Let us do your harness and collar repairing COLLAR FITTING A SPECIALTY Prompt service. Prices moderate Shop closed 6 pm. Mon, Wed., Fri. Maple, Ont. Baker’s Repair Shop “AL†PUPLE Wi‘shes to announce that he has of the district. taken over the Elgin Mills Barâ€" ber Shop, and respectfully soli- cits the patronage of the people Now Under New Management ELGIN BARER SHOP Saturday : Are class is to have potery Monday. Mine is reddy as per follows: The meloncholic days have cum, the saddest of the yr. 2 cold to go a swimen & 2 hot to stay hear. TRAVEL SERVICE Friday: Jake is a wise g'uy. Sum times. This a. m. the teecher Was a sayen that all queschens about can be ancered by yes or no & Jlake up & ast her had she stopt drinking too mutch beer to be good for her. They Wassent no ripply. At all.‘ She just sorta lookt non plusticated. Thursday: I supose lPa is about as ded game a sport as they is. Ma told him at noon she put his other suit on the clothes horse & he sed what was the odds agenst him? Wednesday: The teecher was tee- ching the class tabel manners and etc and sed we shud eat with are forks & Blisters up & sed hisn leeks so bad he hast to use his nife for pees & beens and etc. Tuesday: Jane gets dummer «S: dummer it looks like. For when the teecher ast her what kind of a husâ€" ben did she want, Jane sed, None. what I want is a single man. Monday : The teecher of the big kids ast Josie Wadkin§ what are a polygon & Josie replide & sed she xpected a parrot witch are ded. Ev- eryboddie laft but me. I that the anser very good. Steamship Reservations to Bneat Britain and the Continent. Premier service to West Indies. PASSPORTS ARRANGED FOR Keep Your Liver Active Richmond Hill Y. B. Tracy, Agent Phone 169 EXPRESS TELEGRAPH Can. National Station Sunday: Pa was a laffing at a1 prufe reeder which he don’t like on TINSMITHING . FURNACES - PLUMBING HEATING Septic Tanks Installed Pumps Barn & Stable Equipment 74 Yonge Street Phone 92F THURSDAY, OCTOBER lst, 1936 SLATS’ DIARY ISAAC BAKER PHONE 71 GLENN’S DRUG STORE Rail tickets and sleeper Reservation. Ont. R.R. No. 2 Telephone Maple 1063 (By Oliver N. Warren) R. H. KANE WITH â€" â€" Parke’s LIVER TONE 50c. -â€" $1.00 to face both t? editur and not menshen the saci dame. Who keeps on ors let thru a which sed a 5 event will be at Mistress Smytheses 1 Thursday Pr Pa sed the eror man will who ‘ouse haft the t to ite hell This coming session is bound to see -a revival of the 1912-13 cry for imperial and Canadian defenceâ€"if war hasn’t broken out before then. There are growing indications that a body of opinion in Canada believes that we need to strengthen our coasts, and improve our air defence. Even the jleast jingoistic of news papers are beginning to say that the‘ League, on which we based our hope of the prevention of war in this gen- eration, has lamentany failed. and that we must find assurance ‘and aid elsewhere now. We shall hear a good deal about the Monroe doc- trine, the need of a highly armed British empire, and so on. Sept stroke More amlbiitious housing lschemes are being developed by the archi- tects of the National Employment Commission, and we shall have, in the next session, legislation to launch subsidized building of thousands of homes for workers across the coun- try, it is indicated. They are with the Dominion Housing Act again to see if it can- not be made a little more effective. The present government doesn’t think the statute is very much use, but they found it there, on the books, and are trying to make it work'. Only about 500 applicants for loans have so far been approved, providing homes and apartments for perhaps 700 persons. This doesn’t touch the fringe of the housing problem in {Canada The Housing Act only as- sists that small class of persons with a fairly good income, some cap- ital or land already available, and held up only by the high cost of second mortgage money. The people who need housing the worst get no help at all from the measure. ‘ (May Help Somewhat 1 It is possible that the latest 11-} mendments to the Act will bring it‘ within the scope of a few people in more modest circumstances. There‘ is $10,000,000 of Federal money waiting for loan approval. enough to launch a 50 million dollar project: So far only eight or nine per cent of it has been put to work, after 15 or 16 months of operation. a1 tra’ces the importance of the mis- sion upon which the Minister of Trade and Commerce is leaving. With Australia our trade at preâ€" sent is the highest it ever was: with New Zealand it is quite good, but only about 40 per cent of pre-de- pression levels. Australia is the third best customer of Canadian pro- duce at present; and New Zealand seventh on the list. Which illus- (Off for the Antipodes) And now Hon. W. D. Euler, Min- ister of Trade and Commerce, leaves for Australia and New Zealand, to negotiate new trade agreements there. Whether the present ones can be improved upon is a question not easily answered. Canada has been enjoying the better part of the bar- gain, judging from trade figures, with both countries, and Mr. Euler may find it necessary to offer some substgntial concessions to Australia and New Zealand in order to retain the present volume of trade. In spite of duty reductions, exports of hay, of alfalfa and grass seed showed a decrease, but with these exceptions, all farm items on the trade agreement showed an improve- ment. I Ottawa Spotlight Ottawa. Sept. 29.â€"Canadian far- mers in various parts of the coun- ‘try appear to have secured larger markets in the United States as a result of the trade agreement sign- ed a year ago. The new tariff rates lhave been operating since January 1lst, and the figures for eight months are quite encouraging. It is always difficult to assign to any one parti- cular cause any national events, beâ€" cause modern life and commerce have become extremely complex. But there seems to be a real relation- ship between the lower tariff rates given Canada and the enlarged ship- ments of goods to the States. Shipments of cheese, for instance, rose from a value of $45,314. in the first eight months of 1935 to $1,109,â€" 741. in 1936. Shipments of poultry rose from 77,564 lbs. to 172,473 lbs. Cream shipments rose from seven gallons to 8,094 gallons; horses, from, 4,344 head to 14,495 head; poultry,‘ from value of $5,265 to $220,382;‘ cattle, from 81,744 head to 189,407 head; potatoes, from 232.153 bushels, to 651,890 bushels; turnips, froml 852,625) bushels to 1,206,424 bushels; strawberries, from 250,273 lbs. to 678,002 lbs.; maple sugar, from 1,-l 539,790 lbs. to 4,736,975 lbs. The death WnJ Ta Bolton ROBERT STUDHOLME By Wilfrid Eggleston urre )Y 31:90. He Questions concerning health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical As- sociation, 184 College St. Toronto, will be answeredpersonally by let- ter. Of course, we know this is all very foolish, but we don’t know it well enough, and we are an excitable people, mistaken often in our most 'generous impulses. So, in spite of all we know, the next time an acci- dent happens we may do these very same foolish things again. Most of all we need to get our fidgets cured 'by some kind of philosophy. l3ut here lies the injured man, and we are the volunteer Good Samari- tans. What are we to avoid, and what are we to do? The Samariâ€" tan of the early day d'ressed the wounds, pouring in oil and wine. This may not be quite modern treatâ€" ment, but at any rate you will not- ice that the oil and wine came be- fore the ambulance. Sometimes it should not, but sometimes it should. Anyway, if we are to do our job even as well as the good neighbor of nearly two thousand years ago we must learn the modern equiva- lents of his wine and oil and general technique. What are some of the elements in “Safety Afterwards?†The acci- rdent has happened, the leg is brok- -'en. [Or body is crushed to the venge ’of death. Or the nervous system is :sliocked :and depressed; arteries are burst and bleeding. What should be done about it? Fifty years ago or Aless a factory employed a surgeon 'skilled in patching to be always at hand. Now-a-days when every road {is crowded with elaborate machinâ€" ery and much fine intelligent horse- ;sense replaced by low-intelligence Iman sense, there are no remote cor- ‘ners where accidents may not occur. 'Almost everybody should be skilled 'in meeting these emergencies. Here again come in our North iAmerican nerves and fussinesses. We ldo not follow the leader, be he po- lliceman or surgeon, as a crowd |would in London or Berlin or even iin Paris. Everybody has his own lsuggestions and the loudest voice lwith the thickest head back of it is ilikely to prevail. When one thinks {of the kind of people who deal with ‘emergenc'ies and accidents he is sur- prised that any who are hurt reâ€" cover. If the poor injured person is merely resting, catching his breath, recovering from shock, pulling him- self together, someone is sure to inâ€" sist upon action, to fuss with the leg to see if it is really broken, to ask foolish questions, to shout and gesticulate, to rush the injured per- son somewhere, anywhere, and any- how to any kind of a poor hospital or hovel, to do anything but let Mo- ther Nature have a few soothing and precious moments for recovery: from the worst of the shock. Not only was the spirit of the Good Samaritan that of the pattern good neighbor to a wounded man but his technique was the best the know- ledge of his day and the circumâ€" stances afforded. down from Jerusalem to Jericho â€" almost as dangerous and infested a road as some well-known streets and sections of some modern cities. On his way he fell among thieves â€" hold-up men, bandits, thuvzs, gunâ€" men, would be the modern equiva- lents. They wounded him, stripped him of his clothing and left him half-dead. Two or three distinguish- ed citizens saw him but passed by on the other side â€" not the first time nor the last in the world’s his- tory that ordinary citizenship, such as we ourselves make up, has neglectâ€" ed human distresses. But the Good Samaritan found the wounded mlan, dress-ed his wounds, clothed him, carried him on his own donkey to an inn, put him in charge of the inn-keeper, paid an instalment on his bill and promised more later on his return. SAFETY AFTERWARDS We hear much about “safety first,†and rightly, but what about safety afterwards? The story of the Good Samaritan is the classic for all time in the spirit of caring- for the wound- ed and unfortunate. A man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho â€" J. R. HERRINGTON )3 Yonge St.. Richmond Hi1} QN.R. Money Order Office THE LIBERAL, RICnMOND HILL, ONTARIO Rents Collected Real Estate Insurance Conveyancin Moved by J. S. Lawson, seconded by C. E. Walkingtonâ€"That the Clerk be and is hereby authorized to issue a cheque to C. H. Ross for $52.40 the same being payment for balance of salary and stamps for the year 1935. Carried Moved by J. S. Lawson, seconded by C. E. Walkingtonâ€"That the Clerk be and is hereby authorized to issue a cheque to Judge T. H. Barton the same being in payment for Assessâ€" ment Appeal held at Aurora re Mary Lake Farm. Carried Moved by J. Jefferson, seconded by J. S. Lawsonâ€"That the Treasur- er be authorized to pay the follow- ing accounts for services cutting weeds and cleaning up cemeteries, at Noble‘oon cemetery; RC. and Bapâ€" tist: Norman Rose, 81 hours; Frank Chapm‘an, 81 Hours, Presblyterian; Moved by J. S. Lawson, seconded by Thos. MacMurchyâ€"That the Clerk be and is hereby authorized to issue a cheque to Arthur Wellesley, Tru- ant Officer, for the sum of $2.60 the same being in payment for Services for the month of September. Carried Moved by J. S. Lawson, seconded by C. E. Walkingtonâ€"That the Clerk be and is hereby authorized to levy our share of tax on Marsh Lands for pumping and maintaining of H01- land Marsh Scheme same being 31,- 172.60. Carried Moved by Thos. MacMurchy, sec- onded by L. B. Goodfellowâ€"That the Treasurer be and is hereby author- ized to pay the following sheep claims, as per valuator’s sworn statement now on file: William Mar- chant, $30.00; D. Heacock, $10.00. Carried Moved by C. E. Walkington, sec- onded by Thos. MacMurchy â€" That the Treasurer be and is hereby au- thorized to rebate $2.00 to Roy Tur- ton for Dog Tax wrongfully charged in 1935. Carried Relief Voucher No. 7, $165.10; Road Voucher No. 24, $256.15; Road Voucher No. 25, $996.48; Relief Vou- cher, $1701.07. Bell Telephone Co., re L. D., Reeve, $2.17; R. L. Boag', re Hulse regis- tration, $2.60; Schomberg Telephone Co., re L. D., Clerk, $8.10; Munici- pal World, re Supplies, $9.81; Mrs. Levi Rodgers, re Hospitalization, $20.90. oil 0: held Hotel King Twp. Council he regular meeting of the coun‘ of the Township of King was at King City, at Armstrong’: 91, on September 26th, at 10 a.m GENERAL ACCOUNTS RESOLUTIONS Maclean's (24 issues) 1 yr. Canadian . . . Chaï¬elaine ....1yr. ...1yr. Moved by L. B. Goodfellow, sec- onded by J. S. Lawsonâ€"That the Clerk be authorized to issue a cheque to Alex McCallum for registering threshing machines; Weed inspec- tion; and transportation of Howard vEgan to Woodstock; a total of 296 miles at 7c. a mile, $20.72. Carried Moved by L. B. Goodfellow, sec- onded by C. E. Walkington â€" That Mr. Burnel Graham and Mr. Elttm Armstrong be and are hereby ap- pointed Arbitrators for School Sec- tions Number 9 and 26, and that Mr. Carlton act as Chairman. Carried The meeting then adjourned to meet in Schomberg, on October 3lst, vat Sutton’s Hotel, at 10 am. Still, unbeautiful suspenders are more esthetic than a 36â€"inch belt making a dent in a 40â€"inch tummy. Moved by Thos. MacMurchy, secâ€" onded by J. Jefferson â€" That the Clerk be and is hereby instructed to write the Municipal Board for perâ€" mission to invest School Securities Funds in the Debentures of S. S. No. 19, Township of King. Carried Moved by J. P. Jefferson, seconded by J. S. Lawsonâ€"That this Council confirm the program of Road Work and Expenditures carried on by the Road Superintendent for the year 1936. Carried Sam Pankhurst, 12 CITIES SERVICE GARAGE Drive in and let us check your car for proper Oil, Grease, Transmission and Differential, Radiator and Battery Goodrich Tires and Tubes Willard Batteries and Service Accessories and Repairs of all Kinds This wonderful offer is avail- able to old ,and new subscrib- ers to this newspaper. We guarantee the fulfillment of all magazine subscriptions and you have positive assurance that this generous offer is exactly as represLent-ed. Re- newals will be extended for full ten Our Guarantee to You! Proper Lubrication Phone 12 l‘l‘DthIlS erm sh‘ Carried Jefferson, seconded Hours, 9th Line Please clip list tions de Time to re-Tire :aken at The Liberal azines chec wspaper. 3 PROVINCE of Magazines after checkir sired. Fill out coupon care PAGE SEVEN Richmond Hill out. .4 WA]. ONTARIO CITIES 't Ill; You Help Yuu'self rowmkmm‘ “Mam-decodes. M Borrower Signs 7’ Mood†to Repay no. “I Gavan-mom Sunewlston 311 Bloor Bldg. 57 3100:- St. West, at B.“ “one: Midway 2434 “ONTO. ONT. CENTRAL 0 AUTO LOANS NANCE COR POR ATION O HOflSEHOID lOANS LOANS $50 to $500 Lava! ma In Canada Industypcolmkc “ M M Spock.“ “d W Purlla'mem Ml cmw‘“ 1 “30954; ' -.v.r Publica