Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 5 Dec 1935, p. 3

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Prentice & Prentice aI'CTIONEERS J. H. mm: as Balliol St., K. G. Pron Markham Toronto. and 0834 We are pxjepared to conduct sales of "cry description. Farms and farm flock sales a specialty. Farms bought and sold on commission. All sales atm “ed to on shortest‘notice, and con-j ducted by the most approved methods; Dentist 01300: Trench Block, two doors north‘ of Bank of Commerce 1 Hours: 9 am. to 5.30 pm. Telenhone 32 PRACI'ICAL PAINTER, PAPERHANGER, GRAINER, ETC. W111 take farm produce or ulythlng Data! for part it full pnyment for DRflw. J. MASON DENTIST YONG’E AND ARNOLD STREET PHONE 70 RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO From the Toronto Conservatory of Unit, will accept a numhpr of pupils h. Pine, Organ and The‘ory. Richmond Hill â€" Tuesday & Fridgy MRS. MYLKS AUCTIONEER MAPLE Mod Auctioneer for the County of York Idol attended to on shortest notice And at reasonable rates. Patronage Solicited ' J. T. SAIGEON & SON Insurance FIRE â€" AUTOMOBILE â€" LIFE Thirty Years_ Experience formerly with Hemtzman Com my have Orders at Austin’s Drug tore Richmond Hill Dr. Charles C. Collins North Yonge St. - Richmond Hill DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFFâ€" Office Hours: 8-10 a.m. & 6-8 p.m. DR. LILLIAN C. LANGSTAFFâ€" Digeales of women and children) co Hours: 1-3 pm. Phone 100 Maple, Ont. Office Hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 0 to 8 p.m., and by appointment Office: Centre and Church Streets, Richmond Hill Phone 24 DR. M. C. MacLACHLAN Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings Other Evenings by Appointment Office over the Post Office Woodbridge Phone 77 FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Wand Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE F allT‘ VOL. LVI. 12 Businesl Schools in Toronto. Our comes lead to profitable employment. Write for curri- ulum. W. R. Shaw, Registrar. 1180 Bay St. Dr. C. A. M acDonaid DENTIST Dr. L. R. M arwood Dr. R. A. Bigford centre Street, Thornhill Office Hours: 12-230 p.m. 6-8 p.m. (Successor to Dr. Caldwell) Office Hours 9-10 mm" 12-2 & 6-8 pm. 7 and by appointme‘l}; "" L. W. ZUEFELT Wright &; Taylor Dr. M. J. Quigley DENTIST Bank 61" Commerce Building Adelmo Melecci Telephone 80 “YORK COUNTY’S NEWSIEST NEWSPAPER" G‘EO. W. CROSS Piano Tuner Dr. J. P. Wilson Drs. Langstaf f DENTIST At Dr. Bigford’s Office Tuesdays 9-12 am. Thursdays 12-41530 p.131: J. Carl Saigeon Dr. L. R. Bell Phone; Thérnhill 100 & Holidays by appointment MUSICAL BUSINESS 30 Benton Ave” MEDICAL Richmond Hill upcua nus. no erm in SHAW’S Successor to THORNHI’LL opens Aug. 26th Phoné Maple 3 PHONE 3 A. Cameron MacNaughton, K.C. BARRISTER 1711 Star Building, 80 King Street. West, Toronto Phone: ELgin 4879 BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Richmond Hill â€" Ontario Office over Davies Dry Good Skore Maple Every saturgay 93 Yonge Street Immediately North of Masonic all Phone 87 â€"- -Richmond Hi1 Toronto Office -â€"â€" 18 Toronto Street Phone ELgin 1887 S. TUPPER BIGELOW LLB. Bowden Lumber & Coal 00., LTD LUMBER OF ALL KINDS Insulex, Donnacona Board, etc. LANSING WILLOWDALE 42 HUDSON 0234 formerly of Wm. Cook, Cook & Dehny Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Officeâ€"711 Dominion Bank Building southwest ccmer of King and Yonge Streets, Toronto. W; B. Milliken. K. 0. Herb. A. Clark Henry E. Redman W. P. Mulock BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Member of the Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta Bars) 310 McKinnon Buiiding, 19 Melinda St, Toronto Ens. Phone EL. 1744 Barristers, Solicitors. etc. Wm Cook. K. C. Ralph B. Gibson, K.G. Toronto Office: 912 Federal Bldg“ 85 Richond St. West Richmond Hill, Thursday forenoon Maple, Thursday afternoon Money to loan at Current Rate; 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. Han-y Ngughtfln. Res. Elgin Mills Barristers and SOIJ'citm's Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Boles, B. A. Percy Biggs AD. 0177 Toronto AD. 6178 1315 Bank of Hamilton Building Yonge Street â€"â€" Toronto Alexander MacGregor K. C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC INSURANCE LIFE, FIRE, ACCIDENT, SICKNESS, PLATE GLASS, AUTOMOBILE, BURGLARY, GUARANTEE BONDS SPECIAL RATES T0 FARMERS ON ALL CARS - TARIFF 82 NONTARIFF CO'S. PLUMBING AND TINSMITHING Thomhill, Ontario Hot Water Heating and general repairs. ALL KINDS OF SHEET METAL WORK Flu-meet. Elva Troughs, Metal McGuire, Boles & Co. N aughton & Jenkins A. C. HENDERSON 1008 Federal Buildin 85 Richmond St. West, oronto Telephone AD. 1948 014 Confederation Life Bldg. Toronto Phone: Office EL. 5029 Ganges, Roofing Jobbing Promptly Attended to THURSDAY AFTERNOON I.F‘OX 'fiA’R iils'i‘ivi'n' 1' 'S’dtliélfon NOTARY Mulock~ Milliken, Clark (9: Badman Thomas Delany T. C. Newman Cook & Gibson A. G. SAVAGE Campbell Line Rich’mqugi Hill Evpyy Post Office Block Richmond Hill Established 1880 Reg. Phone 12~2 MAPLE‘ nOTEL Res. Phone RA. 5429 EICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1935 Immediate expulsion has been the penalty decided on by Havelock, 01115.. school authorities to stop Continuation school pupils from smoking around the school. Principal Morgan Wrote the school authorities telling of numerous complaints of the children using cig- arettes and asking for the “moral sup- port of the board to correct the sit- uation.” This was promised. A black bear, which suddEnly walk- ed on to the highway near Muskoka Falls, was struck and killed by a fruit truck recently. “When 56 of the 63 constituencies‘ in Alberta returned followers of Mr Aberhart at the Provincial election i1 was the result solely of the definite promises to introduce a system of $0- cial credit, which included a monthly credit payment of $25 to every eligâ€" ible adult in the province. Now that he is in power, however, Premier Ab- erhart is apparently/finding many dif- ficulties that he had not foreseen,,and he is becoming more and more indef» inite with regard to his social credit plans. What a gift some people have of finding fault. Praise anything, no matter what, and they will immed- iately confront you with a “but.” It really seems to hurt them when you take pleasure in admiring anything, and so they hasten to take you down a peg. It is a petulant habit arising froin envy or jealousy. Let us 100k Well then to ourselves, lest we help to swell the list of these unhappy fault-finders. Less than three weeks until Christ. mas. Do your shopping now, or you cannot do it early. Mr. Percy Young, popular driver of the Toronto Wet Wash Laundry, while on a recent hunting trip in the Sudbury district in addition to his count of deer was successful in shoot‘ ing three bears. The mother bear and two cubs were trailed to their den and killed by Mr. Young who is known as a hunter of no mean repute. The bears have since been on display at the St. Lawrence Market, Toronto. It’s easier to open a tin can than it used to be; they have new devices which take the top out and leave no jagged edge; the cat can stick her head in the tin now with safety. One has no more to use a fork, a knife and corkscrew to get a bottle of ket- chup started and the percolator and the drip make it unnecessary to drop an egg- in the coffee pot to hold the grounds at the bottom. But the stove pipes are just as they were. Like the ears of a donkey they have not changed. General News & Views If the Hon. H. H. Stevens did noth- ing else in the Federal election cam- paign he certainly showed the value of advertising by some of his election revelations. In one of his speeches he stated that over a period of eleven years, the Robert Simpson Company, Limited had paid these papers the following sums: Toronto Telegram, $2,948,000; Toronto Daily Star, $2,- 878,000; Mail and Empire, $361,000;‘ Globe, $339,000. Smaller payments to other papers, it was further alleged, brought the Simpson Company’s pay- ments over that period to a total of $6,642,000, and another great depart- ment store had paid even more than that. It pmves with a vengeance that ad- vertising pays, remarks the Renfrew Mercury, explaining that it means that this one store spends over $600,- 000 a year, $2,000 a day in newspaper advertising in its home city news- papers. John Naubauer, Puslinch Township farmer, believes he has a turnip which, for size, can beat anything grown in Ontario this year. The root, of the Swede variety, weighs 26 lbs., and came from a uniformly good crop. Ingersoll town council will be elect- ed in future for a twoâ€"year term. Simcoe is flirting with the idea. The reason would appear to be that most people think an experienced council is necessary for proper administra- tion of municipal business today and the first year a man sits in the coun- cil he is of little or no value. At that the plan has its points. It all de- pends on whether or not the council is a good one. If it is a poor council the two year term is far, far too long. ‘3 Convictions: Ideas, right or wrong, - that we have adopted into our self- love and thus glorified and sanctified. RT ONE BENT OVER CAMPBELL REPORT FOR RELIEF RECIPIENTS The usual by-law was passed pro- viding for the annual nomination and elections. The nomination meeting will be held Monday afternoon, Dec. ‘20th, and the election Monday, Jan. Gth. On election day polling will be from 9 am. to 5 pm. and' the follow- ing were appointed as deputy return- ing officers: Thornhill, N. J. Smellie 1nd J. E. Francis;, Elgin Mills, George Topper; Buttonville, Cline Burr; Vic- toria Square, Thomas Frisby; Union- ville, J. Gibson and W. Noble; Cashel, Herb Spoffard; Lot 5, Con. 8, George Cowie; Lot 16, Con. 8, A. R. Wide- man; Dixon’s Hill, Edgar Browns- bverger; D. Ramer’s house, D. Rainer; Mongolia, William Rennie. A letter from the chief weed in- spector for the province of Ontario» ruled that no weed inspector or coun- cil can be held responsible for any losses sustained as a result of thresh- ing operations. Road accounts were passed as fol- lows: D. Boyd, Stouffville, 3840; R. J. C‘unningham, Gormley, R.R. 2, $70.- 30; E. A. Buchanan, UnionviTle, $532.- 20; D. Shadlock, Milliken, $32.00; C. Wideman, Markham, R.R. 2, $42.50; W. J. Stonehouse, Unionville, $57.40; J. K. R‘eesor, Markham, $28.70; J. G. Wideman, Stouffville,'$276.30-; W. G. Maxwell, salary, $100.00. Relief matters occupied considerâ€" able of the time of the regular De- cember session of the Markham town- ship council. Several requests for increased relief were met with the firm declaration by\ Reeve George B. Padget that as far as he was con- cerned the township would not give any relief in excess of the Campbell report. Some applicants claimed that this allowance was not sufficient to meet their needs but Reeve Padget declared that no person would get one cent more. Other members of coun- cil agreed with the reeve on sticking to the Campbell report as the basis for relief. ‘ General accounts as follows: Costs:l Markham Division costs, $19.50; Geo.‘ Dukes, work twp. hal, $150; Hugh Boyd, Stouffville, sheep valuer fees and mileage, $8.00; Robt. Davies, Mt. Albert, sheep killed and flock dam- age, $25.00;~ Hospitalization account, $163.87; Wm. Brooke, sheep valuer fees and mileage, $2.00; A. G. Gorm- ley, 2 sheep killed by dogs, $14.00; James Gibson, truant officer fees and mileage, $75.00; F. H. Stiver, sheep valuer fees and mileage, $8.00; James Walker, constable, salary and mile~ age, $117.80; A. V. Orr, relief of- ficer, salary and mileage, $87.15; Naughton and Jenkins, solicitors, ac- count re Unionville debentures, $110.â€" 77. The problem of the single unem- ployed faced the council when a. numâ€" ber of single men made application for relief. Up until December lst the council issued no help to single men hut in response to some of the appli- cations the council will endeavour to nrovide work for some of the single who claimed they were right up against it and in need of food. There will be an address by Mrs. Lyman Kennedy and duets by Misses Betty Hord and Myrtle Burr. Mr. and Mrs. Russell! Brillingiar entertained a. number of friends from Buttonville last Tuesday evening. As this is the Christmas meeting the members are asked to bring a gift for the Children’s Home at Wil- lowdale. Reports of the convention in T0- ronto will also be given at this meet;- mg. Miss Ada Thomson and Miss Rea- man were guests of Miss Drew Kelly last Tuesday afternoon. The December meeting- of the WI. will meet at the home of Mrs. Oscar Cox, Thursday afternoon, Dec. 12th, at 2.30. Will all members and any others wishing to donate books or magazines for the Frontier Camp bring them to this meeting. There will also be a special collection taken in aid of these camp schools. BUTTONVILLE IN MARKHAM SAYS REEVE PADGET Hon. E. J. Davis Celebrated His 84th Birthday Mr. Davis believes that Canada is gradually recovering from the effects of the past five years, and he feels that the depression has a definite lesson for the nation. “There is one thing that can‘t be emphasized too much, and that is that the foundation of our troubles is debt.” “We must begin with the boys and girls, im'pressing them with the importance of economy to realize by effort the value of the dollar,” he said. “I learned the leather tnade when 16 years old,” Mr. Davis said‘, de- scribing how he started with his father and became a partner in 1872 in the firm of Andrew Davis and Son, of King. As usual he was in his Newmarket office at 8.30 Monday morning where messages of congratulation were waiting to be opened. Later he left to keep busihess appointments in To- ronto, for in spite of his age he is still in active control of the largest calfskin factory in the British Empire Mr. Davis was born Dec. 2, 1851, in the district now known as New- tonbrook. He is of U. E. Loyalist descent. “We have more men employed now than We ever had,” he said. “Our object has been to keep the men at work, and right through the depres- sion we didn’t drop any, even though we lost money.” Further recovery in the leather inâ€" dustry as a result of the new treaty with the United States is expected by Mr. Davis. “If the treaty accom- plishes what it should then it Will mean a great deal to the country,” he said. IS OLDEST LIVING EX-W’ARDEN OF YORK COUNTY Hon. E. J. Davis of Newmarket, one of York County’s best known resi- dents, celebrated his 84th birthday on Monday, Dec. 2nd. A former pr'o- vincial secretary and member of the legislature for North York he is the oldest surviving ex-warden of York County. Retired from politics since 1904, Mr. Davis is a well known Liberal figure in Ontario. During all his political career, which began in 1877, he was never defeated for office. Mr. Davis has five sons associated with him in the leather industry and has two daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Davis celebrated their Glst wedding anniversary Oct. 29. acme! the king’s iaigbtnap Richmond Hill Dairy 3 G. WALWIN, Prop. 3 Phone 42 Richmond Hill i Milk and Cream SECURED FROM SELECTED AND INSPECTED Hm AND HANDLED IN m MOST APPROVED METRO“ IT IS SURE TO GIVE SAT].- FACTION. PASTEURm BY THE MOST MODm METHODS. Because it is so PURE, u FRESH, and so GOOD be sure to insist on Daily Services Richmond Hill N ewmarket, Sutton, Barrie, Orillia, Midland ATTRACTIVE RATES Canadian and USA. points between Richmond Hill LOW FARES Single Copy 5!: . intermediate points. TORONTO $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE between and and and No. 23

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