.Dr. Charles 0. Collins Dentist _ 'Office: Trench Block, two doors north of Bank of Commerce Hours: 9 am. to 6.30 p.xn. Telephone 32 Frk'hy Evenings Other Evenings by Appointh Office over the Post Ofï¬ce Woodbridge Phone '77 “I, nuns 0F SHEET METAL wonx mum:- E‘I? 13mm» Metal Office Hours: 9 to 11 an. 6 to 8 p.m., and by appointment Office: Centre and Church Streets, IRichmond Hill Phone 24 Maple, 011%. (Women and Children) Office Hours 1 - 3 pm. :Appointments made Ph01 Dr. W. J. Mason DENTIST YONGE AND ARNOLD STREET PHONE 70 RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO 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 8 - 10 a.m.; 6 - 8 p.m. 122 Yonge St. Richmond Hill DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFF Office Hours 9-10 tint, 12â€"2 & 6-8 p.111. an y appointment MAPLE â€" Phc DR. JAMES R. LANGSTAFF ' wages, Roofing Jobbing Promptly Attended to Dr. C. A. MacDonald J. H. Prentice, 416 Balliol St, K. C. Prentice Markham Toronto, HYmm. 0834 We are prepared to conduct sales of every description. Farms and farm Jtock sales a specialty. Farms bought and sold on commission. All sales at- tended to on shortest notice. and con- ducted by the most approved methods. LRichmoï¬d Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 16 .Branch Offices at 1m mama'erme Open M3134â€, yedpesday and AUCTIONEER MAPLE Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York Sales attended to on shortest notice and at reasonable rates. J. T. SAIGEON & SON Insurance FIRE â€" AUTOMOBILE â€" LIFE J.FOX THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE Bulk of Commerce Building LIAâ€"L __ AA Thirty Years Experience Forme‘rly with Heintzman Company Leave Orders at Austin’s Drug Store Richmond Hill Dr. M. J. Quigley DENTIST From the Toronto Conservatory of Music, will accept a number of pupils in Piano, Organ and Theory. Richmond Hillâ€"Tuesday & Friday VOL. LVI. Office Hours 10 â€"- 12 am. Dr. R. A. Bigford Prentim &: Prentice AUCTIONEERS DENTIST At Dr. Bigtord'l Office Tuesdays 9-12 mm. ghqndays 12-4480 pm}: Dr. J. P. Wilson C. E. Walkington Drs. Langstaff Dr. L. R. Bell Wright & Taylor George W. Cross Piano Tuner FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Adelmo Mrelecci “YORK COUNTY’S J. Carl Saigeon THORNHILL NEWSIEST NEWSPAPER†Succouoi: MEDICAL DENTIST BUSINESS MUSICAL MRS. MYLKS Phoï¬e Maple 3 Phone 100 Phone 3 LIFE, FIRE. ACCIDENT. SICKNESS, PLATE GLASS, AUTOMOBILE. BURGLARY. GUARANTEE BONDS SPECIAL RATES TO FARMERS ON ALL CARS TARIFF & NON TARIFF CO'S. INSURANCE Bowden Lumber & Coal co., LTD LUMBER OF ALL KINDS lnsulex, Donnacona Board, etc. LANSING WILLOWDALE 42 HUDSON 0234 ' BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Member of the Ontario, Saskatchewan and Albert: Barn I 810 McKinnon Building, 19 Melinda St., Toronto Bus. Phone EL. 1744 S. TUPPER BIGELOW LLB. Alexander MacGregor K. C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC 614 Confederation Life Bldg. Toronto Phone: Office EL. 5029 Res. MO. 2866 BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill Every THURSDAY AFTERNOON 93 Yonge Street 'Immediabely North of Masonic Hall ‘ Phone 87 â€" Richmond Hill Toronto Office â€" 18 Toronto Street Phone ELgin 1887 A. Cameron MacNauQ‘hInn, K.C Barristers, Solicitors. etc. Officeâ€"711 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 formerly of Wm. Cook, Cook 8: Delany BARRISTER - SOLICITOR NOTARY 1008 Federal Building 85 Richmond St. West, Toronto Telephone AD. 1948 Telephone 148 for appoinrtrménts. Barristers and Solicitors Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Boles, B.A. Percy Biggs AD. 0177 Toronto AD. 0178 1316 Bank of Hamilton Building Yonge Street â€"â€" Toronto BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc 84 Yonge Street Richmond Hill OFFICE HOURS 9.30 to 12 â€"- 2 to 5 1 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 12â€"2 Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public 201 Church Street, Toronto Phone Waverley 4365 Residenceâ€"18 Poyntz Ave., Lansing, Ont. Willowdale 308 {.A ï¬loomfield Jordan McGuire, Boles & Co. BARRISTER 1711 Star Building 80 King Street West, Toronto Phone: ELg'in 4879 A. G. SAVAGE Naughton & Jenkins Malaria. Milliken, Clark A" Redman Walter S. Jenkins T. C. Newman Barristers, A Sqlic§§0r§, Thomas Delany Established 1880 Cook & Gibsen _Wm; ngk, K. c: Res. Phone RA. etc. MILL 139 RICHMOND HILL FLOUR AND CEREALS FEEDS FOR STOCK AND POULTRY YOU CAN SAVE 95% OF YOUR POULTRY FROM A BAD INFEC- TION 0F ROUP WITH THE H.T.H. CURE. IMMEDIATE RELIEF. CALL AND INQUIRE sweet to the fool. A little flattery tastes sweet to a wise man and a good deal of it tastes PRESBYTERIAN BAZAAR The annual bazaar under the aus- pices of the Women’s Association of Richmond Hill Presbyterian Church will be held Saturday, November 14. Reserve this date now. A villager of Upper Egypt claims to have just celebrated his 13ls't birthday, and to have sixty children. His name is Selim e1 Hendawi, and he lives in El Haghe, a village near Aswan. Selim has been married many times, and his children’s fam- ilies constitute the major part of the village. “It should have occurred long ago, but political conditions in France were such that it could not be effect- ed earlier,†he said. This devalua- tion is! an intermediate step towards returning to the gold basis for world currenciesâ€"not the old basis, but a reduced one. “Devaluation of the franc and of the other currencies of the European gold bloc has long been recognized ‘in financial circles as inevitable and necessary to world stabilization of currencies and recovery of interna- ~’cionaJ trade,†Sir Thomas White, vice-president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce and Canada’s war-time minister of finance, said in an inter- view in Toronto. Quebec is going to try out some economic ideas of its own, Premier Duplessis intimates. The cabinet, he said, is to devote further consider- ation to a system of “change†be- tween Quebec province and foreign countries with a view to drawing a- greements under which Quebec would deliver to these countries a certain portion of its produce and r9ceive merchandise in return. A farmer has recently died in England leaving a million and a quarter dollars, all of which he made out of farming. He did it because he adopted improved methods. The story says that, after farming in the traditional way and losing $3,000, abolished livestock from his farming system, substituting ammonia and phosphates as fertilizers. Baylis, of King's Lynn, Norfolk, the farmer in question, made money while many of his neighbors went bankrupt. Before his death he was farming 12,000 acres. The only livestock on the farm were work horses. RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15th, 1936 The annual King- and Vaughan Plowing Match will be held at Con- cord, Friday, October 30th. Aurora council will provide extra police protection for children having to cross Yonge Street at school time and on Sunday for Sunday School. The annual plowing match of the North York Plowmen’s Association will take place on Oct. 21 on the farm of Robert Mil'lar Estate, north of Ringwood, it was made known recently. Nbrman Steckley, Stouffâ€" ville, is the Secretary in charge of entries. Sud‘bury’s assessor gives the pre- sent population of that city as 24,- 440â€"â€"an increase of 2000 during the past year. This is one of the spots in Canada where there is no depres- sion. All trade statistics and business returns indicate that prosperity which has been lurking round the corner for so long is fast becOming a reality. Trade, employment, manu- facturing production, life insurance and farm prices all show improveâ€" ment. THE MILL Thanksgiving Day gave this part of Ontario its first taste of winter weather. Ice, snow and a very cold wind combined to make the holiday savor of winter more than glorious autumn. General News & Views RES. 82-W Villagé Trasurer. mated at Richmond Hill, August 20, 19 6. nu. ‘11“. caï¬ies'ibF"§ai&‘ï¬i§E“}}§§y be had at my office. A.__._I_._ HUME, The sale will be held on the above date at the hour of ten o’clock in the forenoon in the Municipal Hall infltheZ Villgge >qf iRichmond Hill. ed in the “Ontario Gazette" under the dates of September lst, October 1st and November 1st, 1936 and that, unless the said arrears of taxes and costs are sooner paid, I shall, on the 15th day of December, 1936, pro- ceed to sell the said lands to dis- charge the said arrears of taxes and the_ charges thereon. 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- beeri prepared, and isAbeing publish- In a few hours a man can tell all he knows; after that he’s interest- ing....It used: to be that a. woman got a job because she could not get a husband; but now the husband is easy to get if she has the job. VILLAGE OF RICHMOND HILL TREASURER’S SALE OF LANDS IN ARREARS OF TAXES True Story!: A young man who was given the air by a girl decided to get even if it was his last earthly deed. So he requested the] young lady to go driving which she accep- ted With a. good deal ‘of smug self- satisfaction. Just as she was about to get in the car, the young man‘ handed her a hammer and a. packet of nails and the information that she could drive as she pleased. Some time ago a motion was made by a hotelâ€"keeper to qwash the local option by-law in Pickering, twelve different reasons being stated for such an order. The by-law passed with a majority of 205 out of a total vote of 1,280. The Divisional Court on Saturday set aside the order. Local option is therefore still in force in Pickering Township and Village. Some time ago Mr. H. C. Bailey of Maple offered a prize of a gold watch to the one guessing the near- es-t to the weight of a bar of soap. The contest c10sed on October lst, when the bar was weighed and found to be 91 lbs. 4 oz. The prize was awarded/ to Mrs. C. Crook, whOSe guess was 91 lbs. 31/2 oz. Mr. A. J. Hume has moved into the front part of the Fire Proof store which has been neatly fitted up for a tailoring establishment. The store is divided by a partition run- ning east and west, the south part being the work shop, and the north part the showâ€"room. Lilacs in full bloom, ramd as fra- grant as in the month of May, were picked a few days ago at the rear of the Standard Bank. Lilacs in October are certainly a novelty. From our Issue of October 11th, 1906 A special meeting of the W.M.S. Auxiliary took place on Friday, 0c- tober 2nd, for the purpose of pack- ing the things for shipment. A large box containing seven beautiful quilts, a large quantity of good and. useful articles of clothing, also a variety of papers, magazinesâ€"the old' library of the Sabbath Schoolâ€"and a large old Bible, was directed to Little Cur- rent, to be distributed by the Rev. Wesley Dean. A barrel containing four quilts and much useful cloth- ing, papers, etc., was also sent to Sudbury to the Rev. J. Gibson. Mr. John Sanderson kindly attended to mailing and directing of the same which were shipped on Saturday. Mr. T. H. Trench was judge on carriages at Woburn Fair held last Friday. There were two fires in Newmar- ket last week. On Sunday morning about 3 o’clock smoke was seen com- ing from a large store in the Mill- ard block, occupied by Montgomery & Brodie, and although it was not burned down it was» badly damaged, and the loss on stock was about $7000.. About half past one o’clock on Wednesday morning the large tannery owned and run by Marsh & Brown was burned to the ground. Loss about $5000; insured- for $3000. The first named proprietor is our old friend, Mr. Sidney A. Marsh, form- erly of this place. From our Issue of October 15th, 1896 WAY BACK IN LIBERAL FILES THIRTY YEARS AGO FORTY YEARS AGO RICHMOND TAILORS CLEANING & PRESSING SERVICE IS THE VERY BEST w / glue King’s Highbag $®“ E . SAFE ' DIRECT' ECONOMICAL DAILY SERVICE â€" LOW RATES NORTH BAY - CALLANDER - HUNTSVILLE PARRY SOUND - GRAVENHURST - BARRIE - DRILL“ A MIDLAND â€" BEAVERTON between RICHMOND HILL and and intermediate points RICHMOND HILL PHONE 491 GOODS CALLED FOR. AND DELIVERED 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 rellp able service be your assurance of the very best in your cleaning requirements. ATTRACTIVE RATES TO OTHER CANADIAN AND U.S.A. POINTS Tickets and Information at R. PETCH â€"- PHONE 177, RICHMOND HILL J. A. GREENE Single Copy 5c $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE No. 16