Dr. Charles C. Collins DENTIST At Dr. Bigford’n Office Tuesdays 9-12 mm. Thursdays 12-4330 pan} DR. M. C. MacLACHLAN Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings Other Evenings by Appointment Ofï¬ce over the Post Office Woodbridge Phone 77 Maple, Ont. (Women and Children) Office Hours 1 - 3 pm. Appointments made Phox Dentist Office: Trench Block, two doors north of Bank of Commerce Hours: 9 am. to 5.30 p.m. Telephone 32 Licensed Auctioneer Counties of York and Simcoe Sales of all descriptions conducted upon shortest notice and at reasonable rates. No sale too large and none too small King, Ont. Phone King 42-r-3 DR. LILLIAN C. LANGSTAFF Office Hours: 9 to 11 mm. 6 to 8 p.m., and by appointment Office: Centre and Church Streets, Richmond Hill Phone 24 122 Yonge St. Richmond Hill 'DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFF Ofï¬ce Hours 8 - 10 a.m.; 6 - 8 pm. ALL KINDS OF SHEET METAL WORK AUCTIONEERS ' J. H. Prentice, 415 Balliol St" K. C. Prentice Markham Toronto, HYlam. 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 conâ€" ducted by the most approved methods. Dr. W. J. Mason DENTIST YONGE AND ARNOLD STREET PHONE 70 RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO DR. JAMES R. LANGSTAFF AUCTIONEER MAPLE Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York Sales attended to on shortest notice and at reasonable rates. J. T. SAIGEON & SON VOL. LVI. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Richmond Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE Insurance FIRE â€"- AUTOMOBILE â€" LIFE From the Toronto Conservatory of Music, will accept, a number of pupils in Piano, Organ and Theory. Richmond Hillâ€"Tuesday & Friday MRS. MYLKS Thirty Years Experience Formerly with Heintzman Company Leave Orders at Austin’s Drug Store Richmond Hill Furnaces, Eave Troughs, Metal Garages, Roofing Jobbing- Promptly Attended to Dr. C. A. MacDonald DENTIST Telephone 80 Dr. M. J. Quigley DENTIST Prentire & Prentice J'.FOX Dr. R. A. Bigford o! C_o_mmerce Building Office Hours 10 â€" 12 am. C. E. Walkington Office Hours 9-10 “11., 12-2 & 6-8 pm. fund by appointment__ “YORK COUNTY’S Dr. J. P. Wilson George W. Cross Piano Tuner Wright & Taylor Adelmo Melecci Drs. Langstaf f J. Carl Saigeon Dr. L. R. Bell NEWS'IEST NEWSPAPER" MUSICAL MEDICAL BUSINESS TEORNHILL Successor to Phoï¬e Maple 3 Phone 100 Phone 3 LIFE, FIRE, ACCIDENT, SICKNESS, PLATE GLASS, AUTOMOBILE, BURGLARY, QUARANTEE BONDS SPECIAL RATES T0 FARMERS ‘Bowden Lumber & Coal co., LTD LUMBER OF ALL KINDS Insulex, Donnacona Board, etc. LANSING ‘WILLOWDALE 42 HUDSON 0234 BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Member of the Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Bar: 810 McKinnon Building, 19 Melinda. St, Toronto Bus. Phone EL. 1744 INSURANCE A. Cameron MacNauQ'h’nn, [LC S. TUPPER BIGELOW LLB. Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Ofï¬ck711 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 BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill THURSDAY AFTERNOON 93 Yonge Street Immediately North of Masonic Hall Phone 87 -â€" Richmond Hill Toronto Office â€" 18 Toronto Street ‘ Phone ELg-in 1887 Alexander MacGregor K. C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC formerly of Wm. Cook, Cook & Delany BARRISTER - SOLICITOR NOTARY 1008 Federal Building 85 Richmond St. West, Toronto Telephone AD. 1948 Barristers and Solicitors Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Boles, B.A. Percy Biggs AD. 0177 Toronto AD. 0178 1315 Bank of Hamiltmi Building Yonge Street -â€" Toronto B. Bloomfield Jordan BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc. Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Wm. Cook, K. C. Ralph B. Gibson, K. C. Toronto Office: 912 Federal Bldg. 85 Richmond 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, Whitchurcn, Markham and North Gwillimbury. Walter S. Jenkins. Res. Phone Hill 5048 J. Harry Naughton. Res. Elgin Mills Res. Phone 12-2 Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public 201 Church Street, Toronto Phone Waverley 4365 Residenceâ€"18 Poyntz Ave., Lansing, Ont. Willowdale 308 Telephone 148 for appointments. TARIFF & NONTARIFF CO'S. McGuire, Boles & Co. Naughton & Jenkins 614 Confederation Life Bldg. Toronto Phone: Office EL. 5029 Res. MO. 2866 BARRISTER 1711 Star Building 80 King Street West, Toronto Phone: ELgin 4879 Mulmfl’cT Milliken, Clark A1 Redmtm Walter S. Jenkins OFFICE HOURS 9.30 to 12 â€"- 2 A. G. SAVAGE T. C. Newman Thomas Delany Cook & Gibson @1119 m Established 1880 84 Yonge Street Richmond Hill mt Office Block Richmond Hill Res. Phone RA. 5429 RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3rd, 1936 It’s got so you can find almost ev- erything in a drug store except the old-time profit. The High and Public Schools will re-open here next Tuesday, the 4th of September. Teachers and pupils will find the rooms considerably brighter than they left them the end of June. The committee of manâ€" agement has had the interior of the High School calcimined, and the ne~ cessary painting done. At the Pub- lic School tlje old win‘diows with small panes of glass facing Yonge Street have been replaced by new sash with large panes, some calci- mining has been done, and new doors hung at the front. Mr. W. Hewison has been busy this week putting'on the finishing touches, the body of the building being painted cream, with brown trimmings. Mr. Wm. Sheppard, manager at the Metropolitan Waiting Room, has been furnished with one of the Unâ€" derwriters Fire Extinguishers which is placed in the freight room. Of the dwellings erected in late years in this villageâ€"several of which have been constructed with modern tasteâ€"that just occupied by Mr. Isaac Crosby and family stands out prominently as one of the most handsome and commodious resi- dences in this section of country. Nor is this building altogether new, because it contains the frame-work of the grand old residence erected by Mr. Parker Crosby 33 years ago. The old structure with its central dome and six towers, with its spa- cious grounds and rows of Norway Spruce trees on either side, was ad- Imired by everybody who passed a- long Yonge Street. The house is clad with red brick, the basement with its cemented floor is divided into several compartments, and the place is heated by a hot air furn- ace. No change has been made in the large, roomy hall as you enter the front door, and the circular stairway at the end remains the same, but the upstair part is im- proved by the addition of closets in connection with each room. Downâ€" stairs there is an archway between the library and the dining-room, and there is also an archway between the drawing-room and a smaller sit- ting-room on the south side of the hall, and the interior is grained throughout. The lawn in front of the residence when completed will be beautiful. The grounds have been graded with great care, more than 300 loads of earth being drawn to secure a perfect slope. The plank walk which reaches from the dwell- ing to the street is along the north side, and as Mr. Crosby has pur- chased 15 feet alongside his lane the driveway will be to the north of the row of evergreens outside the lawn. The proprietor is to be congratulat- ed on the good taste which he has displayed in the'arrangement of his residence and surroundings. Ernest Bowes, son of A. B. Bowes of Concord, died Thursday. The ,young' man was taken ill on the pre- vious Sunday with spinal meningitis, but although Dr. Oavan of Toronto was brought to consult with the 10â€" cal physician nothing could be done to save him. Deceased was in his 21st year. The funeral took place from the residence to Thornhill ce- metery on Saturday at 2 o’clock. Mr. Walter Eyer of this Village has been appointed bailiff for the metery on Saturday at 2 o’clock. Mr. Walter Eyer of this Village has been appointed bailiff for the Third Division ,Court in the County of York in the room and stead of Mr. John Michael, resigned. The Book Committee purchased a- bout sixty dollars worth of books for the Public Library from a re- presentative of the Methodist Book Room last Friday. It will be several weeks, however, before the books are catalogued and placed on the shelves. At the football tournament at Thistletown last Saturday Maple Junior team defeated Concord by 2 to 0. They afterwards played with Weston but the result was a draw, no goals being scored. From our Issue of August 30, 1906 WAY BACK IN LIBERAL FILES No of our junior Lacrosse teams went to Aurora on Saturday to play friendly matches with teams in that town. About six o’clock the follow- ing bulletin on the black board opâ€" posite Lorne Hall told the result: lst matchâ€"“The Kids- win.†2nd matchâ€"Aurora 3, Richmond Hill From our Issue of Sept. 3rd, 1896 THIRTY YEA RS AGO FORTY YEARS AGO Stouffville Agincourt Thistletown Vellore . . . Vandorf Schomberg Unionville . Eversley Sharon . . . Udora Belhaven As the match will be held within 25 miles of the Quebec boundary and just across the Roosevelt Bridge from the international border, the executive committee has been given every assurance that many thous- ands of spectators will come from Quebec and the United States to support their local contestants, and present indications point to the breaking of last year’s record of more than 500 competitors and 100,- 000 spectators. “Many new features will be in- cluded on the official program this year,†Mr. Carroll announced, “and foremost among these will be the :new ‘visitors class’ which is open only to residents of the United States, Quebec, and the Maritime Provinces. This competition will be held on the closing day of the match and, because of the international aspect of this year’s meeting, will ‘probably be watched with the keen- est interest by all who attend.†Mr. Carroll stated that several groups of farmers across the border were planning to charter busses to bring contestants and visitors to Cornwall. He said that he had in- formed their farm bureaus that the Ontario Highway Traffic Act per- mitted motor busses while on chart- ered trips- to operate in this prov- ince without Ontario registration plates. There will be more than 30 com- petitions on the program, with tro- phy and cash awards valued at over $4,000. Officials of the match have been assured of a strong contingent of: skilled plowmen from Quebec, prize winners in many contests in their own province. These contestants will also demonstrate the excellent progress made in horse-breeding in Quebec by bringing teams represent- ing the breeds most used in Quebec. They will include Percheron, Belgian, Clydesdale, and the native French- Canadian breed. The latter was e- volved in Quebec and is the only breed of horse originated in Can- ada. These teams will qualify for the horse show held during the match by participating- in the plow- ing contests. Plans for the four-day assembly at Cornwall have been thoroughly worked out by the executive of the Ontario Plowmen's Association in co-operation with the Eastern Coun- ties Plowmen’s Association, made up of ten branches from the seven On- tario counties of Glengarl‘y, Stor- m‘ont, Dund‘as, Grenville, Carleton, Prescott and Russell. Ten local com- mittees are completing all details which they claim will miake this year’s match the greatest in the history of the association and exhi- bition plowing. An old-world touch will be pro- vided by a few yoke of oxen from the French--speaking province which will participate in a special plowâ€" ing demonstration. Also on display will be at least one pair of the French-Canadian breed of cattle. Toronto, Aug. 29.â€"The enthusi- asm displayed to date by farmers and agricultural experts of the Proâ€" vince of Quebec and New York State, as well as those in Ontario, prom- is-es to make the International Plow- ing Match and Farm Machinery De- monstration to be held from Oct. 6 to 9 at Cornwall, Ont. by far the largest and most international event of its kind in the world, according to a statement issued today by J. A. Carroll, of the Ontario Depart- ment of Agriculture and Secretary- Manager of the Ontario Plowmen's‘ Association, under whose auspices it is held each year. This Year‘s Meet Will Be Truly In- ternational Official Declares School Fair Dates Cornwall Piowing Match To Be World’s Greatest $4,000 PRIZE LIST m ML Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. RICHMOND TAILORS CLEANING & PRESSING SERVICE IS THE VERY BEST HARRY R. ROSE NORTH BAY - CALLANDER - HUNTSVILLE PARRY SOUND - GRAVENHURST - BARRIE - ORILLIA MIDLAND - WASAGA BEACH - BEAVERTON between RICHMOND HILL and and intermediate points RICHMOND HILL PHONE 491 GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED TELEPHONE RICHMOND HILL 191 NORTH YONGE ST. OPPOSITE ORANGE HOE RICHMOND TAILORS We are now equipped to give you 24 hour service on your cleaning and pressing, and can guarantee you the very best in workmanship. Don’t take chances with your garments by having inferior cleaning. Let our years of dependable and reli- able service be your assurance of the very best in your cleaning requirements. Don’t wait for the EXPLOSION! Look at the PRICES 40 Yonge St. Richmond Hill BARRISTERS-AT-LAW Office Hoursâ€"Every Monday and Thursday Afternoon and by appointment Toronto Ofï¬ce: 100 Adelaide Street West g1 ‘7'" maxingsuing SAFE ' DIRECT ° ECONOMICAL DAILY SERVICE â€" LOW RATES HALL’S Service Station ATTRACTIVE RATES TO OTHER CANADIAN AND U.S.A. POINTS Tickets and Information at R. PETCH â€" PHONE 177, RICHMOND HILL Slze 30 x 3% Size 29 x 4.4}0-21 Size 30 x 4.50-21 Slza 28 x 4.75-19 Other sizes equally low-priced ROSE & HERMAN J. A. GREENE Discard those old, worn tires NOW. Get a set of sturdy, low-priced It’s expensive and may be disastrous. SPEEDWAYS Single Copy 5: $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE No. 10 LOUIS H-EJ Telephone 133 We stock ’eml The ï¬nest low- price value in tiredom! Goodyear builtâ€" Goodyear guaranteed Come in TODAY!