DEPENDABLE SERVICE RICHMOND TAILORS J. A. GREENE Phone 49J Richmond Hill For Finest Quality Hand Tailored Clothes