Ashphnlt ' Roofing, Gyproc Telephmze 27 WOW..me gGoing Back To School FOR SALE AT THE LIBERAL PRINTING OFFICE Director of PHONE 54-J THORNHILL { FUNERAL AND AMBULANCE SITRVI CE WW WOODBRIDGE. ONT‘AMO 9| Way‘s â€") E W, R. DEAN §| 2:91;.2czxrï¬ggsf DATED at Maple this 27th day of August. Tuesday, Sept. 8th. 11 am. “AL†PUPLE v Wishes to announce that he has taken over the Elgin Mills Bar- ber Shop, and respectfully soli- cits the patronage of the people of the district. â€" ELGIN BARBER SHOP Now Under New Management The Stork Shoppe Master F eedsi The regular September meeting of the Vaughan Township Council will be held in the Township Hal‘. Vellore Vaughan Council SHEPPARD & GILL LUMBER CO. We are agents and will be pleased to quote you on any style or quantity required. 2514 Yonge St. are the best Counter Check Books made in Canada. They cost no more than ordinary books and always give satisfaction. Farm Implements, Machinery and Répairs Telephone Richmond Hill 39 See Your Heme Printer First You may need a Special 3 Grain . . . . . . . . . Special 5 Grain . . . . . . . . Master 3 Grain . . . . . . . . Master Laying Mash, 20% Red Head Mash, 17%% Master Growing Mash .. O. A. C. Laying Mash .. O. A. C. Growing Mash . . Wheat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pig Starter . . . . . . . . . . . . Pig Concentrate, 32% Master Dog Biscuits, 50 ALL PRICES F.( Lupber; Lath, Shinng 663‘ I8// Sales Books! PAGE FOUR Charles Graham AGENT MASSEY HARRIS Tunic @ . . . . . . . . . . $1.98 or $2.98 Middy @ . . . . . . . . . . . . 79c. or 98c. Navy Skirt @ . . . . . . 98c. or $1.98 SOCKS SHIRTS BLOUSES RICHMOND HILL for the transaction of General Business J. B. McLEAN; Clerk Dealers in . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.00 per cwt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.95 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.15 ††1; . . . . . . . . . . . 2.55 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . 2.45 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.35 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.50 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.45 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.90 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.45 ††. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.35 ††lbs. . . . . . . . . 3.50 ††043. WAREHOUSE “One of the falsest of false gods to which the modern world bbws down is the so-called ‘favorable bal- ance of trade’.â€â€"Bruce Barton. “Philosophers will always ‘be the last to discover the truth.†â€" Will Durant. The studio was unable to use even a fraction of the hundreds of stories told by old Californians, but many were incorporated into the picture. “The Spanish have a legend that a mysterious light glows at night about hidden treasure. And there is a story that years later, on a night of terrific storm, a rancher riding through the mountains saw this glow coming from the ground. As he hesitated,. undecided, a horseman brushed past in the darkness and dis- mounted at the light. The rancher fled. A few days lat-er he returned and found the earth disarranged and the marks of a horse and a man~ in the wet g'round'. Our people always believed it was Murrieta, returning for the treasure vanishing into Mexâ€" ico.†“The rangers immediately took Murrieta’s trial. In his haste he was forced to bury the treasure. Soon afterward he was killedâ€"or at least disappeared from California. The treasure was lost forever. “My grandfather,†said Olivas, “was Raimundo Olivas. In 1852 he sold' a herd of cattle for $75,000. The transaction: was witnessed by a silk peddler, who was a spy of Murrieta’s. That night the house was attacked, the gold taken by Murrieta, and the house gutted of diamonds. Earrings were torn from my grandmother’s ears as she tried to protect my' fath- er, then a boy, from the bandits. California. descendants of the early- day Dons virtually flooded the Metro- Goldwynâ€"Mayer studios with legends of Joaquin Murrieta, picturesque bandit' and patriot, when that studio announced plans to film “Robin Hood of El Dorado,†a story based on Joaquin’s life. The feature, starr- ing Warner Baxter, opens tonight, (Thursday) at the Capitol Theatre. One of the most dramatic real-life stories came to William Wellman. director, from M. J. Olivas, a studio policeman, who told of an encounter his grandfather had with Murietta in 1852 at Ventura, California. It was Murrieta’s last “big job,†and the one that brought about his end. DESCENDANTS 0F EARLY-DAY DO'NS SEND IN FACTS Studio Besieged with Information About Joaquin Murrieta CAPITOL THEATRE ' COULDN’T USE IT ALL MOhawk 4940 is the first band to be engaged twice within a period of two years. It was at the “Ex†in 1934. Kneller Hall band is one of the embryo conductors many of whom are organists, vocal- ists, composers and masters of num- erous instruments. A man injures himself every time he wrongs another. To dedicate the magnificent new bandshell at the Canadian National Exhibition this year the management has engaged the Kneller Hall band from the Royal Military School of Music at T‘wickenham, England. A signal honor has oeen conferred on this' organization inasmuch as that it Councillor H. D. Logan of LindL say, is asking “that the Municipal Act be amended to provide that a member of a municipal council shall not be disqualified from sitting or voting in such council because of his selling goods to a Welfare Board of Relief Committee of the municipal- ity, where all or a part; of the cost of such relief is paid by the provincial or federal government.†Prescott presents a resolution to the effect that since 90 per cent. of municipal expenditures are now conâ€" trolled by bodies other than the counâ€" cil, the council should have complete control of municipal finances. Guests of Dr. Bruce Speakers at the three-day con- vention include: Hon. H. A. Bruce. Lieutenant-Governor; H. L. Cum- mings, Deputy Minister of Municiâ€" pal Affairs; R. E. Knowles, Jr., who will speak on “Income Taxation and Succession Dutiesâ€; Controller Ralph C. Day, who will discuss “City Re- lief†and George Hurst of the Tor- onto Assessment Department, Presi- dent of the Association. On Sep- tember 3rd the delegates will be guests of the Lieutenant-Governor at luncheon at Government House and in the evening they will witness the spectacle in front of the grandstand at the Exhibition as guests of the city. Bonding of trustees and deposi- tees of securities is asked by Stam- ford and Prescott wants: the M.O.H. to pass on all indigents before ad- mission of hospital. Considerable discussion is promis~ ed on the suggestion emanating also from Elgin that municipal councils should be empowered to refer to the Ontario Municipal Board any requisi- tion from a school board which is deemed to be excessive. Tax on HYdro The City of Niagara Falls and the Township of Stamford are demand- ing- again that the Ontario Hydro be required to pay taxes on the same basis as if hydro were privately owned. Many municipalities however would be glad to have them tax free. Elgin County also contends “Thlat serious consideration should be given to the sterilization of moronic and imbecile children who are found in shelters and other institutions.†Only persons who are property owners should be authorized to qualify for office in municipal coun- cils and school boards, a County of Elgin motion says. At present tenâ€" ant‘s can qualify. t Increase in the daily cost to muni- cipalities for indigent convalescent patients from 90 cents to $1.25 per day is protested in a City of Windsor resolution. Apartment Doors All entrance-exit doors of apart- ment houses should open outward, a resolution from the City of London contends. Since the Ontario Government collects income taxes and subsidizes local municipalities from this fund, the township of South Dorchester contends that the subsidy should be pooled andi distributed to the munâ€" icipalities according to their local as- sessments. Proper protection for employees transferring large sums of money is also proposed in a resolution from Ottawa. The City of Ottawa centends that municipalities are not responsible for unemployment, that it is a national and! that the Dominion Government should assume the full cost of re- lief. Abolition of County Councils, and Payment of all relief costs by the federal government are the princi- pal proposals which will be made by delegates to the 38th annual meet- ing of the Ontario Municipal Associ- ation, Sept. 2, 3 and 4. Sterilization of moronic and imbe- cile childrren. Taxation of hydro. Reduction of truck and‘ trailer ton- age Plan of Sterilization of Imbecile Children and Tax on Hydro Before Association Abolish County Councils MUNICIPAL UNIT URGED THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO Irrespective of party, the Canadâ€" ian people may well unite in con- tinuing to repose confidence in the ’man at the helm of the Canadian ship of state, William Lyon Macken- ‘zie King. It should be the wish of 'every Canadian that he may long ‘continue to give this Dominion safe ’Liberal leadership, ever seeking to ‘go forward along the path of po- rlitical democracy, and economic de- ‘niocracy, through this tremendous period of transition in the world’s ’social structure.†No other political party in any ‘country at the present time has been so long served Without a break in 'leadenship. The Canadian leader’s record is also unique in having held ‘bffice as Prime Minister during)r nine years of this period. With the whole ‘world in ferment, with political de- mocracy in jeopardy everywhere, 'with some nations being shepherded 'into dictatorship while others swing 'into revolution, Canada has reason to feel thankful for wise guidance.... Premier Mackenzie King’s name will surely be bracketed with the most illustrious of Liberals in Car.- adian politics. It is a great record to have been leader of the Liberal 'party for seventeen years. He ob- served this anniversary, with char- acteristic modesty, by staying quietâ€" ‘ly at home in the country l-ast Fri- day. The Ottawa Citizen also paid‘ 'bute to the Liberal Chief, under caption “Prime Minister’s Fine cord.†It said, in part:â€" A shrewd, if cautious, party lead- er, but one who has been ever pre- '1)ared‘ to stake all on a great issue, Mr. King 'has lived up to the highest traditions of public life and kept his name unsullied. Canadians, irreâ€" spective of their political affiliations, are thankful that he has been spared to participate so long and creditably in affairs of state.†l Mr. King- has deserved the success 'that has come to him. He has ad- hered to the principles that he first espoused. Never has he lost con- fidence that the nation would come ‘to his point of View. He has purâ€" sued a consistent, undeviating course and the country at no time has been in any doubt about what might be expected of him. His achievements have enhanced the prestige of the Dominion. Nowhere is he more highly regarded than in Britain and the United States. With the repub- lic he recently completed a favor- able trade treaty and within a few ‘months he is likely to reach a simi- lar accord with the mother country. 'Not the least of his merits is his success in improving the amenities observed between the two great po- litical parties. “Yesterday was the sieventeenth anniversary of the selection of Mr. Mackenzie King as leader of the na- tional Liberal party. During the in- ‘tervening period Mr. King has been prime minister in three periods, serâ€" ving in that capacity for nearly ten years. It is 28 years since he first entered parliament amid‘ predictions that the day would come when he would reach the highest honors in political life. *‘Leadee For g Seventeen Years Mr. King starts on his 18th year of leadership in good health. He will leave next month at the head of Canada’s delegation to the meet- ing of the Assembly of the League of Nations in Geneva. Fitting Comment In its issue of Saturday, August 8, the Toronto Daily Star, which did much to present Mr. Mackenzie King to the people of Canada in the early months of 1919, as a prospective leader of the Liberal party, paid him the following editorial tribute under the caption: An Honorable Career: To hold the leadership of a politi- cal party for 17 years in a period of world change and unrest consti- tutes something of a record. Mr. King is the only leader in the Bri- tish Commonwealth, if not in the en- tire world, who has remained at the head of a political party for that length of time. The only other lead- er who approaches Mr. King’s record is Premier J. D. Hertzog, of South Africa. In the case of Mr. Hertâ€" zog, however, tne party changed. Coalition of the Nationalist group, headed by Mr. Hertzog, with the South African party formed the United Party which the South AL rican Psemier now heads. Now, after seventeen years as ac- tive head of the Liberal party, Mr. King is Prime Minister again. Prime Minister Has Established Ejn- viable Record For Public Service On August '7, 1919, Mr. Mackenzie King became leader of the Liberal party in Canada. He was chosen leader in a popular convention held in Ottawa, and attended by dele- gates from every province in the Dominion; and for seventeen years he has maintained his leadership Without a break. For nine years, from 1921 to 1930, Mackenzie King was prime minister in the first Libâ€" eral government since the adminis- tration of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. tri - the “The ultimate goal is the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.†â€" Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin. By virtue of a warrant issued] by the Reeve of Richmond Hill dated the 10th day of August, 1936 and to me directed, commanding me to proceed with. the collection of arrears of taxes, together With the fees and expenses, I hereby give notice that the list of lands liable to be sold has been prepared, and is being publishâ€" ed in the “Ontario Gazette†under the dates of September lst, October 1st and November lst, 1936 and that, unless the said arrears of taxes and costs are sooner paid, I shall, on the 15th day of Decemfber, 1936, pro- ceed to sell the said lands to dis- charge the said arrears of taxes and therrcharges thereon. ‘ Copies of usaid List may" be 7 had at my office. Village Treasurer. Dated at Richmond Hill, August 20, 1936. The saTe will be held on the above date at the hour of ten o’clock in the _fore}}gon in the Municipal Hall in the Village of Richmond Hill VILLAGE OF RICHMOND HILL TREASURER‘S SALE OF LANDS IN ARREARS OF TAXES Refined elderly couple desire to rent in Richmond Hill, Thornhill, or on the highway to Toronto, modern apartment with garage and garden space, or self-contained part of mod- ern house. Rent $25 to $35. Reply to RC. Box No. 2, Ottawa, Ont. CARPET SWEEPER, Bissell, section of stairs, I brass bed, spring and mattress, 1 iron bed, box spring and mattress, 1 galvanized iron soft wat- er tank, 175 gal. with pipes and fau- cet; 1 Drop leaf Kitchen Table; Dum’b Waiter Complete. Mrs. A. L. Phipps, 68 Richmond St., phone 13. COWS with high R.O.P. and good show records, gov. accredited, in calf to one of the best bulls in Canada; also Hunter type gelding, rising 3 yrs. old. Apply B. R. Leech, 3rd con. Markham, 2V2 miles east of Thornhill. DUAL PURPOSE SHORTHORN DAIRY CATTLE, pure bred and grade, government tested, all breeds, guaranteed to be right in all. quart- ers including 60 day refett, compen- sation taken as- collateral. Apply to Ed. Irish, Willowdale, Stop 9 Yonge Street, phone 369.]. 7 ROOMED STUCCO HOUSE in Richmond Hill, excellent location, all conveniences, $3,000 cash, a real barâ€" gain. Apply J. R. Herrington, Rich- mond Hill, telephone 87. FARM, 100 acres on 4th Concession Markham, 114 miles north of Vic- toria Square, good buildings, lots of water. Apply Wm.'Dennie, Gorm- ley. YOUNG DUCKS AND CHICKENS, dressed, drawn if requested; also Cuâ€" cumbers, beets, other vegetables. An- derson, 92 Richmond Street, Rich- mond Hill. RANGE for coal or wood, warming closet; also bricks for installing hot water jacket. Apply 11 Centre St. West, Richmond Hill. SEED WHEAT, Dawson’s Golden Chaff, O.A.C. 61 Registered, also Dawson's Golden Chaff No. 1 Gov’t test. Clark Young, Milliken, phone Agincourt 45-21. FINDLAY R O U N D KITCHEN FORDSIOKN TRACTOR in first class condition with pulley attachment, will sell reasonable or exchange for good work horse. Telephone Maple 1949. GARDEN TRACTOR in perfect con- dition; also Barred Rock Pullets layâ€" ing. Apply W. Purkis, Cities Ser- vice Station, Langstaff High-way. 6 TUBE ATWATER KENT RADIO in first class condition, moderately priced. J. A. Baker, RE. No. 2, Maple. YOUNG ROASTING FOWL, 3 to 3%, lbs., dressed. J. Hickson, 8 ROSe- view Ave., Richmond Hill. good repair, Empire make, $25.00 J. A. Rose, Maple, Ont. SAND & GRAVEL, Cement blocks, buildings raised. John Jarvis. Rich- mund Hill. telephone 94M. 21/2 H.P. GASOLINE ENGINE in BICYCLE in good condition, cheap. Apply 32 Arnold Street, Richmond Hill, or telephone 181. 4 ACRES OF FODDER CORN. Ap- ply A. Ash, R.R. No. 2, Maple. 100 CHOICE YEARLING LEGHORN HENS, 65c. each. Roselawn Farms, Richmond Hill. “THIS IS THE DAY OF ADVERTISINGâ€"MAKE THE MOST OF H" RATESâ€"Five lines or less, 25 cents for first insertion and 15 cents for each subsequent insertion. Over 5 lines 5 cents per line extn each insertion, IF CHARGED 7 CENTS PER LINE Classified Advs. APARTMENT \VANTED FOR SALE A. J. HUME. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3111, 1936 Phone HYland 2081 Open Evenings Bea. Phone 9788 Johnston & Granston IKANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS OF CANADIAN .& FOREIGN Granite Monuments FORDSON TRACTORâ€"1927 Model â€"Overhauled. Used Cars Little Brothers Ford Sales & Service RICHMOND HILL. ONTAR-IO WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23rdâ€"Auction sale of cattle, pigs and geese, the property of Reve Castator, lot 1, mm. 6 Vaughan, 114 miles south of Wood- bridge on townline. The cattle have had. 3 government tests and 2 pri- vate tests and are accredited. They have a test of 4.2 at the Vita-Milk dairy. Terms cash. Watch The Lib- eral for full particulars of this sale. J. C. Saigeon, Auctioneer. 1936 FORD DeLUXE TOURING SE- Auction sale of farm stock, imple- ments, tractor and tractor equip- ment, hay, grain, roots etc., the pro- perty of James Patton, lot 16, con. 5, Vaughan, 1% miles south of Maple sideroad. No reserve as- farm is rented. Watch The Liberal for fur- ther details. J. C. Saigeon and C. E. Walking-ton, Auctioneers. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19THâ€" Entries for big Amateur Contest. to be held in the Orange Hall Wood- bridge during Fair Week will be re- ceived by Mr. G. A. Bagg, secretary of L.O.L. No. 28, Woodbridge, until October 151;. Exact date to be an- nounced» later. Good Used Cars, DURANT, 1930â€"Own Car $225.00 CHEV.â€"-1934 Coach 495.00 FORD with Radio, 1934 495.00 DODGE 1931â€"New Paint, Mo- tor Job 375.00: tor Job 375.00‘ SEE HARRY TROWELL AT GILES, RICE & PETERS Ltd. DANFORTH AT MAIN ST. Phone GRover 2191 or for appointment phone 9 Richmond Hill LOSTâ€"Between Richmond Hill and Elg'in Mills,_License plate EY-90. Finder kindly leave at The Liberal Office. BE INDEPENDENT, sell the pro- ducts of a nationally-known firm; big profits and steady repeat orders. Others are making big money selling our goods. Why can’t you? Write today to Familex Products 00., 570 St. Clement St., Montreal. EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER Wishes a position, care of elderly lady, or couple, or Invalid, or as lady’s companion. Apply Li'beral Of- fice. ‘ HOUSES RAISED, moved etc. base- ments built. Phone Thornhill 73. SMART GIRL for housework. Ap. ply Phone Thornhill'lO’Y. SIX ROOM HOUSE on Arnold St, Richmond Hill. Apply to P. C. Hill. Richmond Hill. DANâ€"Demonstrator â€" Very Small Mileage. MISCELLANEOUS SALE REGISTER 1849 Yonge St. (east side) Between Mertan & Balliol Sts. $850.00 1935 FORD TUDOR $575.00 NOTICE $200.00†TU RENT WANTED LOST